Sunday, April 10, 2022

Sky-Hi Drive-In and Restaurant, Chicago; Eat in a Real DC-7 Airplane.

Menu Cover


Chicago's Sky-Hi Drive-In and Restaurant, in Chicago's Austin neighborhood, was at 102 South Cicero Avenue and opened in late 1963 with a staff of 22. The all-electric restaurant operated in a salvage yard DC-7. The plane's cabin was a 10-table fine dining experience perched over a luncheonette that served drive-in customers.






Hospitality Magazine said the Sky-Hi Drive-In was the Nation's first restaurant in a converted commercial airplane. 

The Dimas brothers, Jim, John, and Chris, evidently spent way too much money renovating and outfitting the 110-foot-long plan and the expensive professional kitchen facilities.
The drive-in, limited seating, and the kitchen were on the ground level. In the roof-mounted DC-7, a 10-table Fine Dining experience with china and quality silverware was available.


It may not have been the most favorable site located on a lot that previously held an auto body shop. 

Sky-Hi opened in 1963 but didn’t really take off — and closed two years later

For those of you that swear there was a Sky-Hi Drive-In at Midway Airport, you are mistaken. What was at 55th Street and Cicero Avenue was the "Trivic Airport Pines Midway Airport Restaurant."
Trivic Airport Pines Midway Airport Restaurant, 55th and Cicero, Chicago.

Compiled by Dr. Neil Gale, Ph.D.

Pepper & Egg Sandwich Recipe, Chicago's Lent Tradition.



The pepper and egg sandwich was created by Italians who immigrated to Chicago in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The owner of Fiore’s Delicatessen in the West Town/Ukrainian Village neighborhood claims that his establishment was the first to start selling the pepper and egg sandwich over 40 years ago. 

The sandwich was created out of the need for meat-free alternatives to Chicago standards like hot dogs and Italian beef sandwiches. Chicago’s Italian-American community is largely Catholic, and since 1965 practicing Roman Catholics are required to abstain from meat on Fridays during Lent, the 40-day period leading up to Easter. (Before 1965, Catholics were not allowed to eat meat on Fridays all year.) 

Pepper & Egg Sandwich; A Chicago Style Recipe.

Ingredients:
  • Turano or Gonnella Baking Company's Italian Bread
  • 1 tbsp. butter or margarine
  • 3 Jumbo eggs
  • 1/2 (or more) of a green bell pepper
  • Black pepper to taste
  • Chicago-style Giardiniera (optional)
Directions:
  • Crack 3 eggs into a medium-sized bowl. 
  • Scramble the egg mixture lightly with a fork and set aside. 
  • Dice the green pepper.  
  • Heat up a skillet and melt the butter or margarine in it. 
  • Add the eggs and then the green pepper and cook until just a little loose.
  • Slice the Italian bread in half and place the egg mixture between the two slices. 
  • Add giardiniera and sprinkle black pepper on the eggs if you so desire.
Compiled by Dr. Neil Gale, Ph.D.