
The Resy Hit List: Where In Dallas You’ll Want to Eat in March 2025
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
- Healthy Eats: Already known for veg-centric bowls and salads, HG Sply Co recently tweaked its menu to be even healthier, with less refined sugars and more protein. UNCO’s co-CEO, Sameer Patel, partnered with nutrition students at Texas Woman’s University for the updates following a lymphoma diagnosis, and the updated, flash-fried French fries might be the tastiest health food ever.
- Remember the Alamo: In honor of Texas Independence Day on March 2, Culpepper Cattle Co.’s locations in Deep Ellum and Rockwall will offer live music and drink specials on their spacious, sunny patio. $9 margaritas, anyone?
- Chili Cook-off for a Cause: For the fourth year, Lockwood Distilling Co. will host a chili competition on March 23 in honor of late regular Aaron Baerwaldt. Taster tickets go for $10, or you an bust out the crockpot and bring your own heat for $25. Proceeds go to Camp Gilmore in East Texas.
- Big Time Bar Takeover: For Catbird’s monthly bar pop-up series, Happy Accidents is coming to town. On March 8, try four cocktails from the multi-award-winning Albuquerque bar, like the Needle and Thread with whiskey and guanabana, or return the next day for a master class with Kate Gerwin herself. Visit Resy’s Events Page for more upcoming experiences.
New to the Hit List (March 2025)
Bar Colette, Shanghai Taste, Smoke ‘N Ash BBQ, Written by the Seasons.
1. MĀBO Preston Center

The best place in America for yakitori is Dallas, or so opined Esquire in its recent list of best new restaurants. Zero arguments here. Part of our guide to the places that defined American dining in 2024, all with strong “vibes” (i.e., hospitality), this Kappo-style counter specializes in coursed, chef’s choice dinners that go beyond sushi. By Masayuki “Masa” Otaka, a long-time veteran of Japanese cooking with a reputation for excellence in grilling on the binchotan, MĀBO is a bit like his former restaurant, Teppo, but in its soft, seraphic afterlife. Jidori chickens from a Pennsylvania Amish farm are fully utilized in chicken liver pâté on a lotus root chip and cured egg yolks with rice. Along with a sashimi platter and skewers of tare-glazed chicken hearts and thighs, it all adds up to an unforgettable meal by one of Dallas’s most masterful chefs.

2. Baonecci Ristorante Frisco
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.
3. Le PasSage Dallas
Travis Street Hospitality, incubator of headliners like Georgie and Knox Bistro, has created immaculate vibes here that channel a luxe Orient Express milieu, but overlooking the Katy Trail. The appeal extends to the cooking, too: crab-stuffed Dover sole with lemongrass butter and halibut in ginger beurre blanc are a result of French tactics from one of Dallas’s most consequential chefs, Bruno Davaillon. Chef Hou Lam “Dicky” Fung’s Peking duck is also mandatory, as are the cocktails by bartenders Mario Martinez and George Kaiho (owner of erstwhile Jettison). It will be a challenge, but save space for one (or four) of pastry chef Dyan Ng’s exquisite desserts that often combine savory ingredients to enchanting effect.
4. Ramble Room Snider Plaza - University Park
This Snider Plaza sweetheart by the group that brought us TJ’s Seafood Market and Escondido is still on the up-and-up. As Ramble Room’s second birthday approaches, founders Jon and Matt Alexis have added some new charmers to the menu, including a Reuben with house-smoked pastrami and a buttery lobster roll on brioche from local La Spiga Bakery. Given the sourcing by one of the city’s best seafood purveyors (TJ’s, that is), you can be sure the oysters are fresh, whether you opt for raw on the half-shell with blood orange mignonette or charbroiled, cacio e pepe-style. When accessorized with a Rancharita or something from the martini bar, lunch or dinner here is an obvious wise choice, but don’t forget brunch, when there’s apple pie French toast, monkey bread, and mimosa carafes for $19.
5. The Porch Restaurant Knox/Henderson

Whether you’re cozying up on the climate-controlled patio or in a roomy indoor booth, this casual hangout still passes muster since opening nearly 18 years ago. Knowing what to keep constant and when to adapt is a critical survival strategy for Dallas restaurants, one that chef Coner Sergeant, knows well. For example, it’s understood that many want the same roasted tomato soup and buttermilk fried chicken salad each time they come in for classic cocktails and perennial patio feels. Others who like to switch it up will enjoy the newly added “trademarked onion” (yep, you know the one), or the Duroc pork chop with cabbage and apples, or an Oklahoma smash burger that might give competition to the hefty, much-loved Porch burger.

6. Claremont Midway Hollow
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.
7. Little Blue Bistro Bishop Arts District
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.
8. Smoke'N Ash BBQ Arlington
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.
9. Mirador Downtown
Since they were unveiled this summer, chef Travis Wyatt’s fish sauce-glazed donuts with Kaluga caviar and gold flake sprinkles have dominated news feeds and our dreams. They’re one reason to reserve a table for Saturday brunch in the sky at Forty Five Ten. Maybe add wagyu short rib and eggs or pumpkin pancakes with cinnamon butter, or opt for the Afternoon Tea service with three courses including foie gras macarons and caviar tartlets. For weekday indulgences, lunch on the loveliest radicchio, Castelfranco, in brown butter vinaigrette, or a fancy-but-solid burger with gribiche. We’re also impressed with roasted pumpkin pavlova, involving an unusual base of buttermilk ice cream that made us question why the two desserts aren’t combined more often.
10. Via Triozzi Lower Greenville

When the high in the weather app drops below scorching, it’s time to tuck into sweaters … and Italian grub. To prep for the season, chef-owner Leigh Hutchinson has added some new show stealers at her Lower Greenville Avenue standout. Take for instance the prosciutto di San Daniele with thin-sliced pears and fig mostarda, or the hat-shaped cappelletti, stuffed with house sausage and propped up on a pool of garlic-fennel broth. Of course, there’s always the lasagne al forno, so thick and perfect it looks photoshopped, even in real life. Round it off with any of the Super Tuscans, Barbarescos, or Brunello di Montalcinos available for fall drinking pleasures.

11. Sultan McKinney
When two software engineers from northern Iraq decide to leave their jobs to open a Mediterranean restaurant, it’s guaranteed to be drive-worthy. At Chra Ismael and Zandi Salih’s first restaurant, opened in the summer of 2023, diners can stick to Mediterranean usuals: kabobs, lamb chops, falafel, and such. Ismael also toils over rarer, more regional delicacies, such the national dish of Palestine, makluba, a meaty pilaf, served upside-down with eggplant, potatoes, and peppers. Quzi, an Iraqi lamb shank with almond- and raisin-studded rice, is another marvel. But the most exceptional showstoppers could be Ismael’s Kurdish dishes designed for celebrations, like the phyllo-baked rice dish, called parda plau, or the huge pots of rice-stuffed vegetables, known as dolma.
Find more info here.
12. Spiral Diner & Bakery – Fort Worth Near Southside
Who would’ve thought Cowtown, an old meatpacking district, would be the birthplace of a long-lasting vegan diner? Now in its 24th year, Amy McNutt’s Spiral Diner abides with plant-based comfort food, like chili mac, nachos, cheesesteaks, and burritos served up on grandma plates. A lengthy, 35-item gluten-free menu also impresses, along with hand-spun I-Scream shakes and sundaes. After a short hiatus, the bakery known for tall, double-decker cakes is back to taking pre-orders. It can even pull off vegan and gluten-free chocolate and vanilla cake. We’re not saying it’s all healthy, but it sure hits the spot when classic diner fare is calling.
13. LaLa’s Taqueria Prosper
Five months after selling his Tender Smokehouse empire, international barbecue consultant and lifelong pitmaster Dante Ramirez opened a taqueria in Prosper, north of Frisco, in September. With his wife and kids on the project, the El Paso-born chef is bringing the sprouting suburb a taste of Mexico’s street tacos. Try the LaLa’s-style, modeled after examples Ramirez found in Los Angeles, with a crispy crust of cheese encircling hand-pressed blue corn tortillas, filled with asada, chorizo, or al pastor, and topped with queso fresco and guacamole. Pro tip: Ask for the secret menu. (Hint: It involves tortas.)
Find more info here.
14. Bar Colette Uptown Dallas
The brothers Brandon and Henry Cohanims’ (Namo) knack for scouting talent can be savored at a contender for this year’s Best New Bar in the James Beard awards. Bar director Rubén Rolón, who comes from Miami with bartending trophies, is inventing cocktails with cacao-infused Scotch and roasted coconut-washed rum, while chef Kazuhito “Kaz” Mabuchi, who left another starred spot in Los Angeles to lead Namo, supplies the bar with sushi. Menu changes rolled out this year include crispy shrimp tempura, fresh oysters with Thai chile mignonette, and spicy salmon rolls — all with new sakes by-the-glass to raise in celebration of fresh talent.
15. Xaman Cafe Bishop Arts
We didn’t need Esquire’s Best Bars in America list to know that good things happen after 5 p.m. in the back of this dimly-lit Jefferson Boulevard coffee shop, where candles and smoldering copal set the mood. Discover an impressive collection of agave-based spirits that go beyond Tequila, like mezcal, sotol, and raicilla. Ask the informed bartenders to walk you through a flight, or try the Ayahuasca cocktail, which strikes a notable balance of sweet, cinnamon-y, and smoky notes. (Yeah, we’re curious about the name, too.) There’s food by chef Monica Lopez, too: light aguachiles, an ancestral seafood soup, and duck breast in pipian sauce.
16. Princi Italia- Dallas Preston Royal
In celebration of this bellwether neighborhood spot’s 13th birthday, founder Patrick Colombo recently gave a facelift to the Dallas location, including Italian chairs, an extended bar, and — in response to noise complaints — acoustical panels. The changes demonstrate Columbo’s decades of hospitality experience. (He originally moved from Washington, D.C. to Dallas in 1982 to manage the Mansion.) And he wasn’t wrong to note that well-to-do Preston-Forest residents might want a Tuscan farmhouse-like restaurant in their ‘hood. Fresh pastas and wood-fired pizzas are menu constants, while refreshes, like veal saltimbocca and Chianti-braised short rib, keep regulars coming back.
17. Shanghai Taste Plano
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
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. La Rue Doughnuts West Dallas
When a certain Portland-based doughnut chain came to town in 2023, how could they have known that Dallas already had a gourmet shop for which Homer Simpson-like connoisseurs would wait in line? Be patient for that magical, doughnut-to-mouth moment. Rowlett pastry chef Amy LaRue is serious when it comes to crafting her fluffy creations, in flavors like cookies-and-milk with Biscoff cookie mousse, Earl Grey with Rishi Tea-sourced ganache, and butterscotch with toffee crumbles we’d almost sell our soul for. Crullers, cookies, kolaches, and croissants also make getting out of bed a little easier each day.
Find more info here.
20. Written by the Seasons, The Quad Uptown

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.
