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    Restaurant in Chicago, United States

    Parachute HiFi

    220Pearl Points

    Casual price, serious cooking. Book it.

    Parachute HiFi, Restaurant in Chicago

    About Parachute HiFi

    Parachute is one of Chicago's most reliable mid-range special-occasion restaurants, with chefs Johnny Clark and Beverly Kim delivering technically precise New Korean cooking in a casual Avondale room. Consistently ranked by Opinionated About Dining across four years, it books far more easily than peers like Kasama or Next Restaurant. Open Wednesday through Sunday from 5 pm.

    Parachute, Chicago: Verdict

    Parachute is one of the most consistent dinner options in Chicago's Avondale neighbourhood, at a casual price point it outperforms restaurants charging considerably more. Chefs Johnny Clark and Beverly Kim run a New Korean kitchen that earns its reputation through technical precision rather than trend-chasing. If you are planning a date night or a relaxed special-occasion meal somewhere north of the Loop, this is a strong booking. It is not the place for a formal celebration requiring white-tablecloth service, but for food-forward dining without the ceremony of a tasting-menu room like Alinea, it is very hard to beat in this city.

    The Restaurant

    The dining room on Elston Avenue sits in a converted garage space, that spatial origin gives Parachute an honest, unpretentious energy. The room is compact rather than intimate in a hushed sense: tables are close, the ceiling is high, the noise level builds as the night progresses. If a quiet, conversation-first environment matters for your occasion, arrive when doors open at 5 pm on a weeknight. Friday and Saturday service runs until midnight, making it viable for a later reservation if an earlier slot is unavailable.

    The kitchen's approach to New Korean cooking is the reason Parachute has accumulated consistent recognition from Opinionated About Dining across multiple years, including a rank of #80 in Gourmet Casual Dining in North America in 2023 and a 2025 rank of #722 in the Casual North America list. That trajectory, holding placement across four consecutive tracked years, signals a kitchen operating at a high level of reliability rather than one riding a moment of hype. For a special occasion where food quality is the primary criterion, that consistency matters more than a single flashy review.

    Where Parachute earns its editorial angle is in technique. New Korean cuisine as a category asks a kitchen to balance fermentation, umami depth, textural contrast, the structural logic of Korean cooking while working within a more casual American format. Clark and Kim do this with evident fluency. The result is food that reads as cohesive rather than fusion-confused, which is harder to execute than it sounds. For direct New Korean comparisons, Soogil in New York City and Atomix operate in the same culinary tradition, though Atomix sits in a far more formal and expensive register. Parachute is the accessible, neighbourhood-scale version of that same technical seriousness.

    Booking is direct. Unlike the months-ahead lead times required for Kasama or the lottery-style process at Next Restaurant, Parachute operates on a relatively open reservation system. A week or two of advance planning should secure most party sizes, though weekend prime slots will tighten. The restaurant is closed Monday and Tuesday, so plan accordingly.

    For a broader Chicago dining context, see our full Chicago restaurants guide. If you are building a wider itinerary, our Chicago hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide cover the rest of the city. For comparable New Korean or chef-driven casual cooking in other cities, Lazy Bear in San Francisco and Providence in Los Angeles offer useful reference points for what serious kitchens at this level of recognition tend to deliver.

    Practical Details

    Parachute is open Wednesday through Sunday from 5 pm, with Friday and Saturday service extending to midnight. The kitchen is closed on Monday and Tuesday. The address is 3500 N Elston Ave in Avondale. Price range data is not published in our current database, but OAD casual recognition across multiple years places it firmly in the mid-range casual dining tier rather than the $$$$ bracket occupied by peers like Smyth or Oriole. Confirm current pricing directly with the restaurant before booking.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Parachute good for solo dining?

    Yes, the format suits solo diners well. The converted garage dining room is informal enough that eating alone here doesn't feel awkward, the New Korean menu from Johnny Clark and Beverly Kim rewards focused attention. If bar seating is available, take it — it's the most comfortable solo position in the room.

    How far ahead should I book Parachute?

    Book at least two to three weeks out, especially for Friday or Saturday when service runs to midnight and demand is highest. Parachute's OAD ranking — #479 in North America in 2024, slipping to #722 in 2025 — hasn't killed reservations, but mid-week slots go faster than the casual setting might suggest. Wednesday and Thursday are your best bet for shorter lead times.

    What should I order at Parachute?

    Specific menu items aren't confirmed in our current data, so we won't guess. What the record does confirm is a New Korean approach from two chefs with sustained OAD recognition across multiple years — the cooking has enough repeat endorsement to suggest ordering broadly rather than playing it safe.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Parachute?

    Dinner only — Parachute doesn't serve lunch. The kitchen opens at 5 pm Wednesday through Sunday, closing at 11 pm most nights and midnight on Friday and Saturday. Monday and Tuesday are dark.

    Can I eat at the bar at Parachute?

    The dining room is housed in a converted garage space, bar seating is part of the layout. It's a practical option if you're dining solo or want to walk in without a reservation, though availability isn't guaranteed. Calling ahead remains the safer move.

    Can Parachute accommodate groups?

    Small groups of four to six are manageable, but Parachute is a neighbourhood restaurant in a converted garage — not a private dining venue. For larger parties, check the venue's official channels, as the space and format work better for intimate dinners than celebrations requiring a dedicated room. If private dining is a priority, Boka is a stronger option in Chicago.

    Location

    3500 N Elston Ave, Chicago, IL 60618

    Chicago, United States

    Compare Parachute HiFi

    Value at a Glance: Parachute
    VenuePrice
    Parachute
    Alinea$$$$
    Smyth$$$$
    Kasama$$$$
    Next Restaurant$$$$
    Boka$$$$

    Key differences to consider before you reserve.

    Also Consider

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

    Parachute sits in a different price register from most of its Chicago peers worth comparing. Alinea and Smyth are both $$$$ tasting-menu rooms where you are committing to a multi-hour, multi-course format and spending accordingly. If technical ambition and a full progressive American experience is what you are after, Smyth is arguably the stronger choice between the two for food quality. Alinea is more theatrical. Neither is the right comparison for a relaxed dinner where the food happens to be very good.

    Kasama is the closest structural peer: a chef-driven restaurant with serious culinary credentials, operating in the casual-to-mid-range tier and earning sustained critical recognition. The difference is cuisine and booking difficulty. Kasama's Filipino cooking and Parachute's New Korean approach serve different flavour profiles, but both reward diners who want serious food without the ceremony of a tasting menu. Kasama is significantly harder to book. If you cannot get into Kasama, Parachute is not a consolation prize, it is a genuinely strong alternative that is easier to access. Next Restaurant and Boka occupy a more formal, higher-commitment tier, neither competes directly with Parachute's casual, neighbourhood-restaurant positioning.

    The decision framework is straightforward: if budget is open and formality is welcome, look at Smyth or Alinea. If you want chef-driven food at a reasonable price point without a months-long booking wait, Parachute and Kasama are your two best options in Chicago, and Parachute is the one you can actually get into on two weeks' notice.

    Hours

    Monday
    Closed
    Tuesday
    Closed
    Wednesday
    5–11 pm
    Thursday
    5–11 pm
    Friday
    5 pm–12 am
    Saturday
    5 pm–12 am
    Sunday
    5–11 pm

    Recognized By

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