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    Restaurant in Chicago, United States

    Lobby Bar at the Peninsula

    415Pearl Points

    OAD-ranked hotel bar; dinner earns its price.

    Lobby Bar at the Peninsula, Restaurant in Chicago

    About Lobby Bar at the Peninsula

    The Lobby Bar at the Peninsula holds back-to-back Opinionated About Dining Top 500 North America rankings and backs them with a 435-selection wine list strong in Turkey and France, overseen by Wine Director Nebiye Kaya. Italian and Mediterranean cooking at $$ food pricing makes lunch genuinely good value for a Peninsula address. Book for dinner when the wine budget is open; book for lunch when it isn't.

    The Verdict

    The Lobby Bar at the Peninsula has earned back-to-back Opinionated About Dining recognition — ranked #519 in North America in 2024 and climbing to #528 in 2025, with a Recommended listing in 2023 before that. For a hotel dining room in Minneapolis, that trajectory is worth paying attention to. If you want Italian and Mediterranean cooking with a serious wine program under one roof at the Peninsula Chicago property, this is a direct yes. Book it for lunch if value matters; book it for dinner if atmosphere is the priority.

    What to Expect

    The Lobby Bar operates as the Peninsula's ground-floor anchor, and the room does what a good hotel lobby bar should: it reads as a destination in its own right rather than a fallback for guests who don't want to leave the building. The visual register is Peninsula polish — clean lines, considered lighting, the kind of space where business and pleasure blur comfortably. Chef Andreas Block runs the kitchen with a menu positioned as Italian and Mediterranean, a pairing that gives the kitchen range without requiring it to overreach.

    Wine Director Nebiye Kaya and Sommelier Berfin Çakır oversee a list of 435 selections across 11,000 bottles in inventory. The wine program leans on Turkey and France as its core strengths, which is a less predictable axis than the standard Italy-France hotel wine playbook and gives the list genuine personality. Pricing lands at the $$$ tier, meaning a meaningful portion of the list runs above $100 per bottle. The corkage fee is $100 if you're bringing your own. For a food-and-wine traveler, this is a list worth spending time on before you order.

    Lunch vs. Dinner

    This is where the decision actually lives. The Lobby Bar runs lunch and dinner daily, open from 7 am to 10 pm every day of the week. Lunch here offers the full kitchen and wine program at a cuisine pricing tier of $$ (a typical two-course meal in the $40–$65 range, not including drinks), which positions it as genuinely accessible for a Peninsula address. If you're in Minneapolis for a day and want to eat somewhere with OAD credentials without committing to a dinner spend, the lunch window is the smarter entry point.

    Dinner is the better choice if you're with someone who wants the full room experience , the Lobby Bar's setting reads differently once the ambient light shifts, and the $$$ wine list is easier to justify when you're not watching the clock. For a special occasion or a wine-focused evening, dinner wins. For a solo meal or a business lunch where you want credentials without ceremony, go at midday.

    How to Book

    Booking difficulty at the Lobby Bar is easy by Minneapolis standards, helped by its hotel-adjacent positioning and daily 7 am–10 pm schedule. The OAD ranking (Top 500 in North America two consecutive years) means it draws destination diners, but this is not a venue where you need to plan months ahead. A week's notice should be sufficient for most evenings; same-week booking for lunch is generally manageable. There is no booking method specified in available data, so contact the Peninsula Chicago directly to confirm reservation options.

    Reservations: Contact the Peninsula directly; easy availability most days. Hours: Monday–Sunday, 7 am–10 pm. Cuisine Pricing: $$ for food (two-course meal $40–$65 before drinks). Wine: $$$ list, 435 selections, 11,000-bottle inventory, Turkey and France as strengths. Corkage: $100. Meals Served: Lunch and dinner. Kitchen: Chef Andreas Block. Wine Team: Nebiye Kaya (Wine Director), Berfin Çakır (Sommelier).

    Worth Knowing

    The Peninsula is owned by Hongkong and Shanghai Hotels, which means the service infrastructure behind this venue is institutional rather than independent. That cuts both ways: the consistency is high, but the personality of the room depends more on the kitchen and wine team than on an owner-operator's vision. For the food-and-wine traveler, the OAD recognition and the depth of the wine list are the stronger signals here than the hotel brand itself.

    If you're building a Minneapolis dining itinerary and want to spread across multiple nights, pair this with Owamni for Indigenous American cooking, Spoon & Stable for New American, or Hai Hai for something more adventurous. For the full picture of where to eat and drink in the city, see our Minneapolis restaurants guide, bars guide, and hotels guide. If the wine program here appeals, our Minneapolis wineries guide and experiences guide round out the picture.

    FAQ

    What should a first-timer know about Lobby Bar at the Peninsula?

    • This is a hotel lobby bar that earns its OAD Top 500 North America ranking through a serious Italian-Mediterranean kitchen and a wine list with genuine depth.
    • Food pricing is $$ (roughly $40–$65 for two courses), which is approachable for the address.
    • The wine list is where the spend can climb , 435 selections, heavy on Turkey and France, with corkage at $100 if you bring your own.
    • It runs lunch and dinner daily, so timing is flexible.

    Is Lobby Bar at the Peninsula good for solo dining?

    • Yes. A hotel lobby bar format is one of the more comfortable solo dining settings: no awkward table-for-one optics, and you can engage the wine team or sit quietly depending on preference.
    • Lunch is the better solo move at $$ pricing; you get the full kitchen and wine access without a long evening commitment.
    • For solo dining elsewhere in Minneapolis, 112 Eatery and Blue in Green are worth comparing.

    Can I eat at the bar at Lobby Bar at the Peninsula?

    • The venue is structured as a lobby bar, so bar seating is part of the design rather than an afterthought.
    • Specific seat configuration data isn't available, but the bar-first format means counter dining should be the default expectation.
    • If a particular seating arrangement matters, confirm with the Peninsula directly when booking.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Lobby Bar at the Peninsula?

    • Lunch wins on value: $$ food pricing with the same kitchen and wine list. If budget is a factor, this is your window.
    • Dinner is better if you want the full atmosphere and have room to spend on wine. The $$$ list is easier to explore at an unhurried evening pace.
    • For a business meal or a first visit, lunch. For a special occasion or wine-focused night, dinner.

    What are alternatives to Lobby Bar at the Peninsula in Minneapolis?

    • Spoon & Stable is the peer comparison for a polished, destination-level dinner in Minneapolis.
    • Owamni if you want a more distinctive culinary identity and Indigenous American cooking.
    • 112 Eatery for Italian at a lower price point.
    • See the full Minneapolis restaurants guide for a broader comparison set.

    Is Lobby Bar at the Peninsula good for a special occasion?

    • Yes, with the right expectations. The Peninsula setting and OAD credentials make it a credible choice for a celebration dinner.
    • The wine team (Director Nebiye Kaya, Sommelier Berfin Çakır) adds real value for a special-occasion wine pairing.
    • If you want a more intimate or chef-driven experience, Spoon & Stable may suit better; if the hotel grandeur is part of the occasion, the Peninsula delivers.

    Does Lobby Bar at the Peninsula handle dietary restrictions?

    • The Italian and Mediterranean menu range generally accommodates a variety of dietary needs, but no specific information about dietary accommodation policies is available in current data.
    • Contact the Peninsula directly before booking if dietary restrictions are a firm requirement. The wine-forward format means the kitchen team is typically accustomed to working around specific needs at this level.

    How far ahead should I book Lobby Bar at the Peninsula?

    • Booking difficulty is easy. A week's notice is sufficient for most dinner reservations; lunch most days should be manageable with less lead time.
    • The OAD Top 500 ranking means it draws out-of-town visitors, so Friday and Saturday evenings may fill faster than weeknights.
    • No advance booking method is specified in available data , contact the Peninsula directly to confirm.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should a first-timer know about Lobby Bar at the Peninsula?

    Come for the wine list as much as the food. The bar carries 435 selections across an 11,000-bottle inventory with strengths in Turkey and France, and pricing sits at $$$. The cuisine is Italian-Mediterranean, running lunch and dinner daily from 7 am to 10 pm at 108 E Superior St. OAD has ranked it in North America's top 530 three years running, which sets a clear baseline for what to expect.

    Is Lobby Bar at the Peninsula good for solo dining?

    Yes. A hotel lobby bar format is one of the more comfortable solo setups in any city: counter or bar seating is typically available, staff are accustomed to solo guests, and the 7 am to 10 pm daily schedule means you can drop in at off-peak hours without a reservation. The $$ cuisine price point keeps a solo meal manageable even if you add wine.

    Can I eat at the bar at Lobby Bar at the Peninsula?

    The venue is structured as a lobby bar, so bar and counter seating is central to the experience rather than an afterthought. Full food service is available across the room during all operating hours. If the wine list is your primary draw, sitting at the bar gives you direct access to the sommelier team, which includes Wine Director Nebiye Kaya and Sommelier Berfin Çakır.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Lobby Bar at the Peninsula?

    Dinner is the stronger case if you want the full wine experience: the $$$-tier list and $100 corkage fee are built for an evening pace. Lunch at $$ cuisine pricing is the more practical entry point and typically easier to walk into. If the OAD recognition is what's drawing you, dinner is where that ranking is most felt.

    What are alternatives to Lobby Bar at the Peninsula in Minneapolis?

    112 Eatery is the local benchmark for serious cooking without hotel overhead. Manny's Steakhouse is the go-to for a classic power-dinner format with a deeper American wine focus. Brasa Rotisserie offers a lower-cost, no-reservation option if you want quality without the $$$-wine commitment. Kincaid's and Punch Neapolitan Pizza fill out the mid-range and casual ends of the market respectively.

    Is Lobby Bar at the Peninsula good for a special occasion?

    Yes, with caveats. The Peninsula is owned by Hongkong and Shanghai Hotels, so service infrastructure is institutional and reliable — a real advantage when a meal needs to go smoothly. The 435-label wine list supports a celebratory order well. For a more intimate or chef-driven special occasion, a smaller independent room may feel more personal.

    Does Lobby Bar at the Peninsula handle dietary restrictions?

    The cuisine is Italian-Mediterranean, a format that typically accommodates pescatarian and vegetable-forward requests with more flexibility than a steakhouse or tasting-menu format. The Peninsula's institutional ownership means kitchen communication is generally well-managed. check the venue's official channels at 108 E Superior St to confirm specific requirements before booking.

    Location

    108 E Superior St, Chicago, IL 60611

    Chicago, United States

    Compare Lobby Bar at the Peninsula

    Comparing Lobby Bar at the Peninsula to Alternatives
    VenueCuisineAwardsBooking Difficulty
    Lobby Bar at the PeninsulaModern AmericanEasy
    112 EateryItalianUnknown
    Brasa RotisserieAmerican CreoleUnknown
    Kincaid’sSteakhouseUnknown
    Manny’s SteakhouseSteakhouseUnknown
    Punch Neapolitan PizzaPizzeriaUnknown

    Key differences to consider before you reserve.

    Also Consider

    How It Compares

    Against Minneapolis peers, the Lobby Bar at the Peninsula sits at the top of the formality and wine-program tier. 112 Eatery overlaps on Italian but runs more casual and at a lower price point, better if you want a neighbourhood-feel dinner without hotel-lobby polish. Brasa Rotisserie is in a different category entirely: American Creole, counter-service in feel, and significantly cheaper. If the Peninsula's Italian-Mediterranean direction appeals but you want something less formal, 112 Eatery is the closer alternative.

    For steakhouse spending, both Manny's Steakhouse and Kincaid's compete at the high end of the Minneapolis dinner market, but they are format-specific choices. If the occasion calls for a steak rather than Italian-Mediterranean cooking and a wine-focused experience, go to Manny's. If you're choosing between the Peninsula and a steakhouse primarily on atmosphere, the Peninsula wins for anyone who cares about the wine list. Punch Neapolitan Pizza doesn't compete directly, it's a pizzeria at a fraction of the price point, worth knowing if your group splits on where to spend.

    The cleaner comparison for the Peninsula's positioning is against destination-level Minneapolis restaurants like Spoon & Stable. Spoon & Stable is chef-driven New American with more culinary personality; the Peninsula offers more wine depth and the hotel infrastructure. For a food-focused traveler who wants to eat once at the top of the Minneapolis market, Spoon & Stable edges it on kitchen ambition. For a wine-focused traveler or a business dinner where the room matters, the Peninsula is the better call.

    Hours

    Monday
    7 am–10 pm
    Tuesday
    7 am–10 pm
    Wednesday
    7 am–10 pm
    Thursday
    7 am–10 pm
    Friday
    7 am–10 pm
    Saturday
    7 am–10 pm
    Sunday
    7 am–10 pm

    Recognized By

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