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USA

Taste of Chicago: Garrett Popcorn

An advertisement for the Chicago Mix at Garrett Popcorn (Scarborough photo)When I travel, I love to seek out those unique attractions or events or food/drink that can only be found in certain places.

In Chicago, Illinois, I found Garrett Popcorn.

Now, I don’t leap out of bed in the morning in search of popcorn. It’s an OK food, but not one of my top favorites.

Still, I’d heard that Garrett in Chicago is special, so since I’m here in the Windy City for the SOBCon08 blogging conference, I headed out in search of the crunchy stuff.

My finger-licking scouting report: this is one bag of greasy, yummy, super-fabulous popcorn.

I couldn’t decide between the CaramelCrisp and the CheeseCorn, but I didn’t have to: Garrett’s sells “The Mix” with both of them mixed together.

Warning — you’ll need a serious pile of napkins to survive a buttery, well-lubed Garrett eating session.

There are several locations in Chicago (670 North Michigan Avenue plus some others) and two locations in New York City. The store locator page can help you find Garrett, or if you can’t make it to Chicago, just order online from their Web site.

I’ve found a new addiction.

Do you have a favorite local food or drink? Please share it down in the comments!

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USA

It’s true; Chicago has changed from the 1920s

Highlights of Millennium Park, Chicago (Scarborough photo)

(This is cross-posted with the Perceptive Travel blog.)

In the U.S., there’s a saying usually ascribed to Native Americans about getting another person’s perspective by “walking a mile in their moccasins.”

As a traveler, it’s always interesting to see my country through another’s eyes.

Monet at the Art Institute, Chicago (Scarborough photo)

As I scanned my local newspaper the other day, I noticed an Associated Press article in the Sports section about how Chicago is trying to convince international officials to pick their city to host the 2016 Summer Olympics.

Apparently Chicago’s international image is pretty much summed up by….the gangster Al Capone.

Industrial grit and grime. Violence.

This is not at all the city that I’ve visited, but when you live in a big country and travelers tend to cluster in well-known coastal cities like New York, Los Angeles or San Francisco, it’s natural that a sprawling Midwestern place on Lake Michigan might tend to be overlooked.

In the AP article, Edinburgh resident Carol Morrison is quoted: “It’s much more visually stunning than I’d expected.”

Chicago Theater (Scarborough photo)

Gosh, yes, Chicago is that.

I visited last summer with my teen daughter to speak at the BlogHer blogging conference, and even though I’d been there before, I was struck anew by the energy, verve, sports enthusiasm, beautiful parks and dazzling architecture.

If you like history and amazing buildings, I strongly recommend the 90 minute docent-led Chicago Architecture Foundation river cruise (what, you didn’t know that Chicago has lovely rivers? See, you should visit….)

The museums alone could keep a visitor tied up inside for days.

For a hard look at press freedom and freedom of speech in general, there’s the McCormick Tribune Freedom Museum. For mind-blowing beauty, there’s the Art Institute of Chicago (I was crushed that Edward Hopper’s 1942 painting Nighthawks was gone when we visited….it was on loan to the MFA in Boston.) For T-Rex-sized portions of natural history, there’s the Field Museum.

Sheila reflected in the Bean, also known as Anish Kapoor's Cloud Gate, Chicago (Scarborough photo)

Inside “the Loop,” the main downtown area, I was never concerned about my personal safety, even at night.

Some parents might be horrified, but my teen walked from the Navy Pier to the Field Museum on her own, and I never worried about her.

Sorry, Al Capone and assorted gangsters no longer rule Chicago.

Poke around in the Chicago Tribune‘s travel section for plenty of visitor fun in what we call the Windy City or the City of Big Shoulders.

And if you plan a trip to any country, always try to explore a little bit beyond “the usual” places….and don’t rely on a city’s reputation from the 1920s.

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USA

Chicago architecture, seen from a river cruise

Architecture River Cruise, Chicago IL (courtesy Chicago's First Lady and CAF)How do you trick your kid into admiring modern architects like Mies van der Rohe and the wedding-cake intricacies of the 1925 Chicago Tribune Tower?

Take her on a river cruise run by the Chicago Architecture Foundation (CAF.)

They offer all sorts of interesting tours, but on our July 2007 visit to the City of Big Shoulders, we wanted a maritime version.

We grabbed sandwiches and drinks at a local grocery store, and caught the 1:00 pm departure of the boat Chicago’s First Lady from the pier at the Michigan Avenue Bridge and Wacker Drive.

An experienced docent (trained guide, usually voluntary) kept up knowledgeable, fun patter for 90 minutes as the boat glided up and down different parts of the Chicago River, showing us over 50 significant sights and giving us great background info about why this city is known for creative buildings.

We learned how the city’s role as a commerce hub was established through the railroads, canals and Lake Michigan. In 1871, the devastating Great Chicago Fire wiped out the central business district and leveled more than 17,000 buildings, so architects and developers went to town, so to speak, designing and constructing striking edifices.

The tour was rather pricey ($26 on a weekday, $28 on a weekend, no discounts that I could find) but I thought it was worth the big bucks and my teenager actually paid attention and enjoyed it.

The top deck is open and there’s also an enclosed, windowed area with tables below….we sat below initially just to eat our sandwiches, but we were so comfortable and had such a good, air-conditioned view through the glass that we stayed down there the whole time. The docent’s descriptions were quite clear over speakers and it was nice to see what everyone else was seeing without baking in the sun.

The cruise operates May-November.

Technorati tags: travel, family travel, Chicago, Architecture River Cruise

Categories
USA

This is your brain on corn

                            See this cornfield? This is mostly what we've looked at for days. (Scarborough photo)

See this Missouri cornfield?  Or maybe it was an Illinois cornfield.  They are beginning to run together.

Now, put this picture on both sides of your vehicle, run the corn out to the horizon, and drive past it for, oh, days and days. 

Alternate occasionally with soybeans.

That is when you understand why this is “America’s Breadbasket” or whatever agricultural blurb you want to come up with.

                             Grain silos in Griggsville, IL (Scarborough photo)

Then see what your teen calls “the biggest freakin’ grain thingies” on the planet in Griggsville IL. 

Learn from a local guy that at harvest time, these humongous silos are all filled and a gazillion bushels of stuff are spread out on the ground behind the silos because there’s no room for it.

That is your brain on corn during a Midwest road trip.