Preview the new Kimski at Monday Night FoodballÂ
[READER]( [Food & Drink]( Won Kim does not care that your grandma hates his food. One month into a five-month sabbatical from Bridgeportâs Korean-Polish Kimski, and the chef is feeling fine. think I did a pretty good job trying to respect each culture,â he says. âI was downright fucking paranoid and scared to honor the babcias and the halmeonies out there. But what I've come to realize is they don't give a shit. They just want authenticity. Grandmothers hate me and my food, and I'm OK with it.â Six and a half years in, Kimskiâs evolved far beyond its initial [Ko-Po experiment]( both in terms of food and its place in the restaurant community. Itâs ground zero for Marzâs [mutual aid]( food service, [Community Kitchen]( and itâs a prolific chef incubator, [nurturing talent]( and launching [independent careers]( for [dozens]( of young chefs. Kimâs earned some me-time. And heâs earned this unfamiliar serenity thatâs allowed him to take a walkabout in Amsterdam and Brussels without freaking out about whether heâd ordered onions. Heâs been painting like mad, free from the worry about whether he left the kitchen with enough buns. And heâs been able to help out the chefs popping up at Kimski until his return without stressing that the restaurant will spiral into chaos. It has also allowed him to start thinking about the next phase for Kimskiâs menu, which you can get a taste of on December 12, when Kim takes over the kitchen at the Kedzie Inn for [Monday Night Foodball]( the Readerâs weekly chef pop-up in Irving Park. Whatâs that look like? Itâs a lot more traditionally Korean, a little more upscale, but above all, âI want to just selfishly make food that I want to eat.â That means your grandma might be weirded out by the way he tosses his chap chae á la minute with a ginger-sesame dressing instead of the standard soy-vinegar-sesame oil trio. Sheâll probably serve some side-eye to the [Heffer BBQ]( smoked brisket on his bo ssam platter, wondering where the boiled pork belly is. Her brow will furrow when she tastes his short rib marinade on the kalbi platter, which skews a lot less sweet than most, but still, âThat's the most humble fucking Korean meal. Youâve got your protein, youâve got your pickled veggies, you got your carbs. Thatâs my ode to how I grew up eating at restaurants and at people's homes. In the 80s, thatâs what put us on the map. White people were like, âOK, we fuck with Korean food now.ââ Iâm not sure what grandma can possibly dislike about his kimchi jjigae, stewed with [his momâs]( home-fermented cabbage, but she will likely be conflicted: âShe hates it when I use her food. She makes it specifically so that I eat it. But I think she also loves the idea of it feeding strangers.â Does change make you nervous? Donât sweat. There will be some Kimski classics, like the Ko-Po beef sandwich dressed with charred shishitos and smothered in cheddar sauce; and the dduk Bok ski, sweet and spicy rice cakes with muenster cheese and fried egg; and the soy-sesame sour cream-drenched fries with chili oil, nori, and scallions. Donât bring granny this Monday beginning at 5 PM at 4100 N. Kedzie. Just walk on in and order. No preorders necessary. Meanwhile, thereâs one more Foodball left in 2022, when MNF veteran [Schneider Provisions]( teams up with [Zeitlinâs Delicatessen]( on December 19, at the beginning of Hanukkah. Keep your eyes open for a brand-new Foodball schedule in January.
[Preview a brave new Kimski at the next Monday Night Foodball](
Check out Won Kimâs granny-triggering menu at the Readerâs weekly chef pop-up at the Kedzie Inn.
by [Mike Sula](
[Love, Charlie: The Rise and Fall of Chef Charlie Trotter](
by Chicago Reader June 2017 [The sweet steak sandwich should be a Chicago food icon](
Most commonly available in majority Black neighborhoods on the south side, the standout sandwich is unfortunately overlooked.
by [Ernest Wilkins](
[Issue of
Dec. 7 â Dec. 21, 2022
Vol. 52, No.]( [Download Issue](
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