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Lightfoot sets aggressive timetable for forging ahead on Chicago casinoFran Spielmanon November 5, 2021 at 6:21 pm

Mayor Lori Lightfoot said she expects to make casino recommendations to state regulators early next year. | Pat Nabong/Sun-Times

“I would like to get a final list to recommend to the Illinois Gaming Board some time in the first quarter of next year,” she said. “We’re very, very interested in moving this process along as expeditiously as possible.”

Mayor Lori Lightfoot said Friday she is “very excited” by the five “well thought out” bids she was dealt last week for a Chicago casino and plans to send a “final list to recommend” to the Illinois Gaming Board “sometime in the first quarter” of next year.

With police and fire pension funds hovering dangerously close to insolvency and mounting police retirements putting even more pressure on the police pension fund, Lightfoot set an aggressive timetable for moving forward on the downtown casino that had eluded Chicago mayors for decades.

“We’re very, very interested in moving this process along as expeditiously as possible because, as you know, the revenue from that casino will fund our police and fire pensions and no time [like] the present for that,” Lightfoot said Friday at an unrelated news conference.

Lightfoot again refused to discuss specific sites recommended by the four development groups.

Pretty much as expected, they include McCormick Place Lakeside Center; the truck marshaling yards adjacent to McCormick Place; the vacant South Loop site known as “The 78”; and the Chicago Tribune’s Near North Side publishing plant.

“I won’t [comment on specific sites] until we make a final decision,” said Lightfoot, who has left the all-important question of site selection up to the developers.

Lightfoot would only say that she is “very excited by the proposals” because they were “all very interesting, very robust and very well thought out.”

“Our team is still going through and analyzing them. Our expectation is that we will bring the various respondents in and let them do presentations,” the mayor said.

Seemingly lukewarm interest in a highly taxed downtown casino forced Lightfoot to push back her original summer deadline for casino bids.

But that didn’t stop major players from stepping forward last week.

They are Rhode Island-based gambling company Bally’s Corporation, Florida-based gaming giant Hard Rock International, and two separate groups with proposals spearheaded by Chicago casino magnate Neil Bluhm’s Rush Street Gaming.

Bally’s submitted two separate proposals.

Bluhm’s company signaled it was all-in on a Chicago proposal last month when it pulled out of the running for another new casino slated to break ground in Waukegan. But Friday’s turning of the cards revealed Bluhm’s Rush Street Gaming is behind two development groups with names that tip their hand on where they’d like to break ground: Rivers Chicago at McCormick LLC and Rivers 78 Gaming LLC.

Bluhm has long been considered a shoo-in to apply for the city casino license, given his success running the state’s most lucrative gambling mecca, Rivers Casino in Des Plaines — in addition to his close ties to the mayor. Lightfoot has received more than $200,000 in campaign contributions from Bluhm’s daughter Leslie and her sister Meredith Bluhm-Wolf.

Hard Rock’s bid as HR Chicago LLC came about nine months after the corporation received the Illinois Gaming Board’s OK to break ground on another casino in Rockford — and about five months after it opened a casino in Gary, Indiana, not even an hour’s drive from Lightfoot’s City Hall office.

Bally’s, which last month took control of the former Jumer’s Casino in Rock Island, submitted proposals for two different potential sites: one at the Chicago Tribune publishing center near Chicago Avenue and Halsted Street and another at the McCormick Place truck marshaling yard south of the sprawling convention center.

Both proposals call for $1.6 billion investments that include a luxury hotel, indoor and outdoor entertainment center, green space and fine dining.

Lightfoot is close to delivering the Chicago casino that eluded Mayors Richard M. Daley and Rahm Emanuel. But only after convincing the General Assembly to authorize the tax-and-fee fix desperately needed to make a Chicago casino economically viable and attractive to a developer.

Even after the effective tax rate was reduced from 72% to 40%, Las Vegas mainstays MGM Resorts International, Wynn Resorts and Caesars Entertainment took a pass.

The same Gaming Board consultant also concluded that “only a centrally located casino that is in close proximity to high-quality hotels and other notable tourist attractions” would be able to “meaningfully penetrate the robust tourism trends” the city of Chicago enjoys.

“Tourists generally will not patronize a casino in an area that is inconvenient relative to where they are staying or perceived as unsafe. Nor will tourists be eager to book a room at a casino’s hotel if there are no other easily accessible attractions nearby,” Union Gaming said.

Contributing: Mitchell Armentrout

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Lightfoot sets aggressive timetable for forging ahead on Chicago casinoFran Spielmanon November 5, 2021 at 6:21 pm Read More »

Lightfoot says Park District’s ‘brand’ damaged by lifeguard scandal, hints board president’s days are numberedFran Spielmanon November 5, 2021 at 5:22 pm

“My expectation is that [Avis LaVelle] will be making a decision relatively soon about what her future will be with the Park District,” Mayor Lori Lightfoot said Friday. | Pat Nabong/Sun-Times

“Avis LaVelle has given a lot of service to this city over decades stretching in different departments, different mayors and different opportunities where she has served,” Mayor Lori Lightfoot said Friday.

Mayor Lori Lightfoot acknowledged Friday that the Chicago Park District’s “brand” has been “hurt” by the sexual harassment and abuse of lifeguards and hinted strongly that Park Board President Avis LaVelle may soon be history.

Under pressure from her closest City Council allies to dump LaVelle for what they call her negligent and “tone deaf” response to the lifeguard scandal, Lightfoot signaled that the housecleaning that swept out Park District Supt. Mike Kelly and three of his top aides may soon take down the board president.

“Avis LaVelle has given a lot of service to this city over decades stretching in different departments, different mayors and different opportunities where she has served,” the mayor said at an unrelated news conference.

“I know that this has been a very trying time for her personally, professionally and very difficult on her family. My expectation is that she will be making a decision relatively soon about what her future will be with the Park District. And I’m sure you’ll hear from her at that time.”

LaVelle could not be reached by phone or by email for comment.

Earlier this week, the Park District fired three top executives — and apologized to female lifeguards for dropping the ball on their complaints of sexual harassment and abuse — after a blistering report exposed a frat-house culture tolerated for decades.

On Friday, Lightfoot openly acknowledged that the high-level negligence has undermined the trust needed to persuade parents to send their children to Park District programs and their teenagers to work at beaches, pools and camps.

“We’ve got work to do. The brand of the Park District — no question whatsoever — has been hurt,” the mayor said.

“I want to make sure that there can never again be any question that every single Park District program … is run with the highest level of integrity and making sure that kids’ safety and learning and being in a nurturing environment is put front and center. We have an obligation to assure our parents that their kids are safe and will learn and thrive and have fun at the Park District. I send my daughter to the Park District. So, I’m speaking not just as a mayor but as a parent.”

Lightfoot said her own biggest takeaway from special counsel Valarie Hays’ report was that the brave young women who came forward with their stories of bullying, sexual harassment and abuse were “finally validated” — albeit too late.

“We cannot have a situation where young women, in particular, but any person in a workplace is talking about abuse, bullying and, God forbid, sexual abuse, sex assault and those concerns and complaints are not taken seriously. I’m very disappointed and distressed to see what has happened and unfolded in the lifeguard program,” she said.

Lightfoot said she’s given interim Supt. Rosa Escareno marching orders to put systems in place across the board in all Park District programs to “make sure that anything like this can never happen again.”

“This week’s announcements clearly show that the former general superintendent repeatedly lied and repeatedly lied publicly about what he knew, when he knew it and what actions that he had taken,” the mayor said

“We have to hold ourselves accountable because we’re dealing with children. … We’ve got to … make sure there are systems in place … and if anybody deviates from that that there is real swift accountability for it because we can’t tolerate anything less than that.”

A former City Hall reporter for WGN-AM Radio, LaVelle served as former Mayor Richard M. Daley’s first press secretary before moving on to accept a top job in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services during the Clinton administration.

She now runs a media consulting company that has benefited from an array of government-related contracts.

LaVelle was appointed to the park board by former Mayor Rahm Emanuel and has served as board president since March 2019.

Finance Committee Chair Scott Waguespack (32nd) and Ethics Board Chair Michele Smith (43rd) have said they don’t buy the claim LaVelle made this week that she had no choice but to trust the repeated assurances she got from Kelly that he was taking action to clean up the burgeoning scandal when it turns out he was sitting on those complaints not for six weeks, as previously reported, but for six months.

Smith has noted the Park District’s inspector general reports “directly to her and only to her. And therefore, she had to have known certain things were going on during and in the run-up to the investigation.”

“The first responsibility as a matter of good governance and lots of experience is to report your findings and do something. And nothing was done. Nothing was shared. That’s her responsibility.”

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Lightfoot says Park District’s ‘brand’ damaged by lifeguard scandal, hints board president’s days are numberedFran Spielmanon November 5, 2021 at 5:22 pm Read More »

CPD officer shot police officer husband as they struggled over weapon she threatened to kill herself with: ProsecutorsMatthew Hendricksonon November 5, 2021 at 5:44 pm

An off-duty Chicago police officer was fatally shot Tuesday at this home in the 8500 block of West Winona Street, authorities say. | Brian Rich/Sun-Times

Jacqueline Villasenor, 39, was ordered held on $50,000 bail Friday.

A Chicago police officer shot her husband to death as they struggled over a gun that she had threatened to kill herself with when they argued at their Northwest Side home, Cook County prosecutors said Friday.

Jacqueline Villasenor, 39, was arguing with her husband, also a CPD officer, about 7 p.m. Tuesday at their house in the 8500 block of West Winona Street when she pulled out a gun and threatened to shoot herself, prosecutors told Judge Susana Ortiz.

German Villasenor, 44, grabbed for the weapon and a struggle over the 9-mm handgun ensued, prosecutors said. As he tried to take the weapon, German Villasenor was shot in the chest; the bullet pierced his heart and exited his back before lodging in a wall, prosecutors said.

The couple’s 16-year-old son heard the shot and went to his parents’ upstairs bedroom, where he found his father lying on his back and his mother performing CPR, prosecutors said.

Jacqueline Villasenor told her son to get her medical kit bag from her car and call 911, which the boy did, prosecutors said.

An off-duty officer heard the radio call that an officer had been shot and was the first on the scene, prosecutors said. Jacqueline Villasenor allegedly told him about the argument, which she said was over a previous affair she had, and the struggle over the gun when she threatened suicide.

That officer noted that Jacqueline Villasenor had a smell of alcohol on her breath, prosecutors said. She allegedly refused to submit to an alcohol breath test to determine her level of intoxication.

Chicago police
Jacqueline Villasenor

German Villasenor was taken to Lutheran General Hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

Jacqueline Villasenor was charged with a count of involuntary manslaughter. If she is convicted, she can be given probation or 3 to 14 years in prison.

In addition to her son, Jacqueline Villasenor has an adult daughter, her attorney Tim Grace told the judge.

All firearms were removed from the house by Chicago police after the shooting, Grace said.

The judge first ordered Jacqueline Villasenor’s held at $100,000 bail but then lowered it to $50,000 when Grace said he only knew she had enough money to post bond on that amount.

Ortiz additionally told Villasenor she couldn’t consume any intoxicants while on bond and to turn over any firearm licenses and ammunition still in her possession to police.

Villasenor is expected back in court Nov. 23.

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CPD officer shot police officer husband as they struggled over weapon she threatened to kill herself with: ProsecutorsMatthew Hendricksonon November 5, 2021 at 5:44 pm Read More »

Can a “single subject law” cure what ails Congress?on November 5, 2021 at 5:22 pm

The Barbershop: Dennis Byrne, Proprietor

Can a “single subject law” cure what ails Congress?

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Can a “single subject law” cure what ails Congress?on November 5, 2021 at 5:22 pm Read More »

Vending machine art is a thing!on November 5, 2021 at 5:19 pm

Chicago’s Art and Beer Scene

Vending machine art is a thing!

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Vending machine art is a thing!on November 5, 2021 at 5:19 pm Read More »

Southwest Side mental health clinic’s walls bear testament to the healing power of artZack Milleron November 5, 2021 at 4:00 pm

“Health, Wealth and Knowledge of Self” at the Greater Lawn Mental Health Center, 4150 W. 55th St. was the product of five artists. | Provided

The murals that decorate the Greater Lawn Mental Health Center are titled ‘Health, Wealth and Knowledge of Self’ and bear visual messages of hope for those seeking help.

James Allen says a city of Chicago-run mental health clinic saved his life. So, when he had the chance, he was happy to give back through his art.

That’s how he ended up helping with a series of murals at another clinic.

After a suicide attempt in 2001, Allen says he went for treatment to the Lawndale Mental Health Center on the West Side, and that helped him deal with his despair over the death of his sister and a breakup with his fiancee.

An ex-con and recovering addict, Allen, now 69 and living in the South Loop, says he had learned to paint in prison, where an art teacher assured him he had talent.

He says he couldn’t see that, though, until after his treatment, which he says helped him embrace the healing power of art.

He ended up volunteering for three years in the Lawndale center’s art therapy program. Then, in 2019, he got involved helping a mural project at another city clinic, the Greater Lawn Mental Health Center, 4150 W. 55th St.

Provided
James Allen — an artist who had also been a client and volunteer art therapy teacher at a Chicago mental health center — adds a coat to the background of the murals at a Southwest Side clinic.

“When you surround yourself with positive things, your life changes,” says Allen, who did setup work and touch-ups for the project. “It can’t help but make you better.”

Damien Perdue, 44, of Logan Square, was hired by the city to lead the project. Perdue — who paints under the name DMNOLOGY — had another artist, James Jankowiak, create a “visual structure” to keep the different parts of the murals separate.

At the center, Perdue, a vegetarian, painted a cornucopia, including an avocado — his favorite — to symbolize the role a good diet plays in mental health.

Provided
The cornucopia was painted by Damien Perdue, a 44-year-old Logan Square artist. The lines around those images are the work of James Jankowiak, a 51-year-old artist from the Southwest Side who specializes in abstract art.

Collectively, the murals are titled “Health, Wealth and Knowledge of Self.” They’re heavy on symbolism, each section containing a message for people who come to the clinic for help.

Terence Byas, a 39-year-old Auburn Gresham artist who goes by the name Dredske, painted a mural including a man in a wheelchair shooting a basketball — “the human spirit triumphing” over adversity, he says.

Irene Zuniga, 33, of Avondale, who goes by the name Zeye One, painted a geometric butterfly and grasping hands — a representation, she says, of growth and the bridging of generational gaps.

“Before, when you would walk in to the building, it looked so depressing by itself,” Zuniga says. “We needed that mural so people can feel safe.”

Click on the map below for a selection of Chicago-area murals

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Southwest Side mental health clinic’s walls bear testament to the healing power of artZack Milleron November 5, 2021 at 4:00 pm Read More »

Ultimate Side Recipes for Thanksgiving and Friendsgiving Celebrations from Chicago’s Best ChefsXiao Faria daCunhaon November 5, 2021 at 4:16 pm

We know some of you are mega-talented in the kitchen. And we know you cannot wait to put on a brilliant meal for your friends and family this Thanksgiving. Well, let us add some brand new recipes from Chicago’s top chefs to your table. Check out these ultimate side recipes for Thanksgiving that you can try this year!

Image Credit: Pasta II Conte

Rose Mary

Noodles are a great side dish for you to bring and you’ll become the gathering’s favorite guest. Especially considering you’ll be using Top Chef Season 15’s winner Chef Joe’s recipe for handmade Cavatelli ‘Cacio e Pepe’.

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Ingredients: 

2cups semolina rimacinata

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1cup room temperature water

1 pot boiling water, seasoned

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1c parmesan fonduta 1oz olive oil

1T cracked black pepper

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1oz butter diced

Directions: 

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Dump flour on a wood cutting board and form a little well with your hand. Add water in the middle and begin to mix flour and water together with a fork until sticky dough is formed.

Fold in the rest of the flour with a bench scraper and then use your hands to form it into a ball.

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Roll it a couple of times on the table, then wrap the dough and put into the fridge to rest for 10 minutes.

Pull out dough, cut into quarters, and work 1 at a time with the others wrapped. Roll into a long rope about ½” thick and then cut into pieces ½” wide.

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Take each piece one by one and press down dough into a wood cavatelli board. Push and slide down the board, then set on a floured tray. Repeat until all dough is used.

Drop pasta in boiling water.

In a sauté pan over medium heat, add olive oil and black peppercorns. Heat until fragrant.

Pull off heat and add 2oz of the pasta cooking water, and then the pasta. After about 2- 3 minutes the pasta will begin to float.

Cook pasta down with water until it begins to thicken. Add fonduta, cook another minute, add butter, and then season to taste. Plate and crack fresh black pepper over the top.

Image Credit: Delish.com

Andros Taverna

Is it even Thanksgiving if there aren’t any sides of potatoes? Chef Doug’s Skordalia is the dish you didn’t know you need in your life and it will for sure be the talk of your family’s gathering.

Ingredients:

1 lb gold potatoes

kosher salt to taste

3 to 6 garlic cloves

¼ cup plus 2 tbsp fresh lemon juice

¾ cup Iliada extra virgin olive oil

Black pepper to taste

Directions: 

Boil potatoes with the skins on until tender and cooked through.
Once cooked, remove from the water and peel the skin off the potatoes.
Crush the tender potatoes with a whisk.
Add the lemon juice, minced garlic and olive oil. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Store in the refrigerator until serving.
Image Credit: chopsticks and flour

urbanbelly, Table at Crate, Chef BK’s Pizza & Parm Shop, Chef BK’s Ramen Bar

We know you’re wondering what pesto has to do with Thanksgiving. But pesto doesn’t have to be exclusive to Italian cooking. It’s just a combination of nuts and oil and herbs and other ingredients, and it can be used in anything from a dipping sauce to a soup to a marinade or to a sandwich. So Chef Bill Kim took Asian versions of these ingredients—like kimchi instead of cheese for a little fermented element—and created a similarly balanced sauce that is distinctly Korean. It adds intensity and will elevate the flavors in your food.

Prep time: 10 minutes

Makes: 1 cup

Ingredients:

¼ cup Nuoc Cham Sauce (page 42)

¼ cup Lemongrass Chili Sauce (page 36)

1 chipotle chili in adobo sauce, plus 1 tablespoon adobo sauce

¼ cup kimchi, homemade (page 166) or store-bought

¼ cup dry-roasted peanuts

½ cup fresh basil leaves, firmly packed

¼ cup olive oil

Directions: 

Place the Nuoc Cham Sauce, Lemongrass Chili Sauce, chipotle chili and adobo sauce, kimchi, peanuts, basil, and oil in a food processor and process for about 1 minute, until coarsely blended.

Transfer to an airtight container and refrigerate for up to 2 weeks or freeze for up to 2 months. Or freeze in standard ice-cube trays, then transfer the cubes (about 2 tablespoons each) to plastic freezer bags and freeze for up to 2 months.

Image Credit: WellPlated

BLVD Steakhouse

A wise person once said if you don’t like Brussels Sprouts, it’s because you’ve never had them prepared the right way, and you’ll learn that’s true when you try Chef Johnny’s amazing recipe.

Serves: Two

Ingredients: 

1 lb. Brussels sprouts

1/4 lb. bacon

1 red bell pepper

2 eggs

1/4 Lime wedge

¼ C. Grapeseed oil

1 T. white vinegar or pickle juice

Salt & Pepper to taste

Directions: 

Clean the Brussels sprouts by cutting the bottom off and splitting them in half.

Toss with grapeseed oil, salt and pepper, and roast at 350*F for 10-12 minutes or until lightly caramelized and tender but not mushy.

Dice and render bacon until crispy. Strain off bacon grease and set aside.

Roast red bell pepper over an open flame. If you don’t have a gas range, place whole peppers in a 400*F oven until soft and caramelized. Place roasted peppers in a mixing bowl with a lid and set aside on a countertop until the peppers have cooled to room temperature. When the peppers are cool enough to handle, peel the skin and scrape the seeds. Discard the skins and seeds.

Transfer the roasted red pepper flesh to a blender and purée until smooth.

Season with a pinch of salt and pepper.

In a saucepot, bring water to a boil.

Add white vinegar or pickle juice to the poach pot.

Crack one egg and gently place in the simmering water. You don’t want the water to boil too rapidly; it might break apart the egg. Give the water a little swirl with a spoon to keep the egg moving and not sticking to the bottom. Cook the poached egg as long as you desire. I suggest 2-3 minutes for a nice runny yolk.

Now you can assemble the dish! Start by placing a few spoonfuls of red pepper sauce in the bottom of your favorite bowl or side dish.

Next, toss the roasted Brussels sprouts with the cooked bacon. Adjust seasoning with salt and pepper as needed.

Place the bacon/brussels sprouts mix over the red pepper sauce and top with a poached egg. Squeeze a wedge of lime over the top for a nice touch of acid and bon appétite!

Image Credit: Taste of Home

The Press Room

Move over Pumpkin, this Stuffed Kabocha Squash recipe is the perfect side dish to serve this Thanksgiving

For the filling:

12 baby portabella mushrooms

1 small eggplant

1 roma tomato

1/2 bunch Swiss chard

2 shallots

3 tablespoons sage

2 honey crisp apples

1 C white wine

2 C cooked rice

1 C feta crumbles
2 T toasted pumpkin seeds
1 kabocha squash

Directions:

Preheat oven to 375 degrees, cut kabocha squash in half, scoop out the seeds and place in the oven for 30 minutes

 Dice eggplant, Swiss chard, shallots, apples, and mushrooms and cook over high heat until caramelized

Add your sage and deglaze the pan with white wine.  Let sit until squash is done cooking.

In a food processor, blend together the cooked rice and cooked vegetables until smooth, remove the squash from the oven and place the filling in the halved squash, and crumble feta on top, bake at 375 for an additional 5 minutes, then turn on the broiler for 2 minutes.

Pull out of the oven and serve immediately. Garnish with pumpkin seed.

PS: The squash itself is a great option for gluten-free and vegan guests alike

For the sauce:

1 cucumber

2 cloves garlic

1 C yogurt

1/2 lemon

2T extra virgin olive oil

2T black pepper

Grate the cucumber and garlic on a cheese grater and lightly season with salt, let sit for about 30 minutes and then with cheese cloth or a towel ring them dry.  Combine the yogurt and cucumber mixture with lemon juice, extra virgin olive oil and black pepper.

Image Credit: Food Network

Funkenhausen

The hearty casserole gets its satisfying chew from day-old soft pretzels. While excellent baked until crispy in a skillet or roasting pan, it also makes a fine stuffing for poultry or pork. If using as a stuffing for whole birds, he recommends adding the mixture to the cavity immediately before roasting. I’ve included the full recipe below.

Serves 4

Time: 1 hour, 50 minutes

Ingredients:

10 cups (1 lb. 12 oz.) day-old soft pretzels, cut in 1-in. pieces

2 Tbsp. unsalted butter, plus more for greasing

1 cup (5 oz.) carrots, finely chopped

1 cup (4¾ oz.) celery, finely chopped

1 cup (5½ oz.) onions, finely chopped

Kosher salt

2 medium garlic cloves, minced (2 tsp.)

½ tsp. poultry seasoning

1 Tbsp. finely chopped fresh sage

1 Tbsp. finely chopped fresh thyme

2 Tbsp. chopped fresh parsley

½ tsp. freshly ground black pepper

1 lb. bratwurst or other mild sausage, casings removed

2 large eggs, lightly beaten

1 cup chicken stock

One 11-oz. can condensed cream of celery soup

Directions:

Preheat an oven to 350°F.

Spread the pretzels out in a single layer on 2 large baking sheets, then transfer to the oven and toast until the pretzel pieces are until just lightly golden and crispy, 15–17 minutes.

Transfer the pretzel pieces to a large bowl and set aside to cool to room temperature.In a large skillet over medium heat, melt the butter.

When the foam begins to subside, add the carrots, celery, onions, season lightly with koshers salt, and cook, stirring frequently, until the vegetables are tender, 12–14 minutes.

Add the garlic and poultry seasoning and continue cooking until fragrant, 2–3 minutes more.

Stir in the sage, thyme, parsley, and black pepper, remove from heat, then scrape the mixture into the bowl with the pretzel pieces.

Wipe out the skillet and return it to medium heat. Add the sausage and cook, stirring frequently and breaking the meat apart with a wooden spoon until it is cooked through, 10–12 minutes.

Transfer the sausage and any drippings to the pretzel mixture. Stir gently to combine, then add the eggs, chicken stock, and cream of celery soup.

Use a silicone spatula to fold the mixture together.

Butter a 12-inch cast iron skillet or roasting pan, then transfer the stuffing into it, pressing down gently with a spatula.

Cover with aluminum foil, transfer to the oven and bake until heated through, about 30 minutes. Uncover and continue baking until golden brown and slightly crispy on the edges, 20-30 minutes more.

Chef John Boudouvas’ Roasted Butternut Squash & Ground Turkey Arancini with Marsala Brown Gravy

Nonnina

Ingredients:

1-1/2 pounds butternut squash, peeled and cubed

3 tablespoons olive oil, divided

1 shallot, minced

2 garlic cloves, minced

1 cup arborio rice

5 cups chicken

1/2 tablespoon salt

1 teaspoon black pepper

1/4 cup honey

1 bunch fresh sage finely chopped (about 10-15 leaves)

1 ½ pound Cooked Ground Turkey

3 eggs

6 ounces grated Parmesan Cheese

1/2 cup flour

1-1/2 cups panko breadcrumbs

Canola oil

Directions:

Preheat oven to 400 degrees.

Toss butternut squash with 2 tablespoons olive oil and spread on a baking sheet. Roast for about 20 minutes, stirring once about halfway through. It should be soft when pierced with a fork when it is done.

While squash is cooking, heat remaining one tablespoon of oil in a medium saucepan over medium high heat. Sauté the shallot and garlic for about 1 minute. Add rice and sauté for about a minute, until the grains start to turn translucent. Reduce heat to low.

Add stock (which is preferably being kept warm in another pan on the stove), a half cup at a time. Stir until the stock is absorbed and then add another half cup until all the stock has been used and the risotto is soft and creamy. This should take about 20 minutes.

When the squash is done, add it to the saucepan and stir until the squash has mostly broken down and is well-incorporated into the risotto. You may need to add a bit more stock to make this happen.

At this point fold in the cooked ground turkey, chopped sage, parmesan, salt and pepper.

Remove the risotto from the heat once the mixture has become quite stiff. Refrigerate the risotto for at least an hour or until it’s cool enough to handle. You could also prepare up to this point a day before completing the recipe.

While the risotto is cooling, Heat the honey very slowly in a small saucepan. Once it’s warm and liquid (about 100 degrees or so) remove it from the heat and add the sage leaves. You might want to muddle the leaves a little to help with the flavor extraction, but you’ll be fishing these sage leaves out later so don’t mash them up too much. Set the honey mixture aside.

When you’re ready to make your arancini get everything set up first. Have a bowl for each:  flour, 3 eggs beaten, panko.

Mix 1 lightly beaten egg into the risotto. Use a tablespoon and get a big scoop of risotto. Then roll the ball in flour, then dip in egg and finally roll in panko. Set aside on a tray. Repeat for the rest of the risotto.

Featured Image Credit: Unsplash

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Ultimate Side Recipes for Thanksgiving and Friendsgiving Celebrations from Chicago’s Best ChefsXiao Faria daCunhaon November 5, 2021 at 4:16 pm Read More »

Chicago Holiday Events 2021 including 108th Annual Christmas Tree lightingon November 5, 2021 at 3:09 pm

Show Me Chicago

Chicago Holiday Events 2021 including 108th Annual Christmas Tree lighting

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Chicago Holiday Events 2021 including 108th Annual Christmas Tree lightingon November 5, 2021 at 3:09 pm Read More »

How To Prepare Your Skin For Winteron November 5, 2021 at 3:00 pm

Just N

How To Prepare Your Skin For Winter

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How To Prepare Your Skin For Winteron November 5, 2021 at 3:00 pm Read More »

Previewing the top second-round IHSA state playoff gamesMike Clarkon November 5, 2021 at 2:08 pm

Lockport’s Ty Schultz (7) runs the ball against Lincoln-Way East’s Charles Nevinger (54). | Kirsten Stickney/For the Sun-Times

A look at the five best games in the second round.

Class 8A: No. 1 Loyola at No. 11 Naperville Central, 1 p.m. Saturday

Has any team navigated the pandemic better than Loyola, which is 16-0 this calendar year? The Ramblers (10-0) graduated one of the best classes in program history (including spring Player of the Year Vaughn Pemberton) but are unbeaten once more against a schedule that included seven playoff qualifiers. That’s despite losing lead back Marco Maldonado with a broken collarbone in Week 4. Quarterback Jake Stearney and running back Mike Regan have kept the train rolling. Naperville Central (6-3) is battle-tested with wins over No. 12 Hinsdale Central and No. 16 Lincoln-Way East, a split with Naperville North and a three-point loss to No. 9 Neuqua Valley. Quarterback Owen Prucha ran for 194 yards in last week’s win over Naperville North.

Class 8A: No. 19 South Elgin at Marist, 1:30 p.m. Saturday

Last week’s 24-13 win over Edwardsville was South Elgin’s first game to be decided by fewer than 28 points all season. This week, the Storm (10-0) looks to reach the IHSA quarterfinals for the first time in program history. Expect a heavy dose of running from a team that has piled up 3,094 yards and 48 touchdowns on the ground this fall. Mason Montgomery (979 yards, 12.4 per carry, 10 TDs), Anthony Marshall (659 yards, six TDs) and Jordan Jones (385 yards, 10 TDs) lead the way. Coastal Carolina-bound quarterback Dontrell Jackson Jr. has 1,950 total yards and 21 TDs for Marist (6-3), Four-star senior linebacker Jimmy Rolder — whose 11 offers include LSU, Florida, Ohio State, Michigan and Illinois — has been one of the season’s breakout stars.

No. 25 Glenbard West at No. 17 Lockport, 6:30 p.m. Saturday

Two of the state’s best defenses go at it here. Linebacker Pat Shadid is among the playmakers for Glenbard West (8-2), which has four shutouts and has allowed only 81 points all season. Joey Pope and Jason Thomas have been productive backs for the Hilltoppers. Identical twins Cole and Cody Silzer, who are both committed to Eastern Illinois, and returning state wrestling champ Andrew Blackburn-Forst anchor the defensive line for Lockport (9-1), which also has four shutouts and has given up only 70 points this fall.

Class 7A: No. 6 Batavia at No. 10 Mount Carmel, 7 p.m. Friday

Batavia (10-0) has had some close calls, including an overtime win vs. No. 8 Wheaton North and a one-point victory over No. 20 Glenbard North. The Bulldogs are another stingy defense, especially against the run; opponents have rushed for only 507 yards all season. The leaders are a pair of linebackers: Tyler Jansey, who owns a Wisconsin offer, with 76 tackles (14 tackles for loss) and five sacks, and Jack Sadowsky, who has an Iowa State offer, with 67 tackles (18.5 for loss) and five sacks. Mount Carmel (7-3) had 100-yard rushing games from sophomore Darrion Dupree and junior quarterback Blainey Dowling last week in the mud and rain against Thornwood.

Class 6A: No. 18 Lemont at Springfield, 7:30 p.m. Friday

In the score heard around the state last week, Springfield (7-3) beat Rock Island 94-72. It was the highest-scoring playoff game in IHSA history; amazingly, Springfield trailed 21-6 after one quarter. Senators quarterback Rashad Rochelle, a Rutgers recruit, passed for six touchdowns and ran for three more. Those 94 points are nine more than Lemont (10-0) has allowed all season. Lemont has a Big Ten recruit too: 6-3, 210-pound running back Abert Kunickis, who is heading to Northwestern as a preferred walk-on.

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Previewing the top second-round IHSA state playoff gamesMike Clarkon November 5, 2021 at 2:08 pm Read More »