Chicago Way

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A01=Michael Gebert
Author_Michael Gebert
Category=DNB
Category=JBSL
Category=NHK
Category=WB
Category=WBN
Category=WQH
charlie trotter
chicago chefs
chicago dining
chicago dining history
chicago food culture
chicago food evolution
chicago food history
chicago food innovation
chicago food narrative
chicago food scene
chicago food writers
chicago magazine food
chicago neighborhoods
chicago reader food
chicago restaurant industry
chicago restaurants
chicago's culinary identity
chicago's food growth
culinary history
culinary influence
dining evolution
dining in chicago
dining out chicago
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_food-drink
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_new_release
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
fine dining chicago
food and community
food and creativity
food and culture
food and economics
food and real estate
food documentaries
food revolution
food trends chicago
food writing
foodie destination
fooditor
graham elliot bowles
grant achatz
grub street chicago
hot dogs with foie gras
james beard award
local chefs
lthforum
michael gebert
michelin stars chicago
modern cuisine
molecular gastronomy
restaurant economy
restaurant industry
rick bayless
stephanie izard

Product details

  • ISBN 9781572843608
  • Dimensions: 152 x 228mm
  • Publication Date: 19 Mar 2026
  • Publisher: Surrey Books,U.S.
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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"[A] must-read for Chicago’s foodies."Publishers Weekly

The untold stories behind Chicago's globally celebrated culinary scene—from revolutionary chefs to kitchen disasters to public uproars to Michelin stars, told by the cooks, servers, restaurateurs, critics, dreamers, and rebels who built America's most fearless food city.

Whether serious destination diners, weekend visitors, or fans of The Bear, everyone knows Chicago has long outgrown its mid-twentieth-century reputation as a steak-and-potatoes town. The last fifty years have seen it explode into world prominence as one of America’s best places to eat—and ground zero of some of America’s greatest cooking. When Michelin first started awarding stars in the United States, they selected Chicago as one of the first cities so recognized. But the story of this ascendency—and of nationally famed chefs like Rick Bayless, Charlie Trotter, Grant Achatz, Stephanie Izard, and many others—has never been fully revealed in all its messy, dramatic, high-energy glory.

The Chicago Way traces Chicago’s growth as a dining capital over the past fifty-plus years through an oral history made up of the voices of those who led, drove, and otherwise took part in that transformation. Readers will learn how the city’s diners (and millions of happily sated visitors) grew to love new and more adventurous ways of eating, from hot dogs with foie gras to molecular gastronomy. These first-person accounts show how restaurants played a key role in transforming the city’s culture, creating hot new neighborhoods—before sometimes getting priced out of them—and driving economic growth not just downtown, but increasingly into its kaleidoscopically diverse neighborhoods. 

This is a dynamic plunge into the chaos and glory of the restaurant world, charged with the unfiltered voices of the men and women who helped make Chicago’s food culture what it is today. Focusing on real estate, finance, and economics as well as food and creativity, these insider accounts together tell a powerful story about the essential influence of Chicago chefs and restaurants on contemporary American cuisine that will appeal to everyone interested in food, restaurants, and dining.

James Beard Award–winning Michael Gebert has written for decades about hundreds of Chicago food figures from every background, and in The Chicago Way, he includes contributions from national celebrities such as Top Chef winners Stephanie Izard and Joe Flamm, Alinea chef Grant Achatz, and Michelin-starred chef and author Lane Regan, among many other notables. His vast network and deep knowledge are reflected in the scores of both famed and unsung food professionals included here, arrayed into a narrative mosaic that reveals the stories behind the story of Chicago’s greatest, most important, and most memorable places to eat food.


Michael Gebert is the editor of Fooditor and a James Beard Award-winning food writer and video producer. He was also an editor of Grub Street Chicago, a contributor to publications such as Chicago magazine and the Chicago Reader, and a founder of the online culinary chat site LTHForum. He has covered the food scene in Chicago in depth for nearly two decades. He lives in Chicago, IL.

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