Restaurant in Chicago, United States
Bring your own wine, eat well.

EL Ideas is a Michelin-starred BYOB tasting menu operating out of Chef Phillip Foss's Pilsen warehouse home, ranked #144 on OAD's Top Restaurants in North America in 2025. One seating, everyone served simultaneously, guests free to roam the kitchen. The BYOB policy makes it one of Chicago's best value-to-quality positions at the $$$$ level.
If you're comparing EL Ideas against Chicago's other $$$$ tasting-menu options, understand this upfront: nowhere else in the city asks you to bring your own wine, wander the pantry, and watch the chef plate your food from three feet away. Alinea is technically more ambitious and considerably harder to book; EL Ideas is more intimate, more affordable by the standards of the format, and operates more like a dinner party than a restaurant. For the right diner, that trade-off is an easy yes.
EL Ideas holds a Michelin star (2024) and has ranked on the Opinionated About Dining Leading Restaurants in North America list three consecutive years: #145 in 2023, #144 in 2024, and #144 again in 2025. At a $$$$ price point with a Google rating of 4.8 across 378 reviews, the quality signal is consistent. The question is whether the format suits you, not whether the cooking is serious.
EL Ideas operates out of a warehouse space in Chicago's Lower West Side, at 2419 W 14th St in the Pilsen neighborhood. Chef Phillip Foss lives upstairs. That detail matters: this is not a chef operating a themed concept about intimacy — it is a working kitchen attached to someone's home, and that shapes everything about the experience.
There is one seating per service. Everyone is seated at the same time, served the same courses simultaneously, and encouraged to bring as much wine as they want (no corkage structure applies in the conventional sense). The room reads more like a test kitchen than a dining room. Guests can move around, explore the pantry, and position themselves next to the cooks as dishes are being plated. The ambient energy is collaborative rather than formal — loud enough to feel alive, but nothing like the controlled theatrical silence at a traditional tasting-menu counter. If you book with a group, this setup makes conversation easy across the entire party rather than confining you to whoever sits beside you.
The cooking is creative New American, with the format of a tasting menu and the sensibility of a chef who is clearly enjoying himself. Based on award descriptions, the menu includes dishes like a shrimp cocktail croquette with shrimp snow (served in a way that requires you to lick the plate), variations on oysters Rockefeller, and riffs on banh mi and French dip. One dish never changes: French fries served with potato leek soup and nitro-poached vanilla ice cream. That signature is the anchor of the menu and a useful signal about the register , technically serious, but not precious.
Pilsen is one of Chicago's most culturally distinct neighborhoods, historically home to a large Mexican-American community and a long-established arts presence. EL Ideas is not a neighborhood restaurant in the sense that locals pop in for dinner , the format and price point place it firmly in the destination category. But the location does something the venue's format benefits from: it removes the context of a conventional fine-dining block. You are not walking past four other $$$$ tasting menus to get here. The warehouse setting in a residential neighborhood reinforces the underground-dinner-party atmosphere in a way that a River North address never could. For diners coming from outside Chicago, this is the part of the city you would not otherwise have a reason to visit. That specificity adds to the experience rather than complicating it.
For local diners, the Pilsen location also positions EL Ideas as a counterpoint to Chicago's more centrally located tasting-menu options. Boka and Elske operate in more conventional dining-out neighborhoods. Girl & The Goat and S.K.Y. are easier to combine with a broader evening out. EL Ideas asks you to commit to the location, which is part of why the experience feels intentional rather than incidental.
Booking EL Ideas is difficult. With one seating per service and limited nights per week (Thursday through Sunday evenings only, closed Monday through Wednesday), total weekly covers are low. Reserve as far in advance as possible , the combination of Michelin recognition and a small room means availability is tight. There is no published phone number or website in Pearl's database; check directly via reservation platforms or the venue's own booking channels.
Reservations: Hard to get; book as far ahead as possible, especially for Friday and Saturday. Hours: Thursday and Sunday 6–8 PM; Friday and Saturday 6–11 PM; closed Monday through Wednesday. Budget: $$$$ (tasting menu format; BYOB significantly reduces total spend relative to comparable venues with wine programs). Dress: Not formally stated, but the underground-dinner-party atmosphere suggests smart casual is appropriate , neither a suit nor athleisure. Groups: The communal, single-seating format works well for groups of four or more. Address: 2419 W 14th St, Chicago, IL 60608.
The BYOB policy is the most underappreciated aspect of the EL Ideas value proposition. At other $$$$ Chicago tasting menus, beverage pairings can add $100–$200 per person to the bill. At EL Ideas, you bring what you want. For a table of four splitting two or three bottles from a good wine shop, the total cost per person drops significantly compared with what you would spend at a comparable Michelin-starred room with a full wine program. The cooking quality , validated by three years of OAD Top 150 North America rankings alongside Michelin recognition , is not discounted to match the informality. You are getting serious food in a format that happens to cost less to experience than alternatives of similar standing.
For context outside Chicago: the BYOB tasting-menu format with high culinary ambition exists elsewhere in the US. Lazy Bear in San Francisco uses a similar communal dinner-party format. The Wolf's Tailor in Denver shares the creative New American approach at the $$$$ level. Neither replicates EL Ideas exactly, but both serve as useful reference points for the category. If you have done The French Laundry in Napa or Le Bernardin in New York City and want to understand what the format looks like when stripped of formality and institutional polish, EL Ideas is that answer in Chicago.
See our full Chicago restaurants guide, our full Chicago hotels guide, our full Chicago bars guide, our full Chicago wineries guide, and our full Chicago experiences guide for more options across the city.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| EL Ideas | New American, Contemporary | $$$$ | Hard |
| Alinea | Progressive American, Creative | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Smyth | Progressive American, Contemporary | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Kasama | Filipino | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Next Restaurant | American Cuisine | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Boka | New American, Contemporary | $$$$ | Unknown |
A quick look at how EL Ideas measures up.
Alinea is the obvious comparison for $$$$ tasting menus in Chicago, but it runs a far more formal and expensive operation with no BYOB option. Smyth offers a similarly intimate counter experience with more polish and a conventional wine program. Kasama is a strong alternative if you want a Michelin-starred tasting menu at a lower price point. EL Ideas sits in its own category: a Michelin 1-star (2024) with a deliberately loose, BYOB format that none of its Chicago peers replicate.
There is no à la carte menu. EL Ideas runs a single tasting menu for the whole room, served simultaneously to all guests. The one dish that reportedly never leaves the menu is French fries with potato leek soup and nitro-poached vanilla ice cream. Everything else rotates, so you are trusting Chef Phillip Foss's direction for the evening.
The venue operates out of a warehouse space where guests can wander into the kitchen and stand next to the chefs as they cook. The format is closer to an underground dinner party than a formal dining room. Dress tidily but there is no evidence of a formal dress code — overdressing would feel out of place here.
EL Ideas is dinner only, with service Thursday through Sunday evenings starting at 6 PM. There is no lunch service. Thursday and Sunday seatings close earlier than Friday and Saturday, so if you want a longer evening, book a Friday or Saturday.
This is not documented in the available venue data, so contact EL Ideas directly before booking. Given the single-seating, whole-room-served-at-once format, significant dietary restrictions may be difficult to accommodate — it is worth confirming before you commit at the $$$$ price point.
Yes, with the right expectations. The format — one seating, everyone eating together, BYOB, chef visible and accessible — makes it feel like a private event rather than a restaurant meal. That works well for birthdays or anniversaries where the experience itself is the point. If your group needs privacy or a quieter atmosphere, the communal setup may not suit.
At $$$$ with a BYOB policy, EL Ideas compares favorably to Chicago peers on total cost. Beverage pairings at Alinea or Smyth can easily add $100-$200 per person on top of the menu price; here, you bring what you want and pay nothing extra for wine. The Michelin 1-star (2024) and consistent Opinionated About Dining Top 150 North America rankings across 2023, 2024, and 2025 support the food quality. For the format, it is hard to find a better value proposition at this tier in Chicago.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.