Chris and Mary Spagnola of
Emilio's Sunflower Bistro have never been afraid to start anew. Both business majors in college, the fearless husband-and-wife team met in culinary school when they each decided to follow a new career path.
After graduating in 1997 and subsequently working as chefs in various restaurants throughout California, the two had an opportunity to crew the kitchen for a privately-owned yacht. Newly wed, they put their stuff into storage and sailed throughout the Caribbean for over a year. The trip became a lesson in ingenuity and serendipity. "As most millionaires probably do, our guy had eclectic tastes, and sometimes he'd want peanut butter cookies at 7:30 in the morning," says Chris. "Stuck without peanut butter, we'd find ourselves crushing peanuts and making it fresh."
Emilio's tropical accents are a souvenir of the couple's experience. Papayas, mangos and tangerines stud the menu of the roughly two-year-old restaurant, and sunflower paintings created by Chris and Mary line the walls of the laid-back space. You don't need yacht-owner funds to afford this fare.
What do you wish you could change or pickle and preserve about the Chicago restaurant scene?
Chris: We'd like to have more independently owned restaurants. There are a lot of corporate restaurants with billion-dollar budgets now. They're nice and all, but it seems like the heart of a restaurant is gone. Knowing who's cooking your food is still an important thing.
What would your last meal be?
Mary: Donuts. I love donuts so much that if I could eat as many as I needed to, that would be fine.
Chris: A good old-fashioned pastrami sandwich. Whenever we get a chance of a day off, we'll go down to Manny's.
Where do you eat before/after a shift?
Chris: There's a great place, Gene and Judes Hot Dogs, in River Grove. If we get out of the restaurant late, we'll occasionally head over there for a dog.
Mary: I've been here long enough to be shamed into not eating ketchup (on my dog).
What's the can't-miss dish at your restaurant?
Mary: Our poached egg on ciabatta with St. George cheese, jalapeno mustard and black forest ham. I love the way the yolk turns into a sauce with the mustard when you cut through it.
What should we know about your restaurant that we probably don't?
Mary and I are always here, and we have our hands in almost everything that's made, from the salad dressings to the desserts to the butchering to the filleting of fish.