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Home Health • Food

Eat. Watch. Do. — Riot Fest guide, Underground Railroad tours, plus Kyoten Next Door review

by Edinburg Post Report
September 14, 2023
in Health • Food
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It’s Thursday, Chicago.

Temps are cooling yet there are so many things to do across Chicagoland. We’re looking forward to Riot Fest at Douglass Park this weekend and live music elsewhere in the city this fall.

In food, we have a review for Kyoten Next Door, a decidedly lower-priced omakase restaurant from chef Otto Phan in Logan Square, that still packs a punch with flavor, Tribune critic Nick Kindelsperger writes. Stay tuned for his review of sister restaurant Kyoten on Monday.

Enjoy the weekend, we’ll see you next week.

— Lauryn Azu, deputy senior editor

Chef Otto Phan at Kyoten, 2507 W Armitage Ave, in the Logan Square neighborhood on August 24, 2023. (E. Jason Wambsgans/Chicago Tribune)

Kyoten Next Door is more than a sushi sequel, Tribune critic Nick Kindelsperger writes. At the new restaurant from chef Otto Phan, a 15-course meal goes for only $159, and the quality doesn’t falter. Read his full review here.

Robert Smith, center, and The Cure at the United Center in Chicago on June 10, 2023.

Robert Smith, center, and The Cure at the United Center in Chicago on June 10, 2023. (Vincent D. Johnson/for the Chicago Tribune)

Riot Fest is back this weekend in Douglass Park. Headliners such as the Foo Fighters Friday, Queens of the Stone Age Saturday and The Cure Sunday make it a musical showdown for rockers of every age. Read more here.

Chef/partner Matteo Lo Bianco prepares the first course of a tasting menu for dinner at Maman Zari, 4639 N. Kedzie Ave., on Aug. 29, 2023, in Chicago.

Chef/partner Matteo Lo Bianco prepares the first course of a tasting menu for dinner at Maman Zari, 4639 N. Kedzie Ave., on Aug. 29, 2023, in Chicago. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)

What is perhaps Chicago’s first Persian fine-dining restaurant opened in Albany Park in July. Read here how a former flight attendant’s cultural memories and an Italian chef’s cuisine finesse brought the project to fruition.

Yeule performs at Pitchfork Music Festival in Chicago’s Union Park on July 16, 2022.

Yeule performs at Pitchfork Music Festival in Chicago’s Union Park on July 16, 2022. (Chris Sweda/Chicago Tribune)

Eat. Watch. Do.

Weekly

What to eat. What to watch. What you need to live your best life … now.

Music critic Britt Julious names the shows she’s looking forward to the most this fall, including Victoria Monét at the House of Blues, Raphael Saadiq and Tony! Toni! Toné! at The Chicago Theatre, and Lauryn Hill at United Center. Read on here.

At Harczak's Sausage Company, on Higgins Avenue in Chicago, a smoked Polish sausage sandwich is made on Aug. 8, 2022. After being deep fried, the sausage is grilled.

At Harczak’s Sausage Company, on Higgins Avenue in Chicago, a smoked Polish sausage sandwich is made on Aug. 8, 2022. After being deep fried, the sausage is grilled. (Terrence Antonio James/Chicago Tribune)

Picking up a Polish sausage to cook at home should be simple. But in Chicago, the sheer number of options almost boggles the mind. Tribune critic Nick Kindelsperger lists his favorites here.

A beleaguered and possibly haunted new mother (Clark Backo) is the center of the supernatural riddle "The Changeling."

A beleaguered and possibly haunted new mother (Clark Backo) is the center of the supernatural riddle “The Changeling.” (Apple TV+)

“The Changeling,” now streaming on Apple TV+, “does more than merely depict the sleeplessness and no-exit despair of so much postpartum depression,” Tribune critic Michael Phillips writes. Read his review of the dark, fantastic tale here.

Oktoberfest on Division Street. The Lodge and the Die Kellerknaben Polka Band.

Oktoberfest on Division Street. The Lodge and the Die Kellerknaben Polka Band.

October is right around the corner, which means Oktoberfest is almost here. Break out your lederhosen for a meal at a Chicago restaurant near you — check out our list here.

Installation view of “William Estrada: Multiples & Multitudes” at Hyde Park Art Center.

Installation view of “William Estrada: Multiples & Multitudes” at Hyde Park Art Center. (Tom VanEynde/HANDOUT)

Rainy fall days were made for deep thoughts and museum gallery exploration. Indulge your creative self at 10 of critic Lori Waxman’s picks for exhibitions to visit this fall, which you can read here.

Clockwise from top left: The Antioch Baptist Church in Venice, Chicago's Finest Marina in Chicago, the Second Reading Book Sho in Alton and The Gillett house in Jacksonville are all Underground Railroad sites in Illinois. The photographs were made using an tintype filter.

Clockwise from top left: The Antioch Baptist Church in Venice, Chicago’s Finest Marina in Chicago, the Second Reading Book Sho in Alton and The Gillett house in Jacksonville are all Underground Railroad sites in Illinois. The photographs were made using an tintype filter. (Terrence Antonio James/Chicago Tribune)

September is International Underground Railroad Month. With this three-day itinerary to visit Underground Railroad sites across the state, you can visit the places where freedom seekers took refuge and get to know the stories of how they made new lives for themselves in Illinois communities. Read the guide here.

Jack Ball, center, as Seymour, and cast, in "Little Shop of Horrors" at the Paramount Theatre in Aurora.

Jack Ball, center, as Seymour, and cast, in “Little Shop of Horrors” at the Paramount Theatre in Aurora. (Liz Lauren/HANDOUT)

Paramount Theatre’s production of “Little Shop of Horrors,” which opened Friday, isn’t so little, Tribune critic Chris Jones writes. Read his review of the show he says is “packed with talent,” but needs some shaping, here.

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