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    Tastemaker Best Bartenders

    Tastemaker Best Bartender finalists shake up Dallas cocktail scene with creativity

    Teresa Gubbins
    Apr 25, 2014 | 3:38 pm

    For our first CultureMap Dallas Tastemaker Awards, we're honoring all the major players in the restaurant world. We've gone sweet on the city's top pastry chefs, suds'ed it up with the best breweries and toasted the best bars. We've bowed to the top chefs and highlighted the rising stars.

    We're also inviting readers to help choose the best new restaurant. All of the winners will be revealed at our big event on May 6.

    For this category, we visit the best bartenders. We love how they take the act of mixing drinks and turn it into an art form. We appreciate their use of fresh ingredients, their knowledge of history and their prolific imagination. Most of all, we love the wonderful cocktails they make us.

    Eddie Campbell, mixologist at Abacus

    Favorite spirit: Small-batch bourbons, especially those from the Sazerac portfolio.
    Favorite drink: Any of the stirred brown bourbon cocktails, like the old fashioned – not only because I think bourbon is the best spirit, but also because they are the best examples of classic American cocktail history. In fact, the old fashioned was right there at the very beginning of the origin of cocktails; it's one of the first perfected cocktails. It's the best use of a smooth but strong bourbon.
    Proudest moment: I think rebounding from my experience with the Chesterfield, to open the Parliament. That was a personal challenge, to let go of all that, in an effort to create something better.

    Michael Martensen, bar mentor

    Favorite spirit: What time of day is it? But I'll go with mezcal. I go down to Mexico once a year and source out mezcals. I have a friend who imports mezcal, he draws out a map and we go cruise. They're all different. Everything is literally passed down from generation to generation; some date back to the 1300s. There's 200-plus types of agave plants, growing at different elevations. It's like wine and terroir.
    Favorite cocktail: Vermouth on the rocks with a twist of orange is my drink, traditionally.
    Proudest moment: I think the idea of mentorship. Of trying to sift through the BS of Dallas restaurateurs and cultivating talent. I'm proud to have had a positive influence on the culture here, dating back to the opening of Cedars Social. We all roll together, we are a family.

    Brian McCullough, co-founder and bar man at Standard Pour

    Favorite spirit: I'm a big bourbon guy.
    Favorite drink: Drinking or imbibing or consuming cocktails is a social gathering, even if it's one person at your house. You drink for the occasion. But I tend to drink with the seasons. In the winter, I drink Irish coffees a lot. I love the hot drinks, like wassail. I love blended drinks. I love the tiki drinks. I’m not afraid of the blender at all.
    Proudest moment: Of all the things, it's the amount of charity work that myself and the people I've worked with have done. This whole business is a lot of fun and we entertain people. But the fact that you can use this business to benefit other people is more rewarding than anything I’ve ever done.

    Rocco Milano, beverage director at Barter

    Favorite spirit: That's a little like asking me to pick my favorite day of the week, but gin has been what I've been into lately. It's because of the incredible complexity it has and the flavor it delivers. It is very difficult to make good gin. Everyone knows Tanqueray, Sapphire, Beefeater, but there's so much more going on.
    Favorite drink: I generally like things that are simple: just any well-made spirit with a little bit of lime juice and sugar to cut it. If it's vodka, we're talking gimlet. If it's rum, we're talking daiquiri. Three ingredients that you can make in a heartbeat, but when it's balanced and flavorful, it's a spectacular drink.
    Proudest moment: On the day in and day out, it's when someone thinks one way and you're able to make them think something different. Someone who's had a bad experience with a spirit when they were 18 and you're able to reintroduce them to it. I had a customer recently say, "You just served me everything I never knew I always wanted." You couldn't pay me a higher compliment.

    Gabe Sanchez, owner-bartender at Black Swan

    Favorite spirit: What I'm liking lately is this Mount Gay Black Barrel Rum from Barbados. They're one of the original rum makers; they've been around since 1703. They're putting it in these bottles that are exactly like what they had in early 1700s. It's rad. And because of the way it's aged, even people who don't like rum are liking it.
    Favorite drink: I like to make a Vieux Carre; it's a classic drink from the 1930s. But I've been doing it with this rum I like, and it makes it completely different.
    Proudest moment: To see three couples get married who met [at Black Swan] on their first date. At the end of the day, you can take whatever you have behind the bar and put it in a glass and it doesn't matter. It's not just selling booze. It's about the memories. When people remember their experience, it's the person behind the bar who makes sure it was a good memory.

    Omar Yefoon, bartender consultant

    Favorite spirit: Rum. It's one of the most diverse spirits out there. My favorites come from the Caribbean. Every island makes a different kind, with a different flavor, consistency or range from light to dark, all based on the conditions of the island.
    Favorite drink: It changes all the time. The last one I ordered was a daiquiri. I was wanting to get out of the house, so I ran down to the Libertine to sit on patio for a bit, and it seemed like the perfect day for a daiquiri. What I've been making lately is martinis. Most people who order martinis want a super-dirty vodka martini, just vodka and olives, which is a pity because they're not embracing the cocktail for what it is. I try to do it in the classic way, with a lot of vermouth, a lot of gin, a dash of orange bitters and no olive. It’s a delicious cocktail.
    Proudest moment: I'm excited about an ad I'm in, in this month's Wine Spectator for Stoli. I participated in a competition — first in Dallas, then New Orleans — and won. Part of the prize was this ad campaign. It's a two-page spread that shows a bunch of cocktails that I created. I'm thinking of getting it framed.

    ---

    Come celebrate the Tastemakers with us on Tuesday, May 6, at Seven for Parties in the Dallas Design District. To learn more about the event, including information about our beneficiaries, judges, participating restaurants and ticket sales, visit our Tastemakers website.

    Gabe Sanchez

    Black Swan owner Gabe Sanchez
    Photo by Hoyoung Lee
    Gabe Sanchez
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    Closure News

    The original Dick's Last Resort in Dallas closes after 40 years

    Teresa Gubbins
    Dec 2, 2025 | 5:49 pm
    Dick's Last Resort
    Dick's Last Resort
    Dick's Last Resort

    A venerable destination in the downtown Dallas area has closed: Dick's Last Resort, the notoriously saucy restaurant and bar at 2211 Lamar St., has closed permanently, after 40 years.

    According to a representative from the Nashville-based chain, the final day for the Dallas location was November 30.

    "Business at that location had been declining, and they were facing an increase in rent, so they made a decision to close," the representative said.

    Dick's Last Resort was founded right here in Dallas in 1985 as a winking, impudent good-time spot with good bar food and cold beer, at a time when leg warmers and mullets were the rage.

    The concept was hatched by bon vivant "Buffalo George" Toomer and Richard "Dick" Chase, centered on a saga about a bad boy named Dick whose big-league plans had failed and who pivoted to open a laid-back bar full of attitude and dick jokes. The restaurant featured gruff staffers and a Southern-style menu in a rowdy roadhouse environment.

    It became a huge success, with customers coming eagerly to be insulted, get pelted with napkins and straws, and wear paper hats with crude comments and insults written in a sharpie such as "I've nailed more wood than HGTV." That atmosphere made it a popular destination for bachelorette parties and other group events, and it was a big tourist draw at its then-location in the West End. (It relocated to its current location close to American Airlines Center in 2005.)

    Although the food took a backseat to the atmosphere, the menu — written on the wall — featured ribs, chicken, wings, and burgers, served casually in paper and buckets. In its heyday and for many years, it remained lodged on the TABC Top 10 list for beer sales in Dallas.

    Chase was ousted for embezzling by the financial backers, who went on to grow the concept into a national chain, with locations in Boston, Chicago, and London. Those are now closed, but there are currently a dozen Dick's across the southeast in Florida, South Carolina, Tennessee, as well as Las Vegas and a longtime location in San Antonio on the Riverwalk.

    Dallas restaurateur Mike McRae, who currently owns restaurants such as Dodie's Cajun Diner in Rockwall, Stan's Blue Note, and McRae's Bistro in East Dallas, worked for Dick's for 23 years and owned the Dallas location for 12 years.

    "I was hired as their general manager 18 months after it opened," McRae says. "Richard Chase was kind of a hothead. He would fire people on the drop of a pin. We had a pink plastic flamingo with a light inside behind the bar, and he was adamant that the light be on all the time. He once fired a GM because the light was off."

    Dick's was owned by Steven Schiff, a Dallas entrepreneur who was in real estate and oil, but had no experience in the restaurant industry.

    "Steve talked to Norman Brinker and said, 'I've got this place but I don't want to be in the restaurant business — how do I sell this?'" McRae says. "Norman said, 'You need to open two more locations in different cities.' So we opened the location in San Antonio and a third in downtown Chicago. Both were wildly successful — way more than Dallas. These places were netting over $1 million in yearly profits, which was a lot of money back then. We opened one in London, Boston, San Diego, Myrtle Beach, they were in major cities all over the U.S."

    McRae eventually became director of operations and they kept it running until 2009 when they sold the company to its current ownership group based in Nashville. McRae bought the Dallas location in 2010, later joined by his partner Gabe Nicolella; they owned it for 12 years before selling it back to the corporate owners in 2021.

    "We did some crazy things in those days, like creating a fake restroom with a pair of tennis shoes visible and a tape recording of farting sounds," McRae says. "We only hired people who had been class clowns, who couldn't get jobs anywhere else. We served food in buckets and the placemats were torn-off butcher paper — things you couldn't get away with now."

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