Restaurant in Chicago, United States
Anelya
290ptsEastern European comfort done with real skill.

About Anelya
Anelya brings Eastern European cooking to Chicago's Avondale neighbourhood at a $$ price point, earning a Michelin Plate in 2024 and a 4.5 Google rating. The zakusky cart, horseradish vodka, green borsch, and stuffed cabbage make this one of Chicago's most accessible chef-driven dining experiences. Book the bar first — it's where the meal properly begins.
The Bar Seat at Anelya Is Where You Want to Start
Anelya's bar fills up. If you're visiting for the first time, claim a stool at the bar before moving to the dining room — this is where the zakusky cart circles, the horseradish-infused vodka shots get poured, and the Balkan wine list gets explored at your own pace. The transition from bar to table is part of how the meal is structured, and first-timers who skip straight to a dining room table miss the opening act. At a $$ price range, this is one of the more accessible Eastern European dining experiences in Chicago, and the bar is where that value becomes obvious early.
Located at 3472 N Elston Ave in Avondale, Anelya holds a Michelin Plate (2024) — a recognition that signals kitchen competence without the tasting-menu price tag that accompanies a full Michelin star. It earned a 4.5 out of 5 from 249 Google reviewers, which for a neighbourhood restaurant in Chicago is a meaningful signal of consistent execution. This is not a destination that coasts on novelty. The cuisine is Eastern European, the format is sit-down with a strong zakusky tradition, and the room is described as cozy , which in this context means intimate rather than cramped.
What to Expect When You Walk In
The experience is built around a product-focused approach to traditional Eastern European specialties. For a first-timer, the clearest orientation is this: the meal begins with the zakusky cart, a rolling display of small bites that functions as the appetiser course. Sunflower seed hummus, tart roe tarts, and carrot salad have all been documented as part of the spread. Think of it less like ordering à la carte starters and more like a curated selection of small plates that rotate based on what's in season and what the kitchen is working with.
From there, the menu moves into more substantial territory. Green borsch enhanced with dill and nettles, loaded with boiled egg and fingerling potato slices, is one of the dishes that has drawn attention. The freshly baked pampushky , a challah-adjacent bread glazed with butter , is noted as the pairing to order with the soup. Stuffed cabbage (holubtsi) uses finely ground, locally raised beef. These are not reinterpreted classics designed to surprise; they are well-executed versions of dishes that are genuinely underrepresented in American dining rooms, and that's the point.
Named for the grandmother of the chefs behind the concept, Anelya is the work of chefs Johnny Clark and Beverly Kim. Their decision to bring Eastern European cooking to Avondale , a neighbourhood with its own distinct culinary identity , rather than position it in a higher-traffic, higher-rent dining corridor, is part of what keeps the price point accessible. The room matches the intention: serious food without the theatre pricing that comes with it.
The Bar Counter: What It Adds to the Meal
The counter and bar area at Anelya serve a function beyond waiting for your table. The horseradish-infused vodka shot is not an afterthought , it's a deliberate tonal marker for what follows. Balkan wine, which remains a genuinely undersourced category even at wine-forward restaurants in Chicago, is available here and worth exploring if you're unfamiliar with the region's producers. The bar seating also gives solo diners a comfortable entry point: the zakusky cart works well as a counter experience in itself, without the slightly exposed feeling that solo diners sometimes report at full dining room tables in intimate venues.
For groups, the transition from bar drinks to the dining room works naturally. Book the bar for pre-dinner, then move to the table , it lengthens the evening in a way that feels intentional rather than drawn out.
How It Compares
Against Chicago's Michelin-starred dining options , Alinea, Smyth, Kasama, and Next Restaurant , Anelya is not competing on price or format. It is the right choice if you want a full dinner with a distinct culinary point of view at a fraction of the cost of those venues. Compared to Oriole, which also takes a product-focused approach but at a significantly higher price point, Anelya delivers more accessible entry to chef-driven cooking without sacrificing the sense that the kitchen has clear convictions about what it's doing.
If you're curious how Eastern European cooking translates in other cities, Kinkally in London and the Boulder Dushanbe Tea House in Boulder offer useful points of reference, though neither maps directly onto Anelya's format. For broader Chicago planning, the Pearl Chicago restaurants guide covers the full range, and if you're building an itinerary, the Chicago hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide are all available on Pearl. For reference-point restaurants at the leading of their respective categories nationally, Le Bernardin in New York, The French Laundry in Napa, Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, Providence in Los Angeles, and Emeril's in New Orleans each show what a different tier of investment looks like.
Know Before You Go
Practical Details
- Address: 3472 N Elston Ave, Chicago, IL 60618 (Avondale neighbourhood)
- Price range: $$ , among the more accessible Michelin Plate restaurants in Chicago
- Awards: Michelin Plate (2024)
- Google rating: 4.5 / 5 (249 reviews)
- Booking difficulty: Easy , no significant lead time required compared to starred Chicago venues
- Leading approach for first-timers: Arrive early, sit at the bar, order a vodka shot or Balkan wine, let the zakusky cart come to you, then move to the dining room
- Solo dining: Well-suited , bar seating and zakusky cart format works for one
- Cuisine: Eastern European, product-focused, traditional specialties
- Hours, phone, and booking method: Not confirmed in our current data , check directly with the venue before visiting
Compare Anelya
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Anelya | If I were to allow myself a soapbox moment, I’d say that new spots offering ideas, cuisine and styles in completely unique and under-explored manners, showcasing incredible skill while keeping the pri...; Named for his grandmother, Chefs Johnny Clark and Beverly Kim bring the flavors of Eastern Europe to Avondale. Throw back a shot of horseradish-infused vodka or sip a glass of Balkan wine in the bar before moving to the cozy dining room.The menu takes a product-focused approach to traditional specialties. An array of hors d'ouevres is displayed on the zakusky cart loaded with the likes of sunflower seed hummus, tart roe tarts, and carrot salad. Green borsch is enhanced with dill and nettles, stocked with boiled egg and slices of fingerling potato, while the freshly baked, butter-glazed, challah-like pampushky bread is a perfect pairing with the soup. Stuffed cabbage, or holubtsi, features finely ground locally raised beef.; Michelin Plate (2024) | $$ | — |
| Smyth | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ | — |
| Alinea | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ | — |
| Kasama | Michelin 1 Star | $$$$ | — |
| Next Restaurant | Michelin 1 Star | $$$$ | — |
| Moody Tongue | Michelin 1 Star | $$$$ | — |
How Anelya stacks up against the competition.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Anelya handle dietary restrictions?
The menu is built around traditional Eastern European specialties with a product-focused approach, which means there are vegetable-forward options like green borsch, carrot salad, and sunflower seed hummus on the zakusky cart alongside meat dishes like stuffed cabbage with locally raised beef. If you have serious allergies or strict dietary requirements, check the venue's official channels before booking — the menu structure suggests flexibility at the starter end, less so for mains.
Is Anelya good for solo dining?
Yes. The bar counter at Anelya is a genuine asset for solo diners — you can start with a horseradish-infused vodka shot and graze from the zakusky cart without the awkwardness of a table for one. At the $$ price range with a Michelin Plate, it's one of the more comfortable solo options in Chicago's Avondale neighbourhood.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Anelya?
Anelya's format centres on the zakusky cart rather than a formal tasting menu, so if you're comparing it to multi-course omakase or prix-fixe formats at places like Smyth or Alinea, the experience is fundamentally different. At the $$ price point with a Michelin Plate, the value case is straightforward: this is Eastern European cooking executed with skill at accessible prices, not a destination tasting experience.
What should I wear to Anelya?
Anelya is a neighbourhood restaurant in Avondale at the $$ price range, not a formal dining room. Casual to pulled-together casual fits the setting — there's no evidence of a dress code, and the bar-forward entry sequence with vodka shots sets the tone early.
What are alternatives to Anelya in Chicago?
If you want more ambition and a larger budget, Smyth in the West Loop offers a seasonal tasting menu with a Michelin star. For Filipino-influenced fine dining at a comparable buzz level, Kasama on the North Side also holds a Michelin star and runs a daytime counter alongside evening tasting menus. Anelya is the right call if you want Eastern European cooking specifically, neighbourhood pricing, and a meal that doesn't require a three-month booking lead time.
Recognized By
More restaurants in Chicago
- AlineaAlinea is Chicago's three-Michelin-star tasting menu at $210–$265 per person — a theatrical, multi-sensory Progressive American experience running three to four hours. It holds a Forbes Five-Star and AAA 5 Diamond, and booking is near impossible without planning months ahead. Worth it for food explorers who commit to the format; not the right call if you want a conventional fine dining dinner.
- SmythSmyth holds three Michelin stars, a top-five North America ranking from Opinionated About Dining, and one of Chicago's most serious natural wine programmes. Dinner only, Tuesday through Saturday, with near-impossible availability and $$$$ tasting menu pricing. Book six to eight weeks out minimum — this is the stronger call over Alinea for food-first diners.
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