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    Restaurant in Chicago, United States

    Lardon

    325pts

    Bib Gourmand deli. Go for the boards.

    Lardon, Restaurant in Chicago

    About Lardon

    Lardon is a Michelin Bib Gourmand-recognised salumeria in Logan Square doing whole-hog butchery and in-house charcuterie at $$ prices — one of the clearest value plays in Chicago. The daytime and weekend brunch format, with boards, serious sandwiches, and a visible curing chamber, is where it delivers best. Booking is easy; no extended lead time required.

    Is Lardon worth visiting for brunch or a weekend meal in Chicago?

    Yes — and if charcuterie, house-cured meats, and serious sandwich craft are what you're after, Lardon at 2200 N California Ave is the clearest answer in Chicago at this price point. It holds a Michelin Bib Gourmand (2024), which means Michelin's inspectors consider it exceptional value: food quality well above its $$ price tag. For a deli and salumeria doing whole-hog, snout-to-tail butchery in Logan Square, that recognition is meaningful. Book it before you talk yourself into something twice the price.

    The Portrait

    Walk past the cutout pig above the door and you already know what Lardon is about. The room carries the feel of a working salumeria that happens to have tables: honeycomb-tiled floors, original wood joists, and a curing chamber visible from the dining room, its shelves lined with soppressata, finocchiona, and Spanish chorizo in various stages of readiness. The atmosphere is relaxed but purposeful — the kind of room where the noise level stays conversational during daytime service, and the energy picks up without tipping into chaos on weekends. This is a good room for a leisurely late morning with someone you actually want to talk to.

    The daytime format is where Lardon delivers its strongest value case. Charcuterie boards arrive on wood, built from in-house creations that reflect a serious command of global sausage-making traditions. Sandwiches , particularly the Italiano , are layered on soft deli bread and represent exactly the kind of thing you'd pay significantly more for at a restaurant billing itself as a charcuterie concept in River North or the West Loop. The truffled lardo with rosemary is among the more referenced items on the menu. A salad with baby kale and delicata squash in a pear vinaigrette rounds out the offer for anyone who needs a vegetable alongside the meat program.

    Weekend dinner shifts register differently , closer to a bistro than a deli, with dishes like steak frites and duck leg confit. If you're coming specifically for the charcuterie experience that earned the Bib Gourmand attention, daytime and weekend brunch service is the format to target. The salumeria identity is most legible when the curing chamber is in full view and the boards are the main event, not a starter.

    At $$ pricing, Lardon positions itself well below Chicago's $$$$ fine-dining tier. You're not paying for a tasting menu or a prix-fixe, you're paying for craft: in-house curing, skilled butchery, and produce sourced to complement the meat program. A board and a sandwich for two lands comfortably without requiring any budget calculation. For the value-conscious diner, the Bib Gourmand is the clearest signal available , it exists precisely to flag restaurants where the quality-to-price ratio is working in the diner's favor. Lardon is one of the relatively few Chicago spots to hold it in 2024, which puts it in direct conversation with some of the city's most attentive casual dining.

    Logan Square is worth noting as context. The neighborhood has a concentration of independent restaurants that punch above their price range, and Lardon fits that pattern. The building itself , historic, with its original architectural bones intact , gives the room a character that purpose-built restaurant spaces rarely replicate. The old-world feel is functional, not decorative: it suits the product.

    Compared to deli-adjacent concepts in other cities, Lardon is operating at a level that competes with destinations like SumiLicious Smoked Meat and Deli in Toronto or The General Muir in Atlanta for seriousness of execution. It is not a novelty charcuterie board concept. The in-house production, the visible curing chamber, and the Michelin recognition together describe a venue operating with genuine culinary discipline in a format that rarely gets this level of attention. If you are visiting Chicago and your itinerary includes one meal that isn't a splurge, this is a strong candidate. If you're a Chicago resident who hasn't made the trip to Logan Square for this, the 4.7 Google rating across 294 reviews is a reasonable signal that it consistently delivers.

    Booking is direct , this is not a hard reservation to land, which is part of the appeal. You do not need to plan weeks out or monitor a release date. Show up with a plan for what you want from the board and you are in good shape. Weekend brunch sees more foot traffic, so arriving on the earlier side of service is the practical move if you want a relaxed pace rather than a wait.

    For broader Chicago dining context, see our full Chicago restaurants guide. If you're planning a longer stay, our Chicago hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide cover the rest of the city. Elsewhere in the US, tasting-menu-level ambition is on display at venues like Le Bernardin in New York, The French Laundry in Napa, Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Providence in Los Angeles, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, and Emeril's in New Orleans , all representing very different value propositions from Lardon, but useful reference points for what different price tiers deliver.

    Quick reference: Michelin Bib Gourmand 2024 | $$ price range | 2200 N California Ave, Logan Square | Google 4.7 (294 reviews) | Booking: easy, no extended lead time required.

    Ratings

    • Value: Strong , Bib Gourmand recognition at $$ pricing is the clearest signal available that quality outpaces cost here.
    • Atmosphere: Relaxed, conversational energy during daytime; historic room with visible curing chamber adds genuine character.
    • Food quality: In-house charcuterie program with whole-hog butchery; sandwiches and boards are the core strength.
    • Booking difficulty: Easy , no significant lead time required.

    Booking

    Lardon is accessible without advanced planning. Weekend brunch is the busiest window; arriving early in service gives you the most relaxed experience. Walk-in is likely possible on weekdays. No timed reservation release or multi-week wait applies here , this is a direct booking at a neighborhood salumeria, not a hot-ticket reservation event.

    Practical Details

    Lardon is at 2200 N California Ave in Logan Square, Chicago. Price range is $$, making it one of the more affordable Bib Gourmand holders in the city. Chef Rodney Staton runs the program. Hours are not confirmed in available data , check directly before visiting. The venue is a deli and salumeria format, meaning the experience is casual-to-relaxed in dress and atmosphere. Groups should be manageable given the neighborhood restaurant format, though larger parties should call ahead to confirm capacity. For dietary restrictions, the menu is heavily meat-focused by design; the vegetable options exist but are not the primary program. Specific allergy or restriction needs are leading confirmed directly with the venue.

    At a glance: 2200 N California Ave, Chicago | $$ | Bib Gourmand 2024 | Easy booking | Call ahead for groups and dietary questions.

    Compare Lardon

    Price vs. Value: Lardon
    VenuePriceBooking DifficultyValue
    Lardon$$Easy
    Smyth$$$$Unknown
    Alinea$$$$Unknown
    Kasama$$$$Unknown
    Next Restaurant$$$$Unknown
    Moody Tongue$$$$Unknown

    Comparing your options in Chicago for this tier.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Lardon worth the price?

    Yes, at $$ pricing with a Michelin Bib Gourmand to its name, Lardon is one of the stronger value cases in Chicago. Bib Gourmand recognition specifically flags good food at moderate prices, and Lardon earns it through house-cured meats and whole-hog butchery that most similarly priced spots in Logan Square don't attempt. If charcuterie boards or serious deli sandwiches are what you're after, the value holds up clearly.

    Does Lardon handle dietary restrictions?

    Lardon is a meat-focused salumeria, so vegetarians and vegans will find the menu narrow. The venue data notes at least one salad option with baby kale and delicata squash, but the kitchen's focus is whole-hog butchery and charcuterie. If you or someone in your group avoids meat entirely, this is not the right fit — consider a different Logan Square option instead.

    Can Lardon accommodate groups?

    Lardon works for small groups, particularly those sharing charcuterie boards, but the salumeria format and deli-style setting mean it suits parties of two to four more naturally than large bookings. Weekend dinner shifts toward a bistro format with plates like steak frites and duck leg confit, which gives groups more to work with than a pure lunch run. For larger parties, confirm capacity directly with the venue before planning.

    What should I wear to Lardon?

    Casual is the right call. The room features honeycomb tiled floors, original wood joists, and a visible curing chamber — it reads as a working salumeria with character, not a formal dining room. At $$ pricing with a deli-and-boards format, there is no dress expectation beyond being comfortable.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Lardon?

    Lardon does not operate as a tasting menu restaurant. The format is a salumeria and deli by day, shifting to bistro-style plates on weekend evenings. The draw here is the charcuterie selection and sandwich craft, not a structured multi-course format. If a tasting menu is your priority in Chicago, Alinea or Smyth are the relevant comparisons.

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