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Featured Bars/Clubs


Tinibar, located in a 100-year-old building adjacent to Allure, looks the same inside and out. The building looks like a historical landmark, and inside, the well-worn brick walls have eroded with years of deep bass shaking the foundation. Despite the DJ in the corner booth, Tinibar isn't really a dance club, though there is a small amount of space on the wooden floor for that. It feels more like a speakeasy with its low amber lights, discreet booths and a long wooden bar. Read more about this Dallas bar or club >>
http://www.toadiesbar.com Bedford's no-frills neighborhood bar Toadies isn't named after the famous Dallas rock band. Far more obvious than that, it's a frog-themed bar, complete with a giant frog on the huge sign that sits above the entrance, and frog statues sprinkled within the bar. Almost everyone sitting at the long wooden counter seems well-acquainted with each other, discussing the ins and outs of whichever local team is playing on the pull-down screen behind the bar. The drink selection seems pared down to just the basics, but what Toadies lacks in drink variety, it makes up for in friendly service. Read more about this Dallas bar or club >>
With free parking, cheap cover prices and affordable drinks, Tomcats West is one of Fort Worth's most hassle-free music venues. The large building sits just off of Interstate 30, with very little surrounding it. Hard, loud guitars and punishing drums blare through the venue's top-notch surround sound speakers, pumping up the young-ish crowd. The venue isn't exactly the biggest club in town, but it has got plenty of heart. Read more about this Dallas bar or club >>
http://www.myspace.com/torchdallas With its adequate sound system, 60-foot bar and hardwood dance floor, the 5,000-sq. foot Torch could be a great addition to the Lower Greenville live-music scene. As it is, though, the club's attempt to be all things to all people (douchebags can get bottle service even if they're wearing shorts) keeps it from being anything special. It's a nice setting for its sporadic, if poorly promoted, live hip-hop shows. The place was the site of a rather inadvertently funny bar-to-MC misunderstanding: moments after a bartender stated that the bar had no drink specials, the host of a hip-hop showcase tried to boost bar traffic by boasting that the bar had great drink specials. Read more about this Dallas bar or club >>
http://www.toulousecafeandbar.com Alberto Lombardi shares his love of Franco-influenced Belgian comestibles and his house specialty, pomme frites, in the Park Cities. The eatery"s amber glow gives it the ambience of a bistro where customers can while away the hours enjoying the Gallic-heavy wine stock or perhaps some frogs" legs. Mussels come in many compelling varieties, their bread-sopping sauces adding to your dining pleasure. The third Monday of the month is when a reservation-required, three-course wine dinner is held. The dining room is small but inviting, decorated by French posters and artwork, and the bar is a cozy, steel-topped vantage to watch the Katy Trail joggers trot the evening away. Read more about this Dallas bar or club >>
http://www.tccigarseuless.com There aren't many cigar places in Dallas where you can buy a drink and a smoke and enjoy them both indoors. But if you're looking for a good scotch to go with your stogie, Town & Country Cigars in Euless is the nearest place. The big front room has plush leather sofas and a big glass coffee table covered with newspapers, ashtrays and cigar magazines. The adjacent walk-in humidor is massive, offering thousands of cigars, and the bar in the back has cocktail tables from which patrons watch sports on a massive TV. The bar, while not as well stocked as the humidor, has plenty of options, whether you're looking for whiskey or a local craft beer. There are several Rahr choices on tap. Read more about this Dallas bar or club >>
http://www.townhousedallas.com Townhouse is very trendy and modern. Half restaurant and half bar, it boasts a nice selection of draft beers and stand out appetizers, including duck quesadillas served with blueberry-lime salsa and short rib sliders with horseradish pickles. Entrees feature dishes like pecan pork shops with a bourbon glaze, shrimp and grits, an Asian turkey burger with pho spices and sriracha aioli sauce, and kimchi duck tacos. Yup, kimchi duck tacos. Townhouse is managed by the Restaurants-America, who also owns PrimeBar in Uptown. Read more about this Dallas bar or club >>
In Oak Cliff lives a little dive bar that doesn't take itself too seriously. With one pool table, a small bar and a short wooden deck out back, Tradewinds is a neighborhood bar full of regulars who argue that Oak Cliff will soon be as safe as Uptown. Some nights the bar will serve up homemade pizza, occasionally it will give out free shots to its regulars and every now and then it has live music on the weekends. It's all about what mood they're in. There's no set schedule for this safe and lighthearted spot, so you just have to see what's in store when you show up. Read more about this Dallas bar or club >>
http://www.trecerestaurant.com The Travis Avenue bar and restaurant scene is a favorite hangout for the uptown crowd. From the porch of Mexican kitchen and Tequila Lounge, you can look out on a street lined with fancy cars and beautiful people, or you can look inside at the breezy California-style dining room, rich with dark cherry tables and floors, and white adobe walls. Walk into the bar area and sample any of their 100-plus tequilas-they even have several top shelf tequilas on tap. Have drinks with friends or sit down for a delicious gourmet Tex-Mex meal.Here you can get the most virile tableside guacamole known this side of the Minute Men; a place where haute Mexican regional cooking unfurls in fresh clear flavors, including the prime New York strip ranchero; short ribs braised in cabernet and Mexican chili; and nachos with lobster, black bean puree, avocado and jalapeño jelly. Trece is where good Mexican lives in Dallas. Here"s hoping more follow suit. Read more about this Dallas bar or club >>
What looks like an actual treehouse, if it were first an old fraternity house, is a spanning two-story bar directly next to the heart of the University of North Texas campus. Catering mostly to students, The Treehouse has more than 80 specialty shots that line the menu hanging above the downstairs bar, including the "cheap fuck" and the "orgasm," to name a couple. With its wooden exterior and mahogany interior, The Treehouse is a good place to go if you're not too picky about your draft beer selection and want fruit-flavored alcohol at a considerably low price. Read more about this Dallas bar or club >>
http://www.treesdallas.com This is the place where all Dallas rock music fans have been at one time in their lives. Visiting Trees is like a rite-of-passage for area high-school seniors, who have assured their parents that they're safe and sound at a friend's house. It's a place with great history and legend, like Kurt Cobain's infamous fight with a bouncer, and many ear-splitting performances from The Flaming Lips. In recent years Trees shut down and reopened with the help of new management. A fresh coat of paint and some remodeling around the bar has the once ramshackle operation looking as sleek as any ultra-lounge in town. A trip to Trees is a history lesson--plus you get to hear some great local and national bands. Read more about this Dallas bar or club >>
http://www.trinityhall.tv Upon first visit, Trinity Hall seems like just another faux-Irish Pub, of which there are many in North Texas. But what sets Trinity Hall apart from the others is that it's run by an actual Irish dude. There is a huge selection beer, and a Scotch menu that is intimidating to the faint-of-heart, and weak-of-wallet. It's not your typical sports bar, but Trinity Hall is the perfect place to watch soccer. They screen games from the World Cup and the English Premier League. Drop by one Saturday, order a Guinness and enjoy the rest of your weekend. Read more about this Dallas bar or club >>
http://www.trscdallas.com With two floors of reception-style table seating, a stage and dance floor, this dine-and-dance club off South Lamar offers music, sports and food daily from noon to 2 a.m. As for sports, 10 plasma screens and a projector broadcast professional and college games. As a nightclub, Trinity River features a full bar, DJs on weekends and caters special events any time with a party reservation. The menu includes platters for 10 to 15 and a regular selection including American choices like chicken tenders and pork chops and an international menu Wednesday through Friday. Read more about this Dallas bar or club >>
http://www.trinitytaverndfw.com Located on the eastern fringe of Fort Worth is Trinity Tavern, one of the area's sleeker watering holes. Managing partner Joel Fincher describes his bar as "a little bit of Uptown with Fort Worth prices." It's certainly not anything like the massive ultra-lounges in Uptown Dallas, but its stone floor and wooden ceiling give the place a somewhat sophisticated feel. So too does the no-smoking policy and the art hanging on the walls, all of which is for sale. What keeps the place casual is the light dinner menu and the bar's cozy space. Read more about this Dallas bar or club >>
Like J. Blacks and Beauty Bar before it, The Trophy Room is another Austin establishment replicated for Dallas drinkers -- complete with stage for live shows, antlered "trophies" mounted and hung on the walls, and, perhaps most important, the mechanical bull. The bucking machine is placed front-and-center on Trophy Room's front patio and has helped earn this new Uptown bar plenty of early buzz. And the building's orange-painted facade makes it easy to spot, while the brown and green walls and warm wood accents keep the hunting "theme" going. Read more about this Dallas bar or club >>
http://www.tumbleweedssportsbar.com You'll find Tumbleweed's Sports Bar at the furthest edge of Fort Worth, situated among a few gas stations and restaurants on the south side of Loop 820. The first thing you'll see upon walking inside the bar is a mounted buffalo head and a wooden Indian. The regulars here include local service industry types getting off work and anyone else wanting to shoot pool on one of Tumbleweed's six tables. Most likely, they were lured by the free pool that Tumbleweed's offers on Sundays or Mondays. The walls aren't plastered with televisions, but there are enough screens to find the game you need. If you're hungry, the nearby Dickie's BBQ delivers straight to the bar. Read more about this Dallas bar or club >>
http://www.twenty7bar.com Located in a strip shopping center off Parker and Independence Parkway in Plano, this sports bar makes for a solid hangout spot whether you're looking to grab a quick bite and relax or down a few cold ones while watching a game. At this sports bar and grill, don't be too surprised if you see folks dancing between the tables also, because a door connects Twenty7 to sister ultra lounge Krem. Both are owned by former Texas Ranger and Detroit Tiger Craig Monroe. Twenty7's fully stocked bar offers up a happy hour Monday through Friday, a full menu of classic game-watching finger foods and plenty of TVs. There are free WiFi, a few different games to play (darts and Golden Tee) and a nice patio out front. Read more about this Dallas bar or club >>
Opened in 2008, this popular family-owned restaurant and bar wasn't the first venture for brothers Josh and Steven Morgan. The pair previously owned two other spots -- in North Dallas and the flagship Frisco location, which opened in 2005. Their bar and grill offers wallet-friendly lunch specials Monday through Friday, as well as happy hour Monday through Friday from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. -- with specials like $2.50 for select beers, $3.50 margaritas and $4.50 wells and select wines. The menu offers everything from breakfast to finger foods to dinner platters, depending on the time of day. Open from 7 a.m. to 2 a.m., seven days a week, or as one waitress put it, "in other words, almost all the time." Read more about this Dallas bar or club >>
http://www.twocorksandabottle.com The thing that sets Two Corks and a Bottle apart from other wine bars in Dallas is the location from where the wine is fermented and bottled. At Two Corks, it's all done right there in the Uptown shop. It only sells house-made wines, which sounds like a turn-off; people tend to put their trust in more widely distributed labels. But considering that the grapes are shipped direct from California, the wines offered here are on par with top brands. The shop offers a multi-tiered wine club, in which members get discounts and free bottles each month. Read more about this Dallas bar or club >>
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