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    DFW Restaurants Worth the Wait

    Where to eat in Dallas right now: 10 best restaurants worth the wait

    Teresa Gubbins
    Aug 4, 2014 | 1:23 pm

    For our August edition of Where to Eat Right Now, we took our inspiration from Yahoo's recent listicle of 10 U.S. restaurants worth waiting in long lines. Yahoo recognizes an essential truth: If people are lined up for something, it has to be good. Nothing succeeds like success.

    Best to ignore the possibility that lines may be a manipulative technique to woo customers who find something more enticing if they see that other people like it too. Or that lines might represent a restaurant that is poorly managed or designed. You don't see diners lined up in the parking lot of the Rosewood Mansion on Turtle Creek, because the Mansion has a civilized reservation system.

    Dallas-Fort Worth has a few places well-known for lines, like Houston's/Hillstone, Joe T. Garcia's in Fort Worth, and Bread Winners in Uptown during Sunday brunch. Make that any restaurant at Sunday brunch. If you like to wait in line, you'll definitely want to eat out at brunch.

    Lines can backfire. Some would say that no restaurant is worth waiting in line. This edition of Where to Eat is not for those people.

    Cane Rosso/Chop House Burgers
    Call it the #DDD effect. Both of these already popular restaurants are enjoying a boost (and new round of lines) since the airing of a new Texas-themed one-hour version of Diners, Drive-ins & Dives. Nothing makes the Neapolitan pizza of Deep Ellum's Cane Rosso or the bountiful burgers of Arlington's Chop House taste better than having to wait 30 minutes or more to enjoy them.

    Dalat
    East Dallas Vietnamese restaurant does well enough at lunch and dinner, but if it's a line you seek, you'll need to take a disco nap and catch your second wind. Dalat joins Velvet Taco in serving local night owls with food that helps soak up a night's worth of indulgence. Dalat does it with pho, which you can't otherwise find too many places late at night.

    Fireside Pies in Fort Worth
    Fort Worth's West 7th district has had some hits and misses, but the crowds have never abated at Fireside Pies since it opened in 2010. This is also true of its siblings on Henderson Avenue in Dallas and in Plano. But Fort Worth Fireside is a different beast, with a broader menu that goes beyond pizza, including house-made pastas, seasonal dishes and more. This fall, the restaurant will be "rebranded," with a new name: Thirteen Pies.

    Lockhart Smokehouse in Plano
    This is not to take away from the Lockhart Smokehouse in Bishop Arts. But the citizens of Plano have fewer places where they can line up, and the line at neighboring Urban Crust is too long. Lockhart also does barbecue, and barbecue fans seem to need help with the socialization skills that a line can provide. Lockhart makes it worth their while with specials such as Kreuz Market jalapeño sausage mac and cheese, and s'mores bread pudding.

    Monkey King Noodle
    Tiny stand on the edge of Deep Ellum features "legit" Chinese hand-pulled noodles, wontons, noodle soups, dumplings and great Chinese veggies. It's a half takeout, half patio restaurant, with a few tables in front. The line comes from the fact that it's so small and everything is done to order. But line-waiters get "entertainment," in the form of noodle-meister Mike Andrew Chen, whose art is visible through a broad glass window.

    Neighborhood Services
    Chef Nick Badovinus was one of the first restaurateurs in Dallas to understand the social implications of a line — namely, that it forces interaction. He and former partner Tristan Simon defined the model at The Porch, and Badovinus has carried the strategy to Neighborhood Services. The restaurant has a waiting area in the bar by the entrance, where you can see and be seen. It's waiting in line as a singles scene.

    Pecan Lodge
    Dallas' most famous barbecue joint developed a reputation for its long lines while still at the Dallas Farmers Market, where it had a tiny stall and limited seating. They have a lot more space in Deep Ellum — and yet the lines are still there. Despite all that space, there wasn't room for more cash registers, forcing everyone to queue up into a single line — unless you get a big order, and some people do just to gain access to the second register. But, hey, it's part of the fun. And the brisket's worth it, am I right?

    Ramen Hakata
    For the savvy young foodie of 2014, the only thing better than a line is ramen. If there is ramen, you must go. Even if that means Addison — home to the newest (and therefore hottest) ramen place in town. This mom-and-pop has been swamped since the day it opened, with its dozen varieties of ramen — from the traditional tonkotsu to garlic ramen, vegetable ramen, spicy miso ramen, cold ramen and more. If you want to wait in line for it, go soon.

    Scotch & Sausage
    Ladies, you may have too much common sense to wait in line for dinner, but you may find another reason at this new Oak Lawn restaurant. For now, this place featuring a dozen varieties of sausage and scotch is a man magnet. No guarantees on the caliber of man, but S&S is to men as any salad bar place is to women.

    Seasons 52
    This concept from Darden Restaurants, in which everything on the menu is 475 calories or less, opened in Plano way back in 2011, and another branch has since opened at NorthPark. But the fire has not dimmed at this original branch, proving that "healthy" restaurants are a win. Expect 45-minute waits on the weekend, but that's no problem: Its bar has a sexy atmosphere that's catnip for Plano's slightly older singles scene.

    ---

    Want more stories like these? Click the Where To Eat banner at the top to see the rest of the series.

    Monkey King's noodles are made onsite, before your eyes.

    Monkey King noodles
    Monkey King
    Monkey King's noodles are made onsite, before your eyes.
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    Back in Business

    Garland restaurant from Bobby Flay winner to reopen in downtown Dallas

    Luciana Gomez
    Feb 11, 2026 | 10:27 am
    Pangea sushi downtown Dallas
    Photo courtesy of Pangea
    Chef Kevin Ashade has found a new home for Pangea.

    Pangea, the popular Garland restaurant which closed in January 2025, has found a new home. A new iteration of the restaurant will open in downtown Dallas, at 1910 Pacific Ave., Ste. 1400, in a location that was once vegan restaurant Belse.

    According to restaurant personnel, it will open at 4 pm Friday, February 13.

    Pangea is from chef and restaurateur Kevin Ashade, a graduate of the Culinary Institute of America who won Food Network's Beat Bobby Flay in 2016 with his signature coq au vin, which will be served at the new restaurant.

    Ashade has a strong culinary background in Dallas, which includes Craft at the W Hotel, Nana at the Hilton Anatole, The Oceanaire Seafood Room, and his GourmEats catering business, before opening Pangea in January 2020.

    In this new chapter of Pangea, which is defined by Ashade as “elevated and globally inspired," the menu will expand past the original restaurant's upscale Southern eats to include new flavors and fusions from Italian, Nigerian, Japanese, French, and Caribbean cuisine.

    “The focus will be on a true definition of what Pangea is, with new dishes and a true cultural approach to food,” Ashade says.

    The menu will feature about half of the dishes from the original location, including the popular jerk roasted lamb shank, stuffed salmon, and crab cakes. It will expand to include more fish options, like a branzino plate, and more cuts of steak, in addition to the New York strip, filet, and ribeye that were served in the Garland location. Entrees will range from $35 to $50, with more casual options such as burgers and sandwiches available as well.

    The new restaurant will also feature a full raw and sushi bar, including an omakase option starting at $85. They will also be serving brunch on weekends, with options such as chicken and waffles, eggs Benedict, omelets, steak frites, pastry baskets, and a full coffee menu.

    Pangea downtown Dallas The menu is globally inspired. Photo courtesy of Pangea

    The 240-seat space is upscale with a lounge vibe, with warm lighting creating a sophisticated but welcoming look. It features a full bar, a private dining room, and an ample climate-controlled patio. It is centrally located, across the street from Pacific Plaza Park and on the same block as the Majestic Theatre.

    “This relocation means a better spot for us, an opportunity to be part of the business district. We want to create a vacation feel, a place that makes you feel like you are traveling in Mykonos, Tulum, or Ibiza,” Ashade says.

    Pangea will be open for dinner seven days a week, as well as offering lunch on Fridays and brunch on Saturdays and Sundays. The restaurant will stay open late — until 2 am — on weekends.

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