PaK / Pajama and Kurta

Wants to go to 7 places

  1. Cuba 3209 people
    (in )
    6 cheers
  2. Hungary 822 people
    (in Europe)
    4 cheers
  3. Sala Kaewkoo 1 person
    (in Thailand)
    1 cheer
  4. Jane Addams Hull House Museum 3 people
    (in United States > Illinois > Chicago > West Side > Near West Side > University Village > University Of Illinois At Chicago)
    1 cheer
  5. McCormick Tribune Freedom Museum 2 people
    (in United States > Illinois > Chicago > Downtown > Near North Side > River North > Streeterville > Magnificent Mile > Tribune Tower)
    2 cheers
  6. Intuit 1 person
    (in United States > Illinois > Chicago > Downtown > The Loop)
    1 cheer
  7. Chinatown 21 people
    (in United States > Illinois > Chicago > South Side > Armour Square)
    3 cheers

  • Jane Addams Hull House Museum

  • Intuit

  • Sala Kaewkoo

  • McCormick Tribune Freedom Museum

  • Chinatown

  • Hungary

  • Cuba
  • Has been to 72 places

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    Pajama and Kurta's most recent entries...

    Agora Sculpture Installation

    Worth visiting!

    Quote from the artist, Madalena Abakanowicz  — 2 months ago

    “My work comes from the experience of crowds, injustice, and aggression… I feel an affinity for art when it was made a form of existence, like when shamans worked in the territory between men and unknown powers… I try to bewitch the crowd.”

    Bleeding Heart Bakery

    Worth visiting!

    A review of this place: 1st Organic Bakery in the USA.  — 7 months ago

    I went to the BHB’s newest branch, the one in the old Bulldog Bakery at Belmont and Damen. The aesthetic is very diy/crafty (craft-iy?) from the rubber-stamped bird labels for the goodies to the pink and pistachio T-shirts saying, “Never mind the Preservatives . . . Here’s the Bleeding Heart Bakery!” They have truffles, peanut brittle (they make their own!), cake, quiche, muffins, cookies, creme de pots, and all the other usual suspects, plus the standard coffee and other beverages (curiously, not organic). they also have these towels, this chocolate, and other local/handmade/organic/vegan/otherwise virtuous wares for sale. Also, you are encouraged to watch the chefs and bakers at work through a big plexiglass window.

    As for the experience of eating there, it was pricey – sometimes frightfully so. $12 for a loaf of bread? $6 for a small creme de pot? Yep, but consider this: the creme de pot is perfectly delectable, and it’s topped with fresh vanilla bean whipped cream, mango fans, and pomegranate seeds, all organic. Also consider that BHB is a registered nonprofit, that it’s involved in some program which helps low-income people train for successful culinary careers (at least, that’s what I’ve heard on the radio, but I can’t find any information about this online), and that their staff are super-cool.

    Unfortunately, the quality wasn’t consistent. Hubby’s quiche was exceptional, but he reported that his dessert was “like regular icing on a stale cake.” A sampled pound cake was heavenly; a ginger snap was super-gingery but very dry. At BHB’s prices, I don’t want to try stuff that may not turn out to be excellent, so this is going to be a once-in-a-while place for me.

    Soul Vegetarian

    Worth visiting!

    A review of this place: Everyone needs soul food!  — 7 months ago

    Even vegetarians – but it can be hard for it to get! Luckily there’s Soul Vegetarian, which is in a terribly inconvenient location for me, but available for greens-n-sweet-potatos emergencies.

    I went there a while ago, but here’s what I remember: the people were really nice, the portions were very generous, the food was a bit on the salty side for me but otherwise tasty and very filling, and everything was super-healthy without being super-boring and tasteless. I hope to make it back sometime.

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