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    Bishop Arts News

    Chef debuts seasonal Dallas restaurant in old Bolsa space in Oak Cliff

    Teresa Gubbins
    Oct 5, 2020 | 9:58 am
    Encina
    Hey how about some beef tongue with confit potatoes and tomatoes.
    Photo by Kathy Tran

    The new restaurant going into the old Bolsa space in north Oak Cliff is ready to roll: Encina, which will be a warm neighborhood restaurant offering New American cuisine, will open on Friday, October 9 for happy hour and dinner Monday-Saturday, with Saturday/Sunday brunch service in coming weeks.

    Encina is from chef and co-owner Matt Balke, formerly of Bolsa, partnered with co-owner Corey McCombs, formerly front of house at Stephan Pyles, FT33, Flora Street, and Smoke.

    Located at 614 W. Davis St., the restaurant will serve what a release calls an uncomplicated yet adventurous menu with influences from Texas, California, and the South, with a focus on seasonality and fresh ingredients.

    The name Encina is Spanish for "Holm Oak," both a type of tree and also the original name of Balke’s hometown of Uvalde, Texas. Who knew.

    Food
    Balke says in the release that the menu will be focused on simplistic, familiar dishes that offer value; are well executed; consistent; and made with quality ingredients.

    Appetizers include:

    • A Bar N Beef Cheek Pastrami with Granbury pimento cheese and sweet tea gastrique
    • Devils on Horseback with dates, blue cheese, bacon and apple butter
    • Black Eyed Fritters with spicy carrot slaw and giardiniera aioli
    • Calamari Sugo with salami, sofrito, tomato and greens
    • Skillet Cornbread with Brazos Valley Feta and sorghum butter

    Entrees will evolve but for the opening menu will include:

    • Reuben Flatbread with pastrami, swiss, sauerkraut, and pickle dressing
    • Zucchini and Squash Salad with lemon, garlic, mint, pine nuts and feta
    • Ricotta Gnocchi with mushroom broth, braised leeks, roasted mushrooms, pecan gremolata and pecorino
    • Lamb and Pork Bratwurst served with green chili hominy grits and apple mustard
    • The Cliff Flatbread with goat cheese, provolone, confit tomatoes and arugula
    • Turkey Leg Confit with roasted carrot, celery root, brussels leaves, pomegranate and black pepper gastrique
    • 44 Farms NY Strip served with mascarpone grits and broccoli rabe

    Beverage
    McCombs' beverage program features cocktails that also use fresh, seasonal ingredients such as herbs and flowers from local farmers, with only four to five ingredients max. Intriguing.

    Cocktails include:

    • The Kincaid – Bombay Sapphire, Suze, St. Germain, tarragon and lemon
    • Mokonuts – El Silencio Mezcal, Velvet Falernum, coconut, lime and agave
    • The Flower Patch – strawberry and rosemary Grey Goose, grand poppy, lemon, and sparkling wine
    • Reading Wood Black – Woodford Rye, coffee infused martini and rossi bitter, and sweet vermouth
    • Cactus Jack – Cazadores Reposado, Aperol, sweet peppers, dill, lime, and Tajin salt

    Wines will be available by the glass or bottle with familiar labels as well as some unique finds. Bottles range from $60 to $150 but are very well priced and affordable.

    Design-wise, they've kept Bolsa's layout and structure but made down-to-earth updates that are supposed to feel like an extension of their home.

    Updates include improvements to the patio with expanded table and bar space as well as a raised roof, added walls, casement windows, and dining year-round.

    Balke is a 2007 graduate of the Culinary Institute of America, where he graduated as salutatorian, who apprenticed with Sharon Hage of York Street in Dallas, and worked at Bolsa, Bolsa Mercado, The Rustic, and Smoke.

    openingsoak-cliff
    news/restaurants-bars

    Pizza News

    Pizza by the slice restaurants are cropping up across Dallas

    Teresa Gubbins
    Mar 12, 2026 | 1:10 pm
    Slice pizza Poco Fiasco
    Poco Fiasco
    Poco Fiasco slice of pizza with cocktails

    Pizza by the slice is a revered tradition in New York and other intensely urban neighborhoods, but in spread-out Dallas-Fort Worth, it was never much of a thing — until recently.

    However, we are currently enjoying a pizza-by-the-slice trend, propelled by the arrival of two high-profile by-the-slice purveyors — Prince St. Pizza and Slice House by Tony Gemignani — who've both opened locations in the DFW area.

    Their presence among us has brought an awareness of the tradition of the slice (an awareness that has helped create a receptive audience for events like the recent slice pop-up by Dave’s Pizza Oven).

    Other factors helping the slice rise: the "permissible indulgence" trend where you go for something decadent but in a smaller portion, and the legacy of the food truck where you're just there to grab a bite.

    There's also the shift in pricing on pizza: Where DFW previously viewed pizza as a cheap item from a chain, diners now are more accepting of pizza as an artisanal product with a higher price. A slice lets them dabble without having to foot the $20-and-up price a whole pie commands.

    Here's a list of places doing pizza by the slice in DFW, whether it's the authentic street-food-style nosh or else as a lunch option with maybe a salad and drink on the side.

    Motor City Pizza
    Hip pizzeria in Lewisville serves breakfast pizzas by the slice on weekends only — every Saturday and Sunday morning. Their Detroit-style pizza deep-dish crust can handle meats, eggs, and sauces without flopping. The Florentine Benedict pizza with bacon, spinach, mushroom, tomato, cheese, eggs, and Hollandaise is the most popular. Other options include Western omelet pizza, smothered sausage lovers pizza, eggs Benedict pizza, and bacon dream pizza, for $8 to $12 per slice. (They also offer the same pizzas whole.)

    Poco Fiasco
    Harwood District restaurant does it authentic New York-style with a pizza window where you can buy the slice from a generous menu of 11 varieties including not just pepperoni or cheese, but also spinach-artichoke, Italian sausage, or chicken bacon ranch, and at a killer price: $4 per slice. They also have offer The Poco Fiasco Lunch Special, Monday-Friday from 11 am-3 pm with choice of any slice, half salad, and fountain drink for $9.

    Prince St. Pizza
    New York pizza concept known for Sicilian-style square pies opened its first restaurant in Texas at 2820 N. Henderson Ave., in the space previously occupied by the original location of Fireside Pies. Prince St. was founded in 2012 by brothers Frank and Dominic Morano, using family recipes for their Sicilian squares as well as Neapolitan-style pizza. (Sicilian-style pizza is a homey take on pizza, served as a square or rectangle, with a thick focaccia-like crust, light and fluffy on top and crisp on the bottom.) The pizzas are nearly all available by the slice, as well as a whole pie, at about $6 to $7 per slice. But these are big slices. Prince St. also adheres to the New York tradition of late-night hours: until 11 pm on weekdays and 3 am on Friday-Saturday.

    Serious Pizza
    Dallas-based chain came to embrace the slice not because it was trying to emulate New York but because its pizzas are big, big, big. That includes big whole pies as well as some seriously massive slices of pizza — so large that they’re advertised as a “huge slice” on the menu for $5.75, and can serve as a meal for most, doctored up with toppings such as shaved ribeye, chicken, Impossible sausage, spinach, bell pepper, and more. Their slice is a regular part of the menu at both locations in Dallas' Deep Ellum and Fort Worth.

    Slice House by Tony Gemignani
    Fast-casual pizza brand by world-famous pizzaiolo Tony Gemignani opened its first Texas location in Frisco at 5995 Preston Rd. #102, in a storefront that was once a grilled cheese place. The restaurant offers four styles of pizza: New York, Sicilian, Grandma, and Detroit style, always available by the slice or whole. The benefit here is the ability to mix-and-match — you can get a slice of each and compare, and then take a whole pie of your favorite home.

    Ozzi's
    Ultra-buzzy new pizzeria is located way out on the southwest side of Fort Worth — hardly an urban area — but its inspiration, as well as its level of quality, comes from the streets of New York. That's where chef-founder Asdren "Ozzi" Azemi became immersed in pizzeria culture while working for more than a decade at restaurants across New York. After moving back to his hometown of Fort Worth, he opened Ozzi's where he's doing amazing things with pizza dough and crust, well worth a pilgrimage for any pizza aficionado. The pizza's available whole as well as by the slice ($4.25-$5.75), in varieties such as pepperoni or sausage and pepper. You can go ahead and get a slice — but odds are high that you're going to end up with a whole pie, too.

    Yonx Pizza Bar & Co.
    Indie mini-chain is bringing that NYC vibe to the area north of Dallas with locations in Wylie and McKinney. Yonx does New York-style thin-crust pizza in a standard 14-inch, a massive 24-inch "Kong" size, and by the slice, which can be ordered as a lunch with a Caesar salad for $10. Varieties include pepperoni and slightly gourmet options with New York-inspired names, such as Balsamic on Bleeker St., with garlic sauce, mushrooms, shaved ribeye, mozzarella cheese, arugula, and balsamic drizzle; Bronx Bomb, with Sicilian marinara, mozzarella, meatballs, mushrooms, and ricotta cheese.

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    news/restaurants-bars
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