|
Created January 25, 2002 |
© The Chicago Bar Project |

5910 N. Broadway (5900N,
1200W)
Chicago, IL 60660
(773) 275-2696
Moody's Pub is one of the best Chicago bars that you've never heard
of. Located in the heart of the Edgewater neighborhood at Broadway and
Rosedale, not many people beyond Loyola students know it's there. But, there it
is in all of its dark wood and brick glory. Not sure you want to head up to
Edgewater to check out the place? Perhaps you should consider that Moody's
serves up one of the best hamburgers in the city. Still not convinced? How
about this: Moody's has one of the largest and most pleasant beer gardens in
town, and has one of the most comfortable, fireplace-heated rooms in winter.
Combined with a laid-back atmosphere and cheap prices, Moody's is hard to
resist if you can motivate yourself to get up north.
Moody's Pub is located on the west side of Broadway, just south of Thorndale Avenue, Ole St. Andrew's Inn and The Bubble. The saloon is most easily accessible from the Thorndale Red Line El Stop, located one block east and one block north, or from the No. 36 Broadway bus that stops at Thorndale. If you're driving, a fair bit of free parking is available immediately to the north in the Broadway Bank parking lot. Metered parking also runs along both sides of Broadway. Better yet, make Moody's Pub a stop when renting out a Chicago Trolley for the night. Otherwise, a cab will cost you about $15 from the North Side. Once you're in the vicinity, you'll find Moody's 1950's tan brick and dark wood façade beckoning you.
Beyond the thick wooden door that comprises the entrance to Moody's Pub
is a large barroom, packed with 28 thick, wooden, low-rider oak tables and
green plastic chairs. Just inside the door is a metal washbasin filled with
peanuts (baskets to the side). Primo seating is available at the table perched
right in the circular front windows and at the large booth nook behind it,
surrounded with smoky mirrors. As you make your way to the back of the room or
to the beer garden, it can be a little annoying trying to get through all those
tables, as they are located very close together. However, it will all be worth
it in the end – just take a deep breath,
walk towards the back of the room via the narrow passage next to the bar,
and she'll be apples. Inside Moody's Pub is dark. Very dark. The
Inner Town Pub-like
reduced visible spectrum is due to the only lighting coming from the two
fireplaces at the back, candles on the tables, a single TV in the corner, from
the grill at the end of the bar, and from what I can only describe as funky,
expressionistic, 60's, back-lit artwork hanging on the walls around the room.
The entire room itself seems encased dark mahogany wood or at least the
floors, walls, booths, and long wooden bar that runs along the north end of the
room. There isn't even a Golden Tee machine to shed any light. This room has
that similar medieval England feel to Monk's
Pub and Friar Tuck, both located
further south, except that Moody's Pub has an interesting assortment of black
& white portraits, rifles, sledgehammers and cattle skulls behind the bar
(you know, the usual).
Moody's also has the same feel of
My Pie (a
phenomenal pizza joint on Clark in Lincoln Park),
Alfie's Inn (the "Camelot of Glen
Ellyn"; a burger & steak joint on Roosevelt Road), and the
Ground Round; places with lots of
wood, lots of meat, and the inability to see the color of and what someone might
have done to your food, the free peanuts on the tables or the cement floor.
During those precious few warm months in summer, the beer garden at
Moody's Pub is one of the best locations to unwind and enjoy the weather. The
enormity of the tri-level beer garden makes it seem more like a park, giving
Chief O'Neill's, Charlie's Ale House, the
Village Tap, and
Resi's Bierstube a run for their money.
Dozens of plastic and red-painted picnic tables (57 in total, to be exact),
three waterfalls bubbling away, and wall-crawling ivy all lie within the confines of a brick
wall with black wrought-iron railings that block out the noise of
Broadway, and in the shade of several large silver oak trees where sparrows
like to congregate. These birds also keep an eye on patrons and any scraps of
food that might be had. I once saw a sparrow carry off a French fry that was at
least as long as the bird itself.
Moody's menu, like its beer list, is rather limited but simple and quite
good. Moody's offers half-pound "Moodyburgers," seaburgers (fried fish
sandwiches), pork chops, steak sandwiches, fried shrimp, Sloppy Joes, onion
rings, double-chicken breast sandwiches, and salads for the ladies including:
"The Biggest Salad in Town," served literally on a silver platter. The
hamburgers (and outdoor dining) at Moody's have even been voted the best found
in the neighborhood by the Edgewater
Chamber of Commerce award, given the honor of "Best Burger" by the
Chicago Tribune,
Chicago Reader and
Chicago Sun Times, and recently
won the coveted Citysearch Chicago's "Editorial Winner" in 2001 for "Best
Hamburger" as well as placing #8 in the "Audience Top 10." I can personally
back this up, as the burgers I've had at Moody's are excellent. I even think
they are better than those found at
John
Barleycorn's, the Alumni
Club (easily) and bw-3. All food is served
with a healthy portion of fries and in wicker baskets like at
Jury's (another great place for burgers and
a beer garden), and will not set you back more than $6 to $8. A
Chicago Reader freelance writer, known
only as "Girl Moxie," proclaims, "I
suppose to you McDonald's types, $6 for a hamburger is a stretch, but you will
not regret it. I promise. I have a guarantee for you: If you disagree, you may
treat me to what you believe is the Best Burger in Chicago, and I will make an
objective decision... And if you're really lucky, you can buy me a drink, too."
The service is no frills, can be slow at times, but is reliable. If the food's
not your bag, head next door to
The
Room beforehand, and then to Moody's for drinks.
Moody's often has good deals on pitchers since all beer is served on
tap ($7.50 for Budweiser, everyday), and the selection includes Budweiser, Michelob, Beck's and
Berghoff (highly recommended). Pints of
beer are served in glass steins for $2.50. Moody's also has an impressive
selection of "Pub Potions," consisting of exotic summer drinks like the
"Rhapsody in Booze" that consists of bourbon, cherry brandy and dark creme de
cacao. In colder times, Moody's has apple cider, hot chocolate and "Fireside
Fantasies" like the "Keoke," consisting of brandy, Kahlua, coffee, and topped
with whipped cream. Getting to Moody's, even though it is a fair way north, is
a breeze. Either drive up and park in the spacious lot next door or take the
Red Line El to
the Thorndale stop (head west along Thorndale to Broadway and take a left
Moody's is only about a block away). No $15 cab rides are necessary.
Even though it's hard to do a lot of damage to your wallet at Moody's, keep in
mind that they only accept cash, especially as there is no ATM inside the bar
although there may be one next door at the Broadway Bank.
Upon a few visits to Moody's beer garden, I found the atmosphere to be quite conducive for conversations about hunting, Chris Farley and David Spade movies, a friend's lascivious habit of shagging his employees while being a manager at Burger King, and Indian food. The reason for talking about curry is that the Devon "Little India" and "Little Pakistan" corridor is just around the corner, between Ridge Boulevard and California Avenue a great place for an Indian meal, curry spices, for ladies to have stray eyebrow hairs removed, and to purchase live chickens (no joke). I also have to suggest the "Moody Blue" burger: a cleverly named hamburger topped with bleu cheese and, while I don't care for these myself, a huge slice of raw onion.
While it is a great place and may even have some international
notoriety from former Loyola students
("I'd say from Joliet on the south to just this side of the Arctic Circle,"
says owner John Moody), Moody's Pub is not to be confused with the subject of
Russell Drysdale's 1941 painting by the same name. Now hanging in the Vaucluse
Museum in Sydney, "Moody's Pub" is a great example of the lesser-known
Australian aptitude for painting. Recently in the article, "Australian-ness Captured in
Drysdale Retrospective," Moody's Pub earned the following description:
"Even Australians with no interest in or knowledge of art will surely feel a
jolt of recognition on seeing paintings such as Moody's Pub, in which four
lanky men have a smoke outside the iron-lace-balconied pub of an otherwise
deserted outback town..."
Since 1959, Moody's Pub has been an Edgewater institution that can't be beat for burgers, its beer garden and the comfortable laid-back atmosphere. Whether young or old, it's difficult not to enjoy yourself at Moody's in summer or winter, for drinks or food, day or night. It's especially hard to beat having a "Moody Bleu" with a few steins of Berghoff. Afterwards, head up the block to Hamilton's Pub if you're experiencing Golden Tee withdrawal or want to experience the best of Edgewater's dancing scene (an oxymoron?), saunter up to The Bubble or Sovereign for a cocktail (or Old Style out of a can), or head over to the Davis Theater on Lincoln. The Pumping Co. and the now-defunct Sixpence are also located just a few blocks north. When you're at Moody's, just remember: don't get too close to the fireplace and watch out for sparrows doing that pull-up flying maneuver that can only mean one thing duck! For more information, a couple of bad jokes and a coupon for a second dinner for half price, check out the Moody's Pub website. Bob's yer uncle!
~ Have a good story relating to this bar? E-mail it to me. ~
[back to the Chicago Bar Project]
written by Sean Parnell