Restaurant in Chicago, United States
Chicago Cut
190ptsRiverfront steakhouse that delivers on execution.

About Chicago Cut
Chicago Cut is a well-run riverfront steakhouse that earns its Michelin Plate (2024) through consistency rather than novelty. The 35-day in-house dry-aged Porterhouse is the order to anchor your meal, and the service team is strong enough to justify the $$$ price point. Book three to five days ahead for weekend dinners; weekday lunch is more forgiving.
Should You Book Chicago Cut?
Getting a table at Chicago Cut is not the ordeal you'll face at Alinea or Kasama, but don't mistake moderate booking difficulty for availability. The riverfront room is popular enough that weekend prime-time slots fill several days in advance, and the business-lunch crowd means weekday afternoons move faster than you'd expect. If you've been once and liked it, the better question isn't whether to return — it's whether you're ordering the right things and timing your visit correctly. The short answer: yes, book it, and go hungry.
The Room and the Experience
Chicago Cut earns its Michelin Plate (2024) not through novelty but through execution. The wraparound windows along the Chicago River give the room a sense of occasion that most steakhouses in this city can't match on pure atmosphere alone. Red leather furnishings and warm wood trim signal that this is a place taking its genre seriously without veering into theme-park territory. The service team runs tight — attentive without hovering, which matters on a long dinner when you want the table to feel like yours.
For a returning guest, the room itself is already familiar, so the focus shifts to what you're eating and how the meal progresses through the evening. Chicago Cut is not a tasting-menu restaurant in the formal sense, but the way its steakhouse format is structured , prime protein as the anchor, sides as essential supporting acts , creates a logical arc if you order with intention. Think of it as building your own progression: start light, let the beef be the centerpiece, and use the sides to round out the experience rather than compete with it.
What to Order: Building the Right Meal
If you've already done Chicago Cut once and defaulted to a direct ribeye, go deeper this visit. The Porterhouse is the move for two people: prime beef dry-aged in-house for 35 days, pre-sliced and plated per guest, which is a practical detail that actually changes how you eat it , no table-side carving theatrics, just properly rested beef arriving ready. The dry-aging program is handled on premises, which gives the kitchen control over the result in a way that off-site sourcing doesn't.
Cedar-planked salmon with a sriracha-honey glaze is available for non-beef diners and is worth knowing about if your group includes someone who won't eat red meat , it's not an afterthought. But beef is the throughline here, and the kitchen knows it.
Sides at Chicago Cut are not optional. The dome of hashbrowns is the one to anchor your order: crisp, substantial, and better suited to the format than most steakhouse potato preparations. Creamed spinach with nutmeg and grilled asparagus round out the table well. If you're returning with a group, order two or three sides between four people rather than treating them as individual accompaniments , the sharing format lets the meal build more naturally.
The service team is experienced enough to pace the meal properly, but if you want the Porterhouse to land at the right moment, it's worth saying so when you order. Don't let the sides arrive simultaneously with the steak , ask for a slight stagger.
Ratings and Recognition
Chicago Cut holds a 4.4 Google rating across 3,101 reviews, which is a meaningful signal at that volume , it's not a venue coasting on early enthusiasm. The Michelin Plate (2024) confirms consistent kitchen execution without claiming the creativity tier that a star would require. For a steakhouse operating in this price range, that's exactly the right credential: reliable, serious, not trying to be something it isn't.
Practical Details
Reservations: Book at least three to five days ahead for weekend dinner; weekday lunch is easier but the room still fills. Walk-ins are possible at the bar. Budget: Price range is $$$, putting it below the $$$$ tier of Chicago's tasting-menu circuit but above casual steakhouse pricing , expect a full dinner with wine to run meaningfully per head. Dress: Smart casual is the floor; the room skews business and polished without enforcing a formal dress code. Groups: The room handles groups well given its size and service depth , larger parties should call ahead or book through the reservation system to confirm table configuration. Address: 300 N La Salle Dr, Chicago, IL 60654, on the riverfront.
How Chicago Cut Compares
Within Chicago's steakhouse tier, Chicago Cut sits above Bavette's Bar & Boeuf on service formality and room scale, and competes directly with Maple & Ash for the upscale-but-not-stuffy positioning. Gibsons Bar & Steakhouse is the old-guard alternative if you want louder and more traditionally Chicago; Prime & Provisions is the choice if you want a more modern steakhouse interior. Bazaar Meat Chicago goes further in creative direction if straight steakhouse format feels limiting.
For other steakhouse reference points beyond Chicago: Capa in Orlando and A Cut in Taipei operate in comparable premium-steakhouse territory in their respective cities. If you're building a broader dining trip, our full Chicago restaurants guide covers the wider field, and our Chicago hotels guide, Chicago bars guide, Chicago wineries guide, and Chicago experiences guide cover the rest of the trip.
Compare Chicago Cut
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chicago Cut | Steakhouse | Chicago Cut is a steakhouse perfectly suited for the City of the Big Shoulders. This finely tailored locale bustles day and night, thanks to wraparound windows along the riverfront, sumptuous red leather furnishings, warm wood trim and a crackerjack service team cementing its steakhouse vibe.Non-meat entrées include cedar-planked salmon with a sriracha-honey glaze, but make no mistake: beef is boss here. Prime steaks, butchered and dry-aged in-house for 35 days, get just the right amount of time under the flame, as is the case with the perfectly cooked-to-order Porterhouse—pre-sliced and plated for each guest. Sides are a must and should include the dome of hashbrowns, creamed spinach redolent of nutmeg or tender stalks of grilled asparagus.; Michelin Plate (2024) | Moderate | — |
| 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 | — |
How Chicago Cut stacks up against the competition.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I order at Chicago Cut?
Start with the Porterhouse — it's pre-sliced and plated per guest, which makes it the clearest showcase of the in-house dry-aging program (35 days on prime beef). Round it out with the dome of hashbrowns or creamed spinach. The cedar-planked salmon exists if someone at the table doesn't eat beef, but this is not a menu built around non-meat options.
Is Chicago Cut worth the price?
At $$$, Chicago Cut earns its price through consistent execution: prime beef dry-aged in-house, a well-drilled service team, and a riverfront room that doesn't feel like a hotel steakhouse. If you're comparing to Maple & Ash, the value proposition is similar but Chicago Cut leans more formal. If you want a looser atmosphere at a lower spend, Bavette's is the call.
What should I wear to Chicago Cut?
The red leather, warm wood, and riverfront setting set a business-dinner tone — collared shirts and dress trousers for men will fit without standing out. There's no published dress code in the venue data, but the room's formality and price range ($$$) strongly suggest you'll feel underdressed in athletic wear or casual shorts.
Can Chicago Cut accommodate groups?
The room is large enough to handle groups, and the format — sides ordered family-style, shareable cuts like the Porterhouse — works well for parties of four or more. For larger groups or corporate dinners, check the venue's official channels at 300 N La Salle Dr to ask about private or semi-private arrangements, as specific room configuration details aren't published.
Is Chicago Cut good for a special occasion?
Yes, if the occasion calls for a steakhouse setting rather than a tasting menu. The wraparound river views, attentive service, and Michelin Plate (2024) recognition make it a credible choice for birthdays, anniversaries, or client dinners where you need the room to do some of the work. For a more theatrical special-occasion meal, Alinea or Next Restaurant are different categories entirely.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Chicago Cut?
Chicago Cut is not a tasting menu venue — it operates as a traditional steakhouse where you build your meal from individual cuts and sides. If a fixed, chef-driven tasting format is what you're after, Smyth or Alinea are the right Chicago options. At Chicago Cut, the Porterhouse with two or three sides is effectively the recommended format.
What are alternatives to Chicago Cut in Chicago?
Bavette's Bar & Boeuf is the closest alternative at a slightly lower formality level and comparable price point — better if you want a darker, more bar-forward room. Maple & Ash competes directly with Chicago Cut on service and cut quality. If you want to leave the steakhouse category altogether, Smyth offers a chef-driven tasting format at a similar spend.
Recognized By
More restaurants in Chicago
- AlineaAlinea is Chicago's three-Michelin-star tasting menu at $210–$265 per person — a theatrical, multi-sensory Progressive American experience running three to four hours. It holds a Forbes Five-Star and AAA 5 Diamond, and booking is near impossible without planning months ahead. Worth it for food explorers who commit to the format; not the right call if you want a conventional fine dining dinner.
- SmythSmyth holds three Michelin stars, a top-five North America ranking from Opinionated About Dining, and one of Chicago's most serious natural wine programmes. Dinner only, Tuesday through Saturday, with near-impossible availability and $$$$ tasting menu pricing. Book six to eight weeks out minimum — this is the stronger call over Alinea for food-first diners.
Similar venues by awards
Related editorial
- Best Fine Dining Restaurants in ParisFrom three-Michelin-star icons to the next generation of Parisian chefs pushing boundaries, these are the restaurants that define fine dining in the world's culinary capital.
- Best Luxury Hotels in RomeFrom rooftop terraces overlooking ancient ruins to Michelin-starred hotel dining, these are the luxury hotels that make Rome unforgettable.
- Best Cocktail Bars in KyotoFrom sleek lounges to hidden speakeasies, Kyoto's cocktail scene blends Japanese precision with global influence in ways you won't find anywhere else.
Save or rate Chicago Cut on Pearl
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.


