Settle Up: Stirr Will Impress Your Parents, But Not You

Settle Up is a column that critiques cocktail bars with the same gravitas that food critics apply to restaurants, exploring Dallas cocktail concepts, menus, execution and service and steering discerning imbibers toward all the booze that’s fit to drink. There is a time and place for everything. If it’s 2…

100 Favorite Dishes, No. 89: Sundubu Jjigae at Musiro Korean Restaurant

Leading up to September’s Best of Dallas® 2017 issue, we’re sharing (in no particular order) our 100 Favorite Dishes, the Dallas entrées, appetizers and desserts that really stuck with us this year. It’s one of those dishes that, when you translate its name into English, doesn’t sound entirely exciting: soft tofu…

It’s Demolition Day for El Corazon de Tejas

Just after sunrise this morning, Victoria Ferrell-Ortiz went to El Corazon de Tejas — or rather the building that used to be El Corazon de Tejas, as the restaurant closed April 30 — to deliver a message in the form of a hand-painted sign she hung on the vacant building’s…

100 Favorite Dishes, No. 90: Cashew Butter Sandwich at The Lot

Leading up to September’s Best of Dallas® 2017 issue, we’re sharing (in no particular order) our 100 Favorite Dishes, the Dallas entrées, appetizers and desserts that really stuck with us this year. We can already feel your raised-eyebrow disbelief: Are we really advocating that you, a full grown adult who…

100 Favorite Dishes, No. 91: The True Grit at HG Sply Co.

Leading up to September’s Best of Dallas® 2017 issue, we’re sharing (in no particular order) our 100 Favorite Dishes, the Dallas entrées, appetizers and desserts that really stuck with us this year. Whether or not you worship at the altar of “eating clean,” HG Sply Co. — which has locations…

Taquero Gives West Dallas Its Tiniest Cult Taco Shop Yet

Another year, another sensational new taco restaurant on Singleton Avenue. The story of West Dallas is one of gentrification, generational change, young politicians clashing with old and a “restaurant theme park” that changed everything. But another part of the story, and a less flippant part than it might sound, is…

Weird Things Go Down at Dallas’ Hidden Korean Dive Bar

Nollowa is a hidden dive. The lights are low, the Cowboys game is always on, none of the beers are on draft, bottles of Johnnie Walker appear in front of you and seemingly every customer is looking for some action. Also, the bar’s kitchen serves spicy octopus and chicken feet…