GuideUpdated July 16, 2026

6 Best Andersonville Restaurants in Chicago

The best 6 restaurants for andersonville in Chicago — curated by TastyPals editors.

The best andersonville restaurants in Chicago are Little Bad Wolf, Calo Ristorante, m.henry, and more. Start with Little Bad Wolf if you want the strongest overall first pick.

By James Whitfield6 ranked picksPublished July 16, 2026Updated July 16, 2026
6 Best Andersonville Restaurants in Chicago
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Top picks at a glance

How the restaurants compare

How we chose

We looked for restaurants that feel like a strong fit for the guide topic, not just the most obvious names in the city. The shortlist favors rooms with clear mood, dependable pacing, and enough distinction to help someone decide faster. Read our full methodology →

Room tone

Lighting, pace, and general energy all need to support the reason someone clicked this guide.

Food fit

We favored restaurants that feel best suited for the moment, not just restaurants with broad reputation.

Useful range

The final list tries to give readers enough variation in neighborhood, price, and style to compare real options.

6 ranked picks

Little Bad WolfAndersonville's Clark Street corridor has developed into one of Chicago's most reliably interesting dining stretches, and Little Bad Wolf — open since 2014 — has a lot to do with that reputation. The room is compact and illustrated with wolf-from-Little-Red-Riding-Hood imagery, the soundtrack reportedly lands somewhere usefully chill, and the kitchen's entire premise is American bar food approached with genuine intentionality. No reservations, which signals exactly the kind of crowd-driven, walk-in culture the place has cultivated over a decade of consistent business. The Wolf Burger is the anchor and the dish most discussed in outside coverage — Time Out has cited it among Chicago's best, and the build makes the case on paper: three beef patties, bacon, American cheese, onion straws, house pickles, red onion, mayo, and a fried egg. That's a lot of components, and the burger's reputation rests on the idea that the kitchen keeps them in proportion rather than letting the stack collapse into chaos. The Mac and Cheese has its own following, known for a creamy, heavy preparation finished with honey-cured bacon, scallions, and toasted breadcrumbs — the kind of dish that diners consistently point to as a reason to return. The Steak Frites and Half Fried Chicken round out a menu that rewards people who want comfort food with some thought behind it, at a price point — squarely mid-range — that keeps ordering freely realistic. Over 100 beers and a proper cocktail list make Little Bad Wolf a natural landing spot for groups, and the no-reservations policy means weekend waits are a genuine possibility. Go early, plan for the line, and when you sit down, the Wolf Burger and Mac and Cheese are where most people start — and for good reason. View restaurant →
Calo RistoranteCalo Ristorante has been anchoring Andersonville's Clark Street since 1963, and the Recchia family's refusal to modernize the room or the menu is, by every account, the entire point. The dining room — mahogany bar, exposed brick, hand-painted Old World murals, floor-to-ceiling windows — reads like a space designed to make occasion-dining feel accessible rather than aspirational. At a two-dollar-sign price point, that combination of genuine elegance and everyday approachability is exactly what this neighborhood has long championed, and Calo has been demonstrating it for over sixty years without apparent irony or reinvention. The kitchen's reputation rests on two pillars that, on paper, seem like an odd pairing: stone-fired pizza and BBQ ribs. The ribs are consistently described by regulars as fall-off-the-bone, the kind of dish that creates mild cognitive dissonance in a room this carefully composed — but diners report that the dissonance dissolves quickly. The tomato bread is widely flagged as the move before anything else arrives; it has the reputation of an opener that actually matters, not a filler gesture while you wait. From the pasta side of the menu, the ziti in vodka sauce and the bucatini with meatballs are the dishes that come up most often in the conversation around Calo — both signaling a kitchen committed to Italian-American classics as comfort rather than as a canvas for reinvention. Practically: Calo takes reservations through OpenTable, and weekend evenings fill predictably, so booking three to four days out is the standard advice. Walk-ins before 6:30 PM on weekdays have a reasonable shot at the bar. If you're anchoring your order, the stone-fired pizza is the consensus starting point — pair it with the ribs if your table has the appetite, and treat the tomato bread as non-negotiable from the jump. View restaurant →
m.henrySome Andersonville institutions coast on longevity. m.henry, going strong since 2003, still earns the line. This is brunch with actual ambition — chef/owner JD Voss runs a globally-inspired American kitchen built on seasonal, organic ingredients, and you taste the intent in dishes that have outlived a hundred avocado-toast trends. The Blackberry Bliss hot cakes are the headliner, and deservedly — chef Pati Jinich called them the fluffiest in Chicago on 'The Best Thing I Ever Ate,' and I'm not here to argue. The Cinnamon Roll French Toast is its sweeter, more decadent twin (Geoffrey Zakarian's pick). If you lean savory, Fannie's Killer is the move: toasted sourdough, two over-medium eggs, applewood bacon, plum tomatoes, gorgonzola and thyme, with house potatoes. Most dishes land in the $7-10 range — genuinely fair for cooking this considered. Grab the garden patio when weather allows; the room gets loud at peak, so this is a go-early-or-go-patient situation. A real neighborhood anchor that holds a group together. View restaurant →

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Save these spots to your Chicago list in the TastyPals app, then explore similar restaurants when you want a tighter shortlist for the night.

Personalized city picksCleaner shortlistsBuilt for iPhone and Android
TastyPalsTonight
Your taste. Our picks.
Smarter follow-through after the guide: better restaurant context, quicker narrowing, less second-guessing.
For tonight
Date night spots with warm rooms and polished service
Next step
Keep exploring in the app when you want a tighter shortlist