Best Comfort Food Japanese Restaurants in Chicago
39 hand-picked restaurants, critic-reviewed and ranked
Last Updated: February 2026
Our Top Pick
Strings Ramen Shop
Flagship Chinatown ramen shop with house-made noodles and deep broth variety.
Essential Picks
9
Opened in 2014 in the heart of Chinatown, Strings Ramen Shop specializes in house-made noodles and a broad lineup of tonkotsu, shoyu, and miso ramen bowls. With thousands of multi-platform reviews and late hours, it’s the go-to Japanese noodle shop in 60616 for everything from Hell Ramen challenges to comforting bowls after a long day.
Must-Try Dishes:
Hell Ramen, Tonkotsu Ramen Super Premium, Kuro Buta Sausage
What Makes it Special: Flagship Chinatown ramen shop with house-made noodles and deep broth variety.
Notable Picks
#2
Ramen Wasabi
8.9
Ramen Wasabi is a long-running Logan Square ramen shop where concentrated pork broths, springy noodles, and tightly edited toppings anchor some of the city’s most reliable bowls. The space is small, waits are common, and the focus stays squarely on rich, comforting ramen rather than a sprawling izakaya menu.
Must-Try Dishes:
Garlic Miso Ramen, Original Tonkotsu Ramen, Pork Buns
What Makes it Special: A ramen specialist where deep, porky broths have anchored the neighborhood for years.
8.7
Strings Ramen’s Lakeview outpost is a ramen-only specialist where handmade noodles, rich broths, and the city-famous Monster Hell challenge anchor the experience. DePaul and Lincoln Park regulars treat it as the default bowl for late-night cravings and delivery-friendly comfort.
Must-Try Dishes:
Tonkotsu Ramen with Kurobuta Pork, Monster Hell Ramen, Tokyo Shoyu Ramen
What Makes it Special: A ramen-only shop with house-made noodles and cult-favorite spicy bowls.
#4
Gaijin
8.6
Gaijin is Chicago’s first dedicated okonomiyaki restaurant from chef Paul Virant, focusing on Osaka- and Hiroshima-style savory pancakes alongside yakisoba and kakigori. Locals come for the griddled comfort food, cocktails, and a lively room that works for both casual dates and small groups.
Must-Try Dishes:
Beef Osaka Style Okonomiyaki, Traditional Hiroshima Style Okonomiyaki, Pork Belly Yakisoba
What Makes it Special: Specialized okonomiyaki house where Osaka and Hiroshima styles are cooked on a central griddle.
#5
Gretel
8.6
Opened in 2020 by the team behind Little Bad Wolf, Gretel is a dark, whiskey-forward Logan Square gastropub where a heavily praised griddle burger shares space with pork belly nachos, oysters, and late-night snacks. The burger itself appears on multiple citywide best-of lists, and the room’s moody design makes it as viable for date night as for lingering bar dinners.
Must-Try Dishes:
Gretel Burger, Pork Belly Nachos, Oysters Rockefeller
What Makes it Special: A cocktail-and-whiskey-focused gastropub where one of the city’s most talked-about burgers lives in a cozy, late-night room.
#6
Rudy’s Ramen
8.6
A focused ramen shop that wins on broth clarity and balance—rich enough to satisfy, but clean enough to finish without fatigue. Go classic tonkotsu (or the lighter version) and add one fried side; the kitchen’s best work is in that tight ramen-plus-bite rhythm.
Must-Try Dishes:
Spicy tonkotsu ramen, Tonkotsu lite ramen, Chicken karaage
What Makes it Special: Broth-driven ramen that stays balanced and finishable bowl after bowl.
8.4
Vibes:
Comfort Food Classics
Family Friendly Favorites
Quick Bites Champions
Solo Dining Sanctuaries
Daifuku Ramen sits on China Place serving a focused menu of tonkotsu, miso, shoyu, and specialty bowls built on rich broths and generous toppings. With strong recent reviews and a cozy dining room, it’s a reliable option when Strings is slammed but you still want a satisfying Japanese-style ramen experience in Chinatown.
Must-Try Dishes:
Hakata Tonkotsu Ramen, Daifuku Spicy Garlic Ramen, Sapporo Miso Ramen
What Makes it Special: Cozy Chinatown ramen shop with a wide roster of classic broths.
#8
Gyuro Ramen
8.4
Gyuro focuses on gyukotsu, a rich Japanese beef-bone ramen, served with wagyu cuts and house-made noodles in a neon-lit West Loop space. It attracts ramen fans who want deeper, beef-driven broths and are willing to pay steakhouse-adjacent prices for specialty bowls.
Must-Try Dishes:
Signature Gyukotsu Ramen, Kimchi Wagyu Ramen, Prime Signature Gyukotsu
What Makes it Special: Beef-bone gyukotsu ramen with wagyu in a stylized West Loop setting.
8.4
Vibes:
Comfort Food Classics
Group Dining Gatherings
Family Friendly Favorites
Trendy Table Hotspots
Kameya has been Belmont’s dedicated ramen-and-sushi fixture since 2017, pairing a broad noodle lineup with maki and appetizers in a compact Lakeview dining room. Bowls skew rich and comforting rather than delicate, making it a reliable choice when you want classic broths plus the option to share rolls at the same table.
Must-Try Dishes:
Kameya Ramen, Chicken Katsu Ramen, Bulgogi Meatball Ramen
What Makes it Special: Belmont ramen-and-sushi spot with a deep noodle menu and reliable richness.
8.4
A ramen-first shop on 53rd that wins on rich tonkotsu broths and add-on customization without turning the bowl into a gimmick. It’s the dependable Hyde Park move when you want a full, warming bowl with enough menu range to keep repeat visits interesting.
Must-Try Dishes:
Black Garlic Tonkatsu Ramen w/ Pork Belly, Tonkotsu Ramen w/ Pork Loin, Pork Belly Tonkotsu Ramen
What Makes it Special: Ramen-focused menu built around tonkotsu and bold flavor options.
#11
Tacotlan
8.4
A modern taqueria built around bold, griddled tacos and birria-forward specialties, with a menu that rewards ordering in their signature lanes instead of spreading wide. The best results come from one birria format plus one classic meat taco, then let the salsas do the finishing work.
Must-Try Dishes:
Quesabirria tacos with consomé, Carne asada tacos, Birria ramen
What Makes it Special: A birria-and-taco specialist with big-flavor signatures and multiple formats.
8.3
Vibes:
Comfort Food Classics
Family Friendly Favorites
Quick Bites Champions
Solo Dining Sanctuaries
A reliable South Loop sushi house built around steady, repeatable execution—classic rolls, nigiri, and simple hot appetizers that travel well. It’s the kind of neighborhood place you use for weeknight takeout or an easy dine-in sushi run when you want consistency over spectacle.
Must-Try Dishes:
Sashimi combo, Salmon avocado roll, Gyoza
What Makes it Special: High-repeatability neighborhood sushi that’s built for both dine-in and takeout nights.
#13
Monster Ramen
8.3
Monster Ramen is a compact gyukotsu-focused shop where beef-bone broths, wagyu-topped bowls, and loaded gyoza feel more like a composed steak dinner in ramen form. Prices run higher than most peers, but the depth of broth and toppings makes it a splurge bowl for serious ramen fans.
Must-Try Dishes:
The Monster Ramen, Miso Wagyu Ramen, Loaded Gyoza
What Makes it Special: Beef-bone gyukotsu and wagyu-topped bowls give ramen steakhouse richness.
#14
Oiistar
8.3
Oiistar is a Wicker Park ramen bar where housemade thin noodles, tonkotsu-style broths, and Korean-leaning flavors anchor a tight menu of bowls and buns. Locals use it for richly flavored, unconventional ramen like masala- and pozole-inspired bowls when they want a louder, date-night-friendly room instead of a quiet counter shop.
Must-Try Dishes:
Oiimen classic tonkotsu ramen, Paitan Shio with Fukuoka roasted garlic, Pork belly buns
What Makes it Special: Creative Korean-influenced ramen bowls with housemade noodles in Wicker Park.
8.3
Vibes:
Family Friendly Favorites
Quick Bites Champions
Group Dining Gatherings
Comfort Food Classics
A neighborhood standby that works best as a Thai-and-sushi hybrid order: one curry or noodle anchor plus a couple rolls for variety. The Thai side lands most reliably on basil-forward stir-fries and coconut curries, while the kitchen keeps tickets moving for weeknight dine-in and takeout.
Must-Try Dishes:
Thai Basil Chicken, Red Curry, Pad See Ew
What Makes it Special: A practical Thai-plus-sushi menu that rewards a tight, two-track order.
8.3
A Bridgeport ramen-and-small-plates room that wins on range: rich broths, crisp karaage, and a late-night-friendly menu that can stretch into a full meal. It’s strongest when you anchor with one ramen bowl, add one fry item, and keep the rest of the order tight so the broth stays the headline.
Must-Try Dishes:
Spicy garlic ramen, Chicken karaage, Tonkotsu ramen
What Makes it Special: Big-flavor ramen plus fried sides and drinks in a late-night format.
#17
Kuro Ramen
8.2
Kuro Ramen runs a late-night ramen bar just west of Chinatown’s core, pairing black-garlic tonkotsu and spicy miso bowls with an unusually broad appetizer and drink list. It’s used as much for post-game or after-shift meals as for sit-down ramen, with long hours and hearty portions.
Must-Try Dishes:
Kuro Ramen (Black Garlic Tonkotsu), Spicy Miso Ramen, TomYum Seafood Ramen
What Makes it Special: A ramen-focused, late-night spot where black-garlic tonkotsu and snacks stretch service past midnight.
#18
Musashiya Ramen
8.2
Established in 2020, Musashiya is a compact Lakeview East ramen shop focused on customizable tonkotsu and miso bowls rather than a sprawling menu. The space is simple and functional, but portions are hearty and broths have enough depth to make it a dependable cold-weather regular.
Must-Try Dishes:
Tonkotsu Ramen, Shrimp Tempura Tonkotsu Ramen, Tofu Miso Ramen
What Makes it Special: Cozy Broadway noodle shop where tonkotsu and miso bowls are the focus.
#19
Takibi
8.2
A Rogers Park sushi-and-ramen spot that leans intimate and chef-driven, with a menu built around signature rolls, straightforward nigiri, and comforting bowls. Best ordered with discipline: one standout roll, a few nigiri, then ramen if you want the meal to finish warm and filling.
Must-Try Dishes:
Lion King Roll, Pork belly ramen, Assorted nigiri
What Makes it Special: A neighborhood-scale Japanese menu that balances sushi focus with real ramen comfort.
#20
Menya Goku
8.1
Menya Goku is a compact North Center ramen shop from the Ramen Wasabi team, pairing rich bowls like Goku Tan Tan Men and tonkotsu with Japanese beers and highballs. The sleek room, bar seating, and tightly edited menu make it a go-to for serious ramen cravings rather than sprawling dinners.
Must-Try Dishes:
Goku Tan Tan Men Ramen, Pork Goku Tonkotsu Ramen, Nagoya Pirikara Wings
What Makes it Special: Ramen-first Japanese shop with focused bowls and izakaya plates.
8.1
The Fulton Market outpost of Wasabi brings their pork-based ramen, vegan bowls, and Japanese small plates into a polished, buzzy setting. It works for both casual dates and group dinners when you want classic tonkotsu alongside snacks and drinks.
Must-Try Dishes:
Tonkotsu Ramen, Spicy Miso Ramen, Veggie Ramen
What Makes it Special: Established ramen name serving tonkotsu and vegan bowls in Fulton Market.
8.1
Tanaka Ramen & Izakaya serves customizable bowls, black garlic tonkotsu, and vegan options in a sleek, modern room just off Diversey. It’s a flexible pick for friends who want everything from classic pork broth to spicy creamy vegan ramen under one roof.
Must-Try Dishes:
Tanaka Classic Ramen, Black Garlic Tonkotsu Ramen, Spicy Creamy Vegan Ramen
What Makes it Special: A polished ramen-and-izakaya spot with broad broth styles and strong vegan coverage.
Green Tea is a long-running Clark Street Japanese restaurant where ramen, udon, and hibachi-style entrées sit alongside a full sushi menu. It’s the reliable option when someone wants a warming bowl while others at the table are thinking rolls and grilled plates.
Must-Try Dishes:
Tonkotsu Ramen, Spicy Miso Ramen, Nabeyaki Udon
What Makes it Special: A full-line Japanese restaurant where ramen is one of several well-executed comfort staples.
Vibes:
Business Lunch Power Players
Happy Hour Hotspots
Group Dining Gatherings
Comfort Food Classics
A Hyatt Regency steakhouse format with a real sushi lane, built for business dinners and hotel-bar convenience. The best experience comes from committing to either sushi-first with one hot main, or steakhouse classics with a single roll for contrast—don’t try to cover the whole menu.
Must-Try Dishes:
Sunset Roll, Dragon Roll, Black Miso Cod
What Makes it Special: A steakhouse-with-sushi setup that works well for hotel-driven dining.
8
Ukai is a long-running Belmont sushi and Japanese restaurant where comforting pork ramen sits alongside signature rolls, chirashi, and bento-style plates. It’s more of an all-purpose neighborhood Japanese spot than a purist ramen bar, but the noodle bowls function well as a warming anchor in a mixed-order meal.
Must-Try Dishes:
Pork Ramen, Chirashi Bowl, Lili Monster Roll
What Makes it Special: Belmont mainstay where sushi platters, maki, and hearty ramen share the table.
Worthy Picks
#26
Cocoro Japanese
7.9
Operating since the mid-1990s, Cocoro is a quieter, old-guard Japanese restaurant tucked on Wells Street, with a menu spanning sushi, ramen, shabu-shabu, and set meals. It draws a mix of Japanese regulars and River North diners looking for more traditional flavors than the trendier spots nearby.
Must-Try Dishes:
Shabu-shabu for two, Nabeyaki udon, Eel seiro over rice
What Makes it Special: Long-running, izakaya-style spot focused on classic hot pots and noodles.
#27
Kameya Sushi
7.9
Vibes:
Hidden Gems Heaven
Comfort Food Classics
Solo Dining Sanctuaries
Cheap Eats Budget Brilliance
Kameya Sushi is a family-owned Webster Avenue spot that combines a full sushi menu with ramen and izakaya-style starters in a cozy, low-key space. It’s a flexible neighborhood choice for casual dates, takeout rolls, and comforting bowls when you want Japanese without a scene.
Must-Try Dishes:
Kameya Sushi A Platter, Jalapeño Tuna Appetizer, Kameya Ramen
What Makes it Special: A family-run sushi-and-ramen shop with a broad menu, relaxed setting, and pricing that makes weeknight sushi feel attainable.
#28
Ramen-San
7.9
Ramen-san’s Lincoln Park outpost is a noodle-focused joint from Lettuce Entertain You where tonkotsu, chicken shio, and fried chicken-topped bowls pair with beer, cocktails, and ’90s hip-hop. It’s more about hearty, fun ramen sessions than sushi, but fills a clear Japanese comfort-food niche in 60614.
Must-Try Dishes:
Tonkotsu Ramen, Kimchi and Fried Chicken Ramen, Chicken Shio Ramen
What Makes it Special: A lively ramen bar with rich broths, big portions, and a soundtrack that skews louder and more casual than traditional noodle shops.
7.8
A compact ramen shop with distinctive Japanese decor and a menu that rewards sticking to its strongest bowls. Go for the richer broths and add-ons that keep texture intact, and treat it as a focused noodle stop rather than a broad small-plates night.
Must-Try Dishes:
Spicy Specialty Ramen with Soft Shell Crab, Shoyu Ramen, Karaage
What Makes it Special: Personality-packed ramen shop with a standout spicy specialty bowl.
7.8
Vibes:
Cheap Eats Budget Brilliance
Comfort Food Classics
Quick Bites Champions
Family Friendly Favorites
Part of a small ramen chain, this Kyuramen location delivers big, customizable bowls in a narrow, casual space just off Hubbard. High recent review volume and steady lines at peak hours show it’s become an affordable noodle stop for office workers and late shoppers.
Must-Try Dishes:
Kyushu Spicy Tonkotsu Ramen, Honeycomb Platter, Super Bowl Ramen
What Makes it Special: Busy ramen shop offering customizable bowls at accessible downtown prices.
#31
Sushi 21
7.8
Vibes:
Quick Bites Champions
Cheap Eats Budget Brilliance
Comfort Food Classics
Solo Dining Sanctuaries
A small, Korean-owned Japanese spot that’s more dependable when you order from a focused lane—simple rolls, udon, and a couple of cooked starters—rather than chasing an ambitious, everything-on-the-menu spread. It’s a practical neighborhood option built for casual dinners and straightforward takeout wins.
Must-Try Dishes:
Shrimp tempura, Agedashi tofu, Udon
What Makes it Special: Local, low-fuss sushi-and-udon comfort built for repeat orders.
7.8
Vibes:
Family Friendly Favorites
Group Dining Gatherings
Cheap Eats Budget Brilliance
Comfort Food Classics
A big, all-you-can-eat buffet that earns its spot in 60639 mainly on sheer breadth—especially when you focus your plate on the sushi line and the higher-satisfaction hot items instead of chasing everything. It’s best used as a family-and-groups option where volume and variety matter more than precision, with stronger results when you repeat the same few “wins” each visit.
Must-Try Dishes:
Sushi rolls from the cold bar, Crab legs (when available on the seafood line), Cheesy mussels
What Makes it Special: A 60639 all-you-can-eat format with a reliable sushi line plus broad hot-bar variety.
#33
E Ramen
7.7
Vibes:
Cheap Eats Budget Brilliance
Comfort Food Classics
Family Friendly Favorites
Quick Bites Champions
On the Bridgeport side of 60616, E Ramen offers a broad, value-focused menu of tonkotsu, chicken, and kimchi ramen alongside rolls, fried snacks, and rice bowls. Locals use it as an all-purpose weeknight ramen and Japanese-comfort stop where portions are generous and pricing stays accessible.
Must-Try Dishes:
Tonkotsu Classic Ramen, Spicy Chicken Ramen, Chicken Ramen
What Makes it Special: Neighborhood ramen shop balancing a large menu with friendly pricing and portions.
7.7
Oishii Asian & Ramen Hub is a newer Clark Street spot where miso, shoyu, and spicy garlic ramen share space with poke bowls and fried rice. With frequent deals and surplus-food partnerships, it leans value-first while still delivering satisfying, topping-heavy bowls.
Must-Try Dishes:
Shoyu Ramen, Spicy Garlic Ramen, Chicken Katsudon
What Makes it Special: A budget-friendly ramen shop layering generous toppings onto classic broths.
#35
Takumi Ramen
7.7
A Pilsen ramen counter built around straightforward bowls and a cozy, quick-turn rhythm—ideal before a show or as a simple weeknight fix. Order one tonkotsu-style bowl as your anchor, add one extra topping or side, and stop there to keep the meal clean and satisfying.
Must-Try Dishes:
Tonkotsu ramen, Spicy tonkotsu ramen, Miso ramen
What Makes it Special: Direct, brothy ramen bowls in a quick, cozy Pilsen setup.
#36
Wabi Sabi
7.7
A casual Albany Park sushi-and-ramen stop that’s strongest when you treat it like a dependable neighborhood rotation. Pair one roll with one warm bowl—ramen or udon—so the meal stays balanced instead of sauce-heavy.
Must-Try Dishes:
Tonkotsu ramen, Spicy tuna roll, Chicken karaage
What Makes it Special: Neighborhood sushi plus ramen that’s built for easy weeknight meals.
#37
Koto Hibachi
7.6
South of Chinatown in the Bronzeville corridor, Koto Hibachi combines griddled hibachi entrées with sushi rolls and rice bowls in a compact neighborhood space. Portions are generous and takeout-friendly, making it a workable option when you want Japanese-style hibachi without heading downtown.
Must-Try Dishes:
Hibachi Chicken, Koto Combo, Salmon Bowl
What Makes it Special: Neighborhood hibachi and sushi spot offering sizable platters and combo dinners.
#38
Mura Mura Ramen
7.5
A newer Devon Ave ramen shop that’s best treated as a simple, neighborhood noodle fix with a small, cozy footprint. It shines most when you order straightforward ramen bowls and a light side, keeping expectations aligned with its low-key, still-growing operation.
Must-Try Dishes:
Vegan Ramen, Udon Shoyu, Salmon Teriyaki
What Makes it Special: A small, cozy ramen counter option right on Devon.
#39
Sakana Sushi
7.5
Vibes:
Cheap Eats Budget Brilliance
Group Dining Gatherings
Quick Bites Champions
Comfort Food Classics
A Wabash corridor Japanese spot that’s geared toward value-driven sushi ordering with a menu that spans rolls, nigiri, and warm comfort items. Best used as an efficient group pick when you want lots of variety at a friendly price point, not as a precision omakase-style experience.
Must-Try Dishes:
Salmon avocado roll, Spicy tuna roll, Tonkotsu ramen
What Makes it Special: A value-tilted sushi menu that supports big, variety-heavy orders.