Ann's Ham 'n' Cheese sandwich at Bronto Bar
There's a particular ache you feel watching a dish parade through the dining room, drawing twisted necks and ultimately a sigh at its destination. The ache comes from knowing it could have been yours, but you didn't order properly.
It was opening night at Kim's when a sandwich-shaped hole first formed in my heart. The dining room at the remade Sooki & Mimi was hopping. Tables were filled, the music was an irresistible party beat set in the late '90s, and James Beard Award-winning chef Ann Kim's Korean American comforts were jockeying for stomach space.
It was hard to know what to order, so massively order we did. But absent on our table was one square-shaped sandwich steeped in nostalgia and draped in American cheese. We ordered the hotteok, the Korean bun that acts as vessel for the sandwiches. We also ordered the kimchi and "Ann's ham" fried rice, which was studded with cubes of the housemade version of Spam. But I needed the sandwich.
Later that week, Bronto Bar opened, the subterranean drinking den that's down the alley and underneath the Uptown restaurant. In addition to a dazzling array of drinks, curated by flavor on the menu, there it was. The crown jewel in the quest for good eats: the best Spam-like sandwich $11 can buy in this city.
The result is a hunger-crushing dose of "Afterschool Special" nostalgia. Thick porky, salty meat is sizzled up into a juicy mouthful under a layer of cheese and topped with housemade pickles along with yellow mustard that does the heavy lifting of adding acidity to a bite with so much decadence.
It's now a must-order when I visit Kim's or Bronto Bar — and it's easy to cut into four sections to share with friends. (Joy Summers)
1432 W. 31st St., Mpls., kimsmpls.com/bronto-bar

Cease and Desist hot dog at LITT Pinball Bar
There aren't a lot of places in these inflationary times where you can get a lunch special (sandwich, chips, soda) for $10 — and even fewer where you can have it while sitting in a retro vinyl booth among dozens of blinking, whirring, dinging pinball machines. But that's what you'll find at this new eat-drink-play spot, courtesy of the folks behind the former Tilt Pinball Bar that used to exist just off Eat Street.