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Created June 17, 2007 |
© The
Chicago Bar Project |

Fireplace Inn
1448 N. Wells St. (1400N, 200W)
Chicago, IL 60610
(312) 943-7427
"Best Ribs in Town"
As
the name implies, the Fireplace Inn provides plenty of cozy warmth for your
externals in winter via their namesake wood-burning centerpiece inside, while
your internals will be warmed with some of the best ribs in the city. In the
summer
months, your body and spirit will be warmed in the beer garden that doubles the size of the
place and could stand as its own sports bar and which is enormously popular for Bears games and the annual Wells Street Art
Festival, as is the sidewalk café that offers the best people watching on
Wells. Add to that its long history and you'll quickly realize why the Fireplace
Inn has become an Old Town institution, popular with locals and celebrities
alike.
Not to be confused with the Fireside Inn (Ravenswood) or Fireside Bowl (Logan Square), the Fireplace Inn is located in the heart of Old Town, on Wells Street next to the Suite Lounge and across from Burton Place and Bistro Margot. My friends at the Chicago History Museum tell me that the structure now housing the Fireplace Inn was originally opened in 1966 at "John Cale's Fireplace Inn," with Richard Novak having opened the present version in 1969. The building dates back to 1873, having been erected just after the Great Conflaguration of 1871, and was listed as belonging to a plumber, insurance broker, bookkeeper, and then the short-lived Rigoletto Opera Café in 1965. The current owner, of the Novak family, even lives upstairs at this unique brick two-flat – how old-school is that? If you're sado-masochistic and drive to the Fireplace Inn, you'll find valet parking for $10 out front as you've got a snowball's chance of finding street parking even with the meters along Wells. Chicago Bar Project recommendation: grab a cab or take the Brown Line to Sedgewick and hoof it a few blocks over. However you get there, the Fireplace Inn can easily be spotted with its flaming logo set upon a large, hanging black sign that matches the awning.
Upon
arrival, you'll locate the Fireside Inn's main entrance through the
sidewalk café filled with metal
high-backed chairs and cocktail tables. This area is packed during the Wells
Street Art Fair held every June and challenges the staff to prevent patrons from
illegally handing beers to those on the street. Step through the plate-glass
door and you'll find yourself in another
beer garden, this one being much
larger than the sidewalk café and which has more of a sports bar feel. The
entire area is covered by a retractable beige canopy and is even heated in
winter (for which they pay up to $5,000 per month just for the gas bill) Faux-timber walls
go well with the wooden floor made of well-worn planks that cover
what was once a parking lot. A square wooden bar with high-backed chairs
dominates the southeast end of the beer garden, with cocktail tables across from
it and a rear dining area in the back consisting of low-slung tables. The patio
is promoted as being the place for Bears and college football games thanks to the 70" big screen and
banks of TVs hanging from the ceiling and visible from every nook and cranny in
the space.
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The
beer garden features the full menu of the Fireplace, but if you'd rather sit
inside, you'll be shown through another plate glass door opposite the hostess
stand and into the main dining
area. This carpeted exapanse is filled with low-slung wooden tables topped with
burgundy tablecloths and white linen napkins. The room also features exposed brick and
floor-to-ceiling wooden paneling on the north wall, surrounding the impressive
namesake fireplace with a mirror set in above the hearth. The fireplace is said
to burn up to a ton of wood each winter and its woodwork matches that of the
back bar found at the medium-sized bar found in the southwest corner of the
room. The lofty ceiling at the Fireplace Inn boasts dark, thick wooden beams,
from which a huge wrought iron and stained glass chandelier hangs ominously over
patrons. The chandelier is eight feet in
diameter, six feet long and once hung in the old Federal Court building
in Chicago. While the city's smoking ban looms, you can still
smoke at the bar and at the tables leading up to the waist-high wooden partition
across from the fireplace.
An impressive array of blacksmith tools can be found opposite the fireplace, mounted to a wooden display on the south wall. A second display can be seen at the top of the carpeted staircase with brass rails, upon the north wall in the balcony. The rest of the area features low slung tables in the same manner as downstairs, but the main draw here is the restrooms, discreetly placed behind a wood paneled partition behind which a steady stream of the weak-bladdered patrons, primarily from the beer garden and sidewalk patio crowd, disappear momentarily. The balcony serves as overflow from the main dining room and occasionally for private parties, though its salad days were in the 1970s when the Rolling Stones used to come in after shows for the ribs and warmth from a second fireplace – this one of the cast-iron potbelly stove variety (since removed).
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Old Federal Building Chandelier |
The "Fireplace" of the Inn |
While
the fireplace is rather impressive, the real story at the Fireplace Inn is the
food. An 8˝" x 11" laminated
menu illustrates the board of fare, the
highlight of which is the baby back ribs that I've found to be quite good. The meat
is tasty even without additional sauce and pulls right off the bone. Each table
also sports a large jar of somewhat spicy barbeque sauce, which is good but a
bit runnier than I like. What I didn't like was the $4 charge for sharing,
though it would have been better than my wife having ordered the tomato and
onion "salad" (slices of the above served with bleu cheese crumbles) that she
found to be quite plain and not of the Mediterranean variety that we love from
places like Reza's. Fireside also
serves up Texas-style beef ribs as well as a nice selection of steaks, chops and
seafood. A wicker bread basket comes with warm bread as a nice touch. In the
2005/06 edition of Zagat's Chicago
restaurant survey, "'traditional' bastion of BBQ" Fireplace Inn was
rated solidly as "good" for food, décor and service, along with having 'excellent ribs'
('dripping with taste'), with an average meal costing you about $26. Zagat's
went on to note that, "...fans also 'enjoy' 'watching a game' 'on the huge
projection TV' or sitting in the 'nice outdoor area' in summer, but foes would
rather skip what they call the 'standard' fare and 'so-so service'." The kitchen
at Fireside is open until midnight every night and they also deliver. As for
drinks, you'll only find three beers on tap and a fairly standard selection in
bottles, though the ladies tend to prefer the "Big A$$" vodka lemonades,
especially in summer.
The
crowd at Fireside mostly consists of middle-aged locals, younger area denizens
lured by the outdoor areas and visitors looking for ribs. The Fireside Inn has
also been known to attract celebrities like Tom Hanks, Liza Manelli, Cubs players, and numerous
anchors from the local news outlets, which doesn't surprise me as the place is
easily the most elegant rib joint in the city. As for the best ribs, nearby
Twin Anchors consistently gets the
nod, and other notables to my mind include
Smokin' Woody's (North Center),
Gale Street Inn (Jefferson Park),
Miller's Pub (Loop), and
Carson's (around Chicagoland). When you're at
Taste of Chicago, you can check out the Fireplace Inn's signature ribs as well
as their boneless rib sandwich and mozzarella sticks at their booth. Fireplace
Inn has often been described as a ski lodge-type atmosphere, but I find it to be
more of a spacious Redhead Piano Bar-type place. Both are dimly lit, upscale but very comfortable and surprisingly good, though the Fireplace Inn boasts almost 40 years in business. In recognition of its popularity in Old Town, Fireplace Inn was featured on the recent "Ye Olde Libations: The Classic Bars of Old Town" pub crawl by the Chicago History Museum pub crawl the latter of which was led by yours truly. For more information, check out the Fireside Inn
website. Now hand me a wet nap!
~ Have a good story relating to this bar? E-mail it to me. ~
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written by Sean Parnell
