Showing posts with label DFW joints. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DFW joints. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Posse favorites: The Jambo Texan sandwich at Jambo's BBQ Shack

The Jambo Texan sandwich at Jambo's BBQ Shack in Rendon. (Photo ©Chris Wilkins/Texas BBQ Posse)

Every now and then you run into something so uniquely Texan that you stop in pure amazement. This is the case with pitmaster Jamie Geer's Jambo Texan sandwich at Jambo's BBQ Shack in Rendon.

The Posse hit Jambo's in force during their first week of business and was quite impressed.

It wasn't surprising. Jamie not only builds what many consider to be the best BBQ smoker the in the world, the Lamborghini-esque Jambo pit, but he is also a veteran pitmaster on the competition BBQ circuit with numerous championships under his belt.

I had seen a photo of the Jambo Texan sandwich before, but you must see it to believe it. Sandwiched between two pieces of Texas toast, the Texan has the following meats starting from the bottom: sliced brisket, chopped brisket, smoked bologna, pulled pork, smoked sausage & pork ribs.

Friday, June 7, 2013

Bartley's BBQ popular with the locals, not so much with the Posse.

Bartley's BBQ is located in a strip mall on E. Northwest Hwy. in Grapevine. (Photo©Chris Wilkins/Texas BBQ Posse) 

Friday brought the Texas BBQ Posse to Grapevine to eat at Bartley’s BBQ, a joint that none of us had heard of before it made the 2013 Texas Monthly Top 50 list. After one visit, we’re wondering how they made the list.

It was crowded and the line remained a steady 15-20 during the lunch hour. Service is cafeteria line-style with self-serve sides that were mostly very good.

As for the meat, we sampled the brisket, pork loin, pork ribs, turkey, hot links and the smoked bologna. The meat was dry – all of it.

Honestly, if that meat was cooked for the lunch service today, the staff at Bartley’s needs to figure out a new way to store the meat before serving.

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Video: Pecan Lodge's Justin Fourton shows you how to cook a great brisket


When it comes to smoking a brisket, Pecan Lodge pitmaster and co-owner Justin Fourton is among the best in Texas. Their recent appearance on Diners, Drive-ins and Dives is further evidence of that fact.

However, our photo crew at the Dallas Morning News beat Guy Fieri to the airwaves by a couple of weeks with this video of Justin explaining how to prep, cook and cut a brisket. Staff photographer Vernon Bryant spent a day behind the scenes at Pecan Lodge to bring you some of Justin's secrets. Enjoy.......


Video: Vernon Bryant/The Dallas Morning News, Photo: ©Chris Wilkins/Texas BBQ Posse

Friday, April 12, 2013

Lockhart Smokehouse owner wants to add another pit to keep up with demand at his Oak Cliff joint

Our Shiner Platter lunch at Lockhart Smokehouse. Yes, it was a good as it looks. (Photo ©Chris Wilkins)

During an anything-but-light lunch Thursday at Lockhart Smokehouse in Dallas, owner Jeff Bergus said business has been so strong -- up more than 25 percent this year -- that he's thinking of adding a second pit to the big Bewley that the joint has used since opening in early 2011.

Where would it go?

Bergus said he wasn't sure, but pointed out that there is a small, vacant storefront adjacent to the back of his place, which would be one possibility.

Lockhart is now cooking two tons of meat a week, he said, and sometimes selling out.

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Catching up with pitmaster Travis Mayes at Meshack's Bar-Be-Que Shack in Garland

The Tuesday lunch crowd at MeShack's Bar-Be-Que Shack in Garland. (Photo ©Chris Wilkins/Texas BBQ Posse)

It had been too long, so I went out to visit old BBQ friends in Garland on Tuesday.

Travis and Donna Mayes opened the now legendary Meshack's Bar-Be-Que Shack in May 2009. They led the way to a renaissance of Dallas barbecue that has been exhilarating, including the opening of Pecan Lodge and Lockhart Smokehouse. New joints continue to open in the D/FW area almost monthly now, some good, some bad.

BBQ snob Daniel Vaughn put MeShack's on the map in late 2009, giving them his first four-star rating in the D/FW area. We made the first of many visits there in March 2010, thrilled to find a great BBQ joint within driving distance of downtown Dallas for lunch.

After dining on brisket sandwiches and burnt ends on my tailgate on Tuesday, Marshall Cooper and I got a chance to catch up with Donna and Travis.

Thursday, March 28, 2013

Two little known facts about Slow Bone BBQ, the newest joint in Dallas

One of these places sells BBQ & one doesn't. Can you guess which is which? (Photo ©Chris Wilkins)

Every couple of weeks I've been cruising by the new location of Slow Bone BBQ, checking for signs of life. This is the joint started up by Maple & Motor owner Jack Perkins, located on the corner of Wycliff and Irving Blvd.

When word of the opening came out via CultureMap's Teresa Gubbins on January 1st, the Dallas food blogosphere lit up. After his highly successful run at the celebrated burger restaurant, Perkins was ready to take on the steadily improving Dallas BBQ scene.

I won't rehash everything that flew back and forth after Perkins basically said that cooking good brisket is pretty simple, but here's an excellent recap by Dallas Observer food critic Scott Reitz on City of Ate. If you're into the Texas BBQ scene, this was entertainment at its best.

Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Pecan Lodge of Dallas wins best ribs in the Posse's Best of Texas BBQ Tour

Order of award-winning ribs at Pecan Lodge in the Dallas Farmer's Market. (Tom Fox/DMN)
While we wait for the full results of the Posse's recent Best of Texas barbecue tour to be published in The Dallas Morning News this weekend, we can reveal one more detail:

Pecan Lodge in Dallas won the pork rib category. Five of our six judges rated pitmaster Justin Fourton's ribs a perfect 10. The sixth judge scored a 9.

Monday, February 18, 2013

First trip to 3 Stacks Smoke & Tap House in Frisco

Diners leave 3 Stacks Smoke and Tap House in Frisco. (Photo ©Chris Wilkins/Texas BBQ Posse)
It's a pretty well-known fact among meat lovers that Collin County has historically been a barbecue wasteland. There are numerous places, but mostly gasser joints cooking unmemorable fare. Nothing remotely approaching the level of Pecan Lodge, MeShack's or Lockhart Smokehouse, all located south in Dallas County.

The folks who just opened 3 Stacks Smoke and Tap House in Frisco hope to change the BBQ landscape in the land of strip malls and restaurant chains. As a resident of Plano, I have high hopes after eating there on Friday.

Friday, November 30, 2012

Babb Bros. BBQ & Blues, the new joint in town


Posse members Jim Rossman and Gary Jacobson paid a visit to the newest BBQ joint in town, Babb Bros. BBQ & Blues, located just west of downtown. Jim shares his thoughts on the two-day old restaurant, as follows:

We timed it just right at 11:45 am for beating the line at Babb Bros. BBQ & Blues, which was about 20 people deep by noon. The serving line was well staffed. I counted at least a dozen employees on the floor.

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

At Pecan Lodge, the Franklin-esque lines for BBQ begin to form at about 10:15 a.m. weekends


Just the other day, a barbecue friend asked me when the lines begin to form for the Pecan Lodge, open Thursday through Sunday for lunch at the Dallas Farmers Market.

We have both tried to eat there on a work day since the Lodge was featured on the popular TV show, Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives, and been discouraged by long lines and gone elsewhere.

This morning, I ran into my Oak Cliff neighbor and Pecan Lodge pitmaster Justin Fourton.

He said business has continued to build since the show first aired in late May.

On Thursdays and Fridays, he said, lines begin to form at 10:30 to 10:45 for the 11 a.m. opening. On Saturdays and Sundays, they begin to form at 10:15-ish, Justin said.

At one point last weekend, there were well over 100 people in line, he said.

That's absolutely Franklin-esque, the kind of line Aaron Franklin gets daily for his Austin joint.

Another testament to the power of great barbecue...and  TV.

Photo ©Chris Wilkins/Texas BBQ Posse




Friday, May 4, 2012

Katy Trail Ice House: The new kid on the BBQ block

We had the pleasure of checking out the latest serious BBQ player in Dallas on Friday. The Katy Trail Ice House, located on the trail near Reverchon Park, has been cooking BBQ on a huge custom-built smoker for the past two months. The results are quite impressive, especially given the short time they've been smoking meats.

Alerted by a recent blog post on written by Stephen Doyle on cravedfw, we rounded up a group and headed there for lunch. BBQ Snob Daniel Vaughn also rounded up a posse of five from nearby Good Fulton & Farrell, the architecture firm where he and photographer Nicholas McWhirter work.

We took over a table on the huge patio, named last year by D Magazine as the "Best Big Bar Patio" in Dallas. This is the kind of place you could easily spend the afternoon nibbling on some BBQ while diving into their huge beer selection. We sampled ribs and brisket, both chopped and sliced. They usually serve sausage, made for them by Rudolph's Market in Deep Ellum, but they didn't have any on this visit.

The consensus from our table of eight was two thumbs up all the way. The meats were cooked very well, with nice rub. The brisket was central Texas style, salt and pepper, and the ribs were cooked just right by my standards, very tender but not quite falling off the bone onto your plate. Posse member Phil Lamb likened the cole slaw to Salt Lick and the beans were very original, in a thick gravy.

We enjoyed meeting general manager Jimmy Fell and pitmaster Eduardo Flores. They really believe in doing things right, low and slow, and not taking shortcuts. Though neither has cooked BBQ commercially before, they each have a wealth of experience in the restaurant business. Currently, BBQ is usually only served only on Saturday & Sunday. We got lucky on this Friday, though Jimmy says they plan to expand to Fridays soon. We'll put out an update when they do.

It's hard to fully grasp a BBQ joint based on one visit, so we won't try to. Daniel mentioned he plans to make another visit of two before bestowing his coveted star rating on the Full Custom Gospel BBQ blog. Not to be too dramatic, but if Katy Trail Ice House can keep up this quality of BBQ on a consistent basis, Pecan Lodge and Lockhart Smokehouse will have some company atop the Dallas BBQ mountain.

Katy Trail Ice House, 3136B Routh Street, Dallas, 214-468-0600. Open Mon-Fri 11am–2am, Sat-Sun 10am–2am. BBQ served only on Saturday & Sunday.

The patio at Katy Ice House was voted "Best Big Bar Patio" last year by D Magazine.

Pepper coats some just-sliced brisket, hot off the pit.

Our posse digs into a big spread of sliced & chopped brisket and ribs, along with cole slaw and beans.

Ribs and brisket were on the menu this Friday, they usually have sausage as well.

BBQ Snob Daniel Vaughan shows off a huge burnt end right before we devoured it.

The next day's briskets, rubbed in salt and pepper, get started on the smoker in the early afternoon.

Katy Ice House general manager Jimmy Fell loads more red oak wood in the smoker. 

Photos ©Chris Wilkins/Texas BBQ Posse

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

BBQ trip to Uncle Willie's and Mama E's in east Fort Worth


In our never ending quest to find the best BBQ joints in Texas, Posse pitmaster Marshall Cooper and I recently headed west to Fort Worth to check out a couple of places we hadn't been yet. Both joints, Uncle Willie's BBQ and Mama E’s Bar-B-Q & Homestyle Cooking, are on the east side of town on Rosedale Ave., located about ten minutes apart.

The Posse went on a Fort Worth BBQ tour in spring 2010, but we were trying to find a new stop or two beyond our two favorites from that tour. After that trip, Off the Bone in Forest Hills and Longoria's BBQ in Everman have become a perennial Posse favorites, the kind of places we send out-of-towners who want to try some really good Texas BBQ on the west side of the Metroplex.

A group of MedStar paramedics enjoy lunch at Mama E's BBQ.

Our plan was to order sliced brisket and pork ribs at each place, the basic staples of judgement for any good Texas BBQ joint. We were first to arrive as Uncle Willie's opened for weekday lunch at 11 a.m. It's located at the southwest corner of Rosedale St. and Miller Ave., in a somewhat desolate part of east Fort Worth. I had high hopes for this joint after a stellar 4-star review by BBQ Snob Daniel Vaughn.

Seeing the empty parking lot, I jumped out to get a good, clean photo of the building before the front was blocked by cars. Within a minute the guys working inside poked their heads outside, curiously asking me what I was up to. Just like to take photos of where I eat, I responded. We were hoping to meet owner Willie Brown, brother of Off the Bone owner Eddie Brown, but he unfortunately wasn't around that day.

Wood rack in front of Uncle Willie's BBQ.
Marshall Cooper tries the pork rib at Uncle Willie's.

It took 15 minutes or so to get our order as the brisket "wasn't quite ready yet." I've heard that now several times over the past couple of years and it usually means you're going to get some chewy brisket that needs to be cooked another hour. That certainly was the case here. On the other hand, the ribs were meaty and tremendous. They were cooked perfectly with a nice rub and a kiss of smoke, definitely setting us up for a return visit, where hopefully we can meet Willie Brown and get a pit tour for Marshall.

Americana on the walls at Uncle Willie's BBQ.
Our lunch of sliced brisket and pork ribs at Uncle Willie's BBQ.

We headed east on Rosedale St. for our next stop at Mama E's Bar-B-Q & Homestyle Cooking, which is located just southeast of the intersection with I-35 West. I'm always a sucker for any restaurant occupying an original 60's style KFC building, and this was no exception.

Our reception was a little more friendly than Uncle Willie's as Tamila Edmond greeted us with a smile at the register. There's a huge dry-erase white board just to the left of the counter with dozens of dining choices, both BBQ and soul food. We ordered our standard sliced brisket and ribs, with white bread and sauce on the side. I'm pretty sure we missed some great sides and other offerings, as detailed in this recent dfw.com review of Mama E's.

Decisions, decisions at the menu board at Mama E's BBQ.
Our sliced brisket and rib lunch at Mama E's.

Marshall and I got our order and dug in. The meats were average, especially when compared to Uncle Willie's. The brisket had a roast beefy quality, dry and overcooked by most standards. It was probably better chopped and sauced and served on a bun. The ribs were cooked well, but short on rub with little or no smoke.

Our conclusion is that Mama E's in probably not a place for Texas BBQ hardcores looking for the best joints in the state. Tamila and her mom Ernestine, aka Mama E, could not have been more gracious and nice to us during our visit. However, it's a friendly family restaurant, serving good food with a loyal following. Also known as the ingredients of a successful restaurant.

Ernestine "Mama" Edmond and her youngest daughter Tamila work the counter and the kitchen.

  • Mama E’s Bar-B-Q & Homestyle Cooking, 818 E. Rosedale, Fort Worth, 817-877-3322. Open Sun-Mon 11 am-5:30 pm, Tues-Thur 11 am-7 pm, Fri-Sat 11 am-9 pm. 
  • Uncle Willie's BBQ, 1506 Miller Ave., Fort Worth, 866-930-8156. Open Tues-Sat 11 am-7 pm.
Photos ©Chris Wilkins/Texas BBQ Posse

Monday, February 20, 2012

Dropping in on Longoria's BBQ in Everman

Brisket sausage at Longoria's BBQ in Everman.

On a recent weekday afternoon, Marshall Cooper and I dropped in at Longoria's BBQ in Everman, one of our favorite DFW joints. We met pitmaster David Longoria at the cash registers and started to talk BBQ. The lunch rush was over and were back in the pit area in no time. The trip was nothing big, we'd already eaten at two BBQ joints in east Fort Worth that day, Uncle Willie's & Mama E's. But we still had room, if you know what I mean.

Longoria's pitmaster David Longoria meets Posse pitmaster Marshall Cooper.

If you've never met David, it's worth the drive. The first time we hit Longoria's was a couple of years ago on a busy Saturday. David was incredibly gracious. holding court over the smokers as we asked questions for 20 minutes or so. It was BBQ 101 for the recently-formed Posse.

Fresh batch of brisket jerky at Longoria's.

On this day, he insisted we try a bite or two from the fresh batch of brisket jerky curing in the sun. We weren't bashful, it's some of the best jerky you'll ever have. Trust me. You can buy a pound of jerky for a little over $20, far less than my previous favorite beef jerky at Woody's Smokehouse in Centerville, which goes for over $35 a pound.

James Dean stands by the Longoria's menu.

We ordered the legendary brisket sausage and some ribs. The sausage was every bit as good as remembered and expected. The ribs were a little underdone, but great taste and rub. We didn't have room for a brisket burger this trip, but that's on my bucket list.

David has also recently started grinding jalapeno cheese brisket sausage, but it's only for sale uncooked and frozen at this point. I bought his last two pounds and cooked them up on the grill the next day. This could very easily be among the best sausage I've ever had.

Longoria’s BBQ, 100 Christopher, Everman. Open Mon-Fri 10:30am-7pm, Sat 10:30am-4pm.

Photos ©Chris Wilkins/Texas BBQ Posse

Sunday, January 29, 2012

Happy anniversary to our friends at Lockhart Smokehouse

Texas BBQ royalty were on hand as friends and family of Lockhart Smokehouse joined together on Sunday evening to celebrate their first anniversary. We were all there to congratulate Jill Bergus, husband Jeff and pitmaster Tim McLaughlin on their success.

Lockhart Smokehouse has played a major role in the renaissance of Dallas barbecue, along with Pecan Lodge in the Dallas Farmer's Market. It's only fitting that a group of Jill's family came up from Lockhart to help them celebrate, including Kreuz Market owner Keith Schmidt and her grandmother Alma Schmidt.

Jill grew up surrounded by the legacy of great BBQ. Her grandfather, Edgar "Papa" Schmidt ran the legendary Kreuz Market from the time he purchased it from the Kreuz family in 1948 until he passed it onto his sons in the 1980's. Jill joked we could talk to grandmother Schmidt about how BBQ keeps her 101 years young.

The Lone Star beer was flowing and the Texas BBQ appetizers, followed by puled pork, Kreuz sausage and Shiner platters. No one left the party hungry.

Jill sums up the last year and looks to the future, "What a year it has been! From our icy first day, we have weathered the year. We look forward to sharing the next year of our fantastic adventure with you."

Lockhart Smokehouse, 400 W. Davis, Dallas, 214-944-5521. Open every day from 11am till they're done.
Photos ©Chris Wilkins/Texas BBQ Posse

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Where's the smoke? the Posse asks after visiting historic Dallas joints

The wooden sign on the wall at the original Sonny Bryan's Smokehouse on Inwood Road says "Real Texas Bar-B-Que."

It's next to a large black and white photo of Sonny himself. The late Dallas BBQ patriarch, dressed in a white shirt, white apron and white chef's hat, has a gentle smile on his face and a big carving knife in his hand.

Once upon a time, that sign might have been accurate. Not anymore.

The same goes for all four of the joints the Posse visited on a recent Saturday during its Roots of Dallas BBQ Tour, which included the original location of Dickey's Barbecue Pit as well as Sonny Bryan's. Both are now part of big chains.

When Posse co-founder Chris Wilkins, a photo editor at The Dallas Morning News, developed the tour itinerary, he picked places that were must-see for anyone who cared about the history of Dallas BBQ. He didn't have high hopes for the food. He was mostly right.

All day long, we kept asking ourselves, where's the smoke? We've been to Franklin in Austin. We've been to the Central Texas BBQ heartland. We've been to Meshack's in Garland and the Pecan Lodge at the Dallas Farmers Market. For us, you can't have real Texas BBQ without smoke.
On this tour, the only place that served what we would call barbecue brisket was Peggy Sue BBQ at Snider Plaza, and that needed some assistance from a very nice mustard-vinegar sauce. All the rest served roast beef. No smoke. No rub. No taste. Very bland.

The joints burned wood in their pits, but they just didn't lay much of that taste on their meats. On purpose for at least one place.

Dave Rummel, the general manager at Sonny's, admitted he wasn't a big fan of smoke, particularly hickory.

"I get more smoke on my clothes than I do on the meat," said Rummel, whose name tag said "Baron of Beef."

Before we get too carried away about the lack of smoke, it should be noted that each of the joints we visited had many customers. So, people like what these places produce, even without much smoke.

We started our tour, eleven Posse members strong, about 10:45 a.m. at Sonny's, across the street from UT Southwestern Medical Center.
An attraction of the original location is its decor. The joint still has the old wooden school desks where customers eat and the original pit, built into the wall when the place opened in 1958.

"Uh-oh, that's a bad sign," Bryan Gooding said as we walked in the door. The Quad/Photo producer pointed to the cooked pork ribs already cut and stacked on a grill in the kitchen.

Later, Rummel explained the recipe. Cooked for several hours on the pit without rub or seasoning, the racks are then dipped in barbecue sauce and stored in the refrigerator overnight. The next day, before serving, they are cut into individual ribs and grilled, carmelizing the sauce.

"That's the way Sonny did it," Rummel said.

While some of us cringed at the technique, the ribs themselves had some fans.

"I'll defend that rib," said Mac Hargrove. "I won't defend the brisket." Hargrove, a financial advisor making his second tour with the Posse, brought along his nephew, Brantley Hargrove, a writer for the Dallas Observer. They and other Posse members loved Sonny's giant onion rings.

We headed south on Inwood, under I-35, over the bridge with its sweeping view of downtown Dallas, to where the street changes its name to Hampton Road. We turned left on Singleton and, after a couple blocks, pulled into Odom's Bar-B-Que, which traces its roots to the 1930s and the Hardeman family. Posse member Michael Hamtil, a photo editor at The News joined us there.

When we arrived before noon, the pit master was just finishing loading four cases (more than 40 racks) of pork spareribs on the smoker with a long-handled pitchfork. That's a lot of ribs. Like Sonny's, Odom's smoker opens out of a wall into the kitchen area.
Our order of brisket, ribs and sausage came smothered in sauce, which overwhelmed the taste of the meat.

Jim Rossman, a tech specialist at The News, was smarter. He said hold the sauce.

"This was all right," Rossman said of his food. "But I don't know if I'd make the trek over here for lunch or anything."

We drove East on Singleton and worked our way around a couple detours to cross the Continental Avenue Bridge, with its nice view of the new Margaret Hunt Hill Bridge. We crossed downtown on Woodall Rogers Freeway to Central Expressway.

The original Dickey's, which opened in 1941, is located at Central and Henderson. There's a painting in the dining room of the building when it was a country cottage, then on the outskirts of Dallas, before it became Big D.

"You know what you do with brisket like this," Wilkins said as he settled in the dining room and tasted his order. "Chop it up and sauce it." Translation: It was dry and had no taste.

Hamtil, a photo editor at The News, said his pulled pork sandwich was "really juicy" but his peach cobbler tasted like "whatever they coated the baking pan with." He left it half-eaten.

Dickey's has earned raves from Barbecue Snob Daniel Vaughn for its jalapeno cheese sausage, but on our visit, the sausage fell short. Gooding said the cheese tasted "Velveety."

"I just don't think it was cooked enough to melt the cheese," Rossman said.

The free soft-serve ice cream, though, was a treat.
We took Central Expressway one exit north to Mockingbird and drove West, past SMU, to Hillcrest. Snider Plaza on Saturdays is a zoo. Good luck parking. We finally found a space about three blocks away in a residential area.

Barbecue has been served at Peggy Sue's location since about the 1940s, first as Howard and Peggy's, later as Peggy's Beef Bar. We walked in the door, past the salad bar, to the Corner Club, a nice place to have a beer and finish the tour.

"This is the best brisket we've had today," Mac Hargrove said. "Anyplace with a Buck Owens album cover on the wall, you know you're in good company."

Hamtil ordered the fried chocolate pie with ice cream and forks for everyone. It was delicious.

From first stop to last, the tour covered 16 miles and took about four hours. Along the way, we traveled through West Dallas and the Park Cities, certainly a study in contrasts.

While the food was largely uninspiring, we did have some favorites, though the grading curve was low.

"The best rib I had was Odom's unsauced," said Marshall Cooper, a commercial real estate broker.

All in all, R.J. Hinkle, a photographer at Quad/Photo, probably summed up the day best.

"Once you know good brisket, then at most places you go it's a disappointment," he said.
Roots of Dallas BBQ Tour itinerary

10:45 am: Meet at Sonny Bryan's Smokehouse BBQ, 202 Inwood Road, Dallas, TX 75235, (214) 357-7120. Hours: Mon-Sun 10:00 am-8:00 pm.
noon: Odom’s Bar-B-Que, 1971 Singleton Boulevard, Dallas, TX 75212, (214) 631-3538. Hours: Open M-Thur 10:30-1:45am, F-Sat 10:30-2:45am, Sun 10:30-11:45pm.
1:15 pm: Dickey's Barbecue Pit, 4610 North Central Expy, Dallas, TX 75206, (214) 370-4550. Open: 10:30 am-9:00 pm.
2:00 pm: Peggy Sue BBQ, 6600 Snider Plz, Dallas, TX 75205, (214) 987-9188, Open: Mon-Thu, Sun 11am-9pm; Fri-Sat 11am-10pm.
Photos ©R.J. Hinkle & ©Chris Wilkins