GuideUpdated July 16, 2026

4 Best pasta Restaurants in Chicago

The best 4 restaurants for pasta in Chicago — curated by TastyPals editors.

The best pasta restaurants in Chicago are Il Porcellino, OLIO E PIÙ, La Scarola, and more. Start with Il Porcellino if you want the strongest overall first pick.

By Giovanni Ricci4 ranked picksPublished July 16, 2026Updated July 16, 2026
4 Best pasta Restaurants in Chicago
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Top picks at a glance

Editorial details
Published: July 16, 2026
Last updated: July 16, 2026

On this page

  1. 1. Il PorcellinoView →
  2. 2. OLIO E PIÙView →
  3. 3. La ScarolaView →
  4. 4. The VillageView →

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.

4 ranked picks

Il PorcellinoIl Porcellino occupies a warm stretch of River North with the kind of room that does real work before a dish arrives — exposed brick, a glowing bar, and a retractable roof at the back that, when Chicago's weather cooperates, opens the space into something closer to a half-garden terrace. The concept is rustic-leaning Italian-American, deliberately unrevised rather than reimagined, and that restraint appears to be the point. This is a restaurant built to become a regular in people's lives, not to impress once and recede. The menu centers on a handmade pasta program that regulars and reviewers consistently point to as the kitchen's core strength. The lasagna verde has developed a reputation as the dish people return for specifically — layered, slow-baked, the kind of preparation that rewards patience in the making. The rigatoni and the tagliatelle Bolognese are frequently cited alongside it, both reportedly executed with the time the sauces require rather than hurried through. Among the larger plates, the chicken parmigiana is described across accounts as generous and properly crisped, while the meatballs have emerged as a reliable table-opener. The wine list leans Italian and, by most accounts, is approachable without being tentative — a good match for a menu that doesn't ask you to work too hard. For a date night that favors comfort over spectacle, the room has been consistently recommended in that register — intimate enough without feeling pressured, the pacing reportedly unhurried. It also functions well for group dinners, where the menu's family-style instincts carry the occasion without demanding much choreography from the table. The retractable-roof back section is the seat worth requesting in warmer months. Weekend evenings book up; plan accordingly. View restaurant →
La ScarolaLa Scarola operates on a logic that most Chicago Italian rooms have quietly abandoned: the room itself is the destination. Not the room as backdrop, not the room as a vehicle for a chef's ambitions, but the room as a living, breathing thing — close tables, low ceilings, the kind of noise that reads as company rather than intrusion. This River West red-sauce institution has reportedly never once attempted to be anything else, and the confidence of that refusal is genuinely rare in a city that keeps renovating its traditions into irrelevance. It draws the couple who still believe dinner should feel like an occasion, the group of four who want something serious in the glass and a reason to linger. At price level two, it asks almost nothing of your wallet while reportedly demanding everything of your evening. The wine list is where La Scarola quietly builds its case. The Ruffino Chianti Classico Riserva Ducale Gold is known for the kind of structured, dried-cherry depth that pulls a long table into focus; the Il Poggione Brunello di Montalcino is a genuinely serious pour for a room this unpretentious — earthy and tannic, the sort of bottle that slows a dinner down in the best possible way. The Prisoner Red Blend is there for the table that wants richness without ceremony, and diners consistently seem to find it does exactly that. For those wanting to open with something bright, the Lanson Brut Champagne is listed as a natural starting point before committing to a bottle of the Enroute Pinot Noir, which has a reputation as the most graceful wine on the list relative to what it costs. Practical intel: regulars reportedly favor early weeknight arrivals, when the pacing has breathing room and the room hasn't yet hit full pitch. Seating toward the back is said to be where the atmosphere deepens and the lighting earns its keep. Book ahead for weekends. Do not arrive expecting innovation — arrive expecting a room that knows precisely what it is. View restaurant →

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Save these spots to your Chicago list

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