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Modern Filipino
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CuisineFilipino
Executive ChefJoseph Fontelera
Price$$
Dress CodeCasual
ServiceUpscale Casual
NoiseLively
CapacitySmall
Resy
Michelin

A former food stall that earned a 2025 Michelin Bib Gourmand, Boonie's on North Western Avenue serves a tight, pork-forward Filipino menu where the rice cooker sets the room's tone before you've even sat down. Chef Joseph Fontelera keeps the format intimate and the cooking direct: crispy pork belly, herb-marinated cuts, steelhead trout in tamarind broth, and a deep-fried plantain spring roll that closes the meal on a high note.

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Address
4337 N Western Ave, Chicago, IL 60618
Phone
(708) 990-8886
Saves & bookings on Pearl
Boonie's restaurant in Chicago, United States
About

The Room Announces Itself Before the Food Does

Walk into Boonie's at 4337 N Western Ave and the first thing that registers is the smell: garlic, sharp and warm, released every time someone lifts the lid of the rice cooker. In a narrow room that evolved from a food stall into a sit-down restaurant, that detail is not incidental. The rice is the organizing principle of the menu, and the aroma is, in effect, the first course. Filipino cooking at this register treats rice not as a side or an afterthought but as the structural anchor around which everything else is arranged.

Chicago's Filipino dining scene occupies an interesting tier. At the high end, Kasama holds a Michelin star and operates a $$$$ tasting format. Bayan Ko sits in a more casual mid-range. Boonie's, priced at $$, belongs to a third category: the Bib Gourmand tier, where the Michelin inspectors specifically recognize value alongside quality. That positioning matters when you're planning a Chicago dining week. The city has three-star rooms like Alinea, Smyth, and Oriole for high-commitment evenings. Boonie's occupies a different slot entirely: the kind of Michelin-recognized neighborhood restaurant where the food punches well above the price point and the room doesn't require a reservation made weeks in advance.

A Menu Built Around One Protein, Executed With Clarity

The menu at Boonie's is small, which is the right call. Filipino cooking has a wide repertoire, but trying to represent all of it in a compact restaurant produces diffuse, unfocused results. Chef Joseph Fontelera narrows the scope and the cooking is sharper for it. Pork is the dominant thread: crispy belly, herb and spice-marinated cuts, sausage. Three preparations from one animal, each with a distinct texture and seasoning logic, is a more coherent statement than a menu that scatters across proteins.

The crispy pork belly hash opens the meal and is substantial enough to function as a main. The distinction is worth making because portion calibration is part of how you read a kitchen's intentions. A starter that could credibly be an entrée suggests generosity as a deliberate choice, not an accident of scaling. Pork returns in marinated form, the herbs and spices working against the richness of the meat, and again as sausage, which is the most transformed version of the ingredient.

Steelhead trout is the menu's counterpoint. Swimming in a burnt tomato and tamarind broth, it introduces the sour and slightly smoky register that Filipino cooking uses to cut through fat. Tamarind as a souring agent appears across the cuisine's regional traditions, and here it functions exactly as intended: the fish is delicate against a broth with real acidity and depth. For a menu this pork-forward, the trout is a considered pivot rather than a token alternative.

Dessert is a deep-fried plantain wrapped as a spring roll, dusted in brown sugar. The result reads like a handheld crème brûlée: caramelized exterior, creamy interior, the kind of textural contrast that tends to be the last thing you remember about a meal. Filipino desserts often draw on a different pantry than the savory courses, and the plantain spring roll is a smart, accessible example of that tradition translated into a format that travels well across dining contexts.

The Booking Logic and What to Know Before You Go

Boonie's received a 2025 Resy Hit List recognition alongside its Bib Gourmand, which means two distinct audiences are now finding it through two separate channels. Michelin Bib Gourmand listings tend to attract food-focused travelers who cross-reference guides. Resy's Hit List draws a younger, more local dining cohort who book through the app. The combined effect on a small restaurant that started as a food stall is predictable: demand is running ahead of what a narrow room can easily absorb.

Reservations are recommended, and opening hours are Wednesday and Thursday 11 AM to 2 PM and 5 to 9 PM, Friday and Saturday 11 AM to 2 PM and 5 to 10 PM. A $$ price point and a tight menu mean the table turns are faster than at a tasting-format room, which does create more availability windows than a single-seating dinner. Midweek evenings and early slots are generally the path of least resistance at restaurants in this recognition tier when seating capacity is limited.

North Western Avenue in the 60618 zip code is a working neighborhood corridor rather than a destination dining strip. That context shapes the experience: you are not arriving at a curated restaurant row. The address is a former food stall that grew into a sit-down restaurant in a neighborhood that hasn't been reconfigured around hospitality tourism. That is part of what the Bib Gourmand recognizes.

Filipino Dining at This Level in Context

The Bib Gourmand at this price point places Boonie's in a specific and useful comparative frame. Filipino cooking has had a complicated relationship with formal recognition in American dining. For years, the cuisine was underrepresented in Michelin coverage relative to its sophistication and depth. That has shifted, with operations like Hapag in Makati drawing international attention and restaurants like Kaya in Orlando building audiences in secondary markets. Boonie's belongs to a cohort of American Filipino restaurants that are earning recognition not by translating the cuisine into fine-dining formats but by doing the cooking clearly and confidently at an accessible price point.

That approach is worth noting alongside the city's other high-recognition rooms. Le Bernardin in New York, The French Laundry in Napa, Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Single Thread in Healdsburg, Providence in Los Angeles, and Emeril's in New Orleans all occupy the formal, high-ceremony end of the recognition spectrum. The Bib Gourmand is Michelin's mechanism for flagging the other side of that spectrum: restaurants where quality is the point and the format is direct. Boonie's Google rating of 4.6 across 390 reviews, combined with the Michelin and Resy recognitions, suggests that the informal register is landing with a wide range of diners, not just those seeking a counterpoint to fine dining.

Signature Dishes
  • Sizzling Sisig
  • Kare Kare
  • Sugpo (Grilled Skull Island Prawn)
  • Sinigang (Trout in Tamarind Broth)
  • Bastos Burger
  • Turon (Plantain Spring Roll)
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At a Glance
Vibe
  • Cozy
  • Modern
  • Lively
  • Whimsical
Best For
  • Casual Hangout
  • Group Dining
  • Celebration
  • Date Night
  • Brunch
Experience
  • Standalone
  • Open Kitchen
Drink Program
  • Byob
Dress CodeCasual
Noise LevelLively
CapacitySmall
Service StyleUpscale Casual
Meal PacingStandard

Warm and embracing with personality-infused touches including framed childhood photos, cute illustrations of cane vinegar and banana ketchup bottles, a large wooden spoon and fork hanging in the front, and a varied playlist of Filipino oldies, K hip-hop, and Paramore. Sleek, tastefully decorated space that feels like a neighborhood spot rather than sterile minimalist design.

Signature Dishes
  • Sizzling Sisig
  • Kare Kare
  • Sugpo (Grilled Skull Island Prawn)
  • Sinigang (Trout in Tamarind Broth)
  • Bastos Burger
  • Turon (Plantain Spring Roll)