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  • Foxtrot Brings Back 45 Former Vendors as September Return Inches Closer

    Foxtrot Brings Back 45 Former Vendors as September Return Inches Closer

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    When Foxtrot relaunches in September and reopens its Gold Coast store, the chain of shoppy shops will stock items from many local brands familiar to fans.

    Foxtrot co-founder Mike LaVitola is back leading the newly formed company, separate from Outfox Hospitality, the entity that filed for bankruptcy in May. . It’s supported by New York-based private holding company Further Point Enterprises. The new Foxtrot has gathered 45 former vendors to be part of the relaunch. The list is packed with Chicago brands like Metric Coffee, Marz Community Brewing, All Together Now, Big Fat Cookie, Do-Rite Donuts, Tempesta Market, and Freeman House Chai.

    But not all brands will return. Some refused, frustrated by the sudden closures, saying they’re focusing on other retail opportunities. Others, for example, Tortello, the Wicker Park pasta restaurant, weren’t asked to return. Foxtrot does have an agreement with Gemma Foods, a West Town pasta maker. While LaVitola praised the product, he says the new version of Foxtrot will be more curated.

    “While it sounds good that you have all this choice, you actually kind of lose your point of view,” LaVitola says. “And it just becomes, you know, it becomes too hard to manage.”

    LaVitola adds he’s seen a lot of brands he’s wanted to add over the last year or two: “Now I get the chance to do that, which is just exciting.”

    While the initial plan was to open eight Foxtrots in Chicago, with Old Town following Gold Coast, more locations are on their way including “a couple in Texas.” In June, LaVitola floated the comeback would include around 15 stores total. There are no plans to reopen in D.C. LaVitola, who founded Foxtrot in 2013, teased the unannounced reopenings of locations on Wicker Park’s Six Corners and inside the Willis Tower: “We’re looking to open new stores once we feel like we’ve got our operations, just totally, totally nailed down in the stores that we have,” LaVitola says. He adds there will also be changes to the coffee and hot food options with details upcoming.

    Many brands have benefited from selling items at Foxtrot, which gives them a chance to grow their customer base and draw attention from bigger national retailers. However, much of that goodwill evaporated on April 23 when the chain, the 33 locations scattered in Chicago, Texas, and Washington, D.C., closed without warning. For the past four months, vendors have been licking their wounds trying to figure out how to make up for lost sales and inventory. After LaVitola regained control of Foxtrot, part of a group that made a $2.2 million winning auction bid in May, Foxtrot 2.0 began making its pitches to vendors, attempting to convince them they had learned from past mistakes, that the new venture would return Foxtrot to its roots in aiding small businesses by showcasing their trendy snacks to diners who frequent chic restaurants with disposable income to spend on items made by well-known chefs.

    LaVitola says it’s been a whirlwind few months as he “gets the band back together” in talking with the old company’s former workers, landlords, and vendors, using them to knit the new entity. His role changed at the original Foxtrot in April 2023 after the company named Liz Williams as chief executive officer. Lavitola says he was no longer in control of the company, even though listed as a non-executive chairman: “Probably advisor is the best title,” he says.

    In November 2023, Foxtrot would later morph into Outfox Hospitality after merging with Dom’s Kitchen & Market, a two-location grocery chain that also had designs on expansion.

    Vendors who spoke with Eater shared trust issues and worried that Foxtrot needed accountability for putting hundreds of workers out of jobs without warning. Many weren’t paid for their food delivered, which remained at stores, visible through windows. Some received court notices as Foxtrot’s original company filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy. They were free to fill out paperwork to pursue payments, but vendors had little hope that they would recover any money.

    LaVitola and company were involved in several email exchanges and meetings to convince vendors to return. Justin Doggett of cold brew coffee maker Kyoto Black is part of the relaunch and was assured that the mistakes of the old Foxtrot wouldn’t be repeated as LaVitola wasn’t involved in that version of the company. He saw it as a positive when he saw former Foxtrot workers were back with the company. After Foxtrot closed, Kyoto Black was left scrambling looking for ways to sell its coffee to make up for lost sales.

    Doggett acknowledges there’s a narrative of LaVitola capitalizing on a devalued company, snatching it up, and restarting it without accountability. He says that’s not true.

    “The guy who founded it was not involved when this happened,” Doggett says. “…He saw an opportunity to kind of take this company that he started and buy it back and kind of like, uh, revitalize the image and the mission of it.”

    Foxtrot has begun offering cash on delivery to more vendors. That’s not a change for wine and beer makers but for other vendors — especially ones who make their items fresh, items that aren’t shelf stable — payment up front provides peace of mind. LaVitola mentions improving vendor communication about the number and frequency of deliveries and marketing support. Vendors also mentioned they don’t have long-term agreements in place. They can leave if the situation goes sideways.

    One vendor that wasn’t listed on the Foxtrot’s news release was Pretty Cool Ice Cream, the dessert company founded by former Publican pastry chef Dana Salls Cree. LaVitola says the provided list was preliminary. Customers will still be able to buy Pretty Cool bars at Foxtrot. Salls Cree confirms Foxtrot has ordered an assortment of her ice cream shop’s classic flavors. Pretty Cool wants to take advantage of Foxtrot customers who use the chain to connect with local products, Salls Cree says. However, there won’t be any special flavor collaborations in the near future. As Foxtrot remained in limbo, Salls Cree began partnering with other parties; Foxtrot lost its place on the collaboration schedule. Given the abrupt shutdown of the original venture and given how the company left so many high and dry, Salls Cree took her time weighing the pros and cons of returning to Foxtrot.

    “It’s such a sliver of our business,” she says. “But the question that keeps coming in — ’why is this taking up so much emotional bandwidth?’”

    James Beard Award winner Mindy Segal says she hasn’t been doing business with Foxtrot since Mindy’s Bakery opened in Bucktown. Foxtrot has sold Mindy’s branded hot chocolate mixes and other items. Segal says they have plenty of other business but would consider working with Foxtrot in the future.

    Meanwhile, Marz Community Brewing will once again sell beer and other beverages at Foxtrot. As the craft beer market has imploded, it’s important for Marz to be available in as many stores as possible, says Ed Marszewski. He’s hopeful the new ownership can clean up the “garbage fire” left by the previous regime.

    “They are going back to doing right to small guys, indies, etc. a platform,” Marszewski says. “We need places like this. Pre-merger, they really helped small manufacturers get traction. I think they want to do right again. Plus, they didn’t screw us over — our invoices were always paid.”

    Hannah Harris Green contributed to this report

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    Ashok Selvam

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  • The DNC Brings Wiener-Obsessed Politicians, Journalists, and Comedians to Chicago

    The DNC Brings Wiener-Obsessed Politicians, Journalists, and Comedians to Chicago

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    While the Democratic National Convention may not be a boon for Chicago’s restaurant industry, local politicians, journalists, and comedians are still planning on sampling the city’s culinary delights this week. Some point to a lack of variety in those diets (we have some suggestions for that); there’s certainly a tendency to stay close to downtown and visit the same North Side neighborhoods. Still, there’s some fun to be had, even if these visitors have limited taste buds and stick with pizza and hot dogs. Eater scoured the convention floor and asked politicians what they put on their hot dogs.


    Lori Lightfoot

    Former Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot.
    Scott Olson/Getty Images

    After taking a nearly year-long hiatus, Lightfoot returned to the media circuit this week with DNC analysis on CBS Chicago. The former mayor, who chose an unorthodox smorgasbord for her Super Bowl spread in 2019, prefers a “modified Chicago-style” dog.

    “Brown mustard, dill pickle slices, tomatoes, sport peppers, and celery salt,” Lightfoot says, “Sometimes also giardiniera instead of the sport peppers. But sometimes if the hot dog is really good and grilled right, just a dog in a bun.”

    Jaime Harrison

    Jaime R. Harrison, Chairman of the Democratic National Committee, speaks onstage during the first day of the Democratic National Convention at the United Center on August 19, 2024 in Chicago, Illinois. Delegates, politicians, and Democratic party supporters are in Chicago for the convention, concluding with current Vice President Kamala Harris accepting her party’s presidential nomination. The DNC takes place from August 19-22.

    DNC chair Jamie Harrison.
    Alex Wong/Getty Images

    The DNC chair kept his restaurant plans under wraps but his spokespeople tell us he’s a slaw dog fan. Harrison tops his dog off with chili, coleslaw, relish, ketchup, mustard, and onions.

    Grace Kuhlenschmidt attends the “Boys Go To Jupiter” premiere during the 2024 Tribeca Festival at Village East Cinema on June 07, 2024 in New York City.

    The Daily Show correspondent Grace Kuhlenschmidt.
    Arturo Holmes/Getty Images for Tribeca Festival

    The 28-year-old self-described “straight lesbian comedian” and Daily Show correspondent has a soft spot for Roost Chicken & Biscuits with locations in River West and Wrigleyville.

    “I was living in Chicago when the pandemic hit and on the news they started talking about how we were going to go into lockdown,” she says. “My roommate Andrew and I turned to each other like ‘We need to order The Roost NOW.’ So we did and that was the last thing I ate before I started wiping down my groceries.”

    During the DNC, Kuhlenschmidt will return to her old favorite and order the House-Style fried chicken sandwich with cheese on a biscuit, plus the chocolate chip bread pudding. When it comes to hot dogs, Kuhlenschmidt took a swipe at Chicago tradition: “When it comes to hot dogs, I need ketchup,” she says. “I really don’t care what Chicago or the National Hot Dog Association say. Ketchup is a divine condiment.”

    DNC senior advisor Keiana Barrett (the chief diversity & engagement officer for developer Sterling Bay) plans on sticking close to McCormick Place and patronizing Williams Inn, the pizzeria and sports bar in the South Loop, owned by the same Black family as Jeffery Pub, one of the oldest queer bars in the country. She’ll start with the hot wings, “fried hard” with ranch dressing, and deep-dish pizza with mushrooms. Barrett only eats turkey hot dogs and prefers them grilled with mustard, barbecue sauce, relish, pickle, and a dash of seasoned salt.

    Christy George

    Christy George, executive director of the host committee, speaks while the Democratic National Convention holds a media walkthrough on Jan. 18, 2024, at the United Center.

    DNC executive director Christy George.
    Brian Cassella/Chicago Tribune/Tribune News Service via Getty Images

    Winner of the 2022 Banchet Award for Best Alternative Dining, Sinhá should expect a visit from the DNC’s executive director Christy George (Gov. Pritzker’s first assistant deputy governor for budget and economy). Among her top picks at the Brazilian restaurant: mango salsa, plantains, chicken curry, and steak.

    “Best Brazilian food in the city recently had it and can’t wait to go back,” George tells Eater — not that there are a ton of Brazilian options in Chicago. “Their patio is intimate and beautiful, it’s a local woman-owned restaurant, and the food is killer.”

    When it comes to hot dogs, George ignores Chicago-style rules.

    “Ketchup and mustard, unapologetically,” she says.

    Don Harmon

    Senate President Don Harmon arrives before Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker delivered his State of the State and budget address at the Illinois State Capitol on Feb. 21, 2024, in Springfield, Illinois.

    Illinois Senate President Don Harmon.
    Brian Cassella/Chicago Tribune/Tribune News Service via Getty Images

    The Illinois state senate president hasn’t had much time to sit down and dine during the DNC.

    “I wish I had been eating anywhere but off the fat of the land, wherever food is put in front of me from reception to reception,” Harmon says on the convention floor on Tuesday before the delegates cast their vote for Vice President Kamala Harris.

    “Hot dogs you’ve only got three choices: you can eat it Chicago-style, you can eat it with mustard and onions, or you can eat it plain,” Harmon says, adding that he’ll eat any of those three options depending on the circumstance.

    “If I can’t spill I’m not above a plain hot dog, mustard, and onions when I’m low-key and Chicago style if someone else is fixing it,” he says.

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    Leigh Giangreco

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  • Pandan Brings Lumpia and Lobster Dumplings to a Gold Coast Rooftop

    Pandan Brings Lumpia and Lobster Dumplings to a Gold Coast Rooftop

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    When Viceroy Chicago executive chef Verlord Laguatan moved to the U.S. from the Philippines 16 years ago, he found all Americans knew about Filipino cuisine was adobo chicken and ube.

    The success of Kasama, Boonie Foods, and other spots has demonstrated Chicago now possesses a deeper interest in the cuisine. While working in Wicker Park at Indian street food restaurant Wazwan, he supplemented the South Asian menu with Pinoy-inspiredred items.

    Laguatan is now seizing a larger opportunity by bringing Southeast Asian flavors to the Viceroy’s rooftop cocktail lounge, formerly known as Devereaux. The space’s new name is Pandan.

    Crispy pork belly steamed buns.
    Viceroy/Neil John Burger Photography

    Lobster dumplings, spicy tuna on crispy rice, and steamed buns.

    Lobster dumplings, spicy tuna on crispy rice, and steamed buns.
    Viceroy/Neil John Burger Photography

    “There were plenty of chefs who have come from high-end backgrounds and now they’re starting to represent themselves and their culture,” Laguatan says. “We are now bringing the spice, we are bringing the funk and people are accepting of that. For many years people were like ‘Ohh, what is that smell?’ or “Ohh, that’s too strong for me,” but now people are starting to accept all of it and there’s a sense of adventure when you’re finding something new.”

    While there are still a few outdoor tables near the pool — which is only open to hotel guests — most of the space has been enclosed to allow it to stay open and provide views of Lake Michigan and the Chicago skyline throughout the winter. The decor focuses on simple elegance, with a main bar lined with leather high-backed chairs and club chairs positioned around candle-lit cocktail tables.

    The bar’s namesake shrub is the star of a signature cocktail blended with lemon, lime, and Don Julio Blanco or Seedlip Notas de Agave for a non-alcoholic version. Pandan foam tops a float made with Ron Zacapa rum, amaro, sarsaparilla, and tiki bitters. Other drink highlights include a wood-smoked blend of bourbon and cardamom and the Flight School, a gin and mezcal-based drink colored purple with violet liqueur and served in a bird-shaped glass.

    Viceroy/Neil John Burger Photography

    Viceroy/Neil John Burger Photography

    Laguatan’s food takes inspiration from Southeast Asia, pairing Filipino classics like pork lumpia and bistek tataki with sweet corn tempura and spicy tuna on crispy rice. The lobster dumplings with coconut curry, crispy shallots, and cilantro oil are inspired by the Nihari momo Laguatan made when working with chef Zubair Mohajir at Wazwan. The goal is to show the qualities that unify the region’s food.

    “Every island [of the Philippines] definitely has their own way of cooking and you’ll find throughout Southeast Asia some people eat spicy, some people don’t,” Laguatan says. “The biggest thing that will always be consistent is that there will be some funk to it. You’ll get your fish sauce and other ferments in there and all tropical fruits and other warm weather ingredients.”

    Flight School (Tanqueray No. Ten, mezcal unión el viejo, crème de violette, cocchi americano, lemon)
    Viceroy/Neil John Burger Photography

    Viceroy/Neil John Burger Photography

    Classic cocktails and more familiar bites like Thai fried chicken and nori fries are also available. Keeping to the farm-to-table focus of Viceroy’s ground-floor restaurant Somerset, Pandan’s produce is sourced from Mick Klug and Nichols farms. Laguatan is also growing ingredients; he operates a garden and beehives on the roof above the kitchen, one of the first projects he started after joining Viceroy three years ago. The menu will change seasonally, with warm cocktails rolling out for winter.

    “We’re continuously improving this garden, adding more things and using it as a learning platform for our cooks and sometimes our guests,” Laguatan says. “It’s for them to understand when ingredients are at their best and hopefully we can carry on this learning culture of using what’s around us. Working with our farmers and local vendors is how we keep our community alive.”

    Pandan, 1112 N. State Street, opening Thursday, June 20.

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    Samantha Nelson

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  • Somna wants to creep you out and turn you on, and you should let it

    Somna wants to creep you out and turn you on, and you should let it

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    In Somna, one woman is burning, and another can’t sleep. She sees a demon when she shuts her eyes. He wants to do things for her, to her. It’s Puritan England, and they set women ablaze for thoughts like this. She ought to know — her husband is the one who lights the torch.

    Becky Cloonan and Tula Lotay, the legendary creative team behind the gorgeous erotic folk horror comic, bill Somna as “a bedtime story.” Like a lot of erotic work, this is a double entendre. Yes, its lead character, an Englishwoman named Ingrid, struggles with disordered sleeping. Much of the story takes place in bed as she slips into dreams and slowly begins to lose track of the borders between her waking life and her dreaming one. But beds are also for sex — her repressed desires come to frightening life in her unconscious mind, and possibly the real world, too.

    “We went into Somna knowing that we wanted to tell an ambiguous story,” says Cloonan. “There’s no wrong way to read this comic. A lot of it’s gonna hopefully make people think about why they think it’s a certain way. If the demon that [Ingrid] is seeing isn’t real, why do you think that?

    “In the ’80s, there was a lot more of this kind of sexual horror stuff going on,” Lotay says. “There’s not as much of it now, but we’re bringing it back!”

    The pair are referring to what many have noted is a uniquely sexless time in pop culture, leaving a void in the sort of explicitly sexual stories that explored messier aspects of the human experience. Deeply flawed characters responding poorly to internal and external desire, and how the world responds to them. In that regard, their work feels refreshing.

    Somna is immediately beguiling, not just for the ways its lush art plays with reader perception, alternating between dreamy lust and folk-horror thrills. Cloonan and Lotay are working in a rich thematic space, exploring the ways repressive cultures and institutions harm everyone, even those who benefit from them. Initially inspired by a bout of sleep paralysis, the story gestated for 10 years before finding life as a miniseries for new comics publisher DSTLRY — an unusual and splashy entry in the burgeoning imprint’s line of debut titles.

    Image: Becky Cloonan, Tula Lotay/DSTLRY

    “A book like Somna, I know it’s not for everyone. We didn’t go in thinking, Everyone’s gonna love this!” Cloonan laughs. “It’s definitely a self-indulgent book that we think some people might really enjoy.”

    Somna is also arriving at the height of the romantasy boom in literature. Novels that take sex and romance just as seriously as their elaborate fantasy worlds are lighting up BookTok and Goodreads. Yet comics that cater to the direct market — your monthly periodicals famous for superhero yarns but full of other genre fare — have yet to make a big splash in the genre.

    “When people open [a comic] up, and they see it laid bare in front of them, it’s jarring,” Cloonan says, ruminating on why comics publishers have been trailing their prose counterparts. “I think we’re still suffering from the Comics Code, and the moral crackdown that comics in North America had while this kind of book flourished in Europe. I think the North American market is still a little trepidatious.”

    “I do think the reason there isn’t more of this kind of content in American comics is due to some of the movements you’ve got out there, [with] banned books,” adds Lotay, who is British. “It’s scary stuff that doesn’t happen so much in the U.K. or in Europe, France and Italy. There’s been a very different approach to sequential art. It’s massive there and they’ve always been pretty open-minded with sexual stories — as a teen I grew up reading Heavy Metal… kind of dark stories that are uber sexy as well.”

    The rocky shore of an English landscape with the ruins of a church visible and an angry horde barely seen in front of it. In an inset panel, a woman looks on in dread. From SOMNA #3 (2024, DSTLRY)

    Image: Becky Cloonan/DSTLRY

    Somna gets a lot of mileage out of the liminal space between danger and desire, playing with the reader’s perception. While Cloonan handles the script, both creators take on the story’s art — with Cloonan’s inky, careful linework telling Ingrid’s story when she’s awake, and Lotay’s dreamlike, painterly style bringing her dreams to life. This is also, consequently, where Somna’s most pulse-quickening pages are.

    “The thing that is passionate and arousing is the emotion behind what’s happening rather than just the visuals. We didn’t want to enter into something with just visuals that are like, Well, now they fuck, or Now we’ll show a dick,” Lotay laughs. “The point is the way Ingrid is becoming more and more entangled in this dream world, and stepping out and being enticed slowly. And Shadow Man being in the room, or hovering nearer and the words he’s saying to her — and then it builds up to the point where she gives in.”

    This is the tricky part in comics, in which the static visual image and the sparse prose have to carefully mingle to showcase characters’ arousal, but not give away too much. This is where the horror aspect of Somna helps a lot, with the dangerously loaded context of its historical setting and themes of female desire and sexual agency.

    A smokey painting of boats arriving in a harbor while, in inset panels, a caged and gagged woman is driven in a cart by a priest and witch hunter. From SOMNA #3 (2024, DSTLRY)

    Image: Becky Cloonan, Tula Lotay/DSTLRY

    “Even those moments where it’s full-on, I think I tried to draw where there was a lot of emotion there,” Lotay says. “And darkness as well, where you’re thinking, This is arousing, but actually, this is quite scary as well! It’s those fine lines.”

    In its final chapters Somna begins to shift into full-on thriller, as Lotay and Cloonan’s art blurs together and a murder mystery simmering in the background envelops Ingrid. Titillation and fear blend into an unsettling climax that leaves the viewer with much more to think about than what is real and what is not. Somna lingers, its historical rumination on women’s sexual agency and patriarchal repression echoing into the present.

    “What makes it scarier is the fact that it’s sexy,” Cloonan says. “At the end if you can put the book down and feel upset that you’re turned on by it, I think we’ve done our job.”

    Somna #1-3 are available to purchase digitally at DSTLRY and in print wherever comics are sold. A collected edition arrives in July.

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    Joshua Rivera

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  • A Luxe Mediterranean Lounge Brings Lebanese Cuisine and Cocktails to River North

    A Luxe Mediterranean Lounge Brings Lebanese Cuisine and Cocktails to River North

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    Three years after the debut of stylish and family-friendly Lebanese restaurant Medi in Lincoln Park, its ambitious owners have unveiled an upscale sister lounge that leans into a resurgence in Downtown nightlife. Mya by Medi, a chic Mediterranean dining and drinking spot featuring live belly dancers and fire performers on weekends, is open at 311 W. Chicago Avenue.

    Medi’s emphasis on Lebanese cuisine and aesthetics extends to Mya, but the atmosphere is markedly different. “Everyone goes to Medi for comfort and family,” says owner Paul Alqas. “Mya is more of a night out with dinner, cocktails, and entertainment.”

    Owner Paul Alqas designed the lounge’s Art Deco-meets-Mediterranean aesthetic.
    Ryan Beshel/Mya by Medi

    Alqas opened Medi in 2021 with business partner Elias Younan, whose father, Hermiz Younan, founded shuttered Lebanese favorite Kan Zaman in Andersonville. Hermiz Younan now helms the Lincoln Park kitchen with wife Helene Younan, but their homey style of cooking wasn’t the right fit for Mya. Instead, he’s tapped executive chef Alexander Willis, a Lebanese American who has worked at Dusek’s, Mordecai, and Soul & Smoke.

    Willis’s combination of personal and professional experience has resulted in a menu that places Lebanese ingredients and flavors in a new context. Mezze options include grilled octopus, which is sous vide for 24 hours and served with black tahini remoulade and preserved lemon chili crisp, as well as deep-fried potato bureka and seasonal pickles made on-site. A trio of pasta options includes babaganoush-stuffed ravioli (pasta shapes are subject to change) with braised lamb alongside entrees such as lamb shank shawarma with black garlic toum and red zhoug.

    An ornate brass lamp.

    A Moroccan-style brass lamp hangs over every table.
    Ryan Beshel/Mya by Medi

    A red cocktail in a glass topped with froth.

    Bright and colorful drinks are a theme.
    Ryan Beshel/Mya by Medi

    Mya’s menu is an ever-evolving project, says Alqas. He and his team audit their sales each month to identify the least popular items, dropping one or two older submissions and adding fresh entries every 30 to 60 days. Willis and his team are also mindful of seasonality and want to make sure diners have new dishes to discuss (and ideally, post to social media).

    That same rotation practice extends to the bar menu, which Willis developed with local jack-of-all-trades Bismark Vega. Cocktails are a key component in Mya’s identity with aesthetically striking drinks like Smoke Show (mezcal, basil syrup, lime, Ancho Reyes Verde), which is immersed in smoke under a glass bell jar, as well as Watermelon Sugar (Titos, watermelon cordial, Mavi Apertivo, grenadine) and the foam-capped Cyprus Sour (Sapphire Gin, Campari, sweet vermouth, egg white). The team also serve wines by the glass from all over the Mediterranean and there’s a reserve list of pricier bottles.

    A yellow cocktail in a rocks class cloaked in smoke.

    Smoke Show (mezcal, basil syrup, lime, Ancho Reyes Verde).
    Ryan Beshel/Mya by Medi

    A highball glass with a pale red cocktail and garnish on top.

    Fun and playful cocktails are a core part of Mya’s identity.
    Ryan Beshel/Mya by Medi

    A row of bar tables and pink plush stools.

    The lounge seats 80 inside.
    Ryan Beshel/Mya by Medi

    In addition to his ownership duties, Alqas (previously of boozy bakery Donut Slut) also filled the role of interior designer at the 80-seat lounge, seeking to weave together Art Deco elements and Mediterranean style. A fan of pampas feathers, he spent around 48 hours installing individual feathers on light fixtures, and the fluffy plumes appear throughout the space. Bold printed wallpaper juxtaposes against ornate Moroccan-style chandeliers, and there’s a private dining room with enormous sliding doors imported from Mexico. Workers are currently setting up heating and cooling for a back patio, which will seat 20.

    On Fridays and Saturdays, Mya ups the ante with live shows from performers who belly dance and do fire tricks, including donning a lit candelabra and moving through the lounge. These presentations kick off around 10 p.m. with an act every 20 to 30 minutes. “It’s a layer that adds to the ambiance and makes it very sexy and elegant,” Alqas says. “It’s something that everybody appreciates.”

    Mya by Medi, 311 W. Chicago Avenue, Open 4 p.m. to 11 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday; 4 p.m. to 1 a.m. Friday and Saturday, Reservations available via OpenTable.

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    Naomi Waxman

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