Restaurant in Chicago, United States
Rose Mary
515ptsAdriatic drinking food done right in Fulton Market.

About Rose Mary
Rose Mary is Chef Joe Flamm's Croatian-Adriatic restaurant in Chicago's Fulton Market, earning a Michelin Plate in 2024 and a 4.5 Google rating across 1,601 reviews. At the $$$ price point, it pairs a charcoal hearth-driven menu of Adriatic dishes with a 205-selection wine list curated for the food. Book 2–3 weeks ahead for weekends; weeknights offer easier access and a more relaxed pace with the drinks program.
Rose Mary, Chicago: Is It Worth Booking?
At the $$$ price point, Rose Mary on West Fulton Market delivers a genuinely specific cooking proposition — Croatian-inflected Adriatic food from Chef/Owner Joe Flamm — and a drinks program strong enough to carry a full evening on its own. For that spend, you are getting Michelin Plate recognition (2024), a wine list of 205 selections across 2,600 bottles, and a room that seats around 100 in a setting designed to recall Croatia's konobas: whitewashed walls, rustic clay, hanging plants. If you want a $$$ dinner that goes somewhere most Chicago restaurants do not, Rose Mary earns the booking.
The Adriatic Angle , and Why It Matters Here
Rose Mary is described in its own framing as a restaurant built around "Adriatic drinking food" , and that phrase is doing real work on the plate and in the glass. The cooking draws on the bold, direct flavors of the Croatian coastline: dishes from the charcoal hearth, preserved vegetables, red pepper cream, rosewater pastry. Tortellini djuvec arrives with eggplant and preserved zucchini in a red pepper cream; burek is filled with ground beef and mozzarella; lamb mains come off the charcoal hearth with blitva and potatoes; and rosewater fritule close things out on the dessert side. These are not approximations of Adriatic flavor , they are direct translations, and at this price tier, that specificity is what separates Rose Mary from the broader Italian-American field in Chicago.
If you are a food traveler who has eaten at Bekal in Zagreb or Dubrovnik in New Rochelle, Rose Mary will feel familiar in the leading sense , a serious attempt at the cuisine rather than a diluted nod to it. If this is your entry point into Croatian cooking, the menu is specific enough to teach you something.
The Bar and Wine Program: The Strongest Argument for Coming on a Weeknight
The PEA-R-13 angle here is worth taking seriously: Rose Mary's drinks program is not an afterthought. Wine Director Kyle Davidson oversees a 205-selection list with 2,600 bottles in inventory , priced at the $$ tier, meaning there is genuine range across the list without the all-or-nothing dynamic of a cellar that skews only toward trophy bottles. Strengths run through France, Italy, Germany, and California. Corkage is $35 if you bring your own, which is reasonable for the neighborhood and price point.
The "Adriatic drinking food" concept means the kitchen is cooking toward the drinks program, not despite it. Dishes built around charcoal, preserved vegetables, and fermented flavors are inherently wine-friendly , and a wine list with Italian and German depth is well-positioned to meet them. If wine pairing matters to your decision, Rose Mary is a stronger call than most $$$ options in Chicago's West Loop, where the bottle lists can be competent but rarely this purposefully curated for the food.
For the leading experience with the drinks program, plan for a Tuesday through Thursday visit. Friday and Saturday in Fulton Market move fast, and a 100-seat room can shift in energy quickly once full. A weeknight visit gives you more attention from the floor staff and more time with the wine list.
Room and Service
The design reads konoba , the Croatian equivalent of a rustic trattoria , with whitewashed walls, clay elements, and hanging plants. At 100 seats, it is a proper restaurant rather than an intimate counter experience, but the service model appears to lean into that scale: well-versed servers are noted as guiding guests through the menu, which matters when the cuisine is unfamiliar to most American diners. If you are coming as a group of four or more, the room can absorb you comfortably. Parties of two wanting a more focused experience should ask about counter or bar seating when booking.
How Rose Mary Fits Into Chicago's Broader Restaurant Scene
Rose Mary sits in a useful position: specific enough to feel like a destination, priced accessibly enough ($$$ versus the $$$$ tier of Alinea, Smyth, or Kasama) that it works for a regular dinner rather than only a once-a-year occasion. It earned a Michelin Plate in 2024 , not a star, but a recognition of quality that puts it in a credible tier. Google reviewers rate it 4.5 across 1,601 reviews, which is a large enough sample to be meaningful. For more on eating and drinking across the city, see our full Chicago restaurants guide, our full Chicago bars guide, and our full Chicago wineries guide.
Booking Rose Mary
Booking difficulty is moderate. At 100 seats, Rose Mary has more availability than a 12-seat counter, but Michelin Plate recognition and a strong Google rating (4.5 across 1,601 reviews) mean that prime weekend slots fill. Book 2 to 3 weeks ahead for Friday or Saturday. Weeknight availability is more forgiving, and as noted, Tuesday through Thursday is when the drinks-focused experience plays leading anyway.
Quick reference: 932 W Fulton St, Chicago, IL 60607 | $$$ | Dinner | Michelin Plate 2024 | Wine: 205 selections, 2,600 bottles, $$ pricing, $35 corkage | Book 2–3 weeks out for weekends.
How It Compares
Pearl Picks Nearby
- Alinea , Progressive American, $$$$ , Chicago's most demanding tasting-menu experience
- Smyth , Progressive American, $$$$ , Strong wine program, seasonal tasting menu
- Kasama , Filipino, $$$$ , Tasting menu format, distinct cuisine
- Next Restaurant , American, $$$$ , Rotating concept, advance ticket booking required
- Oriole , Progressive American, $$$$ , Among Chicago's hardest tables to book
Exploring beyond Chicago? See Lazy Bear in San Francisco, The French Laundry in Napa, Le Bernardin in New York City, or Providence in Los Angeles for other serious wine-and-food evenings at comparable or higher price tiers. Also see our full Chicago hotels guide and our full Chicago experiences guide for planning the full trip.
Compare Rose Mary
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Rose Mary worth the price?
Yes, for what it is. At $$$, Rose Mary sits a tier below Chicago's destination-tasting-menu circuit (Alinea, Smyth) but delivers a more specific cooking identity than most restaurants at this price point. The Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 and a 205-selection wine list overseen by Wine Director Kyle Davidson back the value case. If you want a la carte Adriatic cooking in a room designed for drinking and eating well, the price holds up.
Does Rose Mary handle dietary restrictions?
The menu is built around a charcoal hearth and Adriatic-influenced dishes, so meat, fish, and dairy feature prominently across the described offerings. Specific dietary accommodation policies aren't documented in available venue data, so check the venue's official channels at 932 W Fulton St before booking if you have restrictions that could limit your options significantly.
How far ahead should I book Rose Mary?
Plan for at least 2 to 3 weeks out. At roughly 100 seats, Rose Mary has more availability than a counter-format restaurant, but Michelin Plate recognition drives consistent demand. Weeknight bookings are more accessible than Friday and Saturday, and the bar program makes a weeknight visit a strong choice anyway.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Rose Mary?
Rose Mary's concept is framed around 'Adriatic drinking food,' which points toward a la carte ordering rather than a structured tasting format. The available record doesn't confirm a tasting menu option, so if that format is what you're after, Next Restaurant or Smyth are better-confirmed choices in Chicago.
What should I wear to Rose Mary?
The room is modeled on a Croatian konoba — whitewashed walls, clay, hanging plants, 100 seats — which reads casual-to-relaxed rather than formal. Dress neatly but there's no case for a jacket here. Think the kind of outfit you'd wear to a confident neighborhood restaurant, not a tasting-menu destination.
What are alternatives to Rose Mary in Chicago?
For a different kind of chef-driven cooking at a similar $$$ price, Boka offers polished New American in Lincoln Park and is easier to book. Kasama is the sharper choice if you want something more singular and award-backed, though it's harder to get into. If you want to go up a tier in format and spend, Smyth runs a full tasting menu experience. Rose Mary wins specifically when you want something identifiably Adriatic with a serious wine list and a room built for a full evening.
Recognized By
More restaurants in Chicago
- AlineaAlinea is Chicago's three-Michelin-star tasting menu at $210–$265 per person — a theatrical, multi-sensory Progressive American experience running three to four hours. It holds a Forbes Five-Star and AAA 5 Diamond, and booking is near impossible without planning months ahead. Worth it for food explorers who commit to the format; not the right call if you want a conventional fine dining dinner.
- SmythSmyth holds three Michelin stars, a top-five North America ranking from Opinionated About Dining, and one of Chicago's most serious natural wine programmes. Dinner only, Tuesday through Saturday, with near-impossible availability and $$$$ 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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