Skip to main content

    Restaurant in Chicago, United States

    S.K.Y.

    285Pearl Points

    Michelin Plate value that rewards repeat visits.

    S.K.Y., Restaurant in Chicago

    About S.K.Y.

    S.K.Y. delivers globally minded contemporary cooking — tikka masala lamb, Korean-inflected bibimbap, and a dependable banana budino — at a $$ price point that's hard to match for Michelin Plate, top-100 OAD-ranked dining in Chicago. Easy to book, with Saturday–Sunday brunch adding a second register worth exploring on return visits.

    Is S.K.Y. worth booking in Chicago?

    Yes — and it rewards repeat visits more than most restaurants in its price range. S.K.Y. sits at the $$ price tier for globally minded contemporary cuisine, holds a Michelin Plate (2024), and ranks #89 on Opinionated About Dining's Casual in North America list (2024) — credentials that put it well above its price point. If you've been once and wondered whether to return, the answer is go back and work through the menu systematically. The kitchen at 2300 N Lincoln Park W keeps a rotating roster alongside reliable classics, which makes the second and third visit as purposeful as the first.

    The Room

    S.K.Y. now operates from the first floor of the Belden-Stratford apartment complex in Lincoln Park. The room reads formal enough for a special occasion but relaxed enough that you won't feel out of place in smart-casual clothes. Tall ceilings and dim lighting define the space , it's the kind of room where the lighting does real work, keeping the atmosphere intimate without making it feel cramped. If you're returning after the previous location, the physical setting has changed but the cooking sensibility has not.

    What the Kitchen Is Doing

    Chef Stephen Gillanders runs a globally informed menu that doesn't stay confined to a single culinary tradition. Roasted lamb meatballs with tikka masala butter sit alongside bibimbap with charred vegetables and mushroom bulgogi , dishes that draw from South Asian and Korean technique without forcing a fusion narrative. This is cooking that takes reference points seriously rather than using them as decoration. The menu has both evolved signatures and newer additions, which is exactly the dynamic that makes a multi-visit approach worthwhile.

    How to Plan Your Visits

    First Visit: Establish the Baseline

    On your first visit, anchor around the kitchen's classics. The banana budino has staying power on the menu for a reason , order it. Build the savory portion of the meal around one of the globally inflected mains, the lamb meatballs being the obvious entry point given how well the tikka masala butter works as a framing device for what the kitchen is trying to do. This visit tells you whether the cuisine's cross-cultural approach clicks for you.

    Second Visit: Push Into the Newer Menu

    The kitchen adds new dishes alongside the classics, and the second visit is where you stress-test them. Newer dessert constructions , like strawberries and champagne with pistachio cake, strawberry ice cream, and crémant , are worth prioritizing here. The format rewards diners who are willing to let the menu evolve rather than defaulting to the same order each time. Ask your server which dishes are recent additions; at a place like S.K.Y., that question gets a useful answer.

    Third Visit: Brunch

    Saturday and Sunday brunch (10 am–2 pm) is a different experience from dinner and one that Lincoln Park regulars tend to underuse. The same kitchen, a lower price pressure, and a room that reads differently in daylight. If you've done two dinners, brunch is where you consolidate the relationship with the restaurant rather than treating it as a one-register experience.

    Ratings and Trust Signals

    • Michelin Plate (2024)
    • Opinionated About Dining , Casual in North America, #89 (2024)
    • Opinionated About Dining , Gourmet Casual Dining in North America, #124 (2023)
    • Opinionated About Dining , Casual in North America, Highly Recommended (2023)
    • Google: 4.6 / 5 (1,207 reviews)

    The OAD rankings are particularly telling here. Moving from Highly Recommended in 2023 to a ranked position in 2024 suggests a kitchen that's trending upward, not coasting. At $$, S.K.Y. punches above its price category against Chicago peers that charge significantly more for comparable or lesser cooking.

    Practical Details

    Reservations: Easy to book , no weeks-long wait required, which is unusual for a Michelin Plate restaurant in Chicago. Book a few days out for weekends, walk-in availability may exist mid-week. Hours: Monday–Thursday 5–10 pm; Friday–Saturday 5–10:30 pm; Saturday–Sunday brunch 10 am–2 pm; Sunday dinner 5–10 pm. Address: 2300 N Lincoln Park W, Chicago , first floor of the Belden-Stratford complex. Budget: $$ price range makes this one of the better-value credentialed restaurants in the city. Dress: Smart casual is the standard; the room's dim lighting and tall ceilings read as a dressed-up space, but there's no formal requirement. Group size: Works well for two or four; larger groups should confirm table configurations when booking.

    How It Compares

    See the comparison section below for how S.K.Y. stacks up against Chicago's other leading tables.

    Pearl Picks: More Chicago Dining

    If S.K.Y. is on your list, these are worth knowing: Boka and Elske operate in similar contemporary New American territory but at higher price points. Girl & The Goat is the casual alternative if you want a livelier room with a lower commitment. For something more experimental and intimate, EL Ideas is worth the research. Alinea remains the ceiling for progressive American cooking in Chicago if budget isn't a constraint.

    For broader planning: see our full Chicago restaurants guide, our full Chicago hotels guide, our full Chicago bars guide, our full Chicago wineries guide, and our full Chicago experiences guide.

    If you're benchmarking S.K.Y. against contemporary American cooking in other cities, relevant comparisons include Lazy Bear in San Francisco, The Wolf's Tailor in Denver, and Sons & Daughters in San Francisco. For fine dining at significantly higher price points, Le Bernardin in New York City, The French Laundry in Napa, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, Providence in Los Angeles, and Emeril's in New Orleans provide useful calibration for what the leading of the category looks like.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I wear to S.K.Y.?

    Dress as you would for a considered night out — not black-tie, but not casual either. The room at the Belden-Stratford has tall ceilings and dim lighting that reads special-occasion, so smart evening wear fits the space well. S.K.Y. sits at the $$ tier, which means you won't feel overdressed in a blazer or underdressed in clean, neat clothing. Think date-night register rather than business formal.

    Can I eat at the bar at S.K.Y.?

    Bar seating availability is not confirmed in current venue data, so call ahead before planning a walk-in bar visit. What is confirmed: the dining room is the main event, and with reservations described as easy to book a few days out, there's little reason to gamble on walk-in availability at a Michelin Plate restaurant.

    What should I order at S.K.Y.?

    Order the banana budino — it has held a place on the menu through multiple iterations, which is a reliable signal that it earns its spot. On the savory side, the roasted lamb meatballs with tikka masala butter and the bibimbap with charred vegetables and mushroom bulgogi reflect the globally informed direction Chef Stephen Gillanders runs. For dessert variety, newer additions like strawberries and champagne with pistachio cake are worth exploring on a second visit.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at S.K.Y.?

    S.K.Y. is a $$ restaurant, not a tasting-menu-primary format — the kitchen runs a contemporary à la carte menu with globally minded dishes rather than a structured omakase or prix-fixe as its core offering. If a multi-course tasting experience is what you're after, Smyth or Alinea operate in that format at higher price points. S.K.Y.'s value case is the breadth and quality of its regular menu at the $$ price tier.

    Is lunch or dinner better at S.K.Y.?

    Dinner is the primary format and where the full menu is available five nights a week. Brunch (Saturday and Sunday, 10 am–2 pm) is the better choice if you want the same kitchen at a lower-commitment time slot — it's a different experience from dinner and reportedly underused by Lincoln Park regulars. First-timers should start with dinner to get the full picture of what Chef Stephen Gillanders is doing.

    Location

    2300 N Lincoln Park W, Chicago, IL 60614

    Chicago, United States

    Compare S.K.Y.

    Price vs. Value: S.K.Y.
    VenuePriceBooking DifficultyValue
    S.K.Y.$$Easy
    Alinea$$$$Unknown
    Smyth$$$$Unknown
    Kasama$$$$Unknown
    Next Restaurant$$$$Unknown
    Boka$$$$Unknown

    A quick look at how S.K.Y. measures up.

    Also Consider

    • Alinea — Progressive American, Creative, $$$$
    • Smyth — Progressive American, Contemporary, $$$$
    • Kasama — Filipino, $$$$
    • Next Restaurant — American Cuisine, $$$$
    • Boka — New American, Contemporary, $$$$

    How S.K.Y. Compares in Chicago

    The clearest argument for S.K.Y. is value. Every other restaurant on this comparison list operates at $$$$Alinea, Smyth, Kasama, Next Restaurant, and Boka all cost significantly more per head. S.K.Y. at $$ holds a Michelin Plate and ranks #89 on OAD's North America Casual list, which positions it as the most accessible credentialed table in this peer group. If budget is a factor, S.K.Y. is the clear answer.

    For diners where money isn't the constraint, the choice depends on what you want the meal to do. Alinea is the room you book when you want the full progressive-American spectacle — it's theatrical, demanding, and priced accordingly. Smyth and Kasama both run more personal, chef-driven tasting experiences that reward diners willing to commit fully to the kitchen's direction. S.K.Y. is a better fit if you want a proper dinner with real cooking and a menu you can navigate rather than surrender to. Boka is the closer stylistic peer in the $$$$ tier — New American, contemporary, Lincoln Park — but S.K.Y. makes a stronger value case at its price point.

    On booking difficulty, S.K.Y. is the easiest of the group to secure. Alinea and Kasama require significant lead time; S.K.Y. can often be booked within a few days. If you're planning a Chicago dinner with short notice or want flexibility to return multiple times without logistical friction, S.K.Y. is the practical choice. For a first-time Chicago dining experience where you want maximum impact in one meal, Alinea or Smyth will deliver a more singular event — but you'll pay two to three times the price for it.

    Hours

    Monday
    5–10 pm
    Tuesday
    5–10 pm
    Wednesday
    5–10 pm
    Thursday
    5–10 pm
    Friday
    5–10:30 pm
    Saturday
    10 am–2 pm, 5–10:30 pm
    Sunday
    10 am–2 pm, 5–10 pm

    Recognized By

    Keep this place

    Save or rate S.K.Y. on Pearl

    Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.