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Best Italian in Chicago 2026

Tony Mantuano opened Spiaggia on Michigan Avenue in 1984 and ran it as Chicago's only Michelin-starred Italian restaurant for thirty-six years; the room closed in 2020 and Mantuano left for Yolan in Nashville. Spiaggia's diaspora now defines the rest of the city's Italian scene. Sarah Grueneberg, chef de cuisine at Spiaggia for seven years, runs Monteverde in the West Loop. Joe Flamm, also a Spiaggia alum and a Top Chef winner, runs Rose Mary in Fulton Market. Around them sits the Lettuce Entertain You apparatus (RPM Italian), the Tuscan veteran (Coco Pazzo), and a generation of pasta-driven independents (Daisies, Etta, Piccolo Sogno, Quartino). Eight rooms below, ranked by what a serious eater in Chicago in 2026 actually books for an Italian dinner.

Eight Italian Rooms Worth the Booking

Monteverde Restaurant & Pastificio
#1
Chef: Sarah Grueneberg (founder, 2015); ex-Spiaggia chef de cuisine; Top Chef Texas finalist 2012
Cuisine: Modern Italian, pasta-driven, all pasta extruded or rolled on site in the glass pastificio
Neighborhood: West Loop · 1020 W Madison Street, three blocks west of the United Center exit
Price: Pasta plates $24–36; secondi $42–58; tasting menu $128; James Beard Best Chef Great Lakes 2017; opened 2015
Sarah Grueneberg's pasta program — extruded in the glass-walled pastificio at the back wall — is the most disciplined in Chicago in 2026. Book it.

Sarah Grueneberg trained at the Culinary Institute LeNotre in Houston and worked at Spiaggia under Tony Mantuano from 2005 to 2014 — chef de cuisine from 2008. She finished as Top Chef Texas runner-up in 2012 and opened Monteverde on Madison Street in the West Loop in 2015. The pastificio — a glass-walled pasta lab at the back of the dining room — runs eight to ten pastas nightly: cacio whey ricotta cavatelli, agnolotti dal plin, bigoli with anchovy and breadcrumb, ruchetta with brown-butter quail. The James Beard Best Chef Great Lakes followed in 2017. The dining room is bright, generous-spaced, and the front banquette is the right table for a wine-led dinner. The cocktail program is competent and the amaro section is serious. Reservations open thirty days out at 10:00 AM on Resy.

Not for: a diner who wants the secondi to do the work. Grueneberg's secondi are competent but the pasta program is why you book; lean into the pastificio.
RPM Italian
#2
Owner / Chef: RJ Melman (Lettuce Entertain You); Doug Psaltis, executive chef; Bill & Giuliana Rancic partners
Cuisine: Modern Italian; pasta-cart service; spaghetti carbonara, lobster pasta
Neighborhood: River North · 52 W Illinois Street, two blocks east of the Merchandise Mart
Price: Pasta plates $30–48; lobster pasta cart $98 for two; secondi $48–68; opened 2012
The Lettuce Entertain You power-room Italian — Doug Psaltis on the kitchen, the lobster-pasta cart at the table, the politicians at the front booths. Reserve weeks ahead.

RJ Melman, son of Lettuce Entertain You founder Rich Melman, opened RPM Italian on Illinois Street in River North in 2012 with TV-host partners Bill and Giuliana Rancic. Doug Psaltis, ex-Daniel Boulud and Le Cirque, runs the kitchen. The room is the Lettuce-group benchmark for a city power dinner — front banquettes for the political class, dining room for the everyone-else, a bar that fills standing-room past 8:00 PM. The lobster-pasta cart wheeled to the table, where a server cracks the lobster and tosses it through fresh tagliarini, is the menu signature and the visible-flex order. The spaghetti carbonara and the gnocchi alla bolognese hold the rest. Wine list is California and Italy deep without being intimidating.

Not for: a romantic first-date dinner. The room is loud, bright and political — book Daisies or Piccolo Sogno for talking.
Rose Mary
#3
Chef: Joe Flamm (founder, 2020); Top Chef Season 15 winner; ex-Spiaggia chef de cuisine
Cuisine: Croatian-Italian Adriatic; ribbed pasta, grilled whole fish, ćevapi-adjacent grilled meats
Neighborhood: Fulton Market · 932 W Fulton Market, three blocks east of Soho House Chicago
Price: Pasta plates $24–36; secondi $44–64; tasting menu $115; opened 2020
Joe Flamm's Croatian-Italian Adriatic concept in Fulton Market — orecchiette with sausage and broccoli, the wood-fire branzino. Try it once for the cross-coastal idea.

Joe Flamm came up at Spiaggia, won Top Chef Season 15 in 2018, and opened Rose Mary on Fulton Market in 2020 — the concept is the Adriatic, Italian on the west coast, Croatian on the east, served as a single coherent kitchen. The orecchiette with sausage and broccoli rabe is the lineage Italian plate; the pljeskavica (Balkan grilled meat patty) and the wood-fire whole branzino represent the Croatian half. The room is bright and friendly, family-style large tables in the center, two-tops along the windows. Wine list overweights Friuli, Slovenia, and Dalmatia — a serious cross-Adriatic program rather than a Tuscan formality. Reservations on Resy thirty days out. Flamm is on the floor most weekday nights.

Not for: a diner expecting traditional Tuscan or Roman Italian. Rose Mary's identity is the Adriatic — order around the grilled fish and the cross-cuisine pastas, not the conventional spaghetti.
Daisies
#4
Chef: Joe Frillman (founder, 2017); brother Tim Frillman runs farm sourcing; ex-Nellcôte / Pelago
Cuisine: Pasta-and-vegetables Italian; Midwest seasonal; farm-driven menu changes weekly
Neighborhood: Logan Square · 2523 N Milwaukee Avenue, four blocks from the California Blue Line stop
Price: Pasta plates $22–30; market-vegetable plates $14–22; secondi $32–48; opened 2017
Joe Frillman's farm-driven pasta and vegetable program in Logan Square — the cacio e pepe and the seasonal vegetable plates are the order. Book it for a quiet date.

Joe Frillman opened Daisies on Milwaukee Avenue in Logan Square in 2017 — brother Tim Frillman runs the farm sourcing program from a partner farm in Galena. The menu rewrites itself weekly around what is harvested: peas in May, tomatoes in August, kabocha squash by October, root vegetables through winter. The cacio e pepe is the constant; the pasta program runs four to six options nightly, all extruded in-house. The seasonal vegetable plates are the cross-program move — the pickled-and-roasted radish, the Sungold tomato salad, the charred broccolini. Daisies is one of the few Logan Square rooms with a serious natural wine program and the cocktail bar runs amari-led. The room is small, warm, and the conversation register is the right one for two.

Not for: a guest who wants the secondi to anchor the meal. Daisies plays pasta and vegetables, with the meat-and-fish secondi as a supporting role. Order three or four pastas across two diners.
Coco Pazzo
#5
Founder: Pino Luongo (1992; New York lineage from Coco Pazzo NYC and Le Madri); ownership has shifted but Tuscan identity preserved
Cuisine: Tuscan-Florentine Italian; bistecca alla Fiorentina; serious Tuscan wine cellar
Neighborhood: River North · 300 W Hubbard Street, in the historic Marshall Field warehouse building
Price: Pasta plates $26–38; bistecca alla Fiorentina $108 (40oz, for two); secondi $42–62; opened 1992
Chicago's Tuscan veteran — Pino Luongo's 1992 room on Hubbard Street with the 40oz bistecca alla Fiorentina and a Brunello list. Worth the bottle.

Pino Luongo, the New York restaurateur behind Coco Pazzo Manhattan and Le Madri, opened the Chicago Coco Pazzo on Hubbard Street in River North in 1992 inside the Marshall Field warehouse — exposed brick, twenty-foot ceilings, the dining room organized around a wood-fire grill at the back. The bistecca alla Fiorentina (40oz Florentine porterhouse, T-bone, grilled rare over wood, sliced to order at the table) is the headline cut and the menu signature. The pasta program runs traditional — pappardelle al cinghiale, tagliolini with white truffle in season, ravioli di zucca. The wine list overweights Tuscany — a serious Brunello and Super Tuscan section, with verticals of Sassicaia and Ornellaia available on request. Ownership has shifted across the decades; the Tuscan identity is intact.

Not for: a budget-conscious dinner. Coco Pazzo runs $130–200 per person with a serious Tuscan bottle, and the bistecca is the most expensive single plate on this list.
Etta
#6
Chef: Danny Grant (founder, 2019); Maple Hospitality Group; ex-Maple & Ash, RIA, NoMI
Cuisine: Wood-fired Italian-American; pizza, pasta, oven-roasted whole fish
Neighborhood: Bucktown · 1840 W North Avenue, with a second Etta location in Scottsdale, Arizona
Price: Wood-fire pizza $22–28; pasta $24–34; oven-roasted branzino $48; opened 2019
Danny Grant's wood-fired Bucktown room — the focaccia and the oven-roasted Branzino are the order. Pencil it in for a weekend date.

Danny Grant earned two Michelin stars at RIA in the Elysian Hotel (now Waldorf Astoria) and a single star at NoMI; he opened Maple & Ash with Jim Lasky, then opened Etta in Bucktown in 2019 as the more casual wood-fired counterpoint. The hearth at the back of the dining room runs the program: charred whole branzino, oven-roasted pork chop, wood-fire pizzas with house-cured pancetta and burrata. The wood-baked focaccia comes to the table first, oil-pooled and Maldon-salted, on a wooden board. The pasta program runs five to six options — the rigatoni alla vodka and the cacio e pepe are the constants. Etta the Bucktown room is the original; the Scottsdale location is the Arizona expansion. The room is bright and high-ceilinged with a Bucktown brunch crowd by day and a more serious dinner room past 7:00 PM.

Not for: a serious wine-led meal. Etta's list is competent but the cooking is the value here, not the cellar. Book Coco Pazzo or Monteverde for the bottle dinner.
Piccolo Sogno
#7
Chef: Tony Priolo (co-founder, 2008); business partner Ciro Longobardo; ex-Coco Pazzo and Tutto Bene
Cuisine: Traditional regional Italian; wood-oven pizza, hand-rolled pastas, Italian wine focus
Neighborhood: Grand & Halsted · 464 N Halsted Street, four blocks east of Fulton Market
Price: Pasta plates $24–32; wood-oven pizza $20–28; secondi $36–52; opened 2008; garden patio in summer
Tony Priolo's 2008 traditional Italian room near Grand & Halsted — the wood-oven pizza and the summer garden patio are the reasons to book. Try it once.

Tony Priolo trained at the Culinary Institute of America, worked at Coco Pazzo under Pino Luongo's group, then opened Piccolo Sogno with partner Ciro Longobardo in 2008 at the corner of Halsted and Grand. The cooking is traditional regional Italian — bucatini all'amatriciana, pappardelle al cinghiale, vitello tonnato — without the modernist intervention of Monteverde or the celebrity-room theatre of RPM. The wood-oven runs Napoletana-style pizzas through the dinner service and the garden patio in summer is one of the best outdoor dining rooms in the city. The wine list overweights Italian regions outside Tuscany — a serious Piedmont, Sicily and Campania program. Priolo is on the floor most nights. The room is the conversation room of the eight, register that splits the difference between RPM's loud and Daisies's intimate.

Not for: a diner expecting modern Italian innovation. Piccolo Sogno plays the traditional regional hand at a high level — book Monteverde if the pastificio counter is the question.
Quartino Ristorante
#8
Chef: John Coletta (founder / executive chef, 2005); a Lettuce Entertain You-adjacent project
Cuisine: Roman-Italian small plates; cured meats; tap wine by the quartino
Neighborhood: River North · 626 N State Street, three blocks south of Holy Name Cathedral
Price: Small plates $8–18; pasta $16–24; quartino tap wine $9–14 per quarter-litre; opened 2005
The Roman-Italian small-plate room with tap wine by the quartino — the cured-meat board and the gnocchi are the order. Visit once for the value.

John Coletta opened Quartino on State Street in River North in 2005 as a Roman-Italian small-plate room — the format is the cicchetti bar of Venice meets the cured-meat counter of Rome, served at marble bar tops and small tables. The cured-meat board (prosciutto di Parma 24-month, finocchiona, soppressata, mortadella) is the test order; the gnocchi, the spaghetti carbonara, and the meatballs are the secondary plates. The signature is the tap-wine service — house-blended quartini (quarter-litres) poured straight from steel kegs at $9–14, which makes the room the lowest-friction wine order in River North. Quartino runs as the entry-point Italian on this list — the value sits at $50–80 per person with two pours of tap wine and a cured-meat board.

Not for: a formal anniversary dinner. The room is communal, fast and casual; for the wood-fire branzino and the linen tablecloth, book Coco Pazzo or Etta.

How to Pick an Italian Dinner in Chicago

The pasta argument: Monteverde West Loop. The pastificio is the difference.

The power dinner: RPM Italian River North, front booth. The lobster cart is the visible flex.

The wine-led Tuscan dinner: Coco Pazzo on Hubbard. Bistecca alla Fiorentina and a Brunello.

The quiet date: Daisies in Logan Square. Three pastas, two vegetables, one bottle.

The cross-coastal idea: Rose Mary in Fulton Market. Adriatic-Italian by Joe Flamm.

The summer patio: Piccolo Sogno garden, Grand & Halsted. Best outdoor Italian room in the city.

The wood-fired weekend dinner: Etta in Bucktown. Focaccia and Branzino.

The casual value pour: Quartino in River North. Cured meats and tap wine.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best Italian restaurant in Chicago?
Monteverde Restaurant and Pastificio on West Madison Street in the West Loop is the lineage answer. Sarah Grueneberg, who spent seven years as chef de cuisine at Tony Mantuano's Spiaggia, opened Monteverde in 2015 and won James Beard Best Chef Great Lakes in 2017. The pasta program — extruded and rolled in a glass-walled pastificio at the back of the room — is the most disciplined in the city. The cacio whey ricotta cavatelli is the test plate.
What happened to Spiaggia in Chicago?
Spiaggia, Tony Mantuano's Michelin-starred Italian restaurant on Michigan Avenue in the Magnificent Mile that opened in 1984, closed permanently in 2020 after thirty-six years — the pandemic accelerated a long lease renegotiation. Mantuano moved to Nashville and opened Yolan at the Joseph Hotel in 2021. The Spiaggia lineage continues through alums — Sarah Grueneberg at Monteverde, Joe Flamm at Rose Mary, and the dozens of pasta cooks who came through that kitchen between 1984 and 2020.
Is Monteverde worth it?
Yes for any diner who cares about pasta. Sarah Grueneberg's program runs eight to ten pastas nightly, all rolled or extruded in the open glass pastificio that occupies the back wall of the dining room — guests passing watch the cooks at the brass dies. The cacio whey ricotta cavatelli is the menu signature; the agnolotti dal plin and the bigoli with anchovy and breadcrumb are the secondary orders. Plan $90–140 per person with wine. Reservations open thirty days out on Resy at 10:00 AM.
Where do Chicago power brokers eat Italian?
RPM Italian on West Illinois Street in River North — RJ Melman's Lettuce Entertain You room with Doug Psaltis on the kitchen and the lobster pasta cart at the table. The room runs loud and bright, the front booths are the political tables, and the bar is the bar. For the quieter conversation, Coco Pazzo on West Hubbard since 1992 — Pino Luongo's Tuscan room with the bistecca alla Fiorentina and a wine list that overweights Tuscany. See closing-the-deal restaurants worldwide.
What is Rose Mary by Joe Flamm?
Joe Flamm — Top Chef Season 15 winner and former chef de cuisine at Spiaggia — opened Rose Mary on West Fulton Market in Fulton Market in 2020 as a Croatian-Italian Adriatic concept. The menu reads as ribbed pastas, grilled whole fish, and Adriatic seafood — orecchiette with sausage and broccoli, the pljeskavica, the wood-fire branzino. The room is bright and family-style; the bar handles the wait. Plan $80–130 per person with wine. Reservations on Resy thirty days out.
How much does Italian dining cost in Chicago?
Monteverde, Rose Mary and RPM Italian run $90–150 per person with wine. Daisies, Etta and Piccolo Sogno sit at $70–110. Coco Pazzo is the wine-list outlier — plan $130–200 with a serious Tuscan bottle. Quartino is the value entry point at $50–80 per person on small plates. Pasta plates citywide are $24–36; secondi (the bistecca, the branzino) run $48–72. Reservations are required across the list.

Editorial independence: RFK accepts no payment for inclusion. Some links may pay an affiliate commission on completed reservations; this does not affect rank order or whether a restaurant is included. See methodology for our scoring rubric and revisit cadence.