A new Chicago eatery is positioning itself as the antithesis to Chick-fil-A.

Leghorn Chicken, which opened early last month in Ukrainian Village, offers locally sourced poultry served spicy or pickle brined, as the national fast food chain does, on house-made buns or buttermilk biscuits.

Unlike Chick-fil-A, the fast-casual restaurant also serves food on Sundays, donates 2 percent of its profits to organizations that promote LGBT rights, and offers free Leghorn-branded contraceptives at the counter.

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Leghorn is operated by the Element Collective restaurant group, which cures its own sausage at Old Town Social and mills flour at Nellcôte.

The restaurant opened March 6 at a.m. and ran out of 600 chicken parts within two hours.

“It’s kind of funny to me that Leghorn takes its shots at Chick-fil-A since their food is infinitely superior to Chick-fil-A’s,” said one reviewer. “Why even bother drawing any comparisons?”

The CEO of Chick-fil-A, which closes its stores once a week to encourage employees to attend church, sparked protests in 2012 after expressing his disapproval of same-sex marriage.

Dan Truett admitted last month that his stance had alienated many customers, but the CEO said he still believed LGBT couples should not be legally permitted to wed.

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Watch this video report posted online by WGN-TV: