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    Top 100 Dining Trends

    10 Dallas restaurants in the top 100 that master the hottest dining trends

    Teresa Gubbins
    Nov 4, 2016 | 6:00 am

    Since the publication of our Top 100 — a comprehensive list of the 100 best restaurants in Dallas — we've been reflecting on why we love these restaurants and what makes them great.

    Part of what helps a restaurant earn Top 100 status, along with its excellence, is its sense of here and now. Staying up on trends is one of the reasons people like to eat out. Extra points go to restaurants offering ingredients and dishes that feel inventive and new.

    Here are 10 hot trends in dining, with 10 restaurants from our Top 100 leading the charge:

    Toast, Stock & Barrel
    Toast is a new trend that's still hatching in Dallas. So gird yourself, as there will be much toast in your future. Imagine, if you will, a piece of bread toasted and topped with mashed avocado. And there you have your toast. There are those who would say that toasts are merely a repackaged bruschetta. There are those who would say that the idea of toast being a trend at all is beyond silly. We will just say that Stock & Barrel was among the first to bring us toast, and has a pretty keen version with crushed avocado, Spanish chorizo, and balsamic gastrique.

    Caulifower, Resident Taqueria
    ​Once an ugly ducking, cauliflower has become one of the hottest, sexiest ingredients to feature on a restaurant menu. A lot of it has to do with the whole vegan thing. Cauliflower has a firm, almost meaty texture. Restaurants like 18th & Vine, Rapscallion, and Woodshed Smokehouse in Fort Worth can treat it like it's meat, whether that's smoking a whole head like it's a brisket, or grilling it and call it "steak." Lake Highlands' chef-driven Resident Taqueria spotlights cauliflower as the star of a taco that has become its most famous dish. The cauliflower is roasted until caramelized, paired with kale — trendy in its own right — sprinkled pumpkin seeds, and dressed with a lemon-epazote aioli.

    Fried chicken, Sissy's Southern Kitchen & Bar
    Fried chicken is hardly a new food group; just ask Babe's. But we are talking about elevated fried chicken. Fried chicken served with champagne, a la Max's Wine Dive. Fried chicken by chefs, à la Jeffery Hobbs at Slow Bone. Fried chicken that comes from special birds, à la Street's Fine Chicken. But the first in town to glam up fried chicken and transform it into a foodie pick was Lisa Garza at Sissy's Southern Kitchen, where it gets pressure-fried — pressure-cooked in oil — achieving a desirable result that's both tender and crisp.

    Beet salad, Cafe Momentum
    In the world of salads, we're on the tail end of a kale salad trend so dominant, you can even find it at Chick-fil-A. That clears the way for the comeback of one of the trendiest salads in foodie history: that '00-era classic, the beet salad. Beet salads became so popular that they began to symbolize a lack of creativity. But beets are back at restaurants such as Cafe Momentum where they're reunited with their old friend goat cheese, then primped with basil, olive oil, and pumpkin seeds, or at Stock + Barrel, where they're smoked and accompanied by creamy chevre, pickled shallots, black currants, and crispy garlic.

    Ramen, Ten Ramen
    Ramen has been simmering as a trend in Dallas, with fun new spots bubbling up across town, from Ramen Hakata in North Dallas to Tanoshii Ramen in Deep Ellum to Wabi House on Greenville Avenue, serving ramen and Japanese small plates. But the spot that feels most authentic is Ten Ramen, from Teiichi Sakurai, owner of Tei An restaurant at One Arts Plaza. The setup mimics spots in Japan, where you stand at the counter while you eat your soup, quick and easy. There are usually four to five ramen options, such as basic tonkotsu, veggie, and the popular spicy mazemen ramen, where you hold the broth.

    Bowls, HG Sply Co.
    For any restaurant with aspirations to be cool and hip, the menu must have a "bowls" category. It's the hottest trend in 2016. In the world of bowls, aka power bowls, you mix-and-match ingredients from categories such as grains, proteins, and vegetables. This might sound like a prototypical meal you'd get on a plate, but bowls are supposed to be healthier. That's surely the message conveyed by HG Sply Co., among the first in Dallas to offer bowls, with a broad menu of options ranging from sweet potato hash to quinoa to bacon.

    Lobster roll, 20 Feet Seafood Joint
    In Maine, lobster is tourist food. When there's some left over, you chop it up, toss it in mayonnaise, and stick it in a hot dog bun. It is not a dish of glory — until you leave New England, where it acquires an upscale, exotic tint. Dallas has been on a lobster roll kick for a couple of years, popular at reasonably priced spots such as East Hampton Sandwich Co. and TJ's Seafood, where it's presented as an affordable indulgence. It's a best-seller at 20 Feet Seafood Joint, the East Dallas seafood spot from chef Marc Cassel, where he solves the problem of getting the correct split-top bun by baking it in-house.

    Long dry-aged meat, Knife
    Letting food sit around before you eat it might seem counterintuitive to basic hygienic practices. But some steak spots around the country are pushing the envelope by aging meat for weeks and even months. This includes Knife, the steakhouse at Highland Dallas hotel, where an in-house meat locker ages rib-eyes and other cuts for 240 days or more. That's darn near a year — far beyond the 21- to 28-day industry standard found at classic steakhouses such as Pappas Bros. The process makes the beef taste almost gamey. It's edgy stuff — no surprise, it's chef John Tesar.

    Craft beer, Malai Kitchen
    The craft beer trend in Dallas-Fort Worth has been ablaze for five-plus years and shows no slack. Breweries keep coming. Bars trade out the old Bud-Miller taps for locally made beer. More restaurants put beer on the menu; some host dinners pairing courses with beer. Brewpubs like Braindead Brewing brew beer and have a chef-driven kitchen to match. Vietnamese-Thai restaurant Malai Kitchen takes the next step. It's a restaurant first that branched out into brewing, with a lineup that includes rice lager and IPA, and what fine beers they are.

    Cured meat tasting, Proof + Pantry
    The meat tasting is really just a subset of your standard charcuterie plate, which truthfully deserves its own spot on this list. Charcuterie is like kale; who isn't doing it these days? For the next generation of meating, look to the tasting, featuring an assortment of different meats drawn from the same category. Knife Dallas got the ball rolling with its tasting of bacon. One Arts Plaza restaurant Proof + Pantry picks up the baton with its tasting of hams. For $21, you get a slice of serrano, a slice of speck, some toasts, and pickled cauliflower. Precious? Yes. And so trendy.

    Ten Ramen is among the best in its field.

    Ramen bowl at Ten Ramen in Dallas
    Photo via Yelp
    Ten Ramen is among the best in its field.
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    Steamy shop

    New romance bookstore-cafe brews up lattes and love stories in Arlington

    Luciana Gomez
    Apr 21, 2026 | 1:45 pm
    Daydream
    Photo courtesy of Daydream
    It is love at first sip in this quaint coffee shop and bookstore.

    Like the setting of a Hallmark Channel rom-com, a new bookstore in downtown Arlington invites customers to sip, swoon, and stay awhile. Called Daydream, the shop specializes in romance books and features a cozy coffee shop nestled right inside the bookstore, located at 380 E. Front St., Suite 110, in the heart of downtown Arlington.

    The charming concept is from Alma Sardas, graduate from University of Texas at Arlington who, after a couple of years working in public relations agencies, decided to pursue her dream of owning a romance bookstore.

    As a longtime bookstore and coffee shop lover, Sardas explains, her idea for the shop came from wanting a space that felt like stepping into one of those stories.

    “I’ve always loved bookstores and coffee shops individually, but I didn’t see many spaces that fully leaned into a specific genre and created an immersive experience around it," she says. "That’s where the dream started - building something that felt intentional, cozy, and unique.”

    The book collection is entirely curated by Sardas and features a wide variety of subcategories within the romance genre, including cowboy, dark, fantasy and LGBTQ+ romance and romantic suspense. “There’s a little bit for everybody,” Sardas says.

    The young entrepreneur cites It Ends With Us by Colleen Hoover, A Court of Thorns and Roses by Sarah J. Maas, and Daydream by Hannah Grace (which inspired the name of her shop) as the romance novels that have shaped her love for the genre.

    “They all show different sides of romance: emotional, escapist, and fun,” she says.

    Daydream Daydream brings people together over their love of coffee and literature. Photo courtesy of Daydream.

    The inviting shop pairs the quiet charm of a library with the aroma of a coffee house, in a brightly lit space featuring a palette of cream, blush pink, and light wood tones. There are circular marble-top bistro tables and rounded swivel chairs for customers to enjoy their books and coffee. They also have a dog-friendly outdoor space with a few pink chairs and tables.

    Her offering aligns with the growing trend of younger generations that are craving real-life spaces, and opportunities to unplug, slow down and connect. “I think naturally younger people are going to start gravitating towards books again and the fun escapism that comes with it, rather than the never-ending vicious cycle of comparing themselves to their digital life”, Sardas says.

    Sardas, who is half Cuban and half Mexican, draws on her cultural heritage for both her deep-rooted love of coffee and the inspiration behind the menu she created.

    The menu includes classic drinks such as espresso, latte, and Americano, all served hot or iced, as well as tea - chai and matcha. They serve Cuban coffee, or Cafecito, a homage to her Cuban father.

    The shop has a couple of signature coffees, including a honey vanilla oat latte, and The Havanna, a dulce de leche latte, and they are working on a Mexican-inspired latte in honor of her mother’s traditions.

    Daydream The shop features a pink La Marzocco espresso machine.Photo courtesy of Daydream

    For pastries, they have partnered with Richardson-based La Casita Bakeshop, a thriving women-owned business, to serve an assortment of croissants, cinnamon rolls, cookies and muffins.

    They use beans from Alma Coffee (same name as hers though purely coincidental), a veteran and women-owned company that works closely with farmers in Honduras and roasts in Georgia.

    Daydream's hours are 9 am-7 pm Tuesday-Saturday 10 am-5 pm Sunday; closed Monday.

    Sardas says that starting in May, she plans to host regular events such as themed book clubs that tie into popular tropes and books, like contemporary, dark romance, and queer romance. There are also book discussions, meet-and-greets, author signings, midnight release parties, and themed café nights in the works.

    They are also collaborating with local creatives on activities like candle-making workshops and cake decorating workshops to make the space feel more interactive.

    “It truly is a dream,” Sardas says. “We are excited to be open and ready to be a stop for the Arlington community and beyond.”

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