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    Restaurant in Chicago, United States

    Yao Yao

    305pts

    Two Michelin nods. Order the pickled fish.

    Yao Yao, Restaurant in Chicago

    About Yao Yao

    Two-time Michelin Bib Gourmand winner (2024, 2025), Yao Yao is the clearest value play in Chicago's Chinatown for Sichuan cooking. The pickled fish is the anchor dish, scaling from single portions to a size that feeds six, and the $$ price point makes it a stronger return-visit proposition than most of its neighbors. Easy to book, practical for groups, and one of the more reliable late-night options on the south side.

    Is Yao Yao the leading late-night Chinese option in Chicago's Chinatown? Yes, and it's not particularly close.

    If you're asking whether Yao Yao at 230 W Cermak Rd deserves a return visit, the answer is yes. Two consecutive Michelin Bib Gourmand awards (2024 and 2025) confirm what regulars already know: this is one of the most reliable value propositions in Chicago's Chinese dining scene. At a $$ price point, you're getting Sichuan-leaning cooking that outperforms its cost at nearly every turn. For anyone who has been once and is deciding what to order next, the pickled fish is still the anchor — but there's more to work through here.

    What You're Walking Into

    The room at Yao Yao rewards attention before you order. Front tables look directly into a glass-enclosed kitchen, which is worth requesting if you want to watch the cooking unfold. The wood-crafted banquette runs along the opposite side and is the better seat for a longer meal — more comfortable for settling in, better for groups who want to spread dishes across the table. The visual contrast between the open kitchen's activity and the calmer banquette side gives you a genuine choice depending on your mood.

    As a returning visitor, think of the seating decision as part of the experience. Counter-facing tables for two, banquette for groups of three or more.

    The Food Case for Coming Back

    The Yao Yao pickled fish is the signature, and it scales with your group. It comes in three sizes, with the extra-large version feeding up to six people. The dish delivers a sharp, funky pairing of seafood and sour greens , fiery heat with a pronounced tang that doesn't soften as the bowl empties. For returning visitors who want to cover more ground, the "two flavored pickled" option is the move: it splits the bowl between the pickled fish and boiled beef in spicy Sichuan sauce, letting you compare two of the kitchen's core flavors in one order.

    Wontons in chili oil are a consistent order worth repeating. Beyond the headline dishes, the sides list is where second-timers can go deeper: celtuce, dry bean curd skin, seaweed knot, and konjac noodles round out a meal without adding significant cost. None of these are filler , they're designed to balance the heat and richness of the larger plates.

    Chef Andrei Shmakov leads the kitchen, and the cooking here sits firmly in the Sichuan register without chasing trend. The Bib Gourmand recognition reflects consistency rather than novelty, which is the right signal for a spot you're considering revisiting.

    Late-Night Angle

    Yao Yao's Chinatown address positions it as one of the more practical late-night dining options on Chicago's south side. Chinatown as a neighborhood runs later than most Chicago dining corridors, and Yao Yao fits that rhythm. If you're coming after a show, a game at nearby venues, or simply eating on a later schedule, this is a more reliable option than heading back to the River North corridor. Current hours are not confirmed in our data, so check directly before planning a late arrival , but the neighborhood context and the restaurant's format both support later dining.

    For a broader look at where to eat and drink in the area after hours, the full Chicago bars guide and full Chicago restaurants guide are the right places to start. If you want a drink before or after, Chef's Special Cocktail Bar is worth knowing about in the broader Chinatown vicinity.

    Chinatown Context

    Yao Yao sits in a neighborhood with real depth for Chinese dining. Qing Xiang Yuan Dumplings is the go-to for hand-pulled dumplings nearby, and Sun Wah BBQ covers Cantonese BBQ in Uptown if you're extending your Chinese dining across the city. Yao Yao's Sichuan focus gives it a distinct lane from both , there's no significant overlap in what these places do well.

    For Chinese cooking at a higher price tier in other cities, Mister Jiu's in San Francisco and Restaurant Tim Raue in Berlin offer a useful calibration point for where Yao Yao sits globally , credible, consistent, and punching above its price class.

    Know Before You Go

    • Address: 230 W Cermak Rd, Chicago, IL 60616
    • Cuisine: Chinese (Sichuan-focused)
    • Price range: $$ (accessible; strong value relative to quality)
    • Awards: Michelin Bib Gourmand 2024 and 2025
    • Google rating: 4.5 out of 5 (306 reviews)
    • Booking difficulty: Easy , walk-ins are generally feasible, especially earlier in the evening
    • Leading seats: Front tables for kitchen views; wood banquette for group meals
    • Signature dish: Yao Yao pickled fish (available in three sizes, extra-large feeds up to six)
    • Group-friendly: Yes , dishes scale well for larger tables
    • Solo dining: Viable; counter seating near the kitchen works well for one
    • Hours: Not confirmed , verify directly before a late-night visit
    • Phone/website: Not listed , check Google or OpenTable for current booking options

    How It Compares

    Further Reading

    Browse Pearl's full city guides for Chicago: restaurants, hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences. For reference points on what serious Chinese dining looks like at higher price tiers, see Mister Jiu's and Restaurant Tim Raue. For Chicago's fine dining ceiling, Alinea and Smyth are the standard comparisons at the $$$$ tier.

    Compare Yao Yao

    How Yao Yao Compares
    VenueCuisinePriceAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    Yao YaoChinese$$Score one of the front tables for a view of the glass-enclosed kitchen, though the wood-crafted banquette is ideal for settling in. Yao Yao pickled fish is the signature dish here, and it comes in three sizes (extra-large feeds up to six people!). Fiery and potent, this plate delivers a one-two punch with a funky seafood quality and the sharp tang of sour greens. Choose the "two flavored pickled" for a taste of Yao Yao pickled fish and boiled beef in a spicy Szechuan sauce. Wontons in chili oil are a no-brainer, and tere are also a slew of sides, ranging from celtuce and dry bean curd skin to seaweed knot and konjac noodles to round out the meal.; Michelin Bib Gourmand (2025); Michelin Bib Gourmand (2024)Easy
    SmythProgressive American, Contemporary$$$$Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    AlineaProgressive American, Creative$$$$Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    KasamaFilipino$$$$Michelin 1 StarUnknown
    Next RestaurantAmerican Cuisine$$$$Michelin 1 StarUnknown
    Moody TongueContemporary$$$$Michelin 1 StarUnknown

    What to weigh when choosing between Yao Yao and alternatives.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Yao Yao?

    Yao Yao does not operate a tasting menu format. The menu is à la carte, which is actually the stronger case for coming here. Order the pickled fish (available in three sizes), wontons in chili oil, and a few sides. At $$ pricing with two consecutive Michelin Bib Gourmand awards behind it, the à la carte approach gives you more control over value than a fixed tasting format would.

    Can Yao Yao accommodate groups?

    Yes, and the menu is built for it. The pickled fish signature comes in an extra-large size that feeds up to six people, which makes group ordering straightforward. The wood-crafted banquette seating is the better option for larger parties; front tables are smaller and better suited for two or three diners who want the kitchen view.

    What should a first-timer know about Yao Yao?

    Start with the pickled fish — it is the dish the kitchen is known for, and it comes in three sizes depending on your group. The 'two flavored pickled' option adds boiled beef in spicy Szechuan sauce alongside the fish, which is a practical way to cover the signature in one order. Wontons in chili oil are a low-risk addition. The room has a glass-enclosed kitchen visible from the front tables, so request one if you want to watch the line.

    How far ahead should I book Yao Yao?

    Booking details are not publicly documented in Pearl's current data for Yao Yao, so call ahead or check availability directly at 230 W Cermak Rd. Given that Yao Yao holds back-to-back Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition (2024 and 2025), walk-in availability on weekends is likely tighter than a typical neighborhood spot. Plan accordingly, especially for groups of four or more.

    Is Yao Yao worth the price?

    At $$ pricing with two consecutive Michelin Bib Gourmand awards, Yao Yao sits in a strong value position. The Bib Gourmand designation specifically recognizes good food at moderate prices, so the awards are directly relevant to the value question here. For Szechuan-forward Chinese food in Chicago at this price point, it is one of the harder arguments to argue against.

    Is Yao Yao good for solo dining?

    Workable, but the menu scales better with company. The pickled fish comes in three sizes, with the smallest still designed for sharing, so solo diners should lean toward the wontons in chili oil and a selection of sides like celtuce, seaweed knot, or konjac noodles. Front tables and banquette seating both accommodate single diners. The $$ price range keeps a solo meal from becoming expensive.

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