Restaurant in Chicago, United States
Daisies
550ptsMichelin value, farm-driven pasta, book soon.

About Daisies
Daisies holds a Michelin Bib Gourmand and delivers vegetable-forward, house-made pasta at a $$ price point that few Chicago restaurants can match for value. A recent move to a larger Logan Square space added a bar, private dining room, and an in-house bakery. Book a few days out for weekday dinner; a week ahead for weekends.
Verdict: Book It, and Book It Soon
Getting a table at Daisies is easier than you might expect for a Michelin Bib Gourmand recipient in Logan Square, but that accessibility won't last forever. Since relocating to a larger space on Milwaukee Avenue, the restaurant has more seats and a private dining room, which takes some pressure off the reservation system. Book 2–3 days ahead for weekday dinner and a week out for Friday or Saturday. Walk-ins at the café counter work for breakfast and lunch without much friction. The real question is whether it's worth the trip, and the answer is yes, particularly if you care about where your food comes from and how it's cooked.
Recent Evolution: The Move That Changed Everything
The most important thing to know about Daisies right now is that it's operating in a new home. The restaurant relocated to a space roughly four times the size of its original footprint, still on Milwaukee Avenue in Logan Square. The result is a room flooded with natural light, a proper bar, a private dining room, and a bakery built into the back of the house. This isn't a soft refresh — it's a genuine structural upgrade that changes how the restaurant operates and what it can offer. If you visited the original location and found it cramped or hard to book, this version of Daisies is a different experience. The bones of the menu, house-made pastas, vegetable-forward plates, and farm-sourced ingredients, remain intact. The room now has the breathing room to match the ambition of the food.
The Room: Bright, Relaxed, Louder at Night
Daisies runs two distinct modes depending on when you arrive. During the day, it operates as a café with low-key energy, morning light, and a pace that invites you to stay longer than you planned. Evenings shift toward a more social register — the bar fills up, tables turn, and the noise level rises accordingly. The space handles this transition well thanks to the extra square footage and the light-filled design, but if you're planning a dinner conversation that requires quiet, Friday after 8 PM is not the right call. Tuesday or Wednesday evening is the sweet spot: the room is warm, not packed, and the staff have more bandwidth. The atmosphere reads as confident without being formal , come dressed casually, but the quality of what's on the plate will make you feel like you underdressed for the food.
Why Sourcing Matters Here
Chef Joe Frillman works directly with his brother's farm to supply the kitchen with local, seasonal produce. This isn't a marketing line , it has a direct effect on the menu. Vegetable-driven dishes aren't a concession to dietary trends here; they reflect what the farm is producing. The pasta program builds on the same logic: house-made, ingredient-focused, and calibrated to what's in season rather than what's on a fixed menu. At the Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg end of the farm-to-table spectrum, sourcing is a luxury proposition. At Daisies, it operates at a $$ price point, which makes it significantly more accessible and arguably a more honest expression of the same philosophy. Comparable sourcing ethics at The French Laundry in Napa will cost you a multiple of what Daisies charges. For Chicago specifically, the combination of Bib Gourmand recognition and a working farm relationship at this price tier is a practical reason to book, not just a talking point.
What to Order If You've Been Before
If your first visit was built around pasta , and it should have been , the return visit is an opportunity to go wider. The bakery addition at the new location opens up the dessert section in a way the original space couldn't support. The reported selection of pastries, ice creams, and sorbet at the end of the meal reflects a team with more room to operate creatively. The onion dip with house-made ruffles has followed the restaurant to its new location and remains a reliable anchor to start. House-made pappardelle with mushroom ragu and rigatoni with pork ragu and fermented tomato are the pastas with the strongest track record. On a return visit, test the vegetable-forward plates more deliberately , they tend to reflect what the farm is sending in any given week and offer the sharpest read on what the kitchen is doing at that moment.
Peer Comparisons
If you're deciding between Daisies and other Chicago options in the New American space, the key variable is price tier and format. Boka operates at $$$$ and delivers more formal service and a longer tasting structure. Smyth and Alinea are both destination-level commitments at $$$$ with harder reservations and a fundamentally different experience. Daisies at $$ is a separate category , closer in spirit to Barbuto in New York City or Union in Los Angeles: ingredient-driven, chef-led, informal, and genuinely good. For a date or a small group dinner where the goal is excellent pasta and honest cooking without the tasting menu format, Daisies is the clearest answer in Logan Square. For a special occasion that demands theatre, look at Kasama or Next Restaurant instead.
Practical Details
Daisies is at 2375 N Milwaukee Ave in Logan Square. It operates as a café seven days a week from 7 AM to 3 PM, with dinner service Tuesday through Sunday. Friday and Saturday dinner runs to 11 PM; Sunday and Thursday close at 10 PM. The Google rating sits at 4.4 across 1,207 reviews, which is a reliable signal of consistent execution rather than one-off buzz. The Michelin Bib Gourmand (2024) confirms the quality-to-price ratio that the Google score suggests. For context on how Daisies fits into the broader Chicago dining picture, see our full Chicago restaurants guide. You can also explore Chicago hotels, Chicago bars, Chicago wineries, and Chicago experiences to build out a full visit.
Quick reference: $$ pricing | Bib Gourmand 2024 | Book 2–7 days ahead | Casual dress | 7 AM–3 PM daily café + dinner Tue–Sun | 2375 N Milwaukee Ave, Logan Square.
Compare Daisies
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Daisies | New American, Italian | $$ | One of the newer favourites on the Chicago scene is the delightful Logan Square pasta temple, Daisies: a bright, friendly room with low-key café vibes and surprisingly serious food. The food menu sup...; With the flick of a switch, Logan Square’s beloved pasta restaurant has found a new home just down Milwaukee Avenue. The move is a serious upgrade into a space nearly four times its original footprint. Flooded with sunlight, fitted with a comfortable bar and sporting a private dining room, the restaurant has no shortage of space. And much to everyone’s delight, house-made pastas like pappardelle with mushroom ragu or rigatoni with pork ragu and fermented tomato remain prime attractions. Onion dip with house-made ruffles is still on the menu and still a must-order. A bakery in the back gives this team even more room to play with sweets, and diners can choose between a dazzling selection of pastries, ice creams and sorbet at the meal’s end.; Daisies is a Logan Square restaurant focusing on vegetable-forward, pasta-driven cuisine. Chef Joe Frillman works closely with his brother's farm to source local, seasonal ingredients, blurring the line between farm and table. The restaurant is known for its compelling philosophy of culinary community and creativity.; Michelin Bib Gourmand (2024) | Easy | — |
| Alinea | Progressive American, Creative | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Smyth | Progressive American, Contemporary | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Kasama | Filipino | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Next Restaurant | American Cuisine | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Boka | New American, Contemporary | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
What to weigh when choosing between Daisies and alternatives.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Daisies worth the price?
At $$, Daisies is one of the stronger value cases on the Chicago dining scene — a Michelin Bib Gourmand recipient where pasta dishes built on farm-direct, seasonal ingredients land well below what comparable cooking costs at Smyth or Boka. The format rewards you whether you come for a casual café breakfast or a proper dinner. For the price tier, the gap between what's on the plate and what you pay is wider here than at most Logan Square peers.
What should I wear to Daisies?
Daisies runs a relaxed, sunlit room with café energy during the day and a livelier bar scene at night — nothing about the space signals formality. Casual clothes work for any visit; there's no dress code implied by the Bib Gourmand recognition here. If you're coming for dinner on a Friday or Saturday, the room gets fuller and louder, but jeans and a jacket are as far as you need to go.
How far ahead should I book Daisies?
Book at least one to two weeks ahead for weekend dinner, particularly Friday and Saturday when service runs to 11 PM. The new space at 2375 N Milwaukee Ave is roughly four times larger than the original, which gives Daisies more capacity than before, but the Bib Gourmand profile draws consistent demand. Daytime café slots are easier to walk into; dinner is where the competition for tables is real.
What should a first-timer know about Daisies?
Start with the pasta — it's the core of what Chef Joe Frillman's kitchen does, built around produce sourced directly from his brother's farm. The restaurant now includes a bakery at the back, so leave room for dessert: the pastry and ice cream selection is a genuine reason to pace yourself through the meal. Daisies operates as a café from 7 AM daily, with dinner kicking in Tuesday through Sunday, so the same address works for a morning coffee or a full evening out.
Is Daisies good for a special occasion?
It works well for low-key celebrations where the priority is genuinely good food over formal ritual — the new space includes a private dining room, which makes it a practical option for small group dinners. At $$ with a Michelin Bib Gourmand, it's a better fit for a birthday dinner with friends than a high-ceremony anniversary where you want white tablecloths and a long tasting menu. For that format, Smyth or Alinea are the comparisons to consider instead.
Hours
- Monday
- 7 am–3 pm
- Tuesday
- 7 am–3 pm, 5–10 pm
- Wednesday
- 7 am–3 pm, 5–10 pm
- Thursday
- 7 am–10 pm
- Friday
- 7 am–11 pm
- Saturday
- 7 am–11 pm
- Sunday
- 7 am–10 pm
Recognized By
More restaurants in Chicago
- AlineaAlinea is Chicago's three-Michelin-star tasting menu at $210–$265 per person — a theatrical, multi-sensory Progressive American experience running three to four hours. It holds a Forbes Five-Star and AAA 5 Diamond, and booking is near impossible without planning months ahead. Worth it for food explorers who commit to the format; not the right call if you want a conventional fine dining dinner.
- SmythSmyth holds three Michelin stars, a top-five North America ranking from Opinionated About Dining, and one of Chicago's most serious natural wine programmes. Dinner only, Tuesday through Saturday, with near-impossible availability and $$$$ tasting menu pricing. Book six to eight weeks out minimum — this is the stronger call over Alinea for food-first diners.
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