At Morton’s underneath State Street, perhaps the steakiest 4,800 square feet of the steakiest neighborhood in America, the menu includes something called a Chicago-style bone-in rib eye. When asked what precisely this entails, the veteran waiter shrugs and says, “It’s just a bone-in rib eye.”
That response doesn’t convey ignorance but rather an unflappable brashness that symbolizes the state of red meat in this town: It’s Chicago-style because we say it is.
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No one’s suggesting that the city’s carnivorous culture is a new thing. Just read your history. In the late 19th century, Gustavus Franklin Swift, the Chicago meatpacking baron, became the first person to effectively ship fresh beef in ice-cooled railroad cars all over the country and abroad. Now the meat eaters come here. The Near North Side has possibly the highest concentration of quality beef palaces anywhere—we count 42 steak houses in River North and the Gold Coast alone—and night after night most of them are packed. Local dining titans Lettuce Entertain You and the Boka Restaurant Group (together with B.Hospitality Co. of The Bristol and Balena fame) both plan to open steak houses in 2014. (The Boka-Balena boys are eyeing the West Loop, but they could open on Neptune and people would find a way there.)
A good steak is delicious; it has always been so. But why the boom at this particular time? For one thing, the economy has finally risen from its torpor, allowing tourists and locals alike to feel better about splurging on that most American of proteins. And while steak houses haven’t downscaled in price, they certainly have eased their approach. An undeniable whimsy has seeped into menus (cheese steak egg rolls? Kobe corn dogs?) and service (iPad wine lists). The stuffiness that was part and parcel of the experience is long gone.
More than that, diners today know they can expect a very high level of expertise. Last year Brendan Sodikoff, Chicago’s hottest restaurateur, could have opened any concept he wanted anywhere, and he went with … Bavette’s Bar & Boeuf, a steak house, in River North. Why? “It’s the kind of food people would cook at home,” says Sodikoff. “You could go to the butcher and get an amazing piece of prime beef, but the steak house has the equipment you don’t have at home.”
Point taken. You’ll have a hard time replicating David Burke’s Kansas City strip, for example, unless you’ve got your own $250,000 purebred Angus stud bull, a dry-aging room tiled with 800-year-old Himalayan salt, and a 1,000-degree U.S. Range broiler.
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In search of the city’s top beef experience, our dining team spent months eating our way through more than 80 different steaks at 38 different joints. Old-school standbys (Gene & Georgetti, Gibsons). Newer hot spots (David Burke’s, Bavette’s). Sports lovers’ haunts (Ditka’s, Jordan’s). And, yes, chains (Ruth’s Chris, Capital Grille).
While some places thrilled us, others proved surprisingly disappointing. Many high- profile spots, including Smith & Wollensky, Keefer’s, and Del Frisco’s—each of which could be considered the premier steak house in a less competitive town—fell short of our top 20 for reasons ranging from inconsistent beef to amateurish service. (Restaurant Advice 101: Don’t air dirty laundry about customers in front of other customers.)
So here it is: the ultimate list of Chicago’s best steak houses, ranked. If red meat forever defines this swaggering city, these 20 restaurants walk the tallest.
1David Burke’s Primehouse
616 N Rush St.
2Bavette’s Bar & Boeuf
218 W Kinzie St.
3Benny’s Chop House
444 N Wabash Ave.
4Morton’s
1050 N. State St.
5Capital Grille
633 N St Clair St.
6Gene & Georgetti
500 N Franklin St.
7Chicago Chop House
60 W Ontario St.
8Michael Jordan’s
505 N Michigan Ave.
9The Palm
323 E. Wacker Dr.
10Fleming’s Prime Steakhouse & Wine Bar
25 E Ohio St.
11Ruth’s Chris Steak House
431 N Dearborn St.
12Gibsons Bar & Steakhouse
1028 N Rush St.
13Mastro’s Steakhouse
520 N Dearborn St.
14Tavern on Rush
1031 N. Rush St.
15Erie Café
536 W. Erie St.
16Chicago Cut
300 N La Salle St.
17Sullivan’s Steakhouse
415 N Dearborn St.
18River Roast (Formerly Fulton's on the River)
315 N. LaSalle St.
19Wildfire
159 W. Erie St.
20Mike Ditka’s
100 E Chestnut St.