Restaurant in Chicago, United States
Demera
190ptsEasy booking, honest value, communal format.

About Demera
Demera is Chicago's benchmark for Ethiopian food: a Michelin Plate holder at $$ with walk-in availability and a 4.6 rating across 2,200+ reviews. The communal table in Uptown is the right format for the cuisine, the yesiga wot is the dish to start with, and the price makes it one of the strongest value cases in the city's Michelin-recognized dining set.
Should You Book Demera?
Getting a table at Demera is easy — walk-ins are realistic, and you won't need to plan weeks in advance the way you would for Alinea or Kasama. That accessibility is part of the point. Demera holds a Michelin Plate (2024), sits at a $$ price point, and scores 4.6 across more than 2,200 Google reviews. For Ethiopian food in Chicago, this is the benchmark.
The Room
Demera occupies a well-lit corner on N Broadway in Uptown, with picture windows that open the dining room to the street. The communal table at the center of the room — lined with colorful wicker seating , is the visual anchor. It's the right format for the cuisine: Ethiopian food is inherently shared, and the setup makes that feel natural rather than forced. If you've been once and sat at a standard table, request the communal table on your next visit for a more engaged experience with the food and other diners.
The room reads casual without being cheap. At $$, you're in a neighborhood restaurant that happens to have Michelin recognition, not a dressed-up special-occasion destination. That combination , approachable price, real culinary credibility , is exactly what makes Demera worth returning to.
The Food
Demera's menu covers both vegetarian and omnivorous territory with enough range to satisfy either. For returning guests, the yesiga wot is the reference point: tender beef chunks in a berbere-spiced sauce with onions and ginger, served alongside turmeric-infused split peas and jalapeño-laced collard greens. The injera , soft, tangy, presented in place of silverware in the traditional manner , is how you eat all of it. If you've had it once and liked it, order it again; this is a dish that rewards repetition.
The menu includes a small glossary of terms, which is useful context for anyone still building familiarity with Ethiopian cuisine. If you've been before and used it, you probably don't need it anymore , use that confidence to push further into the menu on your next visit, particularly the vegetarian stews, which hold up well against the meat options.
For comparison: if you've eaten Ethiopian in other cities, Demera competes favorably with LeYou in San Jose and Das in Washington, D.C. , both Michelin-recognized Ethiopian spots. Demera's price point is competitive, and its 4.6 rating across a large review base gives you reasonable confidence in consistency.
Late-Night and Off-Peak Timing
Demera's Uptown location on N Broadway makes it a practical option later in the evening when many of Chicago's more formal dining rooms have closed their kitchens. The neighborhood is active, the room is well-lit, and the format , shared plates, communal seating , suits a later, more relaxed meal. If you're working backward from a late evening in Uptown and want something with real culinary weight behind it, Demera fits the slot better than most options at this price tier.
Hours are not confirmed in our data, so check directly before planning a late arrival. That said, the corner location and neighborhood foot traffic suggest this is not a venue that closes early.
Booking and Practical Details
Booking difficulty is low. Walk-ins are a realistic option, and reservations , if you prefer to secure a spot , won't require more than a day or two of lead time in most cases. This is a meaningful contrast to the city's harder-to-book rooms like Smyth or Next Restaurant, where planning weeks out is standard. Demera sits at 4801 N Broadway, Chicago, IL 60640, in the Uptown neighborhood.
Price range is $$, which means a full meal with injera and shared plates will land well below what you'd spend at any of the $$$$ tasting-menu venues in the city. For groups, the communal table is the right call , it accommodates multiple dishes and keeps the sharing format intact. For two, a standard table works fine, but the communal setup gives the meal more texture.
Dress code is casual. No specific booking platform is confirmed in our data , call ahead or check Google for current hours and reservation options.
For more on dining in Chicago across price tiers and cuisine types, see our full Chicago restaurants guide. If you're planning a broader trip, our Chicago hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide cover the rest.
Quick reference: Michelin Plate (2024) · 4.6 / 5 (2,206 reviews) · $$ · 4801 N Broadway, Uptown · Walk-ins welcome · Communal table available · Casual dress.
How It Compares
Demera sits in a different tier from most of the city's most-discussed dining rooms. Alinea, Smyth, Oriole, and Next Restaurant all operate at $$$$ with tasting menus, long booking windows, and a formal-evening commitment. Demera asks for none of that. It's $$ with walk-in availability and a Michelin Plate , which signals culinary seriousness without the price tag or ceremony of a starred room. If your goal is a genuinely good meal without the planning overhead, Demera is the easier and cheaper call.
Against Kasama , the Filipino spot that draws heavy attention and requires real planning to book , Demera is a useful alternative when you want a similarly specific, non-European cuisine with real culinary credibility but don't want to compete for a reservation. The formats are different (Kasama skews more intimate and tasting-menu adjacent; Demera is communal and à la carte), but both reward diners who appreciate cuisine with a distinct point of view.
If you're considering Demera against other Ethiopian options in the U.S., the relevant comparators are LeYou in San Jose and Das in Washington, D.C. All three carry Michelin recognition and operate at accessible price points. Demera's advantage is its Chicago location, its large and consistent review base, and the communal-table format that suits groups particularly well.
FAQs
- What should I order at Demera? The yesiga wot , beef in berbere sauce with split peas and collard greens , is the dish most worth ordering, and the injera is non-negotiable as your vehicle for eating it. If you've had both before, push into the vegetarian stews on your next visit. The menu glossary is there if you need orientation, but returning guests probably won't.
- Is Demera worth the price? Yes, without much qualification. At $$, you're getting Michelin Plate-recognized Ethiopian food in a neighborhood setting. Nothing about the price tier requires a trade-off in quality here. For context: comparable Ethiopian spots with Michelin recognition like Das in D.C. operate at a similar price tier, so Demera is not an outlier , it's what good Ethiopian at this level costs.
- Does Demera handle dietary restrictions? The menu has substantial vegetarian coverage alongside meat options, which is consistent with Ethiopian cuisine generally , many traditional dishes are vegetarian by default. Specific allergen information is not confirmed in our data; contact the restaurant directly before visiting if you have serious dietary restrictions.
- What are alternatives to Demera in Chicago? For Ethiopian specifically, Demera is the Michelin-recognized anchor in Chicago. If you want a different cuisine at a similar price point with comparable credibility, Kasama is the Filipino option worth considering, though it books harder and sits higher in price. For the broader Chicago dining picture, our Chicago restaurants guide covers the full range.
- Can I eat at the bar at Demera? Bar seating specifics are not confirmed in our data. The room is described as having a communal table and standard dining seating , walk in and ask about available options. Given the easy booking situation, you're unlikely to struggle to find a seat.
- Is Demera good for a special occasion? It works for a low-key celebration or a dinner where the food is the point and the ceremony is not. The Michelin Plate and 4.6 rating give you confidence in the kitchen, and the communal format makes it a good group meal. If you need a more formal setting or a private room, look at Smyth or Next Restaurant instead. Demera is the right call when the occasion is "we want a genuinely good dinner" rather than "we need a room with tablecloths."
Compare Demera
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Demera | Ethiopian | Demera’s well-lit corner location welcomes hungry Uptown residents looking to immerse themselves in Ethiopian cuisine. Colorful wicker seating at the dining room’s communal table gives groups an authentic experience, while picture windows offer plenty of people-watching for everyone.Vegetarian and omnivorous offerings abound on the menu, which also features a small glossary of terms to help newcomers. Pleasantly spicy yesiga wot combines tender chunks of beef with onions and ginger in a rich berbere sauce. Served with turmeric-infused split peas and spicy jalapeño-laced collard greens, this stew is a hearty pleasure. Sop up the extra sauce with piles of tangy and soft injera, presented in the traditional manner in lieu of silverware.; Michelin Plate (2024) | Easy | — |
| Smyth | Progressive American, Contemporary | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Alinea | Progressive American, Creative | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Kasama | Filipino | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Next Restaurant | American Cuisine | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Moody Tongue | Contemporary | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I order at Demera?
Start with the yesiga wot — beef cooked with onions, ginger, and berbere sauce, served alongside turmeric split peas and jalapeño collard greens. Order extra injera to work through the sauce. The menu includes a short glossary if you're new to Ethiopian food, so don't hesitate to use it before ordering.
Is Demera worth the price?
At $$, Demera is one of the more straightforward value calls in Chicago dining. You're getting a Michelin Plate-recognised kitchen at a price point well below what you'd pay at Kasama or any of the city's $$$$ rooms. For the neighbourhood, the format, and the food quality, the price-to-output ratio holds up.
Does Demera handle dietary restrictions?
Yes, and better than most at this price point. The menu covers both vegetarian and omnivorous options with enough range that neither group is eating a compromise meal. Ethiopian cuisine structurally suits vegetarians, and Demera's menu reflects that.
What are alternatives to Demera in Chicago?
If you want Ethiopian specifically, Demera is among the most accessible and recognised options in the city. For casual communal dining at a similar price tier but different cuisine, Kasama runs a daytime counter format worth considering. If budget is not a constraint and you want a tasting-menu experience instead, Smyth or Next Restaurant operate in a different format and price bracket entirely.
Can I eat at the bar at Demera?
The venue data doesn't confirm a dedicated bar setup at Demera. The dining room centres on a communal table and standard seating. Walk-ins are realistic, so arriving without a reservation and taking whatever's available is a practical option.
Is Demera good for a special occasion?
It depends on what you mean by special. Demera's Michelin Plate recognition and communal table format make it a solid choice for a relaxed group dinner where the food is the focus — not a white-tablecloth milestone meal. For a birthday or celebration where the room itself needs to impress, Smyth or Oriole will do more of that work. Demera is the call when the occasion is about eating well together without ceremony.
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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