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    Restaurant in Chicago, United States

    Cabra

    150pts

    Decorated Peruvian rooftop. Easier to book than it should be.

    Cabra, Restaurant in Chicago

    About Cabra

    Cabra is Stephanie Izard's Peruvian restaurant atop the Hoxton Hotel in Chicago's West Loop, and it's more than a rooftop novelty — Opinionated About Dining has ranked it in the top tier of casual North American dining three years running. Booking is easy relative to Chicago's tasting-menu competition, making it the most accessible high-credential dinner in the neighborhood. Go in warm weather for the full terrace experience.

    Cabra Is Not a Casual Peruvian Spot — It's One of Chicago's Most Consistently Decorated Restaurants

    The common assumption about Cabra is that it's a rooftop bar with Peruvian food attached. Correct the record before you book: this is a destination restaurant that happens to sit on leading of the Hoxton Hotel in the West Loop, and Opinionated About Dining has ranked it among the leading casual dining experiences in North America three consecutive years running — #321 in 2025, up from #355 in 2024, and recommended in 2023. That trajectory matters. It signals a kitchen improving under scrutiny, not coasting on a view.

    Chef Stephanie Izard, leading known for winning Leading Chef and building the Girl & the Goat group, takes a different register at Cabra. The cooking here is rooted in Peruvian tradition , ceviches, causas, anticuchos, pisco-based drinks , but filtered through Izard's instinct for bold, layered flavor. For the food-focused traveler, Cabra sits at the intersection of a credible chef reputation and a cuisine that Chicago doesn't have in abundance at this level.

    When to Go and What the Season Changes

    Cabra's rooftop setting means the experience shifts significantly by season. Chicago winters make the outdoor portion of the space impractical, and the full visual payoff of the open-air terrace , Green Street below, the West Loop skyline in the background , is a warm-weather experience. If you're visiting between May and October, prioritize an outdoor table and book dinner for 7 PM or later when the light softens and the room fills. That's the version of Cabra worth planning around.

    In colder months, the indoor dining room still delivers the full menu, but the spatial drama is reduced. The trade-off: weekend lunch slots (Saturday from 11 AM, Sunday from 11 AM) are easier to secure in winter and give you access to the same kitchen at a lower booking pressure. If your visit is flexible by season, warm-weather evenings are the move. If you're visiting in winter, a weekend lunch is the practical alternative.

    Booking Intelligence

    Booking here is classified as easy relative to Chicago's competitive dining tier. You won't face the months-long wait that applies to Alinea or the tight release windows at Kasama. That said, Friday and Saturday evening slots in peak season (June through September) move quickly , a two-week lead time is a safe minimum for those windows. Weeknight dinners Monday through Thursday are accessible with a week's notice or less. The restaurant opens at 4 PM on weekdays, making early-evening slots a reliable option for those who prefer a quieter start to the meal.

    Know Before You Go

    • Address: 200 N Green St, Chicago, IL 60607 (atop the Hoxton Hotel, West Loop)
    • Hours: Monday–Thursday 4–10 PM | Friday 4–11 PM | Saturday 11 AM–11 PM | Sunday 11 AM–10 PM
    • Booking difficulty: Easy , weeknights accessible within a week; weekend evenings in summer, book 2+ weeks out
    • Awards: Opinionated About Dining Casual North America #321 (2025), #355 (2024), Recommended (2023)
    • Google rating: 4.5 across 1,702 reviews
    • Cuisine: Peruvian
    • Leading season: May–October for the full rooftop experience
    • Chef: Stephanie Izard

    How It Compares

    Cabra sits in a different tier from Chicago's high-wire tasting-menu restaurants. Alinea, Smyth, and Next Restaurant all demand more planning, more budget, and more commitment to a fixed format. Cabra is the answer when you want a credentialed, chef-driven meal that doesn't require a tasting-menu mindset or a reservation booked two months in advance. It's the easiest high-quality dinner to secure in the West Loop on short notice.

    Against Kasama, which also operates in the casual-but-acclaimed register and draws comparable OAD attention, the cuisine profiles are distinct enough that the choice is usually preference-driven: Filipino at Kasama, Peruvian at Cabra. Both are worth booking. If Cabra is full on the night you want, Kasama is the closest like-for-like alternative in terms of awards credibility and accessibility. For Peruvian specifically in other U.S. cities, ITAMAE in Miami and Causa in Washington D.C. operate in the same genre if you want a regional comparison.

    Pearl Picks , More Chicago and Beyond

    FAQ

    What should I order at Cabra?

    • The menu is Peruvian-rooted, which means ceviches, causas, and anticuchos are the categories to focus on. Cabra has OAD credentials that suggest the kitchen executes these well, but specific dishes rotate with the season. Ask your server what's been on the menu longest , those are typically the dishes the kitchen has refined most. The Peruvian format favors sharing plates, so ordering across multiple categories gives you the broadest read on the kitchen.

    What are alternatives to Cabra in Chicago?

    • Kasama is the closest alternative if you want a casual-but-decorated restaurant with a similar booking accessibility. For a step up in format and price, Smyth and Oriole operate in the progressive American space. Alinea and Next Restaurant are the choices if you want Chicago's most ambitious tasting-menu experiences, though both require significantly more lead time to book.

    Does Cabra handle dietary restrictions?

    • Peruvian menus typically include strong options for pescatarians and omnivores, with ceviches and vegetable-forward dishes alongside meat-based anticuchos. For specific allergen or dietary needs, contact the restaurant directly , the database does not include published dietary accommodation policies. Given the volume of reviews (1,702 on Google at a 4.5 average), it's reasonable to expect a kitchen accustomed to fielding these requests, but confirm before you go.

    Is Cabra good for a special occasion?

    • Yes, with a caveat on format. Cabra is a share-plates restaurant, not a white-tablecloth tasting-menu setting, so if your occasion calls for formal service and a structured progression, Smyth or Alinea are more appropriate choices. But for a special dinner that feels festive and chef-credentialed without the commitment of a tasting menu, Cabra works well , especially on a warm evening on the terrace. The OAD ranking and Izard's reputation give it enough weight for a milestone meal.

    Is Cabra good for solo dining?

    • Cabra's share-plates format is less natural for solo dining than a counter-service or a la carte setup, but it's manageable. Order two or three dishes and treat it as a tasting of the menu's range. The bar area typically accommodates solo diners more comfortably than the main dining room. For solo dining with a counter-centric experience in Chicago, Kasama may be a better fit depending on your preference.

    Compare Cabra

    Value Check: Cabra and Peers
    VenuePriceBooking DifficultyValue
    CabraEasy
    Smyth$$$$Unknown
    Alinea$$$$Unknown
    Kasama$$$$Unknown
    Next Restaurant$$$$Unknown
    Moody Tongue$$$$Unknown

    Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I order at Cabra?

    The menu is Peruvian-focused under chef Stephanie Izard, so lean into the ceviches and small plates rather than treating this like a conventional sit-down dinner. Cabra has earned consecutive Opinionated About Dining Casual North America rankings — the food is the reason, not the rooftop view. Order broadly and share; the format rewards groups who graze rather than individuals locked into single entrees.

    What are alternatives to Cabra in Chicago?

    For a tasting-menu experience with similar critical credibility, Kasama is the closest peer — it carries heavier accolades and a more demanding reservation process. If you want rooftop atmosphere without Peruvian cuisine as the focus, other West Loop options exist, but none in this tier combine Izard's name recognition with OAD-ranked casual dining. Cabra is the call if you want something genuinely decorated that doesn't require the months-long planning window of Alinea or Smyth.

    Does Cabra handle dietary restrictions?

    Peruvian cuisine structurally accommodates a range of diets — ceviches and vegetable-forward dishes are common on menus in this style. That said, specific dietary accommodation details are not confirmed in available venue data, so contact Cabra directly at 200 N Green St, Chicago before booking if you have serious restrictions. Don't assume; verify.

    Is Cabra good for a special occasion?

    Yes, with the right expectations set. Cabra is a casual-tier restaurant by OAD's classification, so it won't deliver the ceremony of a tasting-menu room like Smyth or Next Restaurant. What it does offer is a rooftop setting, a name-chef pedigree with Stephanie Izard, and three consecutive years of OAD recognition — enough to make a dinner feel intentional without the $300-plus-per-head commitment. Book Friday or Saturday evening for the strongest atmosphere.

    Is Cabra good for solo dining?

    It works for solo dining, particularly at the bar, where the rooftop setting and small-plates format mean you can order at your own pace without committing to a full table. The OAD Casual ranking signals a room that isn't stiff or high-ceremony, which helps. Saturday runs 11am–11pm if you want a lower-pressure lunch slot rather than arriving into peak dinner service.

    Hours

    Monday
    4–10 pm
    Tuesday
    4–10 pm
    Wednesday
    4–10 pm
    Thursday
    4–10 pm
    Friday
    4–11 pm
    Saturday
    11 am–11 pm
    Sunday
    11 am–10 pm

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