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Sunday, August 15, 2021

Eating Lions, Tigers, and Bears at Cafe Bohemia, 138 South Clinton Street, Chicago, Illinois. (1936-1986)


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  • The use of old commonly used terms, disrespectful today, i.e., REDMAN or REDMEN, SAVAGES, and HALF-BREED are explained in this article.
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Cafe Bohemia was located in the shadow of Union Station. The restaurant served diners who were attracted, in part, by the novelty of the dishes. Whether opera and theater patrons or Chicago sports fans, locals were welcomed by either restaurateur Jim Janek Jr. or a family member. The Janek's lived above the restaurant for many years.

The restaurant was opened in 1936 at Clinton and Adams Streets in Chicago by Janek's stepfather, Joe Basek, a hunter who first served wild game. In its early years, the restaurant shocked people by hanging elk carcasses outside the front door, the sight sometimes delaying traffic.


Although the game varieties became more exotic over the years, crisp duckling with wild rice became the most popular item on the menu. From the beginning, each order of duck included a printed card notifying the patron that their order was serving number 321, 4,782, or 15,978 of the house specialty, which reached one million on November 18, 1970.

Janek butchered wild bears brought into his restaurant by hunters. Janek would judge the bear's fat thickness and forecast the winter weather.

Hefty portions, such as porterhouse steaks that increased one ounce in weight each year—86 ounces for the last year in business and almost always served to groups—and an array of mounted heads of wild game—made the restaurant legendary.

Cafe Bohemia restaurant gave the world the buffalo burger and has served its last dishes: bear, hippopotamus, lion, moose, whale, and crispy duck with wild rice. After a secretive but raucous goodbye to staff and patrons on Wednesday night, May 21, 1986, restaurateur Jim Janek Jr. turned the lock one last time, closing down an establishment that catered to generations of eclectic diners from around the country. Employees said Janek decided to quit the business some months ago and recently sold the building to real-estate developers.
 
Cafe Bohemia's claim to fame and motto was "Chicago's Most Unusual Menu."

One menu (undated) shows a selection of game that would probably terrify the most adventurous eaters today. Diners could order Broiled Northern Moose Steak, Broiled Western Mountain Sheep, Broiled Western Antelope Steak, Roast Native Beaver (a 3-hour advance notice required), Braised Steak Strips of African Lion (served in a Grand Marnier Sauce!), Chopped African Lion Steak cooked with Grenadine and rice, or braised Bengal Tiger or Bengal Tiger stew, Moose Stew, One-half Pheasant under glass.

On the seafood front, Cafe Bohemia served a 2½ lbs Broiled whole Maine Lobster or a 1 lb African Lobster Tail, Two whole broiled large filets of Mountain Brook Trout, Fresh broiled or sauteed ½ lbs filet of Walleyed Pike, Florida Red Snapper, Fresh broiled or sautéed North Atlantic Whale steak, Deep sea Turtle Steak, English Dover Sole, and of course, the Chicago original Shrimp DeJonghe (created at the "DeJonghe Hotel and Restaurant" located at 14 East Monroe Street from 1899 to 1923. It was there shrimp DeJonghe was created by chef, Emil Zehr).

Other specials included Roasted Prime Ribs, Barbecued Baby Back Ribs, Loin of Pork, Calf's Liver with onions or bacon, Veal cutlet, Spring Lamb Chops (2 Triple Rib), and U.S. Prime beef Steaks of all cuts.

Order from over 20 appetizers and relishes, six unique salads, and more than 15 desserts.

And don't forget the "Stewart's Special" Coffee with 18% Cream (All You Wish) for 25¢ to round out your meal. Now it's time for a nap.
Circa 1950.
Fresh game is not for everybody. One person said that his in-laws talked about Cafe Bohemia recently. "Someone ordered lion, and it reeked. No one at the table could eat with the smell." 

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French cooking initially features so many sauces t the lack of freshness and off putting odors.

Masking Imperfections: Before refrigeration was widespread, the quality of ingredients could be inconsistent. Sauces helped disguise off-flavors or less-than-ideal textures in meats and vegetables.

Preservation (to some extent): While sauces aren't a primary preservation method, some of their ingredients, like vinegar and salt, could slightly help extend the life of foods in the days before widespread refrigeration.

Richness and Complexity: Sauces were a way to add luxuriousness and layers of flavor to dishes. Using ingredients like butter, cream, wine, and other reductions would bring out the underlying flavors and add a beautiful richness.

Status Symbol: Historically, elaborate sauces showcased the wealth and skill of a household. Dishes accompanied by complex sauces signified the ability to source expensive ingredients and employ skilled cooks. A sign of opulence and power.

Technical Prowess: The mastery of classic sauces—like the five "mother sauces" (Béchamel, Velouté, Espagnole, Hollandaise, and Tomato)—was a point of pride and differentiation for French chefs.

Foundation of Cuisine: The codification of sauces by figures like Antonin Carême and Auguste Escoffier in the 19th century turned sauces into building blocks of French cuisine. Many dishes were built around these "mother sauces" with variations derived from them.

Flavor Enhancement: Even with fresh ingredients, sauces were essential to building complex and layered flavor profiles in dishes. They created the depth and nuance that defines classic French cuisine.

Key figures in the evolution of French sauces:
Antonin Carême: Considered one of the first celebrity chefs, he codified the "mother sauces" (béchamel, velouté, espagnole, hollandaise, and sauce tomate), creating a foundation for the endless variations that came later.

Auguste Escoffier: Simplified Carême's work, streamlining sauces and focusing on refined techniques. His influence is still felt in modern culinary training.

6 comments:

  1. Had the Lion here. Very gamey. Very good memory

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    Replies
    1. Gamey and very highly salted to hekp disguise the taste ...

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  2. Had elk steaks. Very good. Had an 8 course meal. Something special for this Tennessee girl to remember

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  3. Just found four beer shooter glasses from the restaurant with the logo at a garage sale. Awesome!

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  4. I had the Lion. Tasted like gamey roast beef.

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  5. My parents took me and my sisters there for dinner in the mid-1960s. I also had the lion in Grand Marnier sauce. I suspect that the sauce was an attempt to mitigate the gamey taste of the lion. It didn't work.

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