Chicago

The Quiet Rebellion: Why Top Chefs Are Leaving Big Cities for Calmer Lives

The Quiet Rebellion: Why Top Chefs Are Leaving Big Cities for Calmer Lives

Let’s talk about the quiet rebellion in the culinary world. Top chefs are abandoning Manhattan, Chicago, and Philly for smaller towns, trading high-stakes chaos for slower, steadier lives. The math is simple: rising rents, relentless burnout, and regulatory nightmares are making big cities hostile to independent restaurants. Randall Restiano, former beverage director at Gramercy Tavern, left New York to open La Chitarra in Bronxville, a pasta bar with a 100-bottle wine list. “The cost to run a restaurant in Manhattan is insane,” he says. “Here, we can source ingredients freely and price them fairly.” This isn’t just about money—it’s about…
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Chicago’s Wine Scene Is Ditching Old Rules for a Global, Inclusive Tasting Experience

Chicago’s Wine Scene Is Ditching Old Rules for a Global, Inclusive Tasting Experience

Real talk: Chicago’s wine shops are turning into cultural hubs, not just retail spaces. At Uvae Kitchen & Wine Bar, a recent Black History Month tasting shattered the myth that wine education is confined to France, Italy, or California. Sommelier Asha Adisa poured Ashanta Wines’ honeyed sparkling Chardonnay and earthy Carignan, framing each sip with a blunt history lesson: “The labor of enslaved people is the backbone of American power.” With 1% of U.S. wineries Black-owned, Adisa’s class wasn’t just about taste—it was a reckoning. The room buzzed with stories of Woburn Winery’s 34-year legacy in Virginia, a testament to…
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