Thursday, March 28, 2024 Mar 28, 2024
56° F Dallas, TX
Advertisement
Publications

Restaurant Reviews

Places to Meet & Eat: Our Critics’ Picks
By D Magazine |

These restaurants represent the best in Dallas and Fort Worth area dining. It is implicit, then, that we recommend them highly. Visits by our critics are made anonymously to avoid preferential treatment. Listings are updated periodically.

The magazine does not review chain restaurants with more than three locations in the Dallas-Fort Worth area.

Inclusion in this directory has nothing whatsoever to do with paid advertising.

KEY:

Inexpensive: Dinner entrées under $10

Moderate: Most entrées $10 to $25

Expensive: Most entrées $25 or more

(Based on a typical dinner for one, not including drinks, tax, and tip.)



Barbecue

Red, Hot & Blue. 5017 W. Piano Pkwy., Ste. 100. Piano. 972-248-3866. Inexpensive.



Sonny Bryan’s. The basic barbecue sandwich plate remains as fresh and new as the day the late Sonny first lit the fire m the barbecue pit: tender, flavorful meat piled on a soft bun. accompanied by wondrously spicy sauce, smoky beans and creamy cole slaw with a hint of tartness. The onion rings are to be treasured, a crusty shell around a soft, piping hot, sweet onion. The food may be as good at the new locations, but like an old hometown, the gritty ambience of the original must be visited from time to time. 2202 Inwood Rd., 214-357-7120; and other locations. Inexpensive.



Brewpubs

Breckenridge Brewery. This sleek, woody establishment, much larger than the mother ship in Colorado, comes with the slightly Irritating supply-before-demand trappings of success: T-shirts and other Breckenalia are for sale, before you even thought to ask. But the confidence may be well-founded. Besides being one of the prettiest brewpubs so far (the humongous beer-can collage is art, damn it), at least two of the five beers-India Pale Ale and Oatmeal Stout-are first-class creations. To wash down your drink. try the superb prawn appetizer, then move on to duck enchiladas, fish tacos. or the pulled pork sandwich. The brew-pub sweepstakes are getting crowded, and the winner is- well, stay tuned. 1907 McKinney Ave.. 214-965-0007. Inexpensive.



Copper Tank Brewing Company. Copper Tank’s micro-brewed beers might be winning all kinds of awards, but the food served here deserves some serious attention too. These hefty portions of he-man food demonstrate that there’s someone in the kitchen who cares, from the burger’s homemade-tasting bun to the perfectly grilled chicken to the scrumptious pizza crust and sprightly marinara sauce. Don’t miss the onion rings with their zesty apple-horseradish dipping sauce, one of the best appetizers in town, and save room for a decadent bite of the homemade chocolate Grand Marnier torte.2600 Main St., 214-744-2739. Inexpensive.



Hubcap Brewery & Kitchen. 1701N. Market St., 214-651-0808, Moderate,



The Rock Bottom Brewery. Generous appetizers could make their own meal, especially the asiago cheese dip or signature green pork chili. Pizzas arrive lava-hot on cracker-thin crust; try the bourbon beef (with homemade steak sauce) or double-smoked bacon (with spinach, goat cheese and roasted garlic). Smoked chicken enchiladas were some of the best we’ve tried-really. How’s the beer? Thought you’d never ask. Six regular brews range from ultra-light (Coyote Western Ale and Palomino Pale Ale) to deep and roasty (Pelican Brown Ale and our fave, Roadrunner Stout). Falcon Red is a nice compromise. 4050 Belt Line Rd., 972-404-7456- Moderate.



Routh Street Brewery and Grill. 3011 Routh St., 214-922-8835. Moderate.



Two Rows Restaurant & Brewery. 5500 Greenville Ave.. Ste. 1300, 214-696-2739. Moderate.



D REVISITS Yegua Creek Brewing Co. Recently snatching a gold medal at the Great American Beer Festival (the second time in three years) for its Scotch Ale, Yegua Creek continues to brew stellar suds along with a few ho-hum heads. Tops on our list is O’Brien’s Texas Stout, a rich, balanced brew with carrnel-coffee-chocolate undertones, and the White Rock Red, a crisp amber ale with a subtle hop-sizzle. The Tucker’s Golden Wheat (a best-seller), however, was about as exciting as weak herbal tea. The food? Admirably adventurous for a suds house, it sometimes loses its gastro-footing. The Texas-sized Tower O’Rings (onion) were hearty and sweet, but far too greasy. The Tortilla-Encrusted Catfish with Roasted Tomatillo Lime Butter almost worked except the fish had a disturbing essence of pond scum. Half-price menu Sunday evenings is a treat. 2920 N. Henderson Ave., 214-824-BREW. Moderate.



Burgers/Casual

Chip’s Old Fashioned Hamburgers. 4501 Cole Ave., 214-526-1092. Inexpensive.



Dave & Buster’s. The Prime Directive here has always been to serve fun, fun. fun with food on the side. But. the friend-ly and competent waiters and the prettily appointed dining room deserve better support from the kitchen. A cheeseburger was grilled perfection: a Philly chicken cheesesteak decent if overpriced; and the polio grande-a whopping, undercooked chicken breast drenched with enchilada sauce and accompanied by tasteless julienne vegetables-was no fun at all. Stick with the burgers and a cold one from a great beer list, which includes the excellent Pilser Urquel. Walnut Hill at Central Expressway (In the Corner Shopping Center), 214-361-5553. Inexpensive.



Mac’s Bar & Grill. 2301 N, Central Expwy., Piano, 972-881-2804. Inexpensive to moderate. The Ozona Westex Grill and Bar. Set back amid a tangle of trees, this popular gathering spot provides a surprisingly cool, green, countrified retreat in the city. There are no real surprises, and although there are grilled options like salmon salad and a chicken dinner, a bit too heavy reliance on deep frying may well dismay cholesterol counters. A bottle of domestic beer starts at $2.75, there are abundant lunch specials and the portions are very generous, so order conser vatively on your first visit. 4615 Greenville. 214-265-9105. Inexpensive to moderate.



The Pub. Keeping in mind that the British aren’t exactly known for their food, this restaurant turns out some pretty respectable grub, like meat-filled pasties (British pies), bangers (sausages), light, good homemade mashed potatoes and greaseless fried fish and chips (little potato wedges). Nordstrom, 13350 Dallas Pkwy., first level, 972-702-0055, ext. 1620. Inexpensive.



Snuffer’s. There’s a limited menu, but it’s hard to go wrong with burgers, the chicken sandwich or the chicken Caesar salad. Go early on weekend nights, as the crowds build quickly. 3526 Greenville Ave.. 826-6850; 14910 Midway Rd? Addison, 972-991-8811. Inexpensive.



Cajun/Creole

Copland’s of New Orleans. 5353 Bert Une Rd., 972-661-1883. Moderate,



Crescent City Cafe. 2615 Commerce St., 214-745-1900. Inexpensive.



LuLu’s Bait Shack. Cajun cuisine with regional nuances ranging from hot to hotter. Buffalo shrimp are hotsy-totsies nicely balanced in a blue cheese dip, and jambalaya carries a major kick. For tamer tongues, try the Chicken Rockafella with oysters, cheese and spinach. Homey mashed Mardi Gras pasta is a mixture of fresh vegetables with capers and sun-dried tomatoes, while a lunch trip’s oyster po-boy proved a happy marriage of cornmeal-bat-tered oysters with tomato, lettuce and mayo, the plate fetchingly sprinkled with paprika, 2621 McKinney Ave., 214-969-1927. Inexpensive to moderate.



Chinese

Cafe Panda. The personnel here make you feel at home from the get-go, and meticulous attention to detail guar-entees return visits. Start with sublime quail curl, minced and seasoned to perfection, served in fresh, cold iceburg lettuce leaves, and watch as a team of servers perform a near-ballet in bringing it to your table. Tangerine beef was exceptional; delicate beef strips cooked to a sizzle, blended in a delightful sauce with fruity, chewy tangerine shreds. General Tao’s chicken is offered elsewhere but rarely done as well; spicy, honest-to-goodness chicken breast that’s hot but not hellishly so, with no nuggety, gristly pieces. Order coffee and enjoy the Jules Verne-ian brewing device they bring to your table. 7979 Inwood Rd., Ste. 121, 214-902-9500. Inexpensive to moderate.



Cathy’s Pacific. At this ambitious offshoot of Piano’s Cathy’s Wok. Chinese-American dishes dominate the menu along with “light and healthy” entrées. Appetizers both hit and miss-meaty honey-garlic wings start a meal well, as do skewers of satay chicken, but pot stickers disappoint with their nondescript filling, and beef satays are tough. Seafood dishes are a good bet here, and the single best item might be the Vietnamese bouillabaisse, loaded with savory king crab, plump shrimp, miniature clams and seaworthy scallops. Cathy’s uses top ingredients, from jumbo nuts in the cashew chicken to the crisply sautéed vegetables in the spring rolls. Note: Food can be ordered moderately hot, hot, or extra hot. Go with hot. 5950-A Royal Ln., 214-739-3378. Inexpensive to moderate.



Jasmine. Ersatz nightclub ambience collides with hustle-bustle service, but freshly prepared cuisine fortunately transcends both. Exquisite Ming chicken, redolent with spices and served in a crispy cold iceberg lettuce shell, was almost a meal in itself. Some like it hot, opting for Hunan and Szechwan beef-tender, generous helpings and prodigious heat rewarded the palates of even the most jaded jalapeno fans. The ubiquitous general chicken featured tender chunks of meat and fiery peppers; try champagne chicken for a cooler, if somewhat bland, warm-weather treat. One tiny gripe: The overly attentive tea and water filler-uppers tend to hover like pesky mosquitoes. 4002 Belt Line Rd., Addison, 972-991-6867. Inexpensive to moderate.



May Dragon. Happily, May Dragon lives up to its beautiful setting with a quality of food far superior to that found in most Chinese restaurants. Moo shi rolls strike the right balance between sweet (plum sauce I, crunchy (bamboo shoots and cabbage) and savory (shredded beef). Lemon chicken transcends the stickily sweet stuff served in most other places. This version’s lemony bite toned down the sugar, but the fried white-meat chicken strips retained not a bit of the grease. However, a house specialty, five-flavor shrimp, has a neon red sauce sweet enough to make your teeth ache, and the fried rice served with entrées (you can opt for plain white or brown rice) needs some rethinking, as it’s pretty much white rice with a few peas and carrots. May Dragon’s beautiful bar area gives you another reason to visit. 4848 Belt Line Rd.. 972-392-9998. Moderate.



New Big Wong. If you’re up for a quick and tasty lunch, this place delivers large portions of fare in fast-food time- you’ll be astonished. If a more leisurely dinner is the object, the complex menu rewards experimentation. 2121 S. Greenville Ave.. 214-821-4198. Inexpensive.



Royal Chkia. We expected to see the Partridge family dining with the Bradys at this unintentionally retro neighborhood Chinese spot-furnishings and wall facings reflect its former incarnation a zillion years ago as a quasi-Indian place called Safari. Neighboring diners seemed happy and content, so we waited in anticipation for our general chicken and green pepper beef. And waited. And waited. And watched everybody else eat. When we asked our harried waiter to check on our order, he snapped, “Coming now!” Sure enough, two minutes later, the chicken arrived. Three minutes after that, so did the beef. Verdict? Good. A bit on the bland side, with rather small portions, but on the positive side, prices were right-just not worth the wait. Maybe we caught a new waiter with bad manners? We never received an explanation for the delay, but the check was Johnny-on-the-spot. 201 Preston Royal Shopping Center. 214-361-1771. Inexpensive.



Szechwan Pavilion. Peking duck aficionados love the fact that this classic Chinese entree is available at Szechwan Pavilion anytime, in half or whole portions, without the customary need to call ahead and order it. Tableside. waiters brush the delicate pancakes with hoisin sauce, then layer on perfectly roasted duck, with crispy skin and wisps of scallions, and present the rolled-up treats on a platter ringed with slices of orange. Top-quality ingredients star here, from the fat shrimp in the vegetable-loaded sizzling rice soup to the juicy roast pork in the to mein. Szechwan beef, marked as spicy, had just the right amount of burn. The ’wonderful shrimp” would be more wonderful if they weren’t coated in a soggy batter, but they sure are big. but-terflied beauties. 8411 Preston Rd., 214-368-4303. Inexpensive.



Taiwan Restaurant. 4980 Belt Line Rd., Ste. 200, Addison, 972-387-2333. Moderate.



Uncle Tal’s. In The Galleria, 13350 Dallas Pkwy., 972-934-9998, Moderate.



Coffeehouses

Java Jones. 3211 Oak Lawn Ave., 214-528-2099. Inexpensive.



Deli

Dell News. This New York-style deli is dark and uninviting with rudely inattentive service (perhaps a stab at regional authenticity?) that’s slower than a fat slug in mid-fall. The chicken barley soup-a “specialty”-was dull, limp and gooed with overcooked bow-tie pasta. The Greek salad was fresh and crisp, if unexciting, while the BLT had little else to offer besides its thick, chewy bacon. We had our deli-hearts set on a smoked fish platter, but we placed three “sorry, we’re out” orders before a plate of flavorful, yet mushy sable arrived. Our consolation was the authentic bagels: fresh, light ana thoroughly satisfying. Crescent Court, Maple at Cedar Springs, 214-922-3354. Inexpensive to moderate.



Gilbert’s. Just one glimpse of Gilbert’s classic deli menu starts the stomach juices churning, causing noses to twitch at those so-familiar deli smells of spicy pastrami, steaming chicken noodle soup and sizzling frankfurters. Gilbert’s doesn’t disappoint, from the finest grilled Reuben in town to overstuffed sandwiches on good rye. The club sandwich is the classic version, with plenty of house-roasted, thinly sliced turkey, preceded by a choice of deli salads (great slaw) and a bowl of chubby pickles. The menu lists it all– potato pancakes, stuffed cabbage, even kippers and eggs and matzo brie. You can order from an extensive breakfast menu all day long, where the plate-sized pancakes and the hearty omelets make decisions difficult. Gilbert’s good corned beef stars in the hash, but the orange-y home fries need work. Chug down a Dr. Brown’s soda or a chocolate egg cream and contemplate visiting the take-out section next to get a few sandwiches for later. 11661 Preston Rd.. 214-373-3333. Inexpensive.



Spiro’s New York Cafe. A variety of fabulous offerings range from homemade bagels to juicy roasted turkey, super-lean corned beef and pastrami to a 10-ounce burger or vegetable soup. Everything here is the real thing, like the Cheddar (not processed), the butter (not margarine) and the homemade hot dog buns. That hamburger is even served on a hefty Kaiser roll, none of that white fluff that can fall apart on you. But stay away from the sautéed potatoes and the egg breakfasts that we found woefully undercooked. Try instead the crusty potato panckes or a cheese blintze with the huge cup of coffee you’re served here. But it’s the sandwiches and salads that are the stars, and Spiro’s offers full dinners such as veal parmigiana, beef goulash and stuffed cabbage. 700 E. 15th St.. Piano. 972-881-2959. Inexpensive. Street’s. 4246 Oak Lawn Ave., 214-526-2505. Inexpensive.



Eastern European

Athénée Cafe. Inhabiting an unlikely strip-mall spot near an auto parts store, Athénée Cafe bills itself as “Texas’ Only Rumanian & Eastern European Restaurant Since 1986,” (at its current location since 1989) and the aromatic fragrances of ancient Europe will whisk you back a century or two. Wonderful Veal Athénée features tender, fresh medallions topped with provolone in a delightful brandy mushroom sauce, with delicious spicy cabbage and flaky rice pilaf. Stuffed Mountain Cabbage is a fabulous signature dish-meatball-sized beef rolls oven-roasted in delicate cabbage leaves with a red wine sauce, just like grandma in Transylvania used to make. Other highlights include Rumanian sausage, hand-packed daily, and veal chop, finished in the pan with dill and mushrooms in white wine sauce. Forget the house salad-try the silky tomato-based spicy vegetable soup instead. Garlic bread is bland but forgivable, the wine list adequate, the service attentive and caring. 5365 Spring Valley. Ste, 150. 972-239-8060. Moderate.



Eclectic

Bread Winners. The menu here reflects a never-boring mélange of influences, from homey (a simple garden salad of lettuces, spinach, mushrooms, carrots and cabbage bathed In creamy fresh vinaigrette) to refined Asian (a starter of Thai shrimp scampi mounts great spicy curls of shrimp on crisp cilantro noodles!. Main courses cut a similar broad swath-a center-cut mustard-grilled pork chop comes thick, juicy and perfectly partnered with scalloped sweet potatoes and pan gravy; grilled tuna steak, rosy and near-rare, wears a tropical salsa of spiced diced fruit. Try it with a side of lemon whipped potatoes, the citrus accent a delightful presence alongside the plate’s crisp tortilla salad. Desserts here are outstanding, too-key lime pie holds a paper-thin curl of lime atop its tart, dream-cream filling: a to-die-for something called Banana Jazz features fantasy swirls of chocolate mousse and whipped cream layered with sliced bananas on a dark chocolate crust. 3301 McKinney Ave., 214-754-4940. Inexpensive to moderate.



Cafe Society. Bring a book, a journal or someone with whom you can easily slip into well-seasoned conversation and sample the coffees from a lengthy list that includes a 16-ounce, layered mocha, an espresso milk shake and the Society Float: espresso over ice cream. The food? While the dishwater-flat vegetable corn lentil soup should be skipped, the entrees croon with silky flavors. The artichoke spinach-stuffed manicotti is rich, yet texturally light and elegant. The marinated skirt steak is juicy with a clean wisp of smoke and spice, and the accompanying dollop of orange peppercorn-spiced salsa screams with disciplined zest. 4514 Travis St.. 214-528-6543. Inexpensive to moderate.



Deep Citi Dell. Our meal here was one of mixed signals. Maybe you serve yourself coffee [good brews from Cafe Society] at the coffee bar: maybe your waitress will do it for you. Maybe she’ll bring the check to you at the end of the meal, maybe you’ll go up to the counter for it. Maybe your meal will be fabulous, like the Citi Special of ethereal pancakes filling one plate, carefully prepared scrambled eggs and bacon with excellent sautêed petatoes on another. Of maybe it will be so-so, like the Citi Burger, a good herbed focaccia rail with avocado, lettuce, tomatoes and Swiss, ruined by the presence of two fast food-type patties. Citi offers more than deli food, a juice bar and a coffee bar. Its large space (three rooms) is loaded with take-home prepared food, groceries, flowers, magazines and newspapers. There’s even a case filled with wine and beer, and, though the selection is small, it’s well-chosen and reasonably priced. 2934 Main St., 214-747-DELI. Inexpensive.



Deep Ellum Cafe. 5001 Belt Line Rd.. Addison. 972-392-0894. Inexpensive to moderate.



East Side Grill. Chef Tony Knight, whose Aransas Pass restaurant formerly occupied this space, offers down-home dishes endowed with kicky accents that lift them above common bar food. Notable examples: Chicken-fried steak came with terrific twice-baked mashed potatoes and a healthy stir-fry of vegetables. An Aransas burger was a patty of broiled sirloin with roasted poblanos and onions and jack cheese. The 10-ouncestnp steak was gilded with onion braised in Jack Daniels sauce. The homemade salsa that accompanies the chicken quesadillas can make your eyes water from 4 feet away, and fried pickles were surprisingly delicious in nicely seasoned, greaseless crumb crust. 2916 N. Henderson Ave.. 214-828-2801. Inexpensive.



8.0 Restaurant and Bar. Get to this hip spot early or risk missing out on imaginative blue- and green-plate specials, such as black bean tamales in a tomatillo sauce or spicy pasta specialties. Not that the regular menu is a dud: burgers, grilled dishes and sandwiches are hearty, fresh and satisfying. Waitresses are uniformly young, attitude-enhanced and efficient. Stay the hell away on Thursday nights unless you like to watch the beautiful people booze and schmooze shoulder-to-shoulder until the wee hours. In the Quadrangle, 2800 Routh St.. 214-979-0880. Inexpensive to moderate.



Fox and Hound. Although the restaurant calls itself an “English Pub and Grill, “don’t look for toad-in-the-hole here. Despite the silly British names that dot the menu, m’lord will encounter hearty half-pound burgers, ste3k fries, enormous onion rings, rich beer-cheese soup, pasta, blackened salmon and prime rib. The beer list offers more than 100 labels both in bottles and on draft. But while the food is good, the service on two visits was extremely slow and inattentive. 18918 Midway Rd., 972-732-0804. Inexpensive to moderate.



Gershwin’s. The ambitious menu walks many fine lines with a presumptive air and succeeds more often than not, but don’t expect a true gourmet experience-seasonings are either loo strong, as with overpowering, too-salty pasta sauces, or bland and hotel food-like, such as grilled tilapia on warm orzo salad. Best bets are the more traditional ones-steaks, pizzas, salads and sandwiches, all generous, tasty and satisfying. 8442 Walnut Hill Ln. at Greenville Avenue. 214-373-7171. Moderate. The Grape. Could we have felt more Parisian? Here we were, snug at a sidewalk table under a fan-hung canopy, watching a light rain diffuse Greenville Avenue traffic into a twilit watercolor as we polished off our wine with the baked Camembert-little wheel of molten cheese, crowned with Bing cherry and cabernet preserves, flung with walnut bits. com?osed on the plate with ruddy grapes, fanned pear and apple halves and berries. A chilled soup of surpassing subtlety laced the freshness of ripe tomato with a muscular undertone of roasted garlic; a high-piled toss of baby greens ringed with golden tomato wedges wore a Balsamic vinaigrette that was positively thrilling-we’ve had lesser salads at three times the price. Ditto entrées; this restaurant offers some main courses in two sizes, correspondingly priced; the smaller portion of macadamia-crusted rainbow trout was more than ample, two boneless halves in a lightly curried yellow bell-pepper sauce, with a vegetable bouquet of broccoli, snow peas, red bell pepper and julienned squash plus golden yam and plantain chips. Braised lamb shanks, a huge serving, melted from the bone in their rich, winey jus on a bed of wilted bok choy, with horseradish-nipped whipped potatoes and the same veggie nosegay under crisp tobacco leek shreds. As always. by-the-glass wines were generously poured and moderately priced, and service mirrored the establishment’s customary indulgence with small attentions. 2808 Greenville Ave., 214-828-1981. Moderate to expensive.



The Joint. This restaurant that could be described as an upscale pool hall has a global menu with an Asian influence. The menu includes a wide variety of choices from Tasmanian lobster and pan-seared range chicken with glass noddles to tuna melts and later tots. The lobster was super-tender chunks came in a large bowl with shredded scallions on top of a tasty potato/fennel hash brown. Corn-crusted chicken arrived juicy and crispy, accompanied by nicely cooked vegetables, and a special of rib-eye steak was eclipsed by blue cheese-laced scalloped potatoes. Service is great and the place stays open until 2 a.m. for late-night dining. 2727 Cedar Springs, 214-754-0101, Inexpensive to moderate.



Moon Under Water. The two venues here are a spacious, elegant dining area simmering in tasty live jazz and the Rhythm Room, a large nightclub that houses a brewery, a roomy rectangular bar surrounded with big screen televisions and a stage for bands. The menu is interwoven with Mediterranean and Southwestern influences. We enjoyed two appetizers; the grilled honey-glazed quail, a moist, dazzling bird with subtle smoky flavors and the Full Moon Risotto Cakes, moist cushions of Italian Arborio rice with grilled vegetables and dolloped with a chunky tomato sauce. Our entrées came with healthy, though overcooked, carrots, rib-sticking garlic and leek mashed potatoes. The New York strip steak was done to a perfect medium-rare hue, though it was plagued with leathery toughness. The grilled double chicken breast was a little dry on one visit, juicy on the next, but the barbed-wire tangle of spicy fried onions coiling from the meat was addictive. The spicy pork chop melts in the mouth; fusil-li norcini proved to be a zesty pasta dish with spicy Italian sausage; and fresh Gulf red snapper was moist and flaky in its lively tomato relish. 2548 Elm St. and 2513 Mam St., 214-741-2537. Moderate to expensive.



Piano Calé. Choose the mixed green salad instead of the Caesar, and opt for the zingy raspberry vinaigrette. A feast of perfectly cooked vegetables accompanies each generous meal, and most people leave loaded with leftovers. Juicy, freshly grilled roast chicken with red pesto penne draws loyal fans, and vegetarians will find much to choose from. Two more surprises: a decent wine list and a winner of a dessert list. A warm French apple pie [homemade, like everything else here] accompanied by homemade Chambord/FrangeIico ice cream, whipped cream and berries, offers caloric heaven. 1915 N. Central Expwy., Ste. 500. Piano. 972-516-0865. Moderate. Sipango. Chef Matthew Antonovich’s menu sets out an array of selections various enough to allow for grazing or snacking as well as course-by-course dining. An appetizer of tuna seared rare, for example, made a perfect starter for a light supper, presented as thin, ruddy petals fanned with sassy fresh greens dressed in ginger-soy vinaigrette; a small-plate dish of mushroom-fortified risotto, deep-flavored and zipped with mellow Reggiano parmesan, completed a meal we found entirely satisfying. On the more substantial side, an entrée of veal marsala covered its plate with classically sauced, thin slices draped on a cushion of polenta, accented with wild mushrooms and Texas goat cheese. Too sated even to consider the richer desserts at hand, we found the house-made sorbettos altogether captivating-watermelon, fresh and luscious, won out over a more exotic red papaya sampled. Service was amiable, with some timing lapses; live music was a treat, once the too-loud cocktail pianist made way for a combo; people-watching was its own entertainment. 4513 Travis St.. 214-522-2411. Moderate.



The Thomas Avenue Beverage Company. A few months ago. this was strictly an Uptown moisturizing divot for the young and strenuously hip. But now this cozy neighborhood bar-spiced with rich wood and sloppily mortared bricks- packs culinary zip. Chef Mark Jensen chalks up new, inventive fare on the menu board every Thursday. The steamed mussels-some of the best we’ve tasted-were sweet. delicate and smartly seasoned. Well-soaked in lime-garlic-butter-white wine sauce, the grilled sea bass was fresh, succulent and bristling with crisp, tightly focused flavors. The wine list, a crinkled laser printout with edits scribbled in blue ink (” ’cause we’re working out the kinks”) was void of those obese mark-ups that draw cold sweat from the wallets of all but the most hardened, expense-accounted diners. And this place has history: It was a liquor store/pool hall in the ’30s and Jack Ruby’s favorite spot for morning eggs in the ’50s. 2901 Thomas Ave., 214-979-0452. Inexpensive to moderate.



French/Continental

Addison Cafe. Incongruously located in a strip-mall shopping center across from Prestonwood Mall, Addison Cafe presents some contradictions-our pan-seared snapper melted like butter, but the smoked salmon topping was somewhat dry and chewy. Sautéed sea bass arrived crispy, perfectly moist and flaky, yet bread rolls tasted store-bought. And since service is studiously languorous, we were never quite sure who ourwaiter was. Admittedly minor, these quibbles still bear watching. But even in its time-warp 1980s decor of black lacquer and mirrors, Addison Cafe is a casual, refreshing oasis of European style in the midst of this frenzied shopping mecca. 5290 8elt Line Rd. at Montfort, Addison, 972-991-8824. Moderate to expensive.



Arthur’s. This restaurant’s reputation as a prime steak place is deserved, but too limiting. The kitchen’s ways with seafood, veal, fowl and even pasta are winners, too. and who can fault an appetizer list that includes shrimp cocktail, escargot and steak tartare proudly prepared with old-world pomp at tableside? Fresh sea scallops sautéed and sauced with a kiss of Dijon mustard and a whisper of lemon and capers struck an exquisite balance. Rack of lamb’s rosy chops were fork-tender and appropriately sided with a tomato rose and vegetables carved in the presentation-conscious French fashion. Seduced by ceremony, we forewent dessert souffles to share bananas Foster, not on the menu, but lovingly prepared, flamed and served by our waiter as we watched. Cherries jubilee are another unlisted indulgence; we’ll save those for the restaurant’s upcoming 50th anniversary. And for the 60th? Who knows? Vive les classiques! 8350 N. Central Expwy. (in Campbell Center), 214-361-8833. Expensive.



Bonjour. For starters, feast on the wealth of appetizers, such as the lightly sweet and peppery pheasant pate and the garlicky sausage. Or try a French classic like escargots, foie gras pate, frog legs or the aioli with plump shrimp. We enjoyed the aioli so much, we tried all the sauces: gorgonzola, mannara. peppercorn and shallot, each available with the day’s choices of fish, meat and poultry. Entrées come with nicely seasoned, well-prepared vegetables: The potato gratin in a garlicky cream sauce tasted great. Other excellent choices include made-to-order omelets and the individual-size quiche Lorraines, Skip the sandwiches for now-they need some work and should be made on something other than the lackluster baguettes. You can also call for delivery of one of Bonjour’s appetizer trays-great for those Monday night football parties. 3850 W. Northwest Hwy., Ste. 510, 214-350-3467. Moderate.



Chez Gerard. This quintessential little French restaurant with its flowery wallpaper, lace curtains and cozy feel brings to mind your grandmother’s dining room. However. Grandma never cooked like this, and she sure didn’t offer wines like these. The classic French onion soup, crowned with toasted bread and melted cheese, makes a nicely sized, thoroughly satisfactory appetizer, as does a zesty dish of mixed seafood with avocado and lime. The heady-with-mustard dressing coating the tender greens and wisps of mushroom make the house salad a winner and perk up the palate for what follows. The menu is resolutely French, with intensely flavored crawfish soufflés, delicate beef in a wonderful peppery sauce and the best pommes frites around. Desserts, from the cloud-filled praline soufflé to the crusty crème brulée, should never be skipped. 4444 McKinney Ave., 214-522-6865. Moderate,



The French Room. Perfection is not a word to be tossed lightly into restaurant reviews, but this Adolphus Hotel crown jewel came as close as humankind can to deserving it on our last visit. A tower of smoked salmon, avocado, papaya and crisp potato tuiles glistened in its basil oil-papaya vinaigrette; pan-seared Ahi tuna medallions were meltingly tender alongside crisply ruffled pot stickers stuffed with shrimp, foie gras and crab. Tomato bisque was smoky flavored and rich with roasted pine nuts and porci-ni ravioli, and a warm salad of Belgian endive and fresh spinach played candied walnut crunch against rosemary-walnut vinaigrette under fresh pear julienne. One entrée plate presented rounds of roasted duck breast on half moons of lemon thyme polenta in ruby port wine sauce, sided with a nosegay portion of baby haricots verts, asparagus, carrot and cucumber slices; the other held succulent roasted veal tenderloin with Brie cheese and pear gratin on truffled opal basil risotto and a haunting rosemary thyme sauce. One dessert was a light sin-a mélange of fresh berries bedded on pastry with warm caramel sauce and vanilla ice cream; the other, a dark one-hot chocolate cake, rich and crusty around a molten center, ice-cream topped on Amaretto crème Anglaise. One interesting side note: One of us had the prix fixe chef’s menu, $56 sans wine; the other’s a la carte selection, expected to be more expensive, actually totaled a dollar less. And we’d challenge anyone to tell which was which. Oh. and the French Room’s by-the-glass wine selection offers a nicer variety than we’ve seen elsewhere; red-carpet valet parking costs diners nothing but a tip to the attendant to whom you hand your validated ticket. In the Adolphus Hotel, 1321 Commerce St.. 214-742-8200. Expensive.



La Petite Maison. From our first thrilling spoonful of soup to the last plate-scraping nibble of chocolate creme, Barone s fare was beautifully prepared, presented and served. Take the lobster bisque, for example. Its deep auburn color hinted at its lush, splendid flavor. Also good was the seafood starter of smoked salmon, scallops and shrimp flung with capers and green onion. The “Grand Mere” oven-roasted chicken, sprinkled lavishly with hearty smoked bacon squares, was served with carved potatoes and tiny onions. The pork medallions zinged with Dijon mustard and a side of garlic whipped potatoes and baby carrots, while roasted rack of lamb featured three rib chops on a bed of toothsome couscous spiced with subtle curry. The dessert we tried-silken chocolate creme under a tepee of fragile pastry triangles rooted in whipped cream and a layer of raspberries-was a dramatic creation. 2917 Fairmount St., 214-855-0700. Moderate.



Lavendou. This new bistro offers an ethereal French onion soup with a souffle-like crown of cheese, zesty mussels steamed to perfection in white wine, tender gravlax and house-smoked salmon. Each entree we tried was memorable, especially the filets of salmon in basil cream sauce and the swordfish with tomato confit. All of these dishes are served with classic French touches like trimmed toasts, turned lemons and peeled tomatoes. Meals are preceded by vinaigrette-dressed salads and so many vegetables that it’s sometimes necessary to have a second plate to hold them all. For dessert the profiteroles are the winner. Although it’s thoroughly French, the restaurant is unpretentious. It has a cozy blue, yellow and lavender decor and a softly lit patio area, and paintings by the chef’s mother hang on the walls. 19009 Preston Rd.. 972-248-1911. Moderate to expensive.



Old Warsaw. Recipe for a ruined evening: Take three unsuspecting diners. Batter heavily with bullying service, sneering occasionally. Let steep in rising resentment until sullen (about two hours); then, working quickly, apply gratuitous overcharge to bring to boiling point. Drain and discard. And so it went on our last visit. Most of the food was as fine as we’ve always found it-Brie soup was a mushroom-rich joy; lobster crepes lay plumply filled on their dark and light sauces. Duckling roasted with fresh pears and black currant sauce was a succulent triumph, and a mighty veal chop crowned with lump crab meat was positively regal, augmented by a side of fresh fettuccine with earthy wild mushrooms and truffle butter. Au contraire, Grand Marnier souffle, promised as a grand double-sized-for-two version, came from the kitchen as two ordinary single portions, undistinguished in taste or texture. Worse, a menu-described “puff pastry with fresh tropical fruit” was partially inedible, the pastry burned black and too tough to cut, the fruit merely local, although fresh. Worst of all were a starter of salmon tartare and an “Old Warsaw Special Salad,” ordered as a light entrée. The tartare, rather than prepared at the table as billed, was brought as a soggy scoop, the delicate fish eclipsed by strong-tasting components, mustard most apparent. The salad, involving a scant bed of Boston lettuce leaves strewn with hearts of palm, ordinary pickled mushrooms and two carefully placed winter-pale tomato eighths, besides being dismally unappetizing was doubled in price on the check. Without going into detail on the long, long wait for partial correction on top of high-pressure tactics endured throughout the meal, the moral to be drawn here is that in establishments of stellar reputation, an occasional lapse in food execution can be excused; rude, bullying service cannot-a message our minimal 10 percent tip was meant to convey, 2610 Maple Ave., 214-5280032. Expensive.



The Pyramid Room. That vastly overused word, opulence, has to be hauled out yet again here-the Fairmont Hotel’s flagship restaurant demands it; here is service and ambience that beggar less extravagant description. The food, too, on our visit, deserved superlatives, albeit not quite as glowing ones for the prix-fixe menu (four courses. $29 sans wine) as for pricier a la carte selections. Grilled quail halves were pretty little things on Marsala-glazed arugula leaves; cream of turnip soup with toasted pumpkin seeds was too subtle (read: bland] to stir excitement, but grilled snapper with shiitake mushrooms in lobster butter sauce was satisfying. Macadamia nut torte was a dense disappointment, particularly compared to a companion’s a la carte dessert indulgence-a gooey dome of warm chocolate polenta filled with caramel on bourbon-laced sauce with vanilla ice cream.



The courses preceding thai sin were stellar, too-duck con-fit was tenderness itself in a wine-poached pear; lobster bisque was satin-rich and cognac-kissed; herb-crusted rack of lamb, four rosy baby chops, came with chèvre-sharpened mashed potato and jewel-pretty vegetable pearls on rosemary mint sauce. The companion’s tab passed the $50 mark, but you could hardly ask for more cosseting or more comfort at any price than that provided by this serenely cosmopolitan restaurant. Great wines, too, and live music. Fairmont Hotel, 1717 N. Akard St., 214-720-5249. Expensive.



Tramontane. Marvelous starters include the marinated goat cheese, peppered and nestled on top of herbed greens. Those same greens shone in a mesclun salad Strewn with chunks of walnuts and tart goat cheese. We also savored the soups-deep-flavored French onion was topped with fine Gruyère cheese and the haricots vert have a strong, fresh presence in the creamed green bean potage. Entrées exceeded our expectations. Pan-seared salmon was transcendent, bathed in a tart caper sauce and served with grilled polenta and steamed spinach. Other winning entrées were the ravioli stuffed with spinach and mushrooms and the super-plump filet mignon sauced with Cabernet, served with a side of crunchy green beans and rosemary potatoes. The desserts are made in-house, but the bread is from Massimo’s. Preston Center’s got itself a winner. 8220B Westchester Dr., 214-368-4188. Inexpensive to moderate.



Watel’s, This homey little restaurant, half of it an art-filled cozy interior and half an enclosed patio, might have been lifted, menu intact, right off a Paris or Brussels side street. The menu features brains, rabbit and sweetbreads for sophisticated customers, but also plenty of pasta, grilled fish and vegetarian dishes for the less brave. And a filling appetizer of toast rounds served with a zesty eggplant relish and an intense tapenade is a steal at $3.50, As enticing as these regular favorites are, don’t miss the daily specials, like heaps of incredibly tiny mussels in a cream-enhanced, garlicky broth. Another nice touch: a cheese plate for dessert, with a half-dozen types of perfectly ripe cheeses, carefully trimmed fruit slices and a freshly heated basket of bread. On lazy Sunday afternoons, customers can order from Watel’s regular lunch menu or opt for one of the brunch specials. 1923 McKinney Ave., 214-72M323. Moderate.



Gourmet to Go

Betty’s Brisket and Gourmet Foods. 17390 Preston Rd., 972-931-9094. Inexpensive.



Eatzl’s. Okay, it’s not a restaurant, but the prepared foods and breads you can buy at this unique market make it worth frequent trips to turn a meal in your own dining room into a special occasion. Make your way to the bread shelves, where you’ll find 14 varieties and enough spreads and fillings to make you dizzy. At the salad counter, just describe the salad of your dreams and they’ll toss it together. For an effortless meal, try one of the chickens from the wood-burning oven, a steak from the butcher’s counter or one of the dozens of prepared foods. The quality of the deli meats is unsurpassed. 3403 Oak Lawn Ave., 214-526-1515. Inexpensive to moderate.



La Spiga. You may have to track down La Spiga. tucked away in a warehouse area, but it’s well worth the effort. Customers line up to buy these rustic, crusty loaves of preservative-free bread served at many of the finest restaurants in town. But there’s plenty more being dished up here, including tureens of homemade soup (excellent cream of mushroom} and sandwiches on big. soft pillows of panini rolls. Mini-quiches and fruit plates fill the bill for anytime snacks, focaccia comes pizza-style and Caesar salads are a garlicky hit. 4203 Lindberg Dr., Addison, 972-934-8730. Inexpensive.



Marty’s. Marty’s, long the king of gourmet shopping in the Dallas area, has recently come under siege from trendier rivals. Call us quaint, but we much prefer Marty’s friendly, non-snob ambience to the “do-us-a-favor” din of frantic newcomers. Sample new Italian cheese, low-fat Vietnamese chicken salad or Ann’s Marinated Shrimp in Marty’s relaxed cozy aisles. Browse the tapenades, flavored olive and grapeseed oils, vinegars and vinaigrettes, marinades, aromatic coffees and teas, sumptuous, girth-enhancing chocolate truffles and delicate sorbets. Marty’s hallmark, though, is service; their wine experts, for example, field questions from beginners and savants with equal aplomb and courtesy. 3316 Oak Lawn Ave., 214-526-4070. Inexpensive to moderate.



Uncle Chow. The menu might be small, but the flavor’s all there, especially if you start with the pan-fried chicken dumplings, jam-packed with tender white meat. Both the won ton soup and the fried rice score high culinary marks. Moo shu is packed the sensible way-the pancake wrappers separate from the sauce, separate from fillers-allowing customers to serve themselves non-soggy food. Fried rice features chunks of shrimp: spring rolls offer plenty of both chicken and shrimp; and the appetizers can substitute as full meals. 19021 Midway Rd. at Rosemeade. 972-306-CHOW. Inexpensive.



Greek

Koatas Cafe. 4621 W. Park Blvd.. Piano, 972-596-S424. Moderate,



Ziziki’s The gleaming wooden bar might be one of the places to be seen in Dallas, but it’s the food that reigns supreme here. An order or two of Ziziki bread (homemade pita bread broiled with two cheeses and herbs) teams well with any of the carefully crafted salads. Lamb and shrimp star here (the lamb souvlaki, skewered lamb ready to be popped into homemade pita bread, makes a can’t-be-beat sandwich], and the homemade Italian cream cake ends meals on a sweet note. The wines, chosen from all over the globe, demonstrate the owners’ never-ending quest for the best. You’ll want to visit the new coffee bar/take-out shop for some of your Ziziki favorites (like their mouthwatering sauces). 4514 Travis St., Ste. 122, 214-521-2233. Moderate to expensive.



Home Cooking

Barbec’s. 8949 Garland Rd., 214-321-5597- Inexpensive.

Celebration. 4503 W. Lovers Ln.. 214-351-5681. Inexpensive.



Mecca. 10422 Harry Hines Blvd., 214-352-0051. Inexpensive.



Poor Richard’s Cafe. Our last lunch here taught us a lesson-stick to breakfast at Poor Richard’s. Almost everything was disappointing, from the side salad that was unceremoniously served on the same plate as a Texas burger to the waitress who was more interested In cleaning the wait station and cashing out her tips than taking care of her remaining customers. Coffee-usually brisk and steaming hot at breakfast-tasted bitter and grew cold after waiting at least five minutes for cream. The chicken-fried steak was good with the same peppery cream gravy that tops many excellent breakfast entrées, and the vegetables were a bit bland but enjoyable. After we were brought the wrong kind of muffins-twice-the redeemer was dessert: a wonderful coconut cream pie with light meringue piled high atop a cooling layer of sweet coconut cream and a fine crust. Next time we’ll come in the morning, when the waitresses and chefs have a fresh start. 2442 Ave. K at Park Boulevard. Piano, 972-423-1524. Inexpensive.



Indian

Bombay Cricket Club. Though we’re easily fooled about the nuances of cricket (the game), the food here is definitely cricket with us, especially the incendiary chicken ven-daloo, the soothing saag paneer (chunks of homemade cheese in creamed spinach] and the curry-kissed aloo ben-gan, which combines eggplant, potatoes, onions and tomatoes. Having heard raves about the leg of lamb from the tandoor, we’re saving it for the next round, or inning, or chukker. or whatever they call it. 2508 Maple Ave., 214-871-1333. Inexpensive to moderate.



India Palace. Delicate spices imbue truly fine Indian cuisine with attributes similar to a fine perfume-too much creates an assault on the senses; too little, and there’s no magic. Much to the delight of North Dallas diners, India Palace has maintained that proper balance for nearly a decade and shows no signs of slowing down. Complimentary, crispy papad (lentil wafers) make a fine segue to appetizers like fried vegetable pakora or fragrant mulligatawny soup, a hearty broth of lentils, rice and chicken. Entrées include moist, flavorful and low-fat Tandoori chicken, exceptionally silky paneer masala (tofu in a creamy tomato sauce) and our perennial fave. saag paneer (spinach and tofu). Crank up the heat with vendaloo or curry, with your choice of beef, chicken or lamb. Whatever you do, don’t miss the killer breads: onion kulcha, nan or roti. served straight from the tandoor, hot as lava. 12817 Preston Rd., Ste. 105,972-392-0190. Inexpensive to moderate.



Italian

Alfonso’s. 718 N. Buckner Blvd., Ste. 222, 214-327-7777. Inexpensive to moderate.

Alessio’s. 4117 Lomo Alto Dr., 214-521-3585. Moderate.

Angelo’s Italian Grill. Affable service, reasonable prices (S7.95-$12.95) and generous portions mean we’ll be back. 6341 La Vista Dr., 214-823-5566. Inexpensive.



Campisi’s Egyptian. 5610 E. Mockingbird Ln., 214-827-0355. Inexpensive.



Cappellini’s. 3820 Belt Line Rd? Addison. 972-488-9494. Moderate.



Covino’s. Buried deep inside a series of strip malls, Covino’s Pasta and Pizza draws raves from customers for its New York-style pizza-a thin, crisp dough lightly topped with whole (not skim) mozzarella and just a whisper of tomato sauce. That same dough makes the richly stuffed cal-zones especially good and stars again in an appetizer stuffed with meat, cheese and spinach. Pastas, especially the hearty lasagne and tortellini with pesto, earn high marks due to their sprightly sauces. Meatball subs can’t be beat but, like all sandwiches here, require a hearty appetite. Owner Joe Covino (a transplanted New Yorker) is usually on hand greeting the regulars in this tiny, unpretentious trattoria, while his wife Michèle is at home making her scrumptious cheesecakes for the restaurant. Bring the kids, bring the baseball team, bring a bottle of Chianti, but the prices are so low you won’t need to bring much money. 3265 Independence Pkwy., Piano, 972-519-0345. Inexpensive.



Joey’s. 4217 Oak Lawn Ave., 214-526-0074. Moderate to expensive.



Ml Piaci. The artful, minimalist decor, complete with soaring, twisted columns, makes for an upscale setting, but Mi Piaci’s food would taste great anywhere. You have to like a restaurant that bakes its own breads (including killer breadsticks), cures its own olives and grows its own herbs. Pasta, which you can watch Mi Piaci’s chefs roll, shape and cook, never fails to please, especially the earthy fusil-li with wild mushrooms. The menu always offers at least four types of made-to-order risotto, a classic Italian, labor-intensive, meltingly tender rice dish; along with Italian standards such as osso buco and veal scaloppine. Fora knockout alternative, sample the mammoth, juicy, grilled pork chop, served with velvety sage-laced mashed potatoes, pungent oven-dried tomatoes and sweet roasted onions. Hefty portions of garlicky bruschetta start a meal in style, and the lemon tart in a pistachio crust ends it on a light note. 14854 Montfort Dr., 972-934-8424. Moderate.



Modo Mio. The appetizers and entrees score high marks and showcase two recurring themes: excellent seafood and sauces that need more seasoning. We enjoyed the tame but well-prepared Caesar, and the clam chowder held a wealth of tender clams, but one needed to be punched up with garlic and anchovies and the other with Tabasco sauce and pepper. A calamari appetizer dazzled us with the stellar quality of this often-overcooked squid. A shrimp entrée featured crustaceans that were far better than their bland tomato sauce; a smoked salmon appetizer’s fish deserved better than its accompaniments. The careful attention that’s being given to the seafood needs to be shown to the rest of the dishes. Fortunately that careful attention surfaces again in the signature desserts, hollowed-out fruit halves filled with creamy sorbets. One sore point about Modo Mio-as much as we liked it, you can rack up quite a bill pretty quickly. Prices need to drop before it will become the neighborhood hang-out with reliably good food that we all crave. 18352 Dallas Pkwy., Ste. 112, 972-671-MODO. Moderate.



MoMo’s Italian Specialties. This eatery plays like an Italian opera, from the soprano highs of the al dente homemade pastas to the baritone lows of its strip-mall decor. The pizzas achieve perfection, the stuffed pastas, like lasagne, rotolo verde and spinach-filled ravioli, satisfy the heartiest appetites, and a pungent parsley pesto enlivens the complimentary focaccia- Be sure to end your meal with a slice of the chocolate mousse cake. 9191 Forest Ln., 972-234-6800. Inexpensive to moderate.



Nicola’s. From its tony Tuscan al fresco decor to the woody perfume of grilled meats, Nicola’s exudes a breezy confidence beyond typical mall restaurants. But the more ambitious menu selections fall short of their lofty aspirations. On one visit, crackling-hot, delicious pizzas, generous salads and service were all exemplary. On another, our pasta carbonara looked rewarmed, the chicken focaccia sandwich oozed a gooey, plastery cheese and service was perfunctory. So, roll the dice. For a light meal, glass of wine and view of Dallas shoppers at their trendy best, the place is hard to beat-just don’t set your culinary expectations too high. The Galleria, third floor. 13350 Dallas Pkwy., 972-788-1177, Inexpensive to moderate.



Pomodoro. Cedar Springs Boulevard is a far cry from the rolling Tuscan hillside evoked by Pomodoro’s alfresco seating, but even after a decade, the place still exudes its own trendy, noisy charm. Besides, where else could you toast the downtown YMCA joggers tromping past during lunch? Plenty of indoor seating in the tiled dining room, too, but if you’re a non-smoker, ask to sit far, far away from the smoking section. Gently melted buffalo mozzarella wrapped in grilled rugola makes for a nice start; so does the carpac-cio with capers and lemon. Polio Pizzaiola is tender and tasty, if a mite salty; clever pasta dishes, like fettuccine with lobster or pappardelle with sausage, are fun and feisty but could be more substantial for the price. Speaking of which, is it just us, or do the specials seem high? Service is uniformly excellent-Pomodoro still bends over backwards to please, and it shows. 2520 Cedar Springs Rd., 214-871-1924. Moderate.



Ruggeri’s. 5348 Belt Line Rd? 972-726-9555. Moderate.



Terilli’s. 2815 Greenville Ave.. 214-827-3993. Moderate.



Japanese

Hana. 14865 Inwood Rd.r 972-991-8322. Moderate. Nakamoto. Service tends to range from the sublime to we abrupt at this stylish, roomy North Piano institution, but cuisine remains uniformly excellent. Japanese food neophytes can be comfortable with traditional, lightly fried tem-pura offerings or “bento” box lunches-samplings of tender beef or chicken teriyaki, sautéed salmon batayaki or kara age (delicate fried chicken) and California rolls. More adventuresome diners will be rewarded by appetizers of karariage (flounder wrapped in seaweed then lightly fried) or succulent, salty soft-shell crab. Sushi and sashimi are all perfectly sliced and presented with proper panache: Experiment with dragon rolls, unagi (eel) hand rolls, or ask the sushi master to fix something fun. 3309 N. Central Expwy. at Parker Road, Piano. 972-881-0328. Moderate.



Sushi at the Stoneleigh. Every bite we sampled was delectable, from the basic raw tuna, yellowtail and salmon cuts to a more exotic spider roll of crunchy-cooked, soft-shell crab wrapped in seaweed and rice. Chefs-special baked mussels were divine, warmly blanketed in the half-shell by a lush blend of mayonnaise and golden smelt eggs. The salmon roe on seaweed-wrapped rice burst voluptuously on the tongue. Don’t forget appetizers: The miso soup, with hidden cubes of silken tofu and gently pickled emerald seaweed, was delightful. 2927 Maple Ave,, 214-871-7111. Inexpensive to moderate.



Mediterranean

Adelmo’s. Our last dinner at Adelmo’s might have been prepared in two separate restaurants, course by course. A starter of lobster ravioli was a lively, lovely affair, the tender pasta pillows plump with toothsome filling in a spicy, vodka-tomato sauce. Salmon tartare was a soupy mess- innocent snippets of fresh, raw pink fish lost in a near-liquid amalgam sparsely studded with onion and too many capers. The spécialité de la maison, grilled veal chop, was perfect as always, an awesome cut splendidly browned outside, juicy and luscious inside, large enough for two, A day’s special grilled trout was innocence betrayed again, by an unnecessary assault of strong accent elements-dried cherry tomatoes, capers, pickled artichoke hearts and mushrooms, all laid on in a florid over-treatment that overwhelmed the delicate, sweet trout meat’s flavor. 4537 Cole Ave., 214-5590325. Moderate to expensive.



Cafe Express. This restaurant serves up quick meals that are fresh, health-conscious and budget-friendly. The wholesome emphasis can be found in the salads, sandwiches, chicken and pastas. 8ut beware: There are a bevy of burgers-like the blue cheese and bacon burger-and a bountiful display of desserts-like chocolate pet de creme-to tempt the weak. The most delightful feature is the Oasis, a bar Wat is laden with goodies like olives, pickles, freshly grated cheese, mustards, oils, and other condiments you’ll need to improve some of the menu’s blander offerings. Four-cheese fettuccine, for example, needed a sprinkle of that Parmesan, and the greens under a salad Woof Tuscany tuna, chicken and pasta pesto needed a sharp shot of oil and vinegar to bring them to life. 3230 McKinney Ave.. 214-999-9444. Inexpensive.



Cafe Istanbul. 5450 W. Lovers Ln., Ste. 222. 214-902-0919. Inexpensive to moderate.



The Bistro. No longer must one’s choice be narrowed to a single starter, one entrée and dessert to make up a meal. The option’s still on the menu, but so is the opportunity to sample hot and cold teasers of every addictive sort, from soups to salads, from a Iisting of more than 30. and the daily specials. Start, say, with gazpacho-a thick, smooth, piquant version-or a small Caesar salad traditionally dressed and tossed with croutons and Parmesan. Proceed to cigars of fried goat cheese spiked with garlic, paprika and cilantro; ravioli of wild mushrooms, meaty marvels bathed in herb and sherry sauce: garlic shrimp, flirty curls vivaciously seasoned with red chili pepper. Along the way, succumb to fresh foie gras sautèed with raisins and port sauce or lobster soufflé, meltingly airy and splendidly sauced. Our only disappointment of the new dishes was the steak tartare that was so strongly endowed with horseradish and capers, the beef flavor struggled to come through. 5405 W. Lovers Lane. 214-352-1997. Inexpensive to moderate.



Méditerranée Chef David Holben’s exquisite culinary artistry, a casually elegant decor and efficient, non-stuffy service combine to create a sublimely magical bistro in Far North Dallas. Of particular interest: Mediterraneo’s $9.95 luncheon menu includes appetizer and entrée. 18111 Preston Rd. at Frankford, Ste. 120.972-447-0066. Mode-fate to expensive.



Sambuca. 15207 Addison Rd., Addison, 972-385-8455. Moderate.



Toscana. Although we found a few small flaws-a starter of yellow-corn polenta that should have been crispy was soggy on arrival in a basil-tomato-red wine vinegar sauce- we found more to praise, from lusty sourdough bread served with pesto-herbed olive oil to a nibble of portobel-lo mushroom in orange grappa sauce on creamy polenta. And a pizza we tried played pancetta’s salty crunch and assertive gorgonzola against sweet ribbons of caramelized onions in an arugula chiffonade. The salads delivered subtle surprises: Crisp nuggets of sweet, dried dates and pancetta added nuance to goat cheese and arugula in tomato-onion vinaigrette. Entrées were just as outstanding from the sautéed trout in a delicate lemon-tarragon butter to grilled quail with a red pepper cannelloni bean tart. But the star is the risotto with chicken, porcini mushrooms, tomato and Gorgonzola cheese. The standout on the dessert menu: a tiramisu bread pudding with marcarpone cream, hazelnuts and Frangelico sauce. 4900 McKinney. 214-521-2244. Moderate.



Mexican

Avila’s. This is the food you’d come home to if you could and leave home for if you must, starting with the eye-watering salsa. Beef tacos are brim-full of good, greaseless ground beef, and a plump enchilada is perfectly partnered with a golden-hearted, soft cheese taco. The refried beans are outstanding. The service is pleasant, and the restaurant is immaculate. 4714 Maple Ave.. 214-520-2700. Inexpensive.



Cantina Laredo. 8121 Walnut Hill Ln.. 214-987-9192. Inexpensive.



Casa Navarro. This wonderful descendant of downtown’s late, lamented El Taxco offers classic Tex-Mex in true hole-in-the-wall style. Complimentary borracho bean soup, fresh chips, kicky salsa and easy, relaxed service-it’s all setup for huge, steaming portions that’ll ruin tomorrow’s cholesterol test, but what a way to go. Hot. buttery enchiladas, down-home tamales and frijoles all have that ineffable tang only homemade can deliver. Fluffy rice and perfect tacos- all at luncheon-special prices-make this place a godsend for North Dallas-types hankering for a Mex-fix. Can’t wait? They serve breakfast, too. In the Park Forest Shopping Center, 11742 Marsh Ln. Ste. A, 214-357-0141. Inexpensive.



Casa Rosa. 165 Inwood Village, 214-350-5227, Inexpensive.



Chuy’s. 4544 McKinney Ave., 214-559-2489. Inexpensive to moderate,



Dos Charros. This is food for people who break into a sweat at the sight of a habanero chile or those who don’t automatically reach for the Tabasco when they order a Bloody Mary or guacamole. The extensive menu has plenty of seafood choices and healthful options added to the list of traditional favorites. 108 University Village Shopping Center. Belt Line and Piano roads. 972-783-7671. Inexpensive.



El Norte. The decor varies from the authentic look of specials painted directly on the walls to cheesy plastic flamingos in the flower boxes, but some solidly good food comes out of the kitchen. Great starters include the white cheese queso sauce and chips or the jalapeno poppers. The restaurant serves terrific roasted chicken that can be ordered as a dinner or in Mexican specialties like enchiladas. This is a great family spot with a reasonable all-you-can-eat special. 2205 W. Parker Rd.. Piano, 972-596-6783. Inexpensive.



Escondido’s. The rickety surroundings exude genuine “dump” appeal, which simply means that the food should be as good as the place is bad. And for the most part, it is. Service, however, was lacking speed and thoughtful-ness. marring an otherwise fine fix of better-than-ave rage Tex-Mex. 2210 Butler. 214-634-2056. Inexpensive.



Herrera’s. From the first taste of the spicy, lumpy saisa, you know your meal will be terrific. A chalupa, spread with well-seasoned retried beans and a heap of shredded lettuce, is wonderful. The tamales are meaty, filled with lean Shredded pork. Attention to detail can be tasted in the seasonings of a cheese enchilada’s toothsome meat sauce. Service lives up to the food’s quality and the decor is eclectic and fun. 4001 Maple Ave,. 214-528-9644. Inexpensive.



Javier’s Gourmet Mexicano. 4912 Cole Ave.. 214-521-4211. Moderate.



La Calle Doce. Those who don’t like seafood will appreciate the more traditional Mexican offerings, such as spinach enchiladas carefully covered with green sauce. And, La Calle Doce’s long-celebrated hot sauce remains a winner, with an almost stop-action sequence of flavors coming to life in your mouth ending with the heat that melds them all together. 415 W. 12th St.. 214-941-4304. Inexpensive to moderate.



Las Cazuelas. This tiny East Dallas jewel serves up marvelous food, starting with the killer salsa that’s made with fresh cilantro, onion and tomato essences. Try the Mexican enchilada, its tortilla dipped in a ruddy chile wash, wrapped around onion-studded meat rilling, and topped with grated cheese. On Mondays, the special caldo de res, chunky with beef and vegetables, is fabulous as is the knock your-socks-off chile relleno. 4933 Columbia Ave., 214-827-1889. inexpensive.



Mario’s Chiquita. This Travis Walk restaurant, while offering upscale Mexico-City-style fare, also has some of the best basic combination Tex-Mex dinners in town. Satisfy your common-man yearnings with one of the plates named for women like Patricia. Lupita and Virginia. All the dishes are opulently generous and graced with little extra touches. The slivered salad atop a puffy taco, for example, comes dashed with a sparkle of mild vinaigrette that perfectly complements the meat filling. A beef enchilada wrapped in a whisper-thin corn tortilla was bathed in a ranchero sauce of unsurpass-ing smoothness. And the chicken enchilada, a wealth of white meat, is hidden under the best sour cream sauce that will ever cross your lips. Even the rice is nicer than most, broth-scented and flavorful. 4514 Travis. Ste. 105, 214-521-0721, Inexpensive to moderate.



Martin’s Cocina. The kitchen here does magic things with seafood (shrimp especially) and offers a listing of entrées that weigh in at less than 1,000 calories each, including the four chiles rellenos. But there’s no skimping here-the most basic combination plate starts with a lettuce-topped chalupa. its toasty tortilla thickly spread with guacamole. The platter that follows holds a massive enchilada, aquesobathed cheese taco and an overstuffed meat taco as greaseless as that crunchy marvel gets. Equally wonderful rice and beans can be ordered as side dishes. The dynamite pico de gallo is serrano-spiked. 7726 Ferguson Rd., 214-3195834. Inexpensive to moderate.



Mattlto’s. Don’t miss the chile rellenos. topped with the usual sauce, cheese and sour cream, but also with chopped pecans for crunch and raisins for sweetness. The fajitas and tacos are standard fare; save your calories for the homemade flan and sopaipillas instead. 4311 Oak Lawn Ave., 214-5265181. Inexpensive.



Matt’s Rancho Martinez. 6312 La Vista Dr.. 214-823-5517- Inexpensive.



Mia’8. For 14 years, this venerable institution has dished up definitive Tex-Mex food to addicts who stand in line on Tuesdays, when owner Ana Enrique? satisfies their lust for her incomparable chiles rellenos. Other days, they make do with a menu of house specialities, combo plates and sides that read like standard Tex-Mex on paper, but on the palate translate into transcendent fare. Try the bean soup, a truly noble amalgam of pintos with minced chiles, bacon, onion and cilantro accents, miles richer in flavor than prissy upscale black-bean concoctions. Fork into a cheese enchilada crowned with honest, beefy chili, or a soft cheese taco’s tenderly molten heart. Ladle the bracing house salsa onto a bean-spread chalupa or a beef-filled taco, and savor the texture contrasts of greaseless tortilla shells and fine-ribboned lettuce. Service is cheerful; the setting is no-frills comfortable. One note: The restaurant serves only beer and wine. 4322 Lemmon Ave.. 214-526-1020. Inexpensive.



Monica’s Aca Y Alia. 2914 Main St.. 214-748-7140. Moderate.



Monterrey. The setting’s gardenlike and the service is sweetly attentive, but it’s the food in this family-run Lakewood establishment that is close to flawless and fresh, fresh, fresh. An enchilada plate holds two generous wraps of cheese or beef, richly seasoned and sauced, plus outstanding rice and retries. A tamale comes as a tender masa pillow plumped with lean pork under a hearty chili sauce. A special treat is the house ceviche, a heady marinade of white fish in an infusion of lemon, onions, garlic and cilantro. 1611 Greenville Ave., 214-821-2026. Inexpensive.



Nuevo Lewi. If you start with the fajita nachos here, you won’t have room for lunch or dinner. Dig into the warm chips and warmer salsa and then get ready to gorge. Tender chicken enchiladas with verde sauce and beef enchiladas with chilorio are fresh and not at all greasy; the taco macho is 10 inches of tender flour tortilla stuffed with cheese, avocado and your choice of chicken, beef or pork. 12895 Josey Lane at Valley View, 972-488-1984. Inexpensive.



Piano Tortilla Factory & Cafe. 1009 E. 18th St., Piano. 972-423-6980. Inexpensive.



Rodolfo’s. This menu offers 18 different combination plates, plus 18 other specialties and six breakfast options for a total that exceeds the number of chairs at this self-proclaimed “hole in the wall” in Oak Cliff. Start with the home-fried chips, huge half-tortilla rounds served with a full-bodied salsa. Then try the Big Tex Mex dinner or the Number 0 (yes, they start numbering at zero]. The Big Tex Mex offers a cheese enchilada, a tamale with chili sauce, a meat taco, a soft cheese taco, rice, beans and half of a praline for dessert. The taco and enchilada were both silky, the beans creamy and the tamale was a perfect marriage of nongreasy meat and a just-on-the-edge-of-crumbly shell. The star on the Number 0 plate is the Idaho enchiladas made of. yes. mashed potatoes, pleasantly spiced and available with a choice of seven different sauces. 2002 S. Edgefield. 214-942-1211. Inexpensive.



Tupinamba. “Tupy” tacos, although deep-fried, are hard to stop eating. Two small disappointments-the sour cream enchiladas were bland and the fajita salad was topped with dry chicken and an uneventful vinaigrette dressing. Desserts are definitely worth ordering. 12270 Inwood Rd.. 972-243-2355. Inexpensive.



Middle Eastern

Cafe Izmir. A unique dining experience in which you are given a choice of a vegetarian or meat-based meal rather than a menu and are then served a parade of delightful food. The lemon-zested tabbouleh is terrific; the hummus is more silken than we’ve had anywhere else. The Mediterranean cole slaw and a Russian chicken salad, however, were bland. But with these came excellent pita Quarters for dipping or stuffing with grilled kabob tubes of ground beef and marinated chicken. Lamb wore its own wrap of a tortilla-like crepe, with piquant minced green peppers. Cubed cucumber and tomato in lemon-olive oil dressing was a cooling touch; battered saffron rice was fine: and an enormous platter of grilled eggplant, squash and ripe tomato slices brought a bright counterpoint of flavors to the table. A scarce Greek red wine called Boutan Maossa is a happy find here, and the sweet Turkish coffee in fragile cups was as irresistible as the desserts. 3711 Greenville Ave., 214-826-7788. Moderate.



Natural/Health

Dream Cafe. This Quadrangle eatery is the living embodiment of the notion that location, location, location determines success. Its pastoral setting seems particularly appropriate for the Dream Cafe’s menu of nightly pasta and chicken specials-on our visit, one with the tongue-twisting name of chicken with feta-calamata olive relish- salads and sandwiches. You can’t go wrong ordering corn cakes, with a hot, peanut dipping sauce and grilled shrimp, or the vegetable enchiladas of spinach and wild mushrooms with ancho sauce and melted Jack cheese. However, a grilled chicken breast sandwich came on a regrettably dry sourdough bun. The Dream Cafe’s famed breakfast menu remains an intriguing cross-solid egg dishes to entice the power-breakfast crowd and granola for those who want to start the day on a more spiritual, healthful note. The Quadrangle, 2800 Routh St.. 214-954-0486. Inexpensive.



Eureka! 4011 Villanova Dr.. 214-369-7767, Inexpensive.



Fresh ’N Lite. 6150 Frankford Rd.. 972-713-8167. Inexpensive.



Natura Cale, A new chef has breathed new life into this colorful cafe, once appreciated more for its delightfully huge vegetable sculptures than for its natural, healthful foods. The purest of souls will appreciate the nutritional analysis of the menu, the purified water, the filtered air and the amount of flavor packed into the good-for-you food. But the menu also includes choices like burgers for the “nutritionally ambivalent.” New addition on the good-for-you theme: a gospel brunch on Sundays (10 a.m.- 2 p.m., music starts at 11 a.m.) with Pat Peterson. She also performs Thursday and Friday evenings from 6-9 p.m. 2909 McKinney Ave.. 214-855-5483. Inexpensive to moderate.



New American

Americana. Chef Russell Hodges still rules the roost, turning out his top-notch regional American food, but they’ve spiffed up the place and cozied the atmosphere. Black lacquer chairs, white tablecloths and soothing art now complement the distinctive cuisine, which includes a dazzling range of potatoes: balsamic, garlic mashed or garlic fried, truffled, waffle cut and more. Hodges clearly likes assertive flavors-his salmon carpaccio features fish that overwhelms the palate, but trie accompanying curried deviled eggs strike the right note. The grilled chicken Caesar sandwich, a two-hand, two-napkin deal, takes the ubiquitous chicken Caesar salad to new highs, and the corn, shrimp and applewood-smoked bacon soup remains one of Dallas’ best creations. You can’t go wrong ending with the properly crusty crème brulée, beautifully presented on a plate painted with a lattice of raspberry and apricot sauces. 3005 Routh St., 214-871-2004. Moderate.



Antares. The Hyatt Regency’s sky-flung, revolving restaurant, long marked by mediocre food that failed to live up to its soaring view, appears to be finding its wings at last. Huge, meaty, seared sea scallops, pearly-white wit h in, were sparked with chile-peanut dressing; grilled beefsteak tomatoes and earthy shiitake mushroom caps wore dollops of melted queso fresco in a to-die-for roasted shallot vinaigrette. An entrée of grilled tiger shrimp mounted toothsome guard on a peppery bed of lemon-spiked fettuccine in garlic butter. Sautéed salmon was less memorable only because its seasoning was too timid-the filet was fresh and perfectly cooked, but held little excitement on its bed of totally unseasoned rice; what flavor the plate afforded came from the grilled Granny Smith apple slices and applejack sauce that were both blander than expected (a seasonal thing, perhaps?). Desserts were one up-a tongue-tingling Key lime pie. really terrific-and one down-warm peach-walnut cobbler, made with canned peaches, for God’s sake, sans walnuts as far as we could tell, and far too sweet. And the view? How blasé do we have to be before seeing the city do a slow 360-degree pirouette below us fails to be enchanting? Valet parking, by the way, is complimentary via the maitre d’s stamp. Reunion Tower, 300 Reunion Blvd.. 214-651-1234. Expensive.



Anzu. The smoothly uncluttered decor is itself an inducement to relaxed pleasure, from granite-hued tabletops and intimate booth enclosures to the witty flock of bright-colored origami birds that flutter from the ceiling. Service supports the mood, too, with knowledgeable dish descriptions and friendly attention to small needs. Each dish on the menu is a compelling example of East-meets-West culinary compatibility. One entrée, mustard-crusted rack of lamb- five baby riblets-on white beans with tomato and garlic, partnered with rosemary-scented potatoes, was classically American; another, sake-marinated black cod broiled to succulence and served on infant greens with grapefruit sections and Chinese black vinegar alongside ginger-s napped pickled beets, was as eloquently Asian. And a dessert of coconut sorbet with ripe, fresh berries, pineapple and kiwi on raspberry and mango sauces brought both worlds together in light, bright harmony. 4620 McKinney Ave., 214-526-7398. Moderate.



Beau Nash. 400 Crescent Ct? 214-871-3240. Moderate.



City Cafe. Basic California-style food comes graced with a Cajun touch here, a hint of the Southwest there. Seafood dishes make the best choices, whether a juicy grilled esco-lar or a scrumptious seared-salmon salad. City Cafe also renders the classics well, like an her bed-sprinkled omelet or a club sandwich packed with turkey, tomatoes and bacon fighting for attention. The menu changes every two weeks to take advantage of the best that local markets offer, but a few customer favorites, like the succulent tomato soup, appear regularly. Save room for homemade dessert. Also make sure to check out the award-winning wine list and the nice choice of after-dinner drinks. 5757 W. Lovers Ln., 214-351-2233. Moderate.



Dakota’s. Start with an appetizer sampler or warm homemade breads and the addictive, fried, cayenne-spiked onion shreds as you peruse the menu, which includes plenty of items marked as “lighter fare.” Choices from the wood-burning grill never disappoint, but a recent daily special was especially intriguing-colorfully striped, smoked moz-zarelia ravioli showered with sweet crab and sautéed bell peppers with a light, garlicky sauce to tie all the elements together. Bargain-seekers will love the $15.95, three-course “twilight menu” offered daily, with choices that might include a first course of venison sausage quesadil-las followed by roasted salmon and chocolate pecan pie. 600 N. Akard St., 214-740-4001. Moderate.



Huntington’s. Good news-this is one of the best places in Dallas for a reasonably priced, reliably good meal. Lobster bisque smoothly and richly delivers the very essence of lobster, best enjoyed as you wolf down the lightly crusty rolls slathered with garlic-studded whipped butter. Don’t miss the meaty crab cakes (offered as an appetizer or entrée), and end your meal with a knockout of a crusty crème brulée. Watch out for the tame salad dressings, though. Westin Galleria. 13440 Dallas Pkwy., 972-851-2882. Moderate to expensive.



Landmark Restaurant. A day’s-special starter, on our visit, topped a crisp-edged potato pancake with a single, huge, seared sea scallop and zipped the pairing with caviar-caper rémoulade. Another special sandwiched a succulent grilled shiitake mushroom between Roma tomato halves, crumb-coated and fried, on baby greens dressed with basil-balsamic vinaigrette. Both were luscious, as was a haunting-ly smoky tomato soup dolloped with pale green basil cream-a made-in-heaven marriage of flavors and hues adorned by a flash-fried basil leaf. An entrée of charred rare ahi tuna was stellar stuff indeed, the thick, meaty cut crisp-seared on the outside, its heart rosy-dark and tender: its accompanying warm salad Nicoise was studded with pressed kalamata olives that provided spirited accent to the gentle smoothness of the dressing, a vintage balsamic vinegar and saffron aioli. 3015 Oak Lawn Ave., 214-521-5151. Moderate to expensive.



Laurels. As good as the food is. as sweeping the view, as welcoming the decor, what we’re still talking about is the faultless service at Laurels. Live piano music, good bread and nice wines by the glass start meals off well. It’s impossible to resist ordering Laurels’ renowned appetizer, an enchilada packed with lobster and shrimp. The dish’s chile-lime cream melds with the tomatillo sauce for an unbeatable combination. The serrano chile pepper sauce on another appetizer, a health-conscious grilled scallop, also made us reach for the bread to sop up every drop. Filet mignon and rack of lamb are regally presented, each with inventive sidekicks (dive into those mashed potatoes jazzed up with creamed roasted corn). Soufflés head the dessert list but offer more fluff than taste. Sheraton Park Central, 12720 Merit Dr., 972-385-3000. Expensive. The Mansion on Turtle Creek. The near-brashness that has at times marked chef Dean Fearing’s cuisine as more showy than souI-satisfying has been polished into a sophistication and balance that justify the international recognition he has received. Take two starters: A mammoth, orange-caramelized sea scallop partnered divine flash-seared foie gras on a duck confit crêpe with blackened turnip slices and gingered currant sauce: and risotto perfumed with Oregon truffles offered gentle counterpoint to pesto-glazed shrimp with tomato essence and grilled zucchini salad. A request to split an entrée was honored without a murmur of condescension, and the ranch-reared antelope proved adequate for two. a substantial cut, rare and honey-glazed on a hearty posole stew gilded with roasted yellow tomato, punctuated with barbecued venison fajitas. A less costly tasting menu ($65 complete) was as outstanding-bay scallops on deep-flavored fennel puree with basil-creamed noodles; a curl of warm lobster and shrimp fritters with celery root in a salad dressed with truffle-tomato vinaigrette; pan-fried golden trout so succulent its layers slipped apart like satin, with parsley potatoes, black trumpet mushrooms, a crunchy bouquet of minced parsnips, young asparagus and green beans completing the plate. Hang the cost. Go there. Do that. And don’t be dismayed if you mention wine by the glass and the som-mel 1er drops you like a stone-it’s just his way. 2821 Turtle Creek Blvd., 214-559-2100. Expensive. Maple Avenue Cafe. This restaurant is a particularly happy instance of urban evolution-the circa-1905 mansion has been revived, polished and given new life. Furnishings, service and culinary style are in sync with the transformation- the food is regionally keyed to home cooking, stylishly updated but basically familiar. Shrimp cocktail is on the menu alongside ceviche. Good crusty rolls accompany the soup of the day, a deep-flavored cream of mushroom on our visit. Oven-roasted natural chicken, Madeira-sauced, comes with garlic mashed potatoes; sauteed sea bass, petal-tender and moist, is served on ribbons of lemon-buttered fettucine. A peanut butter tart carries a rich chocolate surprise: almond cheesecake is densely textured and satisfying. The house by-the-glass Mondavi wines-Cabernet, Chardonnay, or Zinfandel-are surprisingly modest in price as, indeed, is the food: Entrees start under $10, and the most expensive (two pounds of steamed lobster) is less than $20. 2616 Maple Ave., 214-871-1181. Moderate.



Nana Grill. In the Wyndham Anatole Hotel tower, 2201 Stemmons Fwy.. 214-761-7479. Expensive.



Natchez. 2810 N. Henderson Ave.. 214-821-4552. Inexpensive to moderate.



The Riviera. Well, really, just once, couldn’t this restaurant fall short of expectations? Apparently not. As always. owner-host Franco Bertolasi ’s greeting is warmly effusive, the seating conferred as deferentially as if you were being knighted. As tor food and service on our last visit, we knew the moment an airy avocado cream hors d’ouevre passed our lips that we were doomed, once again, to a near-flawless (and therefore difficult to describe without sounding, well, gushy) dining experience. Each dish seemed to outdo another-a starter of seared foie gras was pure poetry in Madeira wine sauce on leek risotto; chilled shrimp bisque was even better, its scented depths punctuated with avocado dice, its accompanying sunflower crackers crisp little rounds of nutty crunch. Yellow-fin tuna, marinated and grilled with apple-smoked bacon, hardly needed its accompaniment of lobster-caviar rémoulade; a pan-seared cut of salmon on fennel-seasoned white beans was crowned with a waffle of crisp phyllo layers-an inspired touch of wit. We did find one fault here: The beans, al dente a la the current mode, were rather more so than we’d have preferred and-therefore, perhaps-had absorbed enough of the plate’s underlying horseradish butter sauce to obscure their own flavor. Still, the adventurous dish was one we’d happily order again. Food credits here mostly belong to Chef de Cuisine Michael Weinstein. one assumes, with Input from David Holben. now executive chef at sibling restaurants Mediterraneo and Toscana as well as the Riviera. And service? Let’s simply say a tip commensurate to the Quality of attention one receives here would be too astronomical to contemplate. 7709 Inwood Rd., 214-351-0094. Expensive.



Seventeen Seventeen. At the Dallas Museum of Art’s new restaurant, the decor is simply lovely, but even more breathtaking is the food. On a brunch visit, the tomato-Pernod broth was a muted masterpiece. A small comino-rubbed, baby lamb T-bone on musky black-chile mole sauce was splendid and a corn pudding tamale, creamy in its little shuck canoe, was glorified with shredded red and blue tortillas, purple and white cabbage and bell peppers of every hue. On the breakfast side, a honeygranola waffle wore a toss of pecans beside a caramelized, oatmeal-crusted, fried banana on vanilla bean syrup, and smoky-flavored wild boar sausage partnered an omelet stuffed with charred bell pepper confetti and white Cheddar cheese. For lunch, the toasted ravioli triangles, although a trifle tough, were nicely stuffed with corn and goat cheese and served with golden coins of candied kumquat under white chayote squash. The blue crab cakes were partnered with a crunchy salad of field-fresh greens and papery rice noodles. The most memorable desserts were a pink-and-white layered mousse cake heaped with fresh raspberries and a trio of house brulées- mango-lime, raspberry-chocolate, orange with vanilla cream. 1717 N. Harwood St.. 214-922-1260. Moderate to expensive. Yellow. 2719 McKinney Ave.. 214-871-1772. Moderate,



Seafood

Cafe Pacific. 24 Highland Park Village, Preston Road and Mockingbird Lane. 214-526-1170. Moderate to expensive.



Daddy Jack’s. 1916 Greenville Ave.. 214-826-4910. Moderate.

Daddy Jack’s Wood Grill. This new jewel in the Jack Chaplin line of eateries offers lively service and food that manage to combine homey familiarity with twists of near-elegance. For example, a grilled red snapper topped with shrimp ana lobster brandy could grace a tonier table, but here it’s served with an ear of corn. Ditto on the beef filet grilled with apple bacon and crowned with Roquefort butter and roasted walnuts. The Lobster Fra Diavolo is a heaping challenge of lobster, mussels, clams and shrimp. For lunch, try the memorable tomato and crab gazpacho or the tuna anointed with fresh mango and avocado. The one true disappointment was the chocolate mousse that was grainy, rock-hard and almost inedible on two separate visits. However, the Key lime pie of surpassing smoothness was refreshing. 2723 Elm St., 214-653-3949. Moderate,



Eighteen-O-One. 1801 N. Griffin St., 214-720-2224. Inexpensive.



Joe’s Crab Shack. 3855 Belt Line Rd., Addison, 972-247-1010. Inexpensive to moderate.



Lefty’s. Although the menu is small, Lefty’s features everything you’d expect a good lobster house to have, including beef for those who don’t like seafood. Soups come in thick, white mugs; a disk of a cracker covers the top to keep the steam in. Choose the clam chowder and steer away from the metallic-tasting lobster bisque. Of the appetizers, the smoked salmon with bagel chips or the steamed clams would make a nice meal, So would the crisp house salad, paired with a crab cake and its good dilled tartar sauce. Baked shrimp, stuffed with baby shrimp, crab and cracker crumbs, are served perched in a wickedly good sauce. The service gets mixed marks, but the wine list is promising. One false note: The sauce on a daily special of seafood diablo lacked spiciness, though the plate was heaped with clams, lobster, mussels and shrimp. One big bargain: the 1-pound lobster with baked potato and corn for $10.95. 4021 Belt Line Rd.. Addison. 972-774-9518. Moderate.



Mainstream Fish House. Mainstream will reel you in, from your first mouthful of the properly seasoned chowder studded with juicy clams to the mouth-puckering key lime tart sweetened by a dab of whipped cream and a mound of berries. Your best choice in between those two winners? The daily specials. This restaurant a hands-on operation of owner Kelly Hagen and family (his dad owns the very popular fish market a few doors away], knows its fish, as does every employee, so take their recommendations and you can’t go wrong with the broiled, grilled or sautéed specials. Tuesday night is lobster night, a 1-pound beauty, accompanied by roasted potatoes and corn for $14.95, and watch for the lobster lunch specials afterwards, like the luscious lobster Louie salad or lobster enchiladas. Mainstream pays attention to every detail-they serve Empire Bakery’s incomparable bread and killer potato cakes-sautéed to a crisp on the outside, tender within and dotted with corn and bell peppers. Seafood sauces, a choice of eight daily, scream homemade! Only the wimpy crème brulée disappoints. Excellent food, low prices and a thoroughly casual atmosphere (with decent choices of wine and beer) cause this homey little place to be packed for both lunch and dinner. Preston Forest Shopping Center, 11661 Preston Rd.. Ste. 153, 214-739-3474. Moderate.



Newport’s. 703 McKinney Ave.. 214-954-0220. Moderate.



SAD Oyster Company. 2701 McKinney Ave., 214-880-0111. Moderate.



Sea Grill. Asian accents are subtly woven into this seafood-intense menu, where every bite surprises-a touch of lemon grass in the iced tea. a splash of sake enlivening a black bean sauce. Don’t even bother with the menu if a lobster sandwich is one of the daily specials: just order it quickly before they run out. Hunks of sweet lobster meat tossed with a lemon/Dijon mayo make this open-faced sandwich a winner, and it’s served not only with fries, caraway seed-flecked slaw and slices of mango, but also with the good house salad. The setting may be strip mall-pedestrian, but the food, right down to the homemade desserts, transcends it. The orange cheesecake, as delicate as a mousse, ends a meal on a light, but flavor-intense note. Sea Grill offers a wine list that does justice to its food (although the by-the-glass prices are steep). 2205 N. Central Expwy., Ste. 180. Piano. 972-509-5542. Moderate.



Shell’s Oyster Bar & Grill. Despite its one big flaw-waiters that are blase about their duties-we couldn’t help but like Shell’s. Start with trie peel ’n’ eat shrimp, a hefty portion of perfectly prepared crustaceans. One evening’s fish special turned out to be a tasty, perfectly cooked, thin cut of excellent swordfish teamed with lightly cooked vegetables and rice, but the grilled shrimp dinner with slaw and fries was even better. Cajun touches dot the menu from po-boys to red beans and rice, but Shell’s, hoping to establish itself firmly as a seafood restaurant, is off to a good start. The desserts need work, though, so try an after-dinner drink or cappuccino rather than the overly-sweet, pastry-less peach cobbler, 6617 Snider Plaza, 214-691-8164. Inexpensive.



Southwestern

Flying Burro. Bringing his own style of New Mexico-Men to Dallas, owner Scott Cain has a neat sense of the cuisine’s essential basics. To Texas tongues, the most alien dish on trie menu will probably be Winnie’s Killer Queso, a dark, spicy, burn-the-baby melange of peppers. The fried jalapehos-uncommonly crisp and pickled, are filled with vinegary chicken and cheese, all hot as hell. The Burro’s sauces, in red or green, are gentler on the tongue and add the right spice to the chicken and New Mexican enchiladas. Be wary, however, of the posole, which had been overcooked and oversalted when we visited. The pounded chicken breast also had been baked too long. 2831 Greenville Ave., 214-827-2112. Inexpensive.



Sam’s Cafe. Southwestern to the max, this Tex/New Mes; blend aims to please. Pots of soft, poppy seed-studded breadsticks stand ready to dip into their accompanying cream cheese/salsa mixture. Caesars take a Southwestern spin with spicy fried strips of tortillas replacing the croutons, while the dressing remains perkily authentic. The ” King Ranch Casserole, ” a palate-pleasing mixture of chicken, corn tortillas, roasted peppers, cheeses and onions, makes an excellent take-out dish for a dinner the whole family will love. Quesadillas. all five varieties, score high marks, although the ingredients need to be spread out more evenly. Regulars like the eight inventive pastas, and they also know that the poblano chicken chowder, with its sneaky little burn, Is a must-order. Sam’s offers a good-sized bar, with a house specialty called the “Grand Canyon”-a 32-ounce margarita. In the Preston Center Shopping Center. 8411 Preston Rd., Ste. 112, 214-739-2288. Moderate.



Star Canyon. Superchef Stephan Pyles has a gift for slipping happy little surprises into even the most mundane-sounding dishes. A grilled quail was not only halved but boned on a first-course plate mounded with arugula that coyly concealed poached pear slices and zip-spiked Cajun pecans. Coriander-cured venison lived up to ils legendary reputation, grilled rare and sliced into rosy petals complemented by whipped yam and an assertive dried fruit empanada. Even as simple a dessert as bread pudding departs from the commonplace here. Service was friendly and fast, as always. 3102 Oak Lawn Ave., 214-520-7827. Moderate to expensive.



Y.O. Ranch. The food here may be dubbed ’early Texas cooking, ” but we doubt many Old West ranch cooks whipped up this sophisticated a menu, starting with the seafood com cake, a vast flapjack concealing nuggets of crab, shrimp, oysters and corn kernels. Other appetizers are as wonderful; the frog legs were grilled to flawless succulence on wild rice with vegetable ribbons, and the wild boar sausage was served on a sea of molten cheese. Entrees range from basic steaks (we enjoyed a huge, perfect rib-eye) to turkey, catfish, shrimp and the Muy Grande Tex Mex Platter. The New Zealand venison, a thin, lean cut, was rolled around portobello mushroom strips. On the side, we found fresh grilled spinach extraordinarily fine and beautifully seasoned- At lunch, when everything on the menu but the fajitas are a reasonable $5.50, enjoy a country-fried steak that can be prepared in four different styles or one of the Tex-Mex specialties, like Matt’s famed chile relleno. Desserts run the gamut from a wonderful pecan pie to a wretched, dense-as-lead lemon cake. 702 Ross Ave., 214-744-3287. Inexpensive to moderate.



Spanish

Cafe Madrid. Apart from the house bread, which is totally undistinguished, every bite we sampled here held pure delight. Besides the two dozen or so tapas always available, a daily changing blackboard listing offers as many more, including everything from potato omelet to crisp-fried baby smelt, from wine-poached rabbit to blood sausage. Don’t shudder-that last is a near-religious experience, the dark, crisp-skinned sausage stuffed with rice and onion, filled with rich, meaty flavor, presented in double-bite-size morsels on herb-oiled cushions of bread. Try it with authentic Spanish manchego cheese, thin-sliced in crumbly mellow triangles, and stalks of white asparagus dressed with tomato-, onion- and green pepper-studded vinaigrette. If it’s a more conventional meal you’re after, a three-course dinner is offered nightly-cream of leek soup, veal stew and a cream-filled liqueur cake on our visit, paella on Friday and Saturday evenings. 4501 Travis St., 214-528-1731. Moderate.



Steakhouses

Bob’s Steak & Chop House. 4300 Lemmon Ave.. 214-528-9446. Moderate to expensive.



Chamberlain’s Prime Chop House. 5330 Belt Line Rd., Addison, 972-934-2467. Moderate. Del Frisco’s Double Eagle Steak House. 5251 Spring Valley Rd., 972-490-9000. Expensive.



Kirby’s Steakhouse. 3525 Greenville Ave.. 214-821-2122. Moderate to expensive,



Morton’s of Chicago. Understatement reigns here, from dark wood to etched glass, starched white linens and muted Sinatra, and there are more than 30 martini varieties. 501 Elm St., 214-741-2277. Expensive.



The Palm. Monster steaks and lobsters are the main draw here, but veal, seafood and poultry are featured, too. Prime no on a recent visit was an overwhelming platterful, vast and lusciously rare in a crusty coating of seasonings; the veal chop sampled was less delectable, moist but decidedly chewy. These followed a warm appetizer of clams casino-on the half-shell, beneath a chop of celery, carrot and garlic, topped with a crisp curl of bacon-and a cold one involving roasted pimiento blanketing iceberg lettuce under anchovy filets and many capers. Dressed with light vinaigrette, the latter is always fantastic; alas, though, instead of the usual quarter-head chunk of lettuce, the plate held a mere slice this trip-an odd place to cut corners, we thought. A side of green beans was fresh and crunchy; chocolate layer cake was fine. The most recognizable color caricatures of celebs, local and other, that cover the walls were fascinating as usual-although this was the first time we’d realized they were glued, rather than painted directly on the plaster. Tech! 701 Ross Ave., 214-698-0470. Expensive.



Paul’s Porterhouse. 10960 Compesite Dr.. 214-357-0279. Expensive.



Randy’s Steakhouse. A meat in this cozy, Victorian home-turned-restaurant can make you feel like you’re having din ner at a friend’s home. But you ’re friends have never served steaks like these. Graded prime and cut by hand, these beauties lasted rich and buttery. Filets. New York strips and rib-eyes are each offered in two sizes, or opt for the 26-ounce porterhouse. The marbling that characterizes prime meat makes these steaks some of the juiciest around. The 10 seafood selections offer plenty of alternate choices, and all meals come with rich, cheesy potatoes au gratin or a baked potato and fresh vegetables. Ignore the thoroughly tasteless Caesar and the supermarket-style bread. Start your meal instead with a good tossed salad (try the chunky blue-cheese dressing) or an appetizer-sized order of crab cakes-pure comfort food. The bread pudding with Jack Daniels sauce is heavenly mainly because of the lush cinnamon ice cream that topped it. The word “homemade” peps up on Randy’s menu a lot-from the sauces and dressings to the batter on the onion rings and the stuffing in the jalapenos to the peach cobbler. 7026 Main St., Frisco, 972-3 35-3066. Mode rale to expensive.



Ruth’s Chris Steak House. Ignore the menu’s chicken and seafood-you’re at a steak house where beef is taken very seriously. The steaks, served on a platter sizzling with butter, come as either a filet (which we found a little too tender), a rib-eye, a New York strip, a porterhouse or a T-bone. The rich marbling of the corn-fed Midwestern beef displays the promise of juiciness to follow. The meaty lamb chops, however, can give the beef a run for the money. Although you have to order side dishes a la carte, most will serve two. The menu offers eight types of potatoes. The cream spinach also complements the beef well. For an appetizer, try the cheesy, crab-stuffed mushroom caps; among salads, go for the Caesar instead of the unexciting Italian version. There is a huge wine list, and for serious grape lovers, the restaurant has a wine room for tastings. 17840 Dallas Pkwy.. 972-250 2244. Expensive,



Stone Trail. The creative appetizer list includes a crab cake combining a wealth of lump crab meat with zestful chile, served with a tangle of vegetables; catfish with green apple tartar sauce: and grilled goat cheese in grape leaves. The rest of the menu bears more typical steakhouse fare, including lobster and an astonishingly pricey free-range chicken. Beef, crusty and juicy, makes the best entrée with cheese-rich potato casserole or chile-jazzed whipped potatoes on the side. At lunch. Stone Trail serves a wonderful quesadil-la that we’ll put up against any in town. Desserts change daily, but your best choice after dinner may be a drink or cappuccino in the beautiful knockout of a bar. where a jaw singer will entertain you. 14833 Midway Rd? 972-701-9600. Moderate to expensive.



Texas Land & Cattle Company. Night or day. this place jumps. and it has carved out its own Dallas niche with popular entrées like smoked sirloin, mesquite grilled trout and fried pickles. 3130 Lemmon Ave.. 214-526-4664. Moderate.



Thai

Chow Thai. 5290 Belt Une Rd.. Ste. 144. Addison. 972-960-2999. Moderate.



Royal Thai. Impeccably furnished, accented with small lamps casting delicate pools of light, this is the prettiest (and on its best days, the best) of Dallas’ Thai restaurants. That old standby, lemon grass chicken, is skillfully executed, but try less familiar items, too. On a recent visit, one entrée of crab, scallops, fish, shrimp, squid and peppers on curried rice drew literal cries of delight from the lucky first-time diner, who had to be told that even greater pleasures waited on the menu. If there’s a drawback, it’s in the size of the perlions, which are not large; consider appetizers if you’re really hungry. In Old Town, 5500 Greenville Ave., 214-691-3555. Inexpensive to moderate.



Thai-Thai. A near-full house on our last visit made noon service near-brusque and near-instant, but the fare suffered not at all-steamed Thai dumplings were frilled purses plumped with shrimp, perk and vegetables, served with a zesty dipping sauce. Tom Kha Gai (chicken coconut soup) was a miracle of subtle flavor interiacings, smooth coconut milk cushioning pepper heat and filled with white chicken strips, baby corn, lemon grass, lime, cilantro leaves and those dark-capped little mushrooms that look like Disney dancers. Pad Woon Sen heaped an entrée plate with stir-fried glass noodles, chicken and every vegetable known to the Pacific Rim, plus rice and a crisp-skinned spring roll, all for under $5. 1731 Greenville Ave. at Ross, 214-828-9795. Inexpensive to moderate.



Toy’s Cafe. 4422-B Lemmon Ave., 214-528-7233, Inexpensive.



Tuppee Tong. The Village at Collin Creek. 621 W, Piano Pkwy., Ste. 247, Piano. 972-509-7979. Inexpensive.



Vietnamese

Arc En-Ciel. Trie menu here offers more than 300 Chinese and Vietnamese dishes, some authentic, some Americanized. Dim sum is also available. Classic Vietnamese spring rolls, with their transparent wrappers displaying their well-packed interiors of shrimp, vermicelli, mint, pork and garlic chives, taste every bit as good as they look, especially when dipped in the sneakily hot peanut sauce. Tender little shark’s fin dumplings, charcoal-broiled pork over vermicelli and crispy duck disappear fast, but the fresh crab dishes require too much work (and create too much of a mess) to get the meat out of the shell. 3555 W. Walnut Rd.. Garland, 972-272-2188. Inexpensive.



Saigon Savour. The cuisine here combines Mediterranean and Asian influences, but the San Francisco owners need to realize that Dallas palates are used to piquancy. We also found ourselves wishing for vegetables, which the Vietnamese cooks usually prepare with finesse. 17370 Preston Rd., Ste. 490. 972-380-2766. Moderate.



Tarrant County

Angelo’s Barbecue. 2533 White Settlement Rd., Fort Worth, 817-332-0357. Inexpensive.



Benito’s, Like a familiar old friend, Benito’s appearance may be spruced up from time to time, but the food does not change. The queso Flameado. with or without chorizo, is flamed tableside and served with fresh pico de gallo and hot flour or corn tortillas. Order it first and then spend some time with the menu-everything on it is worth trying. The enchiladas can be ordered with mole rojo or mole verde. The chiles rellenos. stuffed with white cheese or beef, are a delight. The fajitas are well marinated and never so overcooked that the subtle marinade flavor is lost. The tacos are big. fresh and filling. 1450 W. Magnolia. Fort Worth, 817-332-8633. Moderate.



Bistro Louise. We’ve rarely found food wonderful enough to warrant a 40-mile return trip, but here the tea-smoked duck-moist and fat-free, its satin skin smoked black and its luscious meat’s near-sweetness offset by a tart cranberry-port salsa-is such a dish. But almost everything we tried here was just as stellar. Other standouts range from Louise’s signature salad to a vegetable tower of peas, diced pepper and smoked corn kernels to a Mediterranean seafood paella. Only one starter fell short: Lettuce timbales weren’t zipped enough with their minted tomato vinaigrette to be interesting. Desserts, lemon coconut cake and a reverse chocolate cake, were humdingers, 2900 S. Hulen (south from 1-30). Fort Worth. 817-922-9244. Moderate to expensive.



Casa Jose. The best Tex-Mex cafe in Arlington offers all the regular Tex-Mex dishes but specializes in soft flour tortilla tacos. Their thick, slightly chewy, warm, handmade flour tortillas offer a tasty base from which to build a taco. Casa Jose isn’t good enough to merit a drive from Dallas or Fort Worth (you’d pass as good or better Tex-Mex on the way), but If you’re in the area, try it. 2030 S. Cooper, Arlington, (metro) 817 265-5423. Inexpensive.



City Park Gate. 2418 Forest Park Blvd., 817-921-4567. Moderate.



Daddio’s Downtown Nearly Jazz Cafe. Like the music its name celebrates, this cafe provides a constantly evolving riff on the theme of service-sometimes it’s faster than other times. But the Greek salad is the best in town, and the rest of the menu gives a unique Texas tone to classic Greek specialties. Breakfast and lunch only, except on Friday and Saturday, when you can listen to great music at night while enjoying your dinner. 715 W. Magnolia, 817-926-7000. Inexpensive.



8.0 Restaurant & Bar. Ill E. 3rd St., 817-336-0880. Inexpensive Gaylen’s. Meat is king at Gaylen’s; a complete range of barbecue possibilities is offered, including beef, sausage, ham, pork loin, chicken, salami and bologna. 826 N.Collins, Arlington, 817-277-1945, Inexpensive.



Joe T. Garcia’s Esperanza’s Mexican Bakery. Not as fancy as its more famous cousin around the corner on North Commerce, the chefs do an excellent job preparing all the old favorites from burritos to tamales. Don’t overlook the soups here: The caldo de res, a homestyle soup with carrots, potatoes and squash, is delicious and filling. The frijoles a la char-ra are also above average-they are made with flair and spici-ness. Breakfast is a work of art here. Chorizo con huevo (Mexican sauage and eggs) can be ordered with potatoes, ham, bacon or pork skin. And on your way out, the bakery, in an alcove off the dining room, sells traditional Mexican breads, rolls and sweet rolls. 2122 N. Main, Fort Worth, 817-626-5770. Moderate.



Joe T. Garcia’s Mexican Dishes. Probably the Fort Worth restaurant best known to Dallasites, Joe T.’s is a place fort Worthers take their out-of-town guests if they insist, but there is much better Mexican food to be had in Fort Worth. However, if it’s atmosphere you want for a big party. Joe T, ’s does an excellent job of feeding large groups decent food in record time. Mariachi players stroll among the diners and will take requests. On a nice night, Joe T.’s patio can’t be beat-it’s one of Fort Worth’s best outside dining experiences. Food is served family style and it rarely varies. Solid and dependable. Cash and local checks only. 2201 N. Commerce St., Fort Worth. 817-6264356. Moderate.



Kowloon Seafood Restaurant. 100 W. Pioneer Pkwy., Arlington, (metro) 817-261-6699. Moderate.



Le Chardonnay. Entrées are to swoon over; Les Patés aux Fruits de Mer “Primavera”-fish, shrimp and scallops sautéed in an olive oil vinaigrette with vegetables, served over fettuccine, was stellar. So was the grilled fresh tuna from the daily specials menu-the generous portion came with a dill-white wine sauce that caused tiny explosions of flavor with each bite. Desserts should not be missed- especially a concoction called “The African Queen” that looked somewhat like a banana burrito, consisting of a banana rolled up in pastry, covered with a caramel sauce. 2443 Forest Park Blvd., Fort Worth, 817-926-5622. Moderate.



Lucile’s-A Stateside Bistro. 4700 Camp Bowie Blvd., Fort Worth. 817-73&4761. Moderate.



Panther City Brewery. Is this an elegant, creative Southwestern restaurant or a casual place with an emphasis on gourmet beer, serving the burgers-and-quesadillas menu you expect at such places? Right now, its unfocused menu includes burgers and sandwiches as well as high-priced entrées and appetizers that sound good on the page but don’t quite work on the plate. The jalapeno beer and the cream ale were smooth and tasty: other beers included pale, red and amber ales, plus a stout. 2513 Rodeo Plaza. Fort Worth, 817-626-9500. Moderate.



Reata. Dripping in western paraphernalia, like rusty ranch gear, ropes, saddles, hats and cowhide-covered chairs, this restaurant on the 35th floor of the Bank One Tower has a wonderful view of Sundance Square and the Trinity River. But neither the food nor the service live up to the expectations evoked by the decor or by the rave reviews this place has received. We were disappointed with appetizers: The horseradish with corn meal-crusted oysters and the three-onion marmalade with bacon-wrapped shrimp were too bland. On two visits, the Texas T-bone and the Mesquite grilled rib-eye we ordered were undercooked, while the pan-seared salmon was overdone. Desserts almost redeemed the day. Chocolate torte with blackberry sauce, apple crisp with caramel sauce and bunuelos with raspberry Cointreau, all served with vanilla ice cream, were scrumptious. If ambience matters more than food and service, give Reata a try. 500 Throckmorton, Fort Worth, 817-336-1009. Moderate to expensive.



Rickshaw Chinese Restaurant. 1229 Wood Haven Blvd., Fort Worth, 817-496-6767. Inexpensive to moderate.



Star of Texas Grill. In the Worthington Hotel, 200 Main St., Fort Worth, 817-882-1719. Moderate.



Sundance Dell & Market. There is no better spot in Sundance Square for a casual. Imaginative brunch, lunch or dinner. Basic offerings include sandwiches, salads, breakfast, gourmet coffees and homemade desserts. In addition to the regular menu with its rotating salad offerings, dinner specials are available on Friday and Saturday nights; the menu of specials for the month is posted on the outside window. On a recent visit, we sampled salads including a zesty roasted potato salad in a homemade vinaigrette, a lemon pepper chicken and spaghetti salad, and an outstanding jicama and mango slaw. Tasty tortilla soup came with shredded chedoar covering the cup and a generous amount of tortilla chips nestled in the cheddar on one side. This is the rare restaurant that’s quick enough for just a bite, but whose smartly minimalist decor, great coffee and excellent food make it perfect for lingering. 353 Throckmorton. Fort Worth, 817-335-3354. Inexpensive.



Uncle Julio’s. Portions are generous as well as delicious. For an appetizer, the queso flameado can be had with chorizo, with peppers, mushrooms and onions, or with mesquite grilled chicken or beef. There are lots of combination plates to choose from, but you can be confident that whatever mix you pick, the enchiladas, tacos, tamales and flautas will be deliciously spicy. Customers can watch tortillas being made at the front of the restaurant and then enjoy eating them. 5301 Camp Bowie Blvd. at West Freeway, Fort Worth, 817-377-2777. Inexpensive.



Water Street Seafood Company. Near the TCU campus. 1540 S. University Dr., Ste. 120, Fort Worth. 817-877-3474, Moderate to expensive.

Related Articles

Image
Business

Experts Weigh In: What the NAR Settlement Could Mean for DFW’s Residential Market

Rogers Healy, Briggs Freeman's Russ Anderson, and Allie Beth Allman's Keith Conlon share insights on the landmark National Association of Realtors lawsuit.
Image
Arts & Entertainment

The Best Places to See a Drive-In or Outdoor Movie in North Texas

Whether you’re solo or with a group, there are some great places to see movies under the stars in DFW.
By Bethany Erickson and Natalie Gempel
Image
Nursing

UNTHSC’s New Nursing Degrees to Focus on Entrepreneurship and Leadership 

The Fort Worth health center added two new degree programs last month after a Board of Regents vote to address the nursing shortage. 
Advertisement