Restaurant in Chicago, United States
Giant
325ptsEasier to book than it deserves to be.

About Giant
Giant in Logan Square is one of Chicago's clearest value cases for serious cooking: Jason Vincent's New American bistro delivers technically precise, chef-driven food at $$ prices with no tasting-menu obligation. The chef's counter at the back is ideal for solo diners and food-focused pairs. Booking is easy, the room is warm, and the cooking consistently outperforms the price point.
Pearl Verdict
Giant is one of the most practical, satisfying dinner bookings in Chicago, and it is significantly easier to get into than its reputation warrants. At $$, it delivers the kind of thoughtful, chef-driven cooking that costs twice as much at the city's tasting-menu flagships. If you want a meal that feels genuinely considered without the ceremony, Giant is where to book first. The chef's counter at the back is the leading seat in the room for solo diners and food-obsessed pairs who want to watch the kitchen at work.
About Giant
Giant sits on West Armitage Avenue in Logan Square, a stretch of Chicago that has earned a reputation as the city's most productive neighborhood for serious, chef-driven cooking without the downtown price premium. Jason Vincent's restaurant is the anchor of that claim. The space is small, the décor modern-rustic, and the room runs warm and convivial in the way that only genuinely neighborhood restaurants do. This is not a destination dressed to impress; it is a working bistro that happens to cook at a level most downtown rooms cannot match for the price.
The atmosphere is the first thing you notice. The room carries the low hum of a place where people are actually enjoying themselves: conversation-level noise, close tables, and the kind of relaxed energy that makes a two-hour dinner feel effortless. After 8 PM on weekends the room fills, the noise picks up, and the energy shifts from unhurried to lively. If you want a quieter dinner for conversation, go early in the week or arrive at opening. Friday and Saturday evenings run until 11 PM, which gives you more flexibility to time the room to your preference.
The menu reads like a list of familiar American dishes pulled apart and reassembled with more technical care than you expect at this price point. Jonah crab salad with soft waffle-cut potato fritters and house-made cocktail sauce is the kind of dish that reads simply and lands cleanly. The pici, described on the menu as "pici with chew," is thick-stranded housemade pasta cooked to a conservative al dente and finished with smoky bacon, chopped jalapeños, and breadcrumbs. These are not elaborate constructions; they are precisely executed dishes built around the pleasure of eating well rather than the performance of fine dining. For food-focused diners who are tired of tasting menus that prioritize concept over satisfaction, Giant is a direct answer.
Chef's counter at the back of the restaurant is worth requesting specifically. It gives you a direct sightline into the kitchen and the kind of close, unpretentious interaction with the cooking process that the larger tasting-menu rooms rarely offer. For solo diners, it removes any awkwardness of a single table; for pairs, it makes the meal feel more like a private experience. Book the counter if you can.
Logan Square as a neighborhood adds practical value to the booking. The area is well-served by the Blue Line at the Armitage or California stops, and parking is easier than in River North or the West Loop. If you are building a Chicago evening around dinner rather than a pre-theater or hotel-convenience booking, this part of the city rewards the extra travel. For a broader view of where Giant sits among Chicago's dining options, see our full Chicago restaurants guide, and pair it with our Chicago bars guide for what to do before or after.
Giant holds a Google rating of 4.5 across 851 reviews, which at this volume is a reliable signal of consistent execution rather than occasional brilliance. The editorial recognition it has earned describes the restaurant as reaching an apex of its caliber while understating itself, which is an accurate summary of the experience on the plate. This is not a restaurant that sells its own mythology. It just cooks well, charges fairly, and lets the room do the rest.
Booking is easy relative to Giant's quality tier. You do not need to plan weeks out the way you would for Alinea or Smyth, but a reservation is still the right move, especially for Thursday through Saturday evenings. The restaurant is open Tuesday through Sunday from 5 PM, with Friday and Saturday running to 11 PM. Monday is closed. If you are visiting Chicago and want one reliable, value-anchored dinner with genuine cooking behind it, this is the booking to make before you settle anything else on your itinerary.
For comparison across American restaurant styles in other cities, Hatchet Hall in Los Angeles and Bacchanalia in Atlanta occupy a similar neighborhood-anchor, chef-driven position in their respective markets. Lazy Bear in San Francisco serves a comparable food-obsessed audience but at a significantly higher price point and with far more booking friction. Giant is the easier, cheaper, and for many diners, more enjoyable call.
Booking
Giant takes reservations and booking is direct, a notable contrast to its quality-tier peers. For Thursday through Saturday, book three to five days ahead to secure your preferred time. Midweek tables are typically available with less notice. If the chef's counter is your target, request it when booking; it fills faster than the main room. The restaurant opens at 5 PM daily and does not serve lunch, so dinner is the only option.
Practical Details
Giant is at 3209 W Armitage Ave in Logan Square. The room is small and the dress code is casual; there is no formality here. The Blue Line makes this accessible from downtown Chicago without a car, and street parking in Logan Square is easier than in most dining-dense Chicago neighborhoods. Hours run Tuesday through Thursday 5 to 10 PM, Friday and Saturday 5 to 11 PM, and Sunday 5 to 10 PM. Giant is closed on Mondays. For everything else happening in the neighborhood and city, see our Chicago experiences guide and our Chicago hotels guide for where to stay.
Pearl Picks
Food-focused visitors to Chicago should cross-reference Giant with Kasama for a Filipino-American counterpoint, Oriole if you want to step up to a full progressive tasting menu, and Next Restaurant if a high-concept experience is the specific draw. For context beyond Chicago, Le Bernardin in New York, The French Laundry in Napa, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, Emeril's in New Orleans, and Providence in Los Angeles represent the broader American fine-dining tier that Giant deliberately steps away from in format, if not always in ambition.
Compare Giant
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Giant | New American, American | $$ | Easy |
| Smyth | Progressive American, Contemporary | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Alinea | Progressive American, Creative | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Kasama | Filipino | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Next Restaurant | American Cuisine | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Moody Tongue | Contemporary | $$$$ | Unknown |
What to weigh when choosing between Giant and alternatives.
Frequently Asked Questions
How far ahead should I book Giant?
Book three to five days out for Sunday through Wednesday; Thursday through Saturday need one to three weeks minimum. Giant takes reservations and is notably easier to secure than comparable quality-tier spots in Chicago, but the room is small, so weekend slots disappear fast. If you're flexible on night, mid-week is your lowest-friction option.
Is Giant good for solo dining?
Yes — the chef's counter at the back of the room is the right call for solo diners. It puts you directly in front of the kitchen action, which suits the format here far better than a table for one. Book it specifically if you can; it is the most engaging seat in a small, casual room.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Giant?
Giant does not operate as a tasting-menu restaurant — the format is à la carte, with familiar dishes given sharper, more creative execution. If a structured multi-course progression is what you're after, Oriole or Smyth are the right call. Giant is the better choice if you want to order freely at a $$ price point without a prescribed format.
What should I wear to Giant?
Come as you are. The room is described as modern-rustic with a cozy neighborhood feel, and there is no formality here. Jeans are fine; there is no dress code to plan around.
Is Giant worth the price?
At $$, Giant sits well below its quality tier in Chicago — Michelin recognition at a neighborhood bistro price point is a genuinely good deal. The kitchen takes familiar dishes (onion rings, crab salad, ribs) and adds enough creative precision to justify a repeat visit, without the sticker anxiety of a full fine-dining spend.
Is lunch or dinner better at Giant?
Giant is dinner-only, open from 5 pm seven days a week. There is no lunch service to weigh against. If you need a daytime option in Logan Square, Kasama runs a Filipino-American café format during the day and is worth cross-referencing.
Hours
- Monday
- 5–10 pm
- Tuesday
- 5–10 pm
- Wednesday
- 5–10 pm
- Thursday
- 5–10 pm
- Friday
- 5–11 pm
- Saturday
- 5–11 pm
- Sunday
- 5–10 pm
Recognized By
More restaurants in Chicago
- AlineaAlinea is Chicago's three-Michelin-star tasting menu at $210–$265 per person — a theatrical, multi-sensory Progressive American experience running three to four hours. It holds a Forbes Five-Star and AAA 5 Diamond, and booking is near impossible without planning months ahead. Worth it for food explorers who commit to the format; not the right call if you want a conventional fine dining dinner.
- SmythSmyth holds three Michelin stars, a top-five North America ranking from Opinionated About Dining, and one of Chicago's most serious natural wine programmes. Dinner only, Tuesday through Saturday, with near-impossible availability and $$$$ 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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