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    Restaurant in Chicago, United States

    Osteria Langhe

    450pts

    Logan Square's most reliable Italian, year after year.

    Osteria Langhe, Restaurant in Chicago

    About Osteria Langhe

    Osteria Langhe is one of Chicago's most consistent Italian tables, with an OAD Casual North America ranking of #28 (2025) and a Michelin Plate to back it up. The Piedmontese-focused menu — led by house-made tajarin and a 1,275-bottle wine list strong on Piedmont — delivers genuine regional depth at $$ pricing. Book a week out minimum for weekend tables.

    Verdict: One of Chicago's Most Reliable Italian Tables — Worth Returning to Repeatedly

    If you've eaten at Osteria Langhe once, you should already be planning your second visit. This Logan Square osteria has been running since 2014 and has earned a Michelin Plate (2024) and back-to-back rankings on Opinionated About Dining's Casual North America list — #50 in 2023, #66 in 2024, and climbing to #28 in 2025. That trajectory is not accidental. The kitchen, led by Chef Fabian Hernandez under owner and wine director Aldo Zaninotto, runs a focused Piedmontese menu that rewards repeat visits precisely because it doesn't try to do too much. At $$ for a typical two-course meal (roughly $40–$65 before drinks), this is one of Chicago's stronger value propositions in serious Italian dining.

    The Room and the Format

    The space on West Armitage signals intent from the outside: a garage-like glass façade, bare wood tables, metal chairs, and glowing bulb fixtures that protrude from the walls. The atmosphere is warm without being fussy , the kind of room where the food is the point. Service is consistently described as welcoming, which matters for a neighbourhood osteria that depends on regulars. Dinner runs Wednesday through Saturday until 10 pm, and Sunday until 9 pm; Monday and Tuesday are closed. Walk in expecting the kitchen to be tight and deliberate, not sprawling.

    First Visit: Where to Start

    If you're new to the menu, the path of least resistance is also the highest-reward one. The tajarin , thin, eggy Piedmontese noodles twirled with a savory ragù , is the dish most associated with this kitchen, and it's the right place to anchor your first meal. All pasta is made in-house. For a starter, the tonnato is worth your attention: thin-sliced poached beef arranged around a tangy tuna sauce, a classic Piemontese preparation that the kitchen handles cleanly. The food leans hearty and regional rather than light or modernist, which is exactly what Piedmontese cooking should feel like in a casual setting.

    Second Visit: Go Wider on the Menu

    Return visits are where Osteria Langhe earns its OAD ranking. Once you've had the tajarin, shift focus to the hand-pinched ravioli stuffed with la tur cheese , a softer, more delicate pasta that contrasts well with the ragù-driven richness of the tajarin. The cauliflower and leek flan is a starter worth adding if you skipped it the first time: it's a distinctly regional preparation that doesn't appear on many Chicago menus. With a 120-bottle wine list built around Piedmont as its core strength, a second visit is also the right time to dig into the wine program. Aldo Zaninotto oversees both ownership and the cellar, and the list has 1,275 selections total, with pricing described as $$ , a range of price points rather than a list that forces you into expensive bottles. Corkage is $25 if you prefer to bring your own.

    Third Visit: Lean on the Wine Program

    By a third visit, you have enough context to use the wine list properly. Piedmont's strength here means Barolo, Barbaresco, Barbera, and Dolcetto are likely to be the best-represented categories, which pairs logically with the kitchen's ragù-driven pasta and protein preparations like the prosciutto-wrapped rabbit loin. This is the visit where you ask Zaninotto or the floor staff for a recommendation rather than defaulting to what you already know. A cellar with 1,275 bottles and a specialist's focus on Piedmont is not something most Chicago Italian restaurants offer at this price tier. Compared to Italian programs at Nico Osteria or Monteverde, both well-regarded Chicago Italian tables, the Langhe wine depth skews more regional and specialist. Alla Vita, Ciccio Mio, and Coco Pazzo are reasonable alternatives if you want broader regional Italian coverage, but none of them combine the OAD ranking trajectory with this price point and wine depth.

    Practical Details

    Booking difficulty is moderate. Given the OAD #28 ranking in 2025 and a Google rating of 4.6 from 678 reviews, this is not a table you can reliably walk into on a weekend. Book at least one to two weeks ahead for Thursday through Saturday. Sunday is slightly more forgiving. The room is in Logan Square at 2824 W Armitage Ave , accessible by the Blue Line (Armitage is a short walk from the Western stop) or by ride-share. Phone and website details are not currently listed in our database; check directly through reservation platforms or the restaurant's own channels.

    DetailOsteria LangheMonteverdeNico Osteria
    Cuisine focusPiedmontese ItalianBroad Italian regionalItalian coastal
    Meal pricing (2 courses)$$ ($40–$65)$$$$$$
    Wine depth1,275 bottles, Piedmont focusItalian-focusedBroad list
    Booking difficultyModerateModerate–HighModerate
    Awards (recent)OAD #28 (2025), Michelin PlateJames Beard nominatedMichelin Bib Gourmand
    Leading forRegional depth + winePasta-forward groupsSeafood-leaning Italian

    Pearl Picks Nearby

    If Osteria Langhe is your anchor for a Chicago trip, use the rest of your time well. Our full Chicago restaurants guide covers the broader dining map. For where to stay, our Chicago hotels guide has options near Logan Square and across the city. If you want to extend the evening, our Chicago bars guide has the right follow-up options. Wine-focused travellers should also check our Chicago wineries guide and experiences guide.

    For context on where serious Italian sits globally, 8½ Otto e Mezzo Bombana in Hong Kong and cenci in Kyoto show how Italian cuisine travels internationally. For fine dining benchmarks in other US cities, Le Bernardin in New York, Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Providence in Los Angeles, The French Laundry in Napa, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, and Emeril's in New Orleans are the relevant frame of reference.

    The Bottom Line

    Osteria Langhe is a well-run, award-tracked neighbourhood osteria that punches above its price point. The OAD ranking improvement from #66 to #28 in a single year tells you the kitchen is not standing still. At $$, with a Piedmont-specialist wine list and in-house pasta, it earns a second and third visit more reliably than most restaurants in its price tier in Chicago. Book with a plan: use visit one to anchor on the tajarin and tonnato, visit two to explore the broader pasta range and wine list, and visit three to let the staff guide you.

    Compare Osteria Langhe

    Osteria Langhe in Context: Awards and Value
    VenueAwardsPriceValue
    Osteria LangheOpinionated About Dining Casual in North America Ranked #28 (2025); Open since 2014, this osteria has become an area staple, thanks to its charming space and focused menu that displays a keen eye on hearty Piedmontese cuisine. The staff is as welcoming as the design, which features a garage-like glass façade, glowing bulbs that protrude from the walls, bare wood tables and metal chairs lining the floor.For starters, we’re partial to the thin slivers of poached beef arranged around a tangy tonnato, but just as tempting is the cauliflower and leek flan. Pastas are, of course, made-in house and the specialty is no doubt the tajarin, a plate of deliciously eggy noodles twirled high with a savory ragù. Other regional specialties include hand-pinched ravioli stuffed with la tur cheese as well as prosciutto-wrapped rabbit loin.; WINE: Wine Strengths: Piedmont Pricing: $$ i Wine pricing: Based on the list\'s general markup and high and low price points:$ has many bottles < $50;$$ has a range of pricing;$$$ has many $100+ bottles Corkage Fee: $25 Selections: 120 Inventory: 1,275 CUISINE: Cuisine Types: Italian Pricing: $$ i Cuisine pricing: The cost of a typical two-course meal, not including tip or beverages.$ is < $40;$$ is $40–$65;$$$ is $66+. Meals: Dinner STAFF: People Wine Director: Aldo Zaninotto Chef: Fabian Hernandez Owner: Aldo Zaninotto; Opinionated About Dining Casual in North America Ranked #66 (2024); Michelin Plate (2024); Opinionated About Dining Casual in North America Ranked #50 (2023)$$$
    SmythMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best$$$$
    AlineaMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best$$$$
    KasamaMichelin 1 Star$$$$
    Next RestaurantMichelin 1 Star$$$$
    Moody TongueMichelin 1 Star$$$$

    Comparing your options in Chicago for this tier.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Does Osteria Langhe handle dietary restrictions?

    The menu is focused on Piedmontese cuisine, which is meat-forward — pasta with ragù, prosciutto-wrapped rabbit, and beef tonnato are signature dishes. The kitchen does offer vegetable-forward options like the cauliflower and leek flan, but this is not a venue built around flexibility. If you have significant dietary restrictions, check the venue's official channels before booking to confirm what can be adapted.

    Is Osteria Langhe worth the price?

    Yes. A typical two-course dinner runs $40–$65 per head before drinks, which is reasonable for OAD #28 in North America casual dining (2025) with a Michelin Plate. The wine list adds value: 120 selections, 1,275 bottles in inventory, strong Piedmontese coverage, and $$ pricing means you won't be forced into expensive pours. For the cooking quality and award trajectory, this is one of Chicago's stronger value propositions in the $$$ neighbourhood.

    How far ahead should I book Osteria Langhe?

    Book at least one to two weeks out for weeknight tables; aim for two to three weeks for Friday or Saturday. Since climbing to OAD #28 in 2025 from #66 in 2024, demand has increased noticeably. Walk-in availability is possible on slower nights, but with only dinner service Wednesday through Sunday, there's no slack in the weekly schedule to absorb last-minute parties.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Osteria Langhe?

    Osteria Langhe serves dinner only, Wednesday through Sunday (5–10 pm weekdays, 5–9 pm Sunday). There is no lunch service. If you're building a daytime itinerary in Logan Square, plan accordingly — this is an evening-only destination.

    What should a first-timer know about Osteria Langhe?

    Start with the tajarin: thin, eggy Piedmontese noodles with ragù are the house signature and the clearest argument for coming back. The room is casual — bare wood tables, metal chairs, a glass garage-façade front — so dress comfortably. Wine Director Aldo Zaninotto also owns the restaurant, which means the Piedmontese wine list gets serious attention; ask the staff for pairings rather than navigating it alone.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Osteria Langhe?

    The venue database does not confirm a tasting menu format at Osteria Langhe. Based on available information, the restaurant operates à la carte at dinner. If a tasting option has been introduced, confirm directly with the restaurant before booking around it.

    Is Osteria Langhe good for solo dining?

    The casual format and à la carte structure make solo dining workable here. The room uses bare wood tables and metal chairs rather than a dedicated bar counter, so you won't have the same perch-and-watch experience as an omakase counter, but the welcoming staff noted in OAD coverage means solo guests are not an afterthought. A weeknight booking is your easiest path in.

    Hours

    Monday
    Closed
    Tuesday
    Closed
    Wednesday
    5–10 pm
    Thursday
    5–10 pm
    Friday
    5–10 pm
    Saturday
    5–10 pm
    Sunday
    5–9 pm

    Recognized By

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