Photo courtesy of Far-Out

The Hit ListDallas

The Resy Hit List: Where In Dallas You’ll Want to Eat in June 2025

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There’s no question we hear more often: Where should I go eat? And while we at Resy know it’s an honor to be the friend who everyone asks for restaurant advice, we also know it’s a complicated task. That’s where the Resy Hit List comes in. 

Consider it your essential resource for dining in Dallas and Fort Worth: a monthly-updated guide to the restaurants that you won’t want to miss — tonight or any night.

Four Things In Dallas-Fort Worth Not to Miss This Month

  • Wine Time: On June 4, Urbano Cafe will bring Valdicava wine’s Pierfilippo Abbruzzese from Tuscany for a four-course wine dinner involving vintage pours of Brunello di Montalcino. Check out Resy Events & Experiences for more tasty to-dos. 
  • Le Gourmet Adventure: The wildly popular themed dinners at downtown restaurant Fond fall on Saturday, June 14 and June 21 this month. Eight courses featuring the flavors of summertime in south France will be based on “Provence, 1970,” Luke Barr’s chronicle of one night when his great-aunt, MFK Fisher, met up with Julia Child, James Beard, Simone Beck, and other food powerhouses to discuss the future of American cuisine. (Update: the dinners are sold out, but set those Notifys to scoop up last-minute spots as they become available.) Informal fun can be had earlier in the month too, on June 5, when chefs Brandon Moore and Jennie Kelley will offer their usual Friday-only lunch burger for dinner, along with additional bar fare like their bloomin’ shallot, tavern pizzas, and a chicken Caesar roti wrap. 
  • Commemorate Freedom: An exhibit of Black American history at Fair Park during the 1936 Texas Centennial was a spark that ignited Juneteenth celebrations across North Texas, according to muralist J.D. Moore. Solidifying the cultural area’s significance, last year, the grandmother of Juneteenth, Opal Lee, led a 2.5-mile walk around the park. This year’s Festival of Service at Fair Park starts at 9:00 a.m. on June 14. Register for free at the website. Or to walk alongside the holiday’s grandmother this year, head to Fort Worth for Opal’s Walk for Freedom on June 19. 
  • Poolside Pilates: On third Saturdays of the month this summer, Dallas wellness center O2 will offer a 60-minute, core-strengthening workout by the rooftop pool at The Adolphus. Cool off afterwards with a mimosa or zero-proof cocktail and enjoy the pool for the rest of the day — as long as you snag your ticket.  

New to the Hit List (June 2025)
Far-Out, Sachet, Turan Uyghur Kitchen, Urbano Cafe.

1. Sachet Highland Park

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Photo courtesy of Sachet

For culinary chops and community leadership, Sachet and Gemma chef-owner Stephen Rogers was recently chosen by the James Beard Foundation for its annual TasteTwenty Chefs event. As Rogers heads to Los Angeles for the national soirée, check in on the updates at Sachet — a new lump crab tagliatelle or Moroccan spiced mussels — available for dinner every night of the week, except Sunday. You might also stop by on a lunch break for eggplant burgers, turkey keftedes sandwiches, and “salady” bowls of lamb tenderloin or dukkah-crusted ahi tuna. While you’re there, say hello to the freshly arrived wine director, Roger Bissell; his selections from Greece, Sardinia, Sicily, Slovenia, and Turkey do not miss. 

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Photo courtesy of Sachet

2. Baonecci Ristorante Frisco

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A profusion of Italian food-lovers in the Lone Star state and the promise of less red tape are the lures that propelled the Gambaccini family to leave their beloved North Beach restaurant after a 16-year run. Now that they’ve bought their first home after moving in 2022 (and also secured a liquor license for one-tenth of what it’d cost back in Cali) Walter, Stefania, and their two sons are loving our state. In turn, Frisco residents and thin-crust pizza nomads are likewise appreciative of the move that brought homestyle Tuscan fare to the ‘burbs. Crisp-thin Lucchese-style pizzas, made by the Gambaccinis’ son, Filippo, are a must-order. To lay it on even thicker, Stefania is in charge of the fresh pastas and sauces, which is why it’s closed for lunch, and why dinners here feel a little celebratory.

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3. Monarch Dallas Downtown Historic District

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Sunsets and city lights are made for cork-popping. Danny Grant’s Italian steakhouse on the 49th floor of The National is a good way to enjoy all of the above, with fresh pastas, caviar service, and wood-grilled items like branzino, dry-aged tomahawks, and South Texas Nilgai antelope. A 127-page drinks list with wines from around the world ends with a page of specialty cocktails, like the Mayor of Speyside for $85, featuring Glenfiddich’s 18-year single malt Scotch. If less decision-making is the goal, the seasonal tasting menu has an optional wine pairing, curated by the restaurant’s sommelier.

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4. Far-Out Dallas

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Where in the world is Misti Norris? has been a question on many Dallasites’ minds since the chef’s much-vaunted restaurant, Petra and the Beast, unexpectedly shuttered last year. We now have an answer: She’s at Far-Out, near Fair Park, with Christopher Jeffers, a restaurant veteran with a 20-year track record of running smash hit restaurants, including erstwhile Smoke and Bolsa. Possibly Jeffers’s most cosmic spot yet, Far-Out is a Texas desert-style brewpub with Thursday night concerts, batangas, ranch waters, and frozen watermelon margaritas to go with Norris’s pig ears-and-tomatoes or white Bolognese tagliatelle with salsa verde. There aren’t many places we’d rather be discovered on the map.  

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5. DOMODOMO Dallas Uptown

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Photo courtesy of Domodomo

This spinoff of a handroll bar in the West Village has us wondering how frequently sequels improve upon their original forms. Chef-owner Brian Kim’s Japanese tasting menu with Korean twists positively glows in a minimalist art house at The Quad. Don’t balk at the seven-course omakase in a town where others tout up to 20: One “course” here might include six pieces of nigiri and temaki, or a sizable round of American wagyu carpaccio with burdock chips, or a filet of Arctic char and broccoli rabe and a cloud of smoked dashi foam. Now that fancy-food inspectors are dallying among our state’s tables, the Dallas edition of Domodomo feels like it was born for such a time as this. 

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Photo courtesy of Domodomo

6. Via Triozzi Lower Greenville

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Executive chef Sonia Mancillas has unlocked springtime at this budding spot for fresh Italian on Lower Greenville. Leeks, artichokes, spring onions, and fava beans bloom alongside mains like seared diver scallops and grilled Colorado lamb chops. Other new dishes, like the lantern-shaped pasta pockets called lanterne, are stuffed with spring peas, asparagus, and crisped prosciutto. But wait, there’s more. The umbrellas have finally been unfurled at Terraza di Triozzi, the restaurant’s rooftop bar. For when you’re feeling spritz-y, head upstairs prior to a meal for salumi-cheese boards and antipasti. Or tap into your inner Sophia Loren and reserve a cabana to cap off a sunny day with frozen Italian margaritas, Margherita pizzetes, and pistachio tiramisu.  

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7. Little Blue Bistro Bishop Arts District

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Dallas is a city that almost has it all — everything except an abundance of natural wine bars. That’s what makes Olivia Genthe’s first take, situated on Bishop Arts’ boutique-y Eighth Street, more than a little special. After she was blocked by a neighborhood union from pouring limited-production wines at her Fount Board & Table cafe in Uptown, Genthe took her vision to a different ‘hood, one that doesn’t mind having a couple of glasses for a weekday wind-down or a seal-the-deal date night. Unsure what glera, catarratto, grillo, valdiguie, or hondarrabi zuri grapes taste like? This is the place to investigate, with cheese plates, snails, Foxley River oysters, and Oak Cliff Bread’s sourdough available to aid with study snacks.

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8. Smoke'N Ash BBQ Arlington

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At only one place in the world does berbere reign next to brisket at a Michelin-recognized barbecue joint. The Arlington-grown sensation known as Tex-Ethiopian fare materialized when Fasicka Hicks started applying awaze, a berbere-based Ethiopian condiment, to her husband Patrick’s smoked brisket, pulled lamb, and pork ribs. You don’t have to mix the two cuisines here: Doro wat and tibs with injera always delight, whether you choose some of the world’s best beefy collard greens or loaded barbecue fries to side them or not. The spice doesn’t stop at meats, though, with items like berbere sweet potato pie, Texas sheet cake with berbere pecans, and berbere Bloody Marys.

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9. Claremont Midway Hollow

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Once again, the Katz brothers have furnished an overlooked neighborhood with an extraordinary restaurant. After establishing Beverley’s Bistro & Bar and Clifton Club as worthwhile reasons to head to Fitzhugh Avenue, followed by an all-day seafood brasserie on Knox Street, Greg and Nik Katz have hit it out of the park with their Preston Hollow hangout, opened in December. The daily dinner menu is bulging with comforts: deviled eggs, chicken drums, hot bean dip, and Texas red chili (no beans). Major merits also lie in selections from the grill, where the brothers’ South African roots surface in the form of barbecue pork ribs, tenderloins with black-garlic butter, and Bay of Fundy salmon filets.

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10. Goodwin's Lower Greenville

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Photo courtesy of Goodwin’s

Can we talk about the zucchini chips at this supercool spot by locals — the ones enlivened by parmesan curls and zigzags of green goddess dressing? Or the lil’ smokies dressed up like Chicago red hots? Or the Dallas Sour with Tequila and cabernet franc, sided by barbecue nuts? Basically, you can’t go wrong here. Kick things off at the Goose Bar for daily martini happy hour from 4-6 p.m. Once snug in a dining room booth, follow pre-game drinks with rosemary focaccia with cracked pepper butter, then enjoy the rest of the full-flavored perks.

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Photo courtesy of Goodwin’s

11. Thiru Kuppusamy Unavagam Irving

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This one is for all-you-can-eat-loving spice enthusiasts. Featuring Tamil cuisine — specifically the fiery, homey curries and biryanis that typify Kongu Nadu food — this Irving storefront has already grown to Plano, Little Elm, Austin, and Phoenix after chef Arun Ganesan brought his grandparents’ restaurant from Erode to Texas in 2022. Expect a wait on weekends when hungry diners line up for unlimited saapadu — with biryani, chapathis, and curries served on a banana leaf. If visiting for à la carte on a weekday, try the chicken lollipops or the bone-in chicken and mutton biryani made with seeraga sambu, a small-grain rice from the region.

Find more info here.

12. Urbano Cafe Dallas

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Neighborhood hang meets date night at this intimate Italian American spot, currently in its second life thanks to Pasha and Sina Heidari, brothers behind similarly cozy gems, St. Martin’s and Las Palmas. On a night when you aren’t in the mood to scream over dinner, come for attentive service and expert recommendations, like baked mezzi rigatoni or the hefty lobster ravioli fra diavolo. The veal scallopini is also a winner, with pounded-thin layers cloaked in a rich, mushroomy Marsala sauce, and when it comes to the filet al Barolo, zero flaws. Hundred-page wine menus aren’t necessary to find something high-quality here, either. The list is as focused as it’s always been, and you can still BYOB for a $20 corkage fee. 

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13. Aladdin Mediterranean Cafe Fort Worth

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Tweaking recipes from his great-grandfather who had falafel stands in Palestine and their native Jordan, Elias Shiber makes a dang good version at this Fort Worth spot. He’s fine-tuned recipes from the Greek side of his family too: Beefy dolmades on lemony avgolemono, sambousek (the Greek version of empanadas stuffed with spiced feta), and a crowd-pleasing gyro plate. The menu here also goes beyond the traditional to satisfy modern-day cravings. Shiber taps into Texans’ love for guacamole with avocado hummus, and his savviness for discerning what’s “in” comes out in hot honey hummus.

Find more info here.

14. Tango Room Design District

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There’s been a changing of the guard at this caviar-centric, low-lit steakhouse in the Design District. Chef David Gomez took over the kitchen last year, following 15 years of chopping his way up the ranks at some of Dallas’s finest restaurants: CBD Provisions, Sassetta – Main StMirador, and Monarch. While premium cuts from Allen Brothers and Westholme Australian Wagyu are constants here, Gomez has refreshed the menu with some springtime exclusives such as rabbit tagliatelle, halibut with pistachio pesto, and baby beets on horseradish labneh. Luxe bites also exist in starters like scallop and foie gras with caviar and beurre blanc, along with selections from co-owner (and wine broker) Simon Roberts’ wine list. 

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15. The French Room Bar Discovery District

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For those who remember glorious dinners in the pre-2020 era of the French Room, the next best thing is dinner in the French Room Bar. Now, as The French Room focuses on exceptional tea service, the adjoining bar in the Adolphus Hotel has a tiny-but-mighty menu of French classics including coq au vin, steak frites, and profiteroles. The confit lamb shank is one of the largest (and tastiest) bone-in hunks of meat in the area, and we can so far vouch for the French onion soup here as one of the finest in the Big D.

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16. Muchacho Tex Mex The Plaza at Preston Center/University Park

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Shady patios, tortilla chips hot-from-the-fryer, and margaritas shaken with superlative Tequilas are designed for springtime sprees. Few places do it as well as chef Omar Flores at his spot in the well-to-do Plaza at Preston Center. Further indications of excellence are found in mojo-marinated octopus fajitas, the super-creamy jazzed-up flan, and dreamy brunches with pan dulce French toast and choripapa-egg tacos. It’s so well-loved that Southlake Town Square got their own edition in 2021. What does it have that the Dallas location does not? Happy hour! — with discounted snacks, mezcal margaritas, and Mexican martinis from 2-6 p.m. daily.

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17. Shanghai Taste Plano

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When cacio e pepe and spicy penne alla vodka have clocked all the miles your appetite can handle, might we suggest James Beard-nominated chef Jimmy Li’s scallion oil noodles, a hearty bowl of wheat noodles boosted by chile oil? The dish isn’t the headliner of the dim sum strongbox that originated in Las Vegas and opened up in Plano last year, but it’s sure to satisfy cravings for carbs. Quite the opposite of simplicity are the xiao long bao trophies that turned heads when the shop originally opened in 2019. Heed the warning signs that the dumplings are served piping hot. If unpracticed in the art of consuming soup dumplings, ask a server for a tutorial on how to best savor the hot pork broth and meatballs enclosed in each pocket — evidently, you’re not supposed to pop the whole thing in your mouth at once.

Find more info here.

18. Mr. Max Richardson

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One of our favorite places to get into soup szn is the new-ish Mr. Max, opened last summer in Richardson. It’s a spinoff of the extremely busy Irving izakaya, founded in 1996 by Hare Nakamura. Mon Restaurant group saved the restaurant after Nakamura’s death in 2013, and today, chef Mamoru Tokeshi oversees both locations. The most pertinent info, though, is that getting a table is far easier in Richardson, added to the fact that the semi-famous takoyaki are as impeccable as those served in Irving. Sashimi, pickles, Nagoya-style fried chicken, and monkfish liver are also exceptional entries into a bowl of ramen or udon. We also don’t mind the house pork curry, or the grilled yellowtail collar, or to end it all, the simply satisfying custard pudding.

Find more info here.

19. Turan Uyghur Kitchen Plano

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Nestled among Park Pavilion Center’s treasure trove of storefronts and tea shops is a kitchen making the dynamic food of northwest China’s Uyghur people. Started by chef Adilan Aziz in 2023, her brother, Alim Jan Omar, transported the concept to Houston’s Asiatown last year. After a bite of the chewy, hand-pulled wheat noodles accented by certified zabiha halal lamb, chicken, or steak (there’s a certificate on the door), Texans’ fever for Uyghur food begins to make sense. Lamb takes the leading role in most dishes, like succulent skewers, shank on scented polow, and flaky, meat pie-like gosh naan, served with a vinegar-based chile oil. The garlicky cucumber salad might take some heat off, but not like the housemade honey cake and necessary pitchers of water. 

Find more info here.

20. Written by the Seasons, The Quad Uptown

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Photo courtesy of Written by the Seasons

Version 2.0 of this Michelin-recommended spot possesses a couple showpieces the Written by the Seasons Bishop Arts does not. Take, for instance, a daily lunch menu with a classic burger and solid sandwiches, or the burgundy jewel tones that make you wish you’d put on your garnet gemstones to match. The treasure chest restaurant opened early this year in the redesigned Quad, making 2025 a promising time for expertly-prepared, seasonally-inspired menus, with dishes like squash focaccia and salmon with heirloom beans from Rancho Gordo. Don’t miss the Monday through Saturday happy hour, from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m., with discounted small plates, crowd-approved cocktails for $10, and half-price bottles of wine.

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Photo courtesy of Written by the Seasons