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    Andros Taverna, Restaurant in Chicago
    Restaurant580Points
    Opinionated About Dining 2026Wine Spectator 2026Michelin 2025Esquire 2021

    Andros Taverna

    Greek · Logan Square, Chicago

    Restaurant in Chicago, United States

    The Read

    Wood-Fired Greek Mezze

    Price

    $$$

    Chef

    Doug Psaltis

    Dress

    Smart Casual

    Why go

    A Michelin Plate Greek kitchen in Logan Square with a wood-burning oven, an all-Greek wine list of 135 selections, $$ food pricing. OAD Casual North America ranked and Esquire-listed, Andros Taverna earns its reputation through a flexible mezze-to-mains format that rewards return visits. Book for groups who want serious food without a tasting menu commitment.

    About Andros Taverna

    The Verdict

    If you're choosing between Andros Taverna and Chicago's other Greek options, Andros wins on atmosphere, credential depth, wine list quality — and it costs meaningfully less per head than the city's $$$$-tier tasting menus at Alinea or Smyth. A Michelin Plate, an Opinionated About Dining Casual North America ranking (currently #826, up from #815 the prior year), and an Esquire Leading New Restaurants nod in 2021 confirm this is not a neighbourhood taverna coasting on nostalgia. It earns its reputation. Book it for a group that wants to graze through mezze and a bottle of Greek wine without committing to a $300-per-head tasting experience.

    Portrait

    Andros Taverna sits at 2542 N Milwaukee Ave, just off Logan Square Park in Chicago's Logan Square neighbourhood. Chef and owner Doug Psaltis, alongside co-owners Hsing Chen and Ryan O'Donnell, has built a room that reads as confident rather than decorative: concrete floors, trailing greenery overhead, a wood-burning oven that anchors the kitchen's output. Wine Director Thomas Kakalios and General Manager Luis Aguilar round out a leadership team that clearly treats operations seriously — the wine list alone, with 135 selections and 1,830 inventory units drawn almost entirely from Greek producers across Macedonia to Santorini, reflects a level of category commitment you rarely see at this price point.

    The format here rewards return visitors who already know the room. On a first visit, most people anchor on the mezze spread, warm pita alongside whipped feta, charred eggplant, taramasalata, call that a meal. That approach works. But if you've been once and you went that route, go back and build around the grilled lamb chops instead. The wood-burning oven extends its influence across most of the menu, which means dishes carry a char and smoke character that differentiates Andros from Greek restaurants relying on stovetop technique. The sweets close things out with real intent: custard pie wrapped in phyllo, a baklava frozen yogurt with pistachio sauce that rewards the diner who doesn't skip dessert.

    Pricing sits at $$ for a typical two-course meal (roughly $40–65 per head before drinks), which makes Andros one of the more accessible entry points in the Logan Square dining corridor without feeling like a compromise. The wine list is priced at $$ as well, with a corkage fee of $50 if you'd rather bring your own bottle, worth knowing if you have something specific from a Greek producer you want to open.

    Seasonal Angle: When to Visit and What to Order

    Andros Taverna's menu doesn't carry documented seasonal rotation notes in available data, but the wood-burning oven and the Greek culinary tradition it draws from both favour heartier proteins and braised preparations in cooler months. If you're visiting between late autumn and early spring, the lamb chops and anything emerging from the oven become the clearest ordering logic. In warmer months, the mezze-forward approach, lighter dips, pita, seafood preparations, maps better to the season and to the breezy openness of the room itself. The Greek wine list, with its range from mineral-driven island whites to fuller Macedonian reds, gives you a seasonal pairing path without needing to look beyond the list.

    For return visitors specifically: if your last meal leaned heavily on the cold mezze and dips, a warmer-month return is a good moment to build around the seafood side of the menu (Andros lists seafood as a secondary cuisine type). A cooler-month return justifies anchoring on the lamb and exploring the red wine side of Thomas Kakalios's Greek list. The dessert program, particularly the baklava frozen yogurt, reads as a year-round closer worth ordering regardless of season.

    Weekend brunch runs Friday through Sunday (Friday from 11am, Saturday from 9am, Sunday from 9am), which opens up a different use case than the weeknight dinner format. If you haven't experienced the space in daytime hours, the Saturday morning slot gives you a quieter room before the dinner crowd arrives. Weeknight hours run 4–10pm Monday through Thursday, with extended service Friday and Saturday until 11pm.

    Know Before You Go

    • Cuisine: Greek and seafood
    • Address: 2542 N Milwaukee Ave, Chicago, IL 60647 (Logan Square)
    • Hours: Mon–Thu 4–10pm; Fri 11am–11pm; Sat 9am–11pm; Sun 9am–10pm
    • Price (food): $$, typical two-course meal $40–65 per head before drinks
    • Wine list: 135 selections, 1,830 inventory units, all Greek producers; list priced $$; corkage $50
    • Booking difficulty: Moderate, plan ahead for weekend evenings
    • Awards: Michelin Plate (2024); OAD Casual North America #826 (2025); Esquire Leading New Restaurants #31 (2021)
    • Chef: Doug Psaltis (also owner); Wine Director: Thomas Kakalios

    How It Compares

    Andros Taverna sits in a different tier from most of Chicago's most-discussed restaurants. Alinea, Smyth, Kasama, and Next Restaurant are all $$$$ operations built around tasting menus that demand full evening commitments and significantly higher per-head spend. Andros gives you a credentialed, award-tracked dining experience at $$ food pricing, a meaningful gap. If your group wants flexibility to graze or to eat a focused two-course meal without a multi-hour commitment, Andros is the more practical choice. Boka offers a comparable atmosphere commitment at a higher price point and in a different cuisine register (New American), so the comparison there is more about format preference than quality.

    Within its own cuisine category, Andros has no direct Chicago competitor at this award level. For Greek dining comparisons in other cities, Mavrommatis in Paris and OMA in London represent how the cuisine performs at higher price tiers with more formal service structures. Andros delivers comparable ingredient focus and wine seriousness at a fraction of the price, which is the core of its value case.

    For diners who want a $$$$ experience in Chicago, the tasting menu route through Smyth or the theatrical format at Next Restaurant are the cleaner choices. But if you want a meal you can shape yourself, mezze to anchor, a main from the wood-burning oven, Greek wine by the glass or bottle, dessert if you have room, Andros Taverna at $$ food pricing is the better decision for most groups most of the time.

    Pearl Picks: More Chicago Dining

    If Andros Taverna is on your list, these may belong there too. For the full picture of where to eat, drink, stay in the city, see our full Chicago restaurants guide, our Chicago bars guide, our Chicago hotels guide, our Chicago wineries guide, and our Chicago experiences guide.

    The take

    The Take

    The Vibe

    Andros Taverna leans on wood smoke and a quietly confident room to set its tone. You notice the warmth from a wood-burning oven first, then dangling greenery and concrete floors; the effect is contemporary rather than traditionally thematic. The dining room has a low hum — not noisy for noise’s sake but lively enough to feel social — and the service and plating are composed without feeling fussy. Overall the restaurant reads as warm, cozy and relaxed: a modern Logan Square taverna that feels convincingly lived-in and welcoming rather than performative.

    Best For

    This is a neighborhood spot that rewards shared meals and group conversation. The kitchen’s focus on mezze and wood-fired dishes makes it particularly well suited to dinners with friends or family where plates come out across the table to be passed and sampled. It also holds up for more intentional visits — the writing notes a Michelin Plate distinction — so it works for low-key special occasions and date nights that prefer relaxed service over formality. Brunch fits the casual, shareable approach as well, making the place versatile across meal periods.

    Ordering Tips

    Start small and share: the dip section serves as a natural entry point for most tables, with whipped feta, charred eggplant and taramasalata arriving with warm pita. Lean into the mezze logic — order several plates to pass rather than one dish per person — and include a mix of oven-driven items and lighter fried options. Signature choices to consider are the Crispy Kataifi Cheese Pie and Zucchini Chips, and the wood-burning oven influence makes the Chicken Souvlaki and Prawn Saganaki natural choices for the table.

    Planning details

    Hours

    Monday
    4–10 pm
    Tuesday
    4–10 pm
    Wednesday
    4–10 pm
    Thursday
    4–10 pm
    Friday
    11 am–11 pm
    Saturday
    9 am–11 pm
    Sunday
    9 am–10 pm

    Location

    2542 N Milwaukee Ave, Chicago, IL 60647 · Directions

    (773) 365-1900

    androstaverna.com

    Recognition and awards
    Also consider

    Also Consider

    • Alinea, Progressive American, Creative, $$$$
    • Smyth, Progressive American, Contemporary, $$$$
    • Kasama, Filipino, $$$$
    • Next Restaurant, American Cuisine, $$$$
    • Boka, New American, Contemporary, $$$$
    Restaurant context

    Andros Taverna operates at a fundamentally different price point from Chicago's most-discussed restaurants. Alinea, Smyth, Kasama, and Next Restaurant are all $$$$ tasting menu operations requiring full evening commitments and per-head spend well above what Andros charges. Andros sits at $$ for food, which means you get Michelin and OAD recognition at roughly half the price. If your group wants flexibility, graze through mezze, share a main, skip or stay for dessert, Andros wins on format and value over every $$$$ peer in the comparison set. Boka offers a comparable atmosphere investment (polished room, serious service) in a New American register at $$$$, so the Boka-versus-Andros decision comes down to cuisine preference and how much you want to spend, not quality.

    For diners specifically committed to a tasting menu experience in Chicago, Smyth is the most technically rigorous option and Next Restaurant adds a theatrical concept-menu format if that appeals. Kasama is worth considering if Filipino-inflected tasting menus interest you more than Greek. None of these compete with Andros on value per dollar spent.

    Booking difficulty is also relevant here: Andros is moderately difficult to book, manageable with a week or two of lead time, while Alinea and Kasama require significantly more advance planning and, in Alinea's case, prepaid reservations. If you're planning a Chicago dinner with limited lead time, Andros is a more realistic choice than its $$$$ peers. The all-Greek wine list with 135 selections is also a differentiator no other venue in this comparison set can match on that specific category.

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    Unlock the full Andros Taverna guide in Pearl, including awards, comparisons, FAQs, planning details, and nearby places.

    Compare Andros Taverna
    Is Andros Taverna Worth It?
    VenuePriceBooking DifficultyAwards
    Andros Taverna$$$Moderate
    2026 OAD Casual in North America Recommended2026 Wine Spectator Award of Excellence2025 OAD Casual in North America Ranked · #8262025 Wine Spectator Award of Excellence2025 Michelin Plate2024 OAD Casual in North America Ranked · #8152024 Michelin Plate2021 Esquire Best New Restaurants · #31
    Alinea$$$$Unknown
    2026 OAD Top Restaurants in North America Ranked · #442026 Forbes 5-Star2026 La Liste Top Restaurants2025 Robb Report 100 Greatest American Restaurants of the 21st Century · #12025 OAD Top Restaurants in North America Ranked · #20Chef's Table Featured Restaurants · 20252025 The Best Chef Three Knives2025 Forbes 5-Star2025 Michelin 3 Stars
    Smyth$$$$Unknown
    Star Wine Lists 2026 · #12026 North America's 50 Best Restaurants · #12026 OAD Top Restaurants in North America Ranked · #152026 La Liste Top Restaurants2025 World's 50 North America's Best Restaurants · #42025 OAD Top Restaurants in North America Ranked · #52025 Robb Report 100 Greatest American Restaurants of the 21st Century · #18We're Smart World Top Restaurants 20252025 La Liste Top Restaurants
    Kasama$$$$Unknown
    2026 OAD Top Restaurants in North America Ranked · #902026 James Beard Award Semifinalists2025 Robb Report 100 Greatest American Restaurants of the 21st Century · #292025 World's 50 North America's Best Restaurants · #312025 OAD Top Restaurants in North America Ranked · #1532025 Michelin 1 Star2025 Michelin 2 Stars2024 OAD Top Restaurants in North America Ranked · #622024 Michelin 1 Star
    Next Restaurant$$$$Unknown
    2026 OAD Top Restaurants in North America Ranked · #872026 Michelin 1 Star2025 OAD Top Restaurants in North America Ranked · #76We're Smart World Top Restaurants 20252025 Michelin 1 Star2024 OAD Top Restaurants in North America Ranked · #812024 Michelin 1 Star2023 OAD Top Restaurants in North America Ranked · #98Pearl Recommended Restaurants
    Boka$$$$Unknown
    2026 OAD Top Restaurants in North America Ranked · #1212026 La Liste Top Restaurants2025 Robb Report 100 Greatest American Restaurants of the 21st Century · #962025 OAD Top Restaurants in North America Ranked · #3532025 James Beard Award Semifinalists2025 La Liste Top Restaurants2025 Michelin 1 Star2024 OAD Top Restaurants in North America Ranked · #2192024 Michelin 1 Star

    Key differences to consider before you reserve.

    FAQ

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Andros Taverna?

    Andros Taverna does not operate a tasting menu format — the menu is structured around mezze, grilled proteins, a la carte ordering. That setup works in your favour at $$$: you can build a full meal around dips and pita, anchor it with lamb chops, finish with baklava froyo, spending only what fits your appetite. For a fixed tasting format, look elsewhere; for flexible Greek dining with Michelin Plate recognition and an OAD Casual North America ranking, Andros delivers.

    What should a first-timer know about Andros Taverna?

    Come hungry enough to work through the mezze section — the whipped feta, charred eggplant, taramasalata with warm pita are worth treating as a dedicated course before moving to mains. The kitchen centres on a wood-burning oven, so grilled and fire-kissed dishes are the move. The wine list runs entirely Greek, covering producers from Macedonia to Santorini across 135 selections, so lean on Wine Director Thomas Kakalios's picks rather than defaulting to something familiar.

    Is Andros Taverna worth the price?

    At a typical two-course meal cost of $40–$65 per person (excluding drinks), Andros Taverna is well-priced for what it is: a Michelin Plate holder ranked in Opinionated About Dining's top 900 casual restaurants in North America for both 2024 and 2025, with an all-Greek wine list of 135 selections and a wood-burning kitchen. It's better value than Chicago's $$$$ tasting-menu operations like Alinea or Smyth if your priority is a satisfying dinner rather than a multi-hour format. The $50 corkage fee is worth noting if you plan to bring your own bottle.

    Does Andros Taverna handle dietary restrictions?

    The database does not include documented dietary accommodation policies for Andros Taverna. Given the menu's structure — mezze-heavy with grilled proteins and a wood-burning oven as the kitchen centrepiece — pescatarians and vegetarians have options in the dips and seafood sections, but anyone with specific allergen requirements should check the venue's official channels at 2542 N Milwaukee Ave before booking.