Chicago Gets Loud: Steakhouses Go Global, Nikkei Crashes Fulton Market, and Why Your Pasta Now Wears a Tomahawk Short Rib
Food Scene Chicago
Chicago’s dining scene has never been shy, but 2026 Chicago is downright extroverted on the plate.
Start in Fulton Market and the West Loop, where the city keeps reinventing itself course by course. According to The Taste Archives, Osaka Nikkei is bringing a polished Peruvian-Japanese mash-up to Fulton Market, promising tiraditos and ceviches that flirt with nikkei-style nigiri under clubby lighting and weekend DJs. Just west, SuSu is set to be a MediterrAsian steakhouse with chef Alexander Willis channeling Lebanese roots through a lens of Thailand, Vietnam, and Japan – imagine sumac-laced chops sharing table space with fish kissed by nuoc cham and yuzu. WTTW’s spring 2026 preview also flags Kitty’s Cosmopolitan Club and Meze Table Market, hinting that West Loop’s future is equal parts supper club swagger and mezze-driven grazing.
Steak, of course, is religion here, but even that’s getting reinterpreted. Modern Luxury points to Trino in the West Loop, a “classic steakhouse” rewritten through chef Stephen Sandoval’s heritage of northern Mexico and Galicia. Think premium cuts brightened by citrusy salsas and smoky chiles, perhaps with a surf component nodding to Spain’s Atlantic coast. Meanwhile, Gibsons Tavern in Fulton Market, as noted by The Taste Archives, leans vintage tavern while keeping those beloved Gibsons steaks and old-school desserts. It’s Chicago’s comfort zone, just poured into a new glass.
Neighborhoods beyond the Loop are busy rewriting the carb canon. Lark Pizza in Avondale’s Guild Row, from Steve Lewis of Lardon and The Meadowlark, promises neo‑Neapolitan pies and Roman pinsas—airy, blistered, and begging for a cold glass of something Italian. Cornerstone Restaurant Group’s Dimmi Dimmi Corner Italian in Lincoln Park will riff on Italian‑American greatest hits with housemade pastas and spritz-centric drinking, while Vicolo from Chris and Megan Curren brings a European café-pasticceria vibe: handmade pasta by night, espresso and pastries with live music by day.
River North is getting Gingie, a Boka Restaurant Group project blending European technique with Japanese nuance, aiming squarely for “destination restaurant” status with an à la carte menu that’s serious without being stiff. In Wicker Park, Libertad’s new outpost will extend the Skokie restaurant’s soulful, shareable Latin American cooking to a neighborhood that lives for small plates and big flavors.
Recent openings keep the momentum. The Infatuation highlights Labriola Italian Specialties in the West Loop, where candele pasta drowned in bolognese and crowned with tomahawk short rib, sausage, and wagyu meatballs feels like Chicago’s answer to subtlety: absolutely not. Pizza Lobo expanding into the West Loop, Migos Fine Foods landing in Bronzeville, and a Brazilian jolt from Chef Thiago Kitchen & Cafe in Lakeview underscore how every corner of the city seems to be getting a new flavor accent.
What binds this all together isn’t just trend-chasing. Chicago’s food culture is rooted in immigrant traditions, Midwestern agriculture, and a blue‑collar belief that generosity matters. Local farms funnel peak‑season produce into these kitchens; Mexican, Polish, Black Southern, Italian, Middle Eastern, and East and Southeast Asian communities season the city’s instincts; and there’s an enduring expectation that even the fanciest spots feed you like family.
For listeners, that means Chicago is no longer merely the city of deep-dish, dogs, and steakhouses—it’s a living laboratory for global ideas grounded in local soul. Pay attention, because right now, some of the most exciting conversations in food aren’t happening in words at all; they’re happening on plates along Randolph, in side‑street bakeries, and in taverns where the lights are low but the flavors are loud.
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