Portillo's
Portillo's fries illustration
Regional chain · Chicago institution · Est. 1963

Portillo's

Chicago classic. Beef tallow blend in the fryer.

Last verified April 18, 2026 Cooking oil Vegetable + beef tallow
§ 01

At a glance

Vegetarian
Not suitable
Per Portillo's directly: "Our French fries and onion rings are cooked in a blend of vegetable oil and beef tallow."
Vegan
Not suitable
Beef tallow in the oil blend is animal-derived.
Gluten-Free
Not suitable
Some locations report a dedicated fry fryer, but Portillo's confirms oil filters are shared with gluten-containing fryers.
Dairy-Free
Likely safe
No dairy in fry oil itself; shared kitchen.
Kosher
Not suitable
Beef tallow disqualifies kosher status.
Halal
Not suitable
Beef tallow from non-halal source disqualifies halal status.
Portillo's is the fourth chain on the atlas with beef in the fry oil — alongside McDonald's, Steak 'n Shake, and Bojangles. Per Portillo's own Nutrition & Allergen PDF (2024): "Our French fries and onion rings are cooked in a blend of vegetable oil and beef tallow." The Chicago hot-dog institution doesn't hide this — it's right there on the public allergen document. Some customers report dedicated fry fryers at certain locations, but Portillo's clarifies that the oil filtration system is shared across fryers, meaning even a "dedicated" fry fryer is celiac-unsafe due to filter cross-contamination.
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Nutrition facts

Portillo's's published nutrition data for the serving size most comparable to an industry "medium" order. Values shown are per-serving and calculated against FDA 2020 Daily Values.

For comparison across chains, see our rankings pages — lowest sodium, lowest saturated fat, lowest calorie, and more.

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Ingredients, line by line

French Fries — annotated

  • Potatoes Fine
  • Vegetable oil + beef tallow blend Beef · Animal-derived — Per Portillo's directly.
  • Salt Fine
Per Portillo's Nutrition & Allergen PDF (2024): "Oil: Our French fries and onion rings are cooked in a blend of vegetable oil and beef tallow."
Chicago's most famous fry institution Portillo's started as a hot-dog stand in 1963 in Villa Park, Illinois, and has grown into one of the most recognizable Chicago food brands. Famous for the Chicago-style hot dog (no ketchup, served on a poppy-seed bun) and Italian beef sandwich. The fries are central to the experience — and they're cooked the way Chicago restaurants traditionally cook them, in a beef-tallow-containing blend that gives them their characteristic flavor.
The shared filter is the celiac trap Portillo's customer reports vary widely. Some say "dedicated fryer for fries — they're gluten-free." Others say "I got severely glutened from the fries." The reconciliation, per Portillo's own staff: "the oil uses a shared filter with their gluten food." Even when a location has a separate fryer for fries, the filtration system processes oil from multiple fryers — including those with breaded chicken sandwiches and onion rings. For celiac-level sensitivity, this is not a safe fry. For mild gluten avoidance, it's likely fine. For severe alpha-gal (allergy to mammalian fat), it's never an option.
The fourth chain on this list McDonald's (beef flavor in par-fry oil), Steak 'n Shake (100% beef tallow), Bojangles (canola+beef fat blend), Portillo's (vegetable oil + beef tallow blend). Four of our 30 chains use beef in their fry preparation. That's roughly 15% of the atlas — much higher than the post-1990 industry consensus around vegetable oils suggested. The "tallow renaissance" in 2024-2025 (Steak 'n Shake's switch, ongoing chain conversations) suggests this number may grow.
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Oil & fryer setup

Primary oil
Vegetable + beef tallow blend
Per Portillo's directly: a blend of vegetable oil and rendered beef tallow. Used for both French fries and onion rings.
Fryer setup
Shared filter
Some locations have a separate fryer for fries, but Portillo's confirms oil filtration is shared with gluten-containing fryers — meaning even a "dedicated" fry fryer is not truly isolated.
Cross-contamination
High
Wheat (breaded chicken sandwiches, fish), milk (multiple items) all in shared oil-filter ecosystem. Beef in the oil is unavoidable.
Brand origin
Villa Park, IL
Founded 1963 by Dick Portillo as a hot-dog stand. Famous for Italian beef, Chicago-style hot dogs, and chocolate cake shakes. ~80 locations primarily in Illinois with growing footprint nationally.
§ 05

Top-9 allergen status

Per the FDA's nine major allergens, as disclosed by Portillo's for Portillo's French Fries.

Milk*
Wheat*
Egg
! Soy
Peanut
Tree Nut
! Fish*
Shellfish
Sesame

Per Portillo's: shared kitchen and oil filters. Cross-contact for wheat, milk, fish all possible despite some locations claiming dedicated fryer.

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Frequently asked questions

Are Portillo's' fries vegan?
No — Portillo's' fries are not vegan. Beef tallow in the oil blend is animal-derived.
Are Portillo's' fries gluten-free?
No — Portillo's' fries are not safe for celiac disease. Some locations report a dedicated fry fryer, but Portillo's confirms oil filters are shared with gluten-containing fryers.
What oil are Portillo's' fries cooked in?
Portillo's' fries are cooked in Vegetable + beef tallow blend. Full oil and fryer details — including whether the fryer is shared with breaded items — are documented on this page.
Are Portillo's' fries dairy-free?
Portillo's' fries do not contain dairy as an ingredient. No dairy in fry oil itself; shared kitchen.
How many calories are in Portillo's' fries?
A small french fries order of Portillo's' fries contains 380 calories, 19g total fat (7g saturated fat), 340mg sodium, 48g carbs, and 5g protein. Source: Portillo's nutrition via MyFoodDiary.
Are Portillo's' fries cooked in beef tallow?
Yes — Portillo's' fries contain beef-derived fat in the cooking medium (Vegetable + beef tallow blend). This makes them unsuitable for vegetarian, vegan, kosher, and halal diets, and for anyone with alpha-gal syndrome.
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In the wild

Standard cut Portillo's fries — golden, generously salted. The beef-tallow blend gives them a characteristic richer flavor than pure-vegetable-oil fries.

Portillo's fries
§ 08

Sources

Every claim on this page is sourced. If a source is wrong, dated, or missing, tell us — we update quickly.

  1. 01
    Portillo's — Nutrition & Allergen Information PDF (2024)Primary source · Official document confirming "blend of vegetable oil and beef tallow"
  2. 02
    Eat This, Not That — Restaurant fries not vegetarianSecondary source · Quotes Portillo's verbatim on their oil composition
  3. 03
    Find Me Gluten Free — Portillo's reviewsSecondary source · Documents the shared-filter problem and conflicting customer experiences
  4. 04
    Portillo's — Nutrition page (official)Primary source · Brand/menu information
Important — read before you eat Ingredient formulations change, sometimes with no public announcement. Allergen risk at any fast-food restaurant depends on the specific location, the time of day, and the staff on shift. For severe allergies, confirm ingredients with the restaurant at the point of ordering, and when in doubt, ask about fryer and equipment cross-contact. This page is an independent reference — not medical advice.