Michigan Avenue

TASTING MENU TITANS

FORGET FAST-CASUAL DINING—CHICAGO’S HOTTEST RESTAURANT­S ARE DOUBLING DOWN ON THE TASTING-MENU ONLY MODEL, WITH IMPRESSIVE­LY DELICIOUS (AND MICHELIN STAR-STUDDED) RESULTS.

- BY AMBER GIBSON

Forget fast-casual dining— Chicago’s hottest restaurant­s are doubling down on the tasting-menu only model, with impressive­ly delicious (and Michelin star-studded) results.

In this age of grab-and-go eats, there’s something to be said for a multi-course culinary journey that can captivate even the most restless of foodies. At several ambitious new Chicago restaurant­s, chefs are embracing the challenge of presenting diners with a dozen or more courses, throwing down the gauntlet to anyone who thinks of Chicago as merely steak joints and gastropubs. But tasting menus today are more passion than pretension: Show up in jeans, sit back, and let these maestros show you what they’ve got.

PERMANENT POP-UP Twenty-seat Temporis has all the intimacy of a pop-up minus the communal tables. Co-chefs Evan Fullerton and Sam Plotnick make an unlikely pair, but the veteran and creative upstart strike a refined balance with their food. “I’m rooted more in the tradition of technique because I had to go to culinary school,” Fullerton explains. Plotnick, on the other hand, began cooking in his college dorm room and has only worked at one restaurant, Les Nomades, where he met Fullerton. “I’m a little more scientific method-y,” Plotnick says. “I want to try a bunch of things I’ve never tried.” That includes an interactiv­e microgreen­s centerpiec­e, and a foie gras ice cream

“oUR GoAl is To leT The FARM diCTATe WhAT We do.” —john shields

and canelé combo accented with passion fruit reduction and sesame tuile. 933 N. Ashland Ave., 773-697-4961; temporisch­icago.com

EFFORTLESS EXCELLENCE

White tablecloth elegance meets exposed brick wall urbanity on an inconspicu­ous West Loop side street at Oriole. With a menu that flows smoothly from sushi (one bite of nigiri topped with crisp roasted genmai) to pasta (luscious capellini dressed with Burgundy truffles), chef Noah Sandoval nonchalant­ly garnered two Michelin stars just seven months after opening. “The stars are a huge honor and confidence boost,” Sandoval says. “I must be doing something right.” Even indulgent courses like lamb belly and Japanese A5 wagyu show restraint so you don’t feel too guilty as you’re digging into the pie that pastry chef Genie Kwon sends you home with. 661 W. Walnut St., 312-8775339; oriolechic­ago.com

FARM FRESH

As you break into the carotene-packed licoricecu­red egg yolk floating in frozen yogurt meringue in what has become Smyth’s signature dessert, thank pastry chef Karen Shields and a coop of chickens on a 20-acre farm in Bourbonnai­s. “Our ultimate goal is to let the farm dictate what we do,” says chef John Shields, who met his wife and partner working at Charlie Trotter’s. “It’s a really challengin­g propositio­n but there’s a uniqueness and creativity that evolves from having less.” Preserved wild black raspberrie­s picked in July brighten up caramelize­d lobster, and salty shiitake mushroom powder garnishes both crispy lamb salad and a milk chocolate huckleberr­y bar. 177 N. Ada St. #101, 773-913-3773; smythandth­eloyalist.com

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 ??  ?? Boasting exquisite fare like this frozen tomato mousse with noyaux and spicy flowers from Smyth, tasting menus are back on trend in a big way.
Boasting exquisite fare like this frozen tomato mousse with noyaux and spicy flowers from Smyth, tasting menus are back on trend in a big way.
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