Second in LDN's 'Let's Eat' Series
[APRIL 12, 2000] The
Korn Krib on Route 121 in Latham reopened under new management on
March 30. The new proprietors, Michael and Demetrios “Jimmy”
Vanos of Lincoln, have leased the property and are open for
business. The
restaurant’s hours are 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Friday
and from 6 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Sundays.
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“We
offer family-style food at competitive prices,” according to
Michael Vanos, the older brother.
“All of our food is made from scratch, we offer daily
lunch specials and breakfast is served throughout the day,” he
added. A grand opening is not planned.
Most
of their business is by word of mouth.
They have many lunch carryouts to area businesses, and
people even make the 15-minute drive from Decatur for lunch,
according to the brothers. They
anticipate that the highway expansion project planned for Route
121 will only add to their business by bringing more traffic past
their establishment.
[Remodeled and reopened Korn Krib
on Route 121 in Latham.]
The
young men come from a long line of restaurateurs and bring many
years of experience to the business. Most recently they have worked at Daphne’s Restaurant in
Lincoln, owned by their parents, John and Stacie Vanos.
The brothers said their parents were instrumental in their
decision to pursue this venture.
The
Vanos brothers have done some minor remodeling.
They have added a dividing wall to separate the bar area
from one of the two dining areas, giving each more privacy.
The bar is equipped with a jukebox and a TV.
Michael describes it as “a comfortable place.”
A farm-scene mural is being painted on the wall of the east
corn crib. It will encircle the dining area. A teacher from the Clinton school system has been
commissioned to paint the mural. Demetrios Vanos said that the
venture is a lot of hard work, but “it is a lot of fun to meet
new people.”
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Michael
Vanos described the recent restaurant boom in Logan County as
good. He feels that
there is enough business for everybody, and that he, his brother
and their staff of 12 are well equipped to handle the job.
[The Vanos brothers, Michael (left) and Demetrios
(right)
standing in the east corn crib at the Korn Krib
Restaurant in Latham, continuing a family tradition.]
The
original Korn Krib, built in 1948 by Eddie Weiss, was constructed
from two corn bins. He opened it as a tavern where locals could
gather to eat, visit and play cards.
The building was later remodeled and called The Green
Towers. In 1996, brothers Jeff and Greg Burgett of Latham
purchased the building and reopened it as the Korn Krib
Restaurant. It became known as a family place with delicious food.
In 1997 the building burned, with arson was cited as the
cause, according to a Latham history book. Although the structure
was completely destroyed, it was rebuilt and leased to the Vanos
brothers. Greg
Burgett, a Latham farmer, now manages the property.
[Kym
C. Ammons-Scott]
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Happy
to be here
The
Restaurant at the Depot is among our county’s many blessings
[APRIL 12, 2000] Let
us digress; the food is sublime.
Now to the real story about The Restaurant at the Depot:
Chef Jeff loves Lincoln, and he says so with conviction,
even while reminiscing about his restaurant days in Galena and his
study of the gourmet science in the provincial cafés in the south
of France.
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Jeff
Tendick’s gentle, “happy to be here” style must be
contagious, because the whole crew at the Depot seems tickled to
be serving an intriguing menu of what Tendick calls “French,
general European and some Midwestern fare.” Server Melissa Habisohn, an LCC senior from Crystal Lake, can
barely contain her delight at mouthing the words, “La Boule
Boeuf Bourguignon,” and assistant server Michael Berkshire is
quick to assure diners that Chef Jeff’s special creation of
fresh beef tips, whole mushrooms, sliced carrots, aromatic herbs,
garlic and a hint of turnip, flavored with brandy and Burgundy
wine in a hollowed bowl of freshly-baked French bread is manna
from heaven.
Manager
Dan Knuppel beams with pride as Chef Jeff and his kitchen staff
present to the polished servers colorful and hearty dishes, from
16-ounce New York strip steaks to dainty cheesecakes laced with rosy
raspberry puree and drizzled with chocolate.
Assistant server Sharon Wilson, a Chicagoan from Hyde Park,
pours water and fills coffee cups with a careful grace.
Her thin yellow tie is just the right touch of foreground
against a crisp, white shirt. Server
Melanie Goforth, a Lincoln native with restaurant experience in
Naples, Fla., says The Restaurant at the Depot makes her proud of
her hometown.
[Chef Jeff's kitchen crew prepares
a variety of colorful and tasty meals.]
Now
back to the food. Even
the entrees shout “happy to be here.”
“Roast Pork Gentleman Jack,” “Chicken Tarragon,”
“Cotes de Porc du Roi” and “Catfish Supreme.”
That last one is evidence of the Midwestern favorites that
Chef Jeff has cordially added to the mix.
If
the European cuisine is a bit foreign to you (oh, come on, give it a
try), then order up some Railsplitter fries with two Wisconsin brats
on grilled sourdough bread, add some sauerkraut and melted Swiss
cheese, and tell the bartender to pour you a Leinenkugel Red.
Then you, too, will be happy to be here.
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Some
dishes are served with bread topped with Chef Jeff’s Calamata
butter, black with ground olives in an olive oil base and a touch
of something only the Chef can name.
The house bread is a soft, even-textured, sweet French
sub-roll, light with golden folds.
[Mark and Debra Howard (left) chat with Mike and
Debbie Kilgallen in the sun room.]
Happy
diners are unhurried; they chat around comfortably-spaced,
linen-bedecked tables in the elegant Victorian room, and watch
Lincoln’s downtown fade from twilight to nightfall through the
atrium of the sun room. Something
old and good has returned to Lincoln, leisurely dining in a lovely
place that holds many memories—the Depot.
[Chef Jeff is happy to be in Lincoln.]
With
the re-opening of the Depot, one suspects that Lincoln itself is
opening to a happy era. A
spate of other good restaurants have come to Lincoln in the past
few years, and several of the old standbys have expanded,
freshened up and kept pace with a generation that, like none
before it, enjoys eating out. Good restaurants in Lincoln don’t
compete with each other so much as they give us all reason to stay
in town, frequent them all, and count our blessings.
Click
here
to view more images of LDN's night at the Depot.
[LDN]
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Good
news and bad news on soybean cyst nematodes
[APRIL
10, 2000] One of
the below-ground pests of soybeans and other plants is the soybean
cyst nematode (SCN). This
creature is actually a small, parasitic roundworm that attacks the
roots. Most nematodes
can only be seen with magnification, but the adult females and cysts
of SCN are about 1/32 of an inch and are visible to the human eye. This
pest is important to Logan County producers because of potential
yield losses of up to 10 bushels per acre, and the entry wound can
allow plant diseases to enter the plant.
This could mean losses in the millions of dollars for Logan
County.
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Soybean
cyst nematodes were first confirmed in our county in the mid-1980s
in the Hartsburg area. Since
then, fields in virtually every part of Logan County have been
analyzed and found to have populations of SCN.
In early stages of field infection, no visible signs on the
plants occur. As
populations build in the soil, the above-ground plant parts may
start showing damage that is often taken for nutrient
deficiencies, compaction damage, herbicide injury or other plant
diseases.
The life cycle of the cyst nematode has
three major stages: egg, juvenile and adult.
The entire life cycle can be completed in 24 to 30 days
under good conditions. When
spring temperature and moisture conditions are right, the eggs
hatch into worm-shaped juveniles.
These juveniles then infect the soybean roots where they
begin feeding. As the
females continue to feed, they become so large they burst through
the root and are exposed to the soil.
The males simply migrate out of the root and fertilize the
females. The swollen
females then start to produce eggs. The eggs remain in the dead
female, which is then called a cyst.
Each cyst may contain up to 400 eggs, which will usually
hatch the next year, but may survive in the cyst for several
years.
SCN
is spread with lots of help.
On its own, these nematodes could move a few inches per
year. Anything that moves soil infested with nematodes will also
spread them. Farm
machinery, people, birds, animals and water are the main ways
nematodes are distributed. Water and machinery probably have the
greatest impact. Flowing
water can actually carry the cysts to other field areas.
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There
is good news and bad news when it comes to SCN.
The bad news is that you can never eliminate the pest once
it is in your field. The
good news is that the nematode can be managed to minimize damage.
The main form of management is the use of rotating crops,
but other management tools such as proper fertility, sanitation
and nematicides can play a role.
The proper place to start is with a predictive soil sample
test. Soil samples
are simply analyzed for the number of cysts and eggs that they
contain. Knowing
these levels, management recommendations can be made.
The
traditional rotation recommendation for most Logan County fields
is to plant a non-host crop such as corn the first year.
The next year a resistant variety of soybeans would be
planted, followed by another non-host crop in year three.
In year four, a susceptible variety of soybeans would be
planted to allow for maintenance of race 3 of the nematodes (the
main race in Logan County). Race
3 is a good type of SCN to have, since there are many soybean
varieties that are resistant to Race 3.
It is also a dominant race.
If allowed to build up in population, it will crowd out
other races that would not have resistant soybean varieties.
With extremely high numbers from soil tests, non-host crops
may have to be planted two or more consecutive years.
Logan
County test results have been running about 80 percent positive
fields over the last three years.
It has almost reached the point of saying every field in
the county should be rotated under the assumption that you need
to. There are also
several gardens that have been found to have SCN (from the green
beans, pole beans or other ornamentals growing there). Rotating crops is always a good idea.
For
more information on SCN or soil analysis, contact me at the
Extension office at 732-8289.
[John
Fulton]
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