
Barbecued ribs are also very popular in Chicago. This is barbecue that has been cooked in a rectangular indoor smoker with glass sides and a large compartment for a wood fire under the grill. Aquarium-smoked barbecue, particularly rib tips and hot links.The gym shoe (sometimes spelled Jim Shoe or Jim Shoo), a submarine sandwich made with a combination of corned beef, gyros, and either roast beef or Italian beef.Pork chop sandwiches, served bone-in with mustard and grilled onions, are popular on the South Side.It is typically found in sandwich shops and pizzerias on the South Side and its adjacent suburbs. The Freddy, a sandwich consisting of an Italian sausage patty topped with green peppers, mozzarella and marinara served on a bun.The breaded-steak sandwich, a specialty particularly found in the Bridgeport neighborhood, which consists of a flattened inexpensive cut of beef that has been breaded, fried Milanesa-style and served on an Italian bread roll with marinara sauce, topped with optional mozzarella cheese and/or green peppers.The big baby, a style of double cheeseburger with the cheese in between the hamburger patties, ketchup, mustard, and pickle slices underneath them, and grilled onions on top said to have originated at Nicky's The Real McCoy in the Gage Park neighborhood.Originally eaten during Lent by Italian immigrants in Chicago, it now can be found in some casual dining restaurants. A pepper and egg sandwich combines scrambled eggs and grilled bell peppers, served on French bread.Indigenous to Chicago, pizza puffs can be found at some hot dog restaurants. A pizza puff is a deep-fried dough pocket filled with cheese, tomato sauce, and other pizza ingredients such as sausage.A square piece of kasseri, kefalotyri, or a similar cheese is fried in a small, two-handled pan, topped with a splash of brandy, and served flambé-style, traditionally with a cry of " Opa!" from the waiter. Flaming saganaki was popularized by restaurants in the Greektown neighborhood.While some restaurants still make their own gyros cones, Chicago is the hometown of mass-produced gyros. Chicago also has its own unique style of tamale, machine-extruded from cornmeal and wrapped in paper, and typically sold at hot dog stands.The mother-in-law is a tamale on a hot dog bun, topped with chili.Shrimp DeJonghe, a casserole of whole peeled shrimp blanketed in soft, garlicky, sherry-laced bread crumbs.
#FLAMING LETTER FONT FOR BARB Q SKIN#


Also very popular in Chicago is a type of thin-crust pizza called "tavern style", which has a very thin, crispy crust and is cut into squares instead of wedges. Similar to this is stuffed pizza, with even more cheese, topped with a second, thinner crust.

The Chicago-style hot dog, traditionally a steamed or boiled, natural-casing all-beef wiener on a poppy-seed bun, topped with yellow mustard, chopped onion, sliced tomato, neon-green sweet-pickle relish, sport peppers, a dill pickle spear, and a sprinkling of celery salt-but never ketchup.The most popular Chicago-style foods are:
