Restaurant in Chicago, United States
Serious tasting menu, real cultural specificity.

Bayan Ko is one of Chicago's most personal tasting menu experiences, blending Filipino and Cuban cooking in a relaxed Ravenswood dining room. At $$$$ per head, the cooking earns its price point without the ceremony of a conventional fine dining room. Booking is genuinely hard — plan well in advance. Michelin Plate recognised in 2024, with a 4.7 Google rating across 423 reviews.
Bayan Ko runs a small tasting menu out of a compact dining room on Montrose Avenue in Ravenswood, and seats are genuinely limited. This is not a restaurant where you can decide on a Thursday to go Saturday. The format shifted away from à la carte to a full tasting menu, a meaningful change that raised the ceiling on what husband-and-wife team Lawrence Letrero and Raquel Quadreny are attempting here: a serious, personal exploration of Cuban and Filipino cooking served as a composed progression of courses, not a spread of shared plates. If you've been once and ate family-style next door at their diner, this is a different register entirely.
The cooking at Bayan Ko draws on two culinary traditions that don't often appear together at this level of precision. The verified highlight dishes give a clear picture of the ambition: black rice and lobster poached in calamansi butter reframe arroz caldo as something technically demanding without losing the dish's identity. Vaca frita, a Cuban staple of shredded beef, arrives here as grilled wagyu with black bean and plantain purees. Pork belly, smeared in mojo and finished with a defined crust, has been a recent standout. These are not fusion exercises — they're recontextualised versions of dishes that carry real cultural weight for the people cooking them, and that intention reads clearly in the result.
For a regular who has already experienced the broader arc of the menu, the pork belly and the wagyu interpretation of vaca frita are the courses that reward the most attention. The calamansi butter preparation on the lobster is the kind of detail that separates this from other Filipino-adjacent tasting menus in the country, including the ambitious work being done at Kasama in Chicago's Ukrainian Village and venues like Hapag in Makati or Kaya in Orlando.
The price point is $$$$, which in Chicago puts Bayan Ko alongside Alinea, Smyth, and Oriole. What differentiates the service here is the absence of ceremony. The dining room is relaxed, the menu is described as zippy in its pacing, and the overall atmosphere does not try to perform fine dining in the conventional sense. This matters for the value calculation. At restaurants like Alinea or Oriole, you are partly paying for a highly choreographed service experience. At Bayan Ko, the investment goes toward the cooking and the sourcing. If you want tableside theatre and multi-person dish delivery, this is not the room for it. If you want technically careful food served without pretension in a setting that feels personal rather than institutional, the $$$$ tier here is justified.
The 4.7 Google rating across 423 reviews is notable at this price point, where polarised opinions are more common. It suggests the kitchen is consistent and the experience meets expectations , a meaningful signal given that tasting menus at this level regularly attract dissatisfied reviews when execution slips. The Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 confirms the cooking is being taken seriously at a credentialing level, even if it has not yet reached star territory. For context, a Michelin Plate indicates food worth stopping for; it's the guide's baseline signal of quality, sitting below a star but above the noise.
Booking here is hard. The tasting menu format in a small Ravenswood dining room means capacity is low and demand has grown since the format change and Michelin recognition. Plan well ahead , waiting until two or three weeks out is likely too late for a prime slot. If flexibility is limited, check for cancellations closer to your date, but don't rely on it. Reservations: Book as far in advance as possible; this is a difficult reservation in Chicago's $$$$ tier. Dress: No dress code is listed, but the relaxed dining room tone suggests smart casual is appropriate. Budget: Price range is $$$$ , expect tasting menu pricing consistent with Chicago's serious tasting menu category. Location: 1810 W Montrose Ave, Ravenswood, Chicago, IL 60613. Bar seating: Not confirmed from available data; contact the restaurant directly. Dietary restrictions: Contact the restaurant in advance , no policy is listed publicly, but tasting menus at this level typically require advance notice for substitutions.
If you are driving from the city centre, Ravenswood is roughly 20 minutes north depending on traffic. The neighbourhood itself is residential and quieter than River North or the West Loop, which fits the intimate, non-scene-driven character of the restaurant. For broader planning, see our full Chicago restaurants guide, our full Chicago hotels guide, and our full Chicago bars guide. If you're planning around an extended trip, our full Chicago experiences guide and our full Chicago wineries guide cover the broader picture.
Bayan Ko is the right call if you want a tasting menu that operates at a serious technical level, carries genuine cultural specificity, and does not make you feel like you're inside a luxury brand exercise. It's a better fit than Smyth if the Filipino-Cuban framework interests you more than progressive American cooking, and a more accessible entry point than Alinea if you want strong cooking without the full performance-dining overhead. If you've already eaten here once and came through the diner next door, the tasting menu is the reason to return. It's doing something specific that the broader tasting menu category in Chicago is not.
For comparison with other tasting menus operating at this level nationally, consider what Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Providence in Los Angeles, or Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg are doing , Bayan Ko belongs in that conversation in terms of intentionality, if not yet at the same awards level. The gap between Michelin Plate and star recognition is real, but this is a restaurant that has earned attention beyond its neighbourhood. If you are in Chicago and the booking works, it's the right room.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bayan Ko | Filipino | $$$$ | Husband and wife team Lawrence Letrero and Raquel Quadreny are raising the stakes at their intimate restaurant in Ravenswood. In a departure from the usual family-style dishes, they offer a tasting menu in a quest to celebrate their Cuban and Filipino heritages on their own terms. Black rice and lobster poached in calamansi butter come together for their version of arroz caldo. Vaca frita translates here to grilled wagyu beef with black bean and plantain purees. Smeared in mojo and sporting a fine crust, pork belly is a recent highlight. The new format is far from stuffy, thanks to a relaxed dining room and a zippy menu, but those wanting to go casual for the likes of lumpia or pork adobo can visit the couple’s diner next door.; Michelin Plate (2024) | Hard | — |
| Smyth | Progressive American, Contemporary | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Alinea | Progressive American, Creative | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Kasama | Filipino | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Next Restaurant | American Cuisine | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Moody Tongue | Contemporary | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Bar seating specifics are not confirmed in available venue data for Bayan Ko. What is documented is that the dining room is compact, capacity is genuinely limited, and the format is a tasting menu — so if bar seating exists, it would be subject to the same constraints. If casual dining is the goal, the couple's diner next door serves lumpia and pork adobo without the tasting menu commitment.
At $$$$, Bayan Ko sits alongside Alinea, Smyth, and Oriole in Chicago's top pricing tier, but the case for value is different: this is a Michelin Plate (2024) restaurant built around a specific cultural identity — Filipino and Cuban — rather than a generic prestige format. If you want cooking that operates at a technical level while grounding itself in two distinct culinary traditions, the price is defensible. If you want flexibility or a la carte options, the diner next door is the better spend.
Yes, with one condition: you need to be committed to the tasting menu format. Husband and wife team Lawrence Letrero and Raquel Quadreny use it to work through Filipino and Cuban cooking on their own terms — verified highlights include black rice and lobster poached in calamansi butter, wagyu with black bean and plantain purees, and mojo-smeared pork belly. That level of specificity is rare at this format in Chicago, and the room stays relaxed rather than ceremonial, which helps justify the price.
Book as early as possible — the tasting menu format in a small Ravenswood dining room means capacity is low, and demand has increased since the format change and Michelin Plate recognition in 2024. Expect a set menu that blends Filipino and Cuban influences, not the family-style Filipino dishes you might find elsewhere. The dining room is deliberately relaxed, so this is not a white-tablecloth endurance event. If you want something more casual from the same couple, the diner next door at the same address is a lower-commitment entry point.
Dietary restriction policies are not documented in the venue data for Bayan Ko. Given the tasting menu format and small kitchen, it is worth contacting the restaurant directly before booking to discuss any restrictions — especially since the menu is built around specific Filipino and Cuban ingredients like calamansi, plantain, black bean, and pork, which are central to the cooking rather than decorative.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.