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    Restaurant in Chicago, United States

    Prime & Provisions

    585pts

    Big room, serious wine, expense-account prices.

    Prime & Provisions, Restaurant in Chicago

    About Prime & Provisions

    Prime & Provisions is a large, polished Loop steakhouse with one of Chicago's stronger wine programs — 325 selections, 3,900-bottle inventory, and a Star Wine List 2026 accreditation. The dry-aged beef is processed in-house and the sourcing is serious. Best for groups and business dining; solo guests and couples should consider the bar or look at Bavette's instead.

    The Verdict: Chicago's Most Serious Steakhouse Wine Program in a Room Built for Scale

    The most common mistake with Prime & Provisions is writing it off as a corporate steakhouse for expense-account lunches. The room does nothing to correct that assumption — it is large, loud, and deliberately theatrical. But the wine program here is one of the strongest attached to a Chicago steakhouse, carrying a Star Wine List accreditation and a two- and three-star World of Fine Wine List award, and the sourcing behind the menu is more considered than the Las Vegas-adjacent glitz suggests. If you are coming for a serious steak with serious wine at 222 N LaSalle, this is the right call. If you want intimacy or a quiet room, look elsewhere.

    The Room

    Prime & Provisions occupies a large, high-ceilinged space in Chicago's Loop, anchored by barrel-vaulted ceilings, chandeliers, and a two-story wine tower that is visible from most of the dining room. The dry-aging room is also on display, positioned deliberately so you understand what is funding the price point. This is not a subtle room. The spatial language is unapologetically grand — polished, masculine, and scaled for groups and celebrations. Solo diners and couples will feel the proportions. The bar offers a more contained experience, and for anyone who finds the main room overwhelming, it is the smarter seat. Compare this to Bavette's Bar & Boeuf, which runs a darker, more intimate format, or Maple & Ash, which matches Prime & Provisions on scale but leans younger and louder. For a more classic Chicago steakhouse feel, Gibsons Bar & Steakhouse remains the neighbourhood benchmark.

    What You're Actually Paying For

    At the $$$ price tier , expect two courses to run $66 and upward, often considerably more once wine enters the picture , Prime & Provisions is charging for sourcing, not just sizzle. The dry-aged cuts are processed in-house, visible through the glass-fronted aging room, which means the provenance is not a menu claim but a physical fact of the dining room. The house-flared thick-cut bacon seasoned with black pepper, Michigan maple syrup, and dark chocolate is an early signal that the kitchen is sourcing regionally and cooking with intention. The dry-aged New York strip with black pepper crust, served with mushrooms and mashed potatoes, is the anchor dish. Apple pie rounds the menu into a deliberately American register. This is not a menu chasing novelty , it is a steakhouse that knows exactly what it is doing and sources accordingly. For a different take on premium protein sourcing in Chicago, Bazaar Meat Chicago takes a more theatrical, globally inflected approach, while Chicago Cut offers a riverfront rival with comparable steak credentials and a similarly serious wine list.

    The Wine Program

    Wine Director Michael Tumbali and Sommelier Jessica Mercer oversee a list of 325 selections backed by a 3,900-bottle inventory. The program holds both a two-star and three-star World of Fine Wine List accreditation , a meaningful credential, not just a participation trophy , and a Star Wine List award for 2026. Strengths are California and France, which maps cleanly onto what Chicago steakhouse regulars actually order. Wine pricing sits at $$$, meaning expect many bottles above $100; the corkage fee is $45 if you choose to bring your own. For context, this is one of the stronger steakhouse wine lists in the city. If wine depth is a core part of your decision, it should be a reason to choose Prime & Provisions over competitors where the list is an afterthought. If you are looking at American restaurants where the wine program is the main event nationally, venues like Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg or The French Laundry in Napa operate in a different category, but Prime & Provisions holds its own in the steakhouse segment.

    Who Should Book

    Prime & Provisions works leading for: groups of four or more who want a polished, high-energy dinner in the Loop; business diners who need a room that reads well for clients; and wine-focused guests who want depth on the list alongside serious dry-aged beef. It is less well-suited to couples looking for a quiet evening, solo diners who want to feel comfortable, or anyone for whom subtlety is part of the brief. For those use cases, Bavette's is the smarter pick. For a steakhouse experience with a different energy at a similar price tier, compare notes with Capa in Orlando or A Cut in Taipei if you travel frequently and want a calibration point. General Manager Christian Hetter and owners David Rekhson and Lucas Stoioff have built a room that prioritises scale and wine seriousness over intimacy, and the result is a steakhouse that rewards the right diner profile considerably.

    Practical Details

    Address: 222 N LaSalle St, Chicago, IL 60601. Cuisine: Steakhouse, lunch and dinner. Budget: $$$ for food (two courses $66+), $$$ for wine (many bottles $100+). Corkage: $45. Wine list: 325 selections, 3,900-bottle inventory, California and France strengths. Booking difficulty: Moderate , reserve ahead for dinner, especially Thursday through Saturday. Google rating: 4.4 from 2,821 reviews. Awards: Star Wine List 2026; World of Fine Wine List two-star and three-star accreditation. Getting there: Located in Chicago's Loop at 222 N LaSalle, close to the Chicago River. Multiple CTA lines serve the area. See our full Chicago restaurants guide for nearby options, and our Chicago hotels guide if you need accommodation nearby. Chicago bars, wineries, and experiences are also covered.

    Compare Prime & Provisions

    Value Check: Prime & Provisions and Peers
    VenuePriceBooking DifficultyValue
    Prime & Provisions$$$Moderate
    Smyth$$$$Unknown
    Alinea$$$$Unknown
    Kasama$$$$Unknown
    Next Restaurant$$$$Unknown
    Moody Tongue$$$$Unknown

    Comparing your options in Chicago for this tier.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can I eat at the bar at Prime & Provisions?

    Bar seating is available at Prime & Provisions and works well for solo diners or pairs who want a faster, lower-commitment visit. The room is large and the bar sits within the same high-energy space, so you get the full atmosphere without a full table commitment. For groups of four or more, a table is the better call.

    Is Prime & Provisions worth the price?

    At $66+ for two courses before wine, it earns its price tag if a polished steakhouse format is what you need. The wine program, holding Star Wine List accreditation with 325 selections and a 3,900-bottle inventory, is a genuine differentiator at this price point. If you want cooking that justifies $$$ on culinary ambition alone rather than atmosphere and steak execution, Smyth or Kasama makes a stronger case.

    What should I order at Prime & Provisions?

    The house-flared thick-cut bacon with black pepper, Michigan maple syrup, and dark chocolate is the right way to start. Follow with the dry-aged NY strip with black pepper crust, mushrooms, and mashed potatoes, and finish with the apple pie. Those three dishes are documented in venue records and represent the clearest expression of what the kitchen does.

    Can Prime & Provisions accommodate groups?

    Yes, and it's one of the stronger group options in the Loop. The room is large-format by design, built for scale under barrel-vaulted ceilings, and the $$$ food pricing and deep wine list support a full group dinner without feeling cramped. Parties of six or more should check the venue's official channels at 222 N LaSalle St to confirm private or semi-private arrangements.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Prime & Provisions?

    Prime & Provisions does not operate a tasting menu format. It's a traditional steakhouse with à la carte ordering across lunch and dinner. If a structured multi-course progression is what you're after, Next Restaurant or Alinea is the appropriate alternative in Chicago.

    Is Prime & Provisions good for solo dining?

    Workable, not ideal. The room leans toward groups and business tables, and the scale can feel impersonal for a solo visit. Bar seating softens that. At $$$ per head, a solo dinner here is a reasonable call if you're in the Loop on business and want a dependable steak and access to a well-stocked wine list, but it isn't a destination solo experience.

    What should I wear to Prime & Provisions?

    The room is polished and masculine in feel, with chandeliers and a two-story wine tower setting the tone. Business casual is a safe baseline; most diners arrive in professional or business attire given the Loop location and the volume of corporate clientele. Shorts and athleisure will read as underdressed.

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