A Bar Guide to Dallas During the World Cup: Where to Drink in Every Neighborhood

Dallas has always been a drinking city. The bars here range from underground mezcalerías hidden behind bridal boutiques to century-old hotel lounges where the bartenders know the difference between a proper Negroni and a lazy one. With the World Cup arriving in June and hundreds of thousands of visitors coming from every country on earth, the question of where to drink becomes suddenly more interesting. Here is the answer, neighborhood by neighborhood. Remember, this is not a directory but rather our suggestions. We can add to this list.

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Asian Mint Has Been Feeding Dallas for 20 Years

Nikky Phinyawatana grew up between two cities and two ways of thinking about food. Bangkok, where she spent her early years, treated Thai cooking as something worth taking seriously — fresh ingredients, careful preparation, proper seasoning, the kind of attention you gave a thing you respected. Dallas, where she attended The Hockaday School as a boarding student and later made her permanent home, had plenty of Thai restaurants but not quite that. The food was there. The spirit of it was somewhere else.

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The Spring Grill Guide: Five Grills Worth Buying This Season at Every Price Point

There is a particular kind of optimism that arrives with the first genuinely warm weekend of the year. You look at the patio, you look at the grill, and one of two things happens: you feel good about what’s out there, or you start doing math. If you’re in the second group, this is for you.

Buying a grill is one of the more personal equipment decisions a home cook makes. It reflects how you like to spend your time, how patient you are, how much you want to be involved in the process, and how much you care about what the food tastes like versus how quickly it arrives on the plate. There is no wrong answer — but there are wrong grills for certain people, and this guide tries to match the right machine to the right cook. Five grills, five different personalities, prices from $239 to just under $2,000. One gas grill, because one is the right number.

The Entry Point: Weber Original Kettle 22″ Charcoal Grill
Around $239

George Stephen invented the kettle grill in 1952 when he cut a buoy in half at the metal fabrication shop where he worked in Chicago and welded legs onto the bottom. He was tired of cooking on open braziers where the wind killed the fire and ash blew into the food. The enclosed bowl design — a hemisphere on the bottom to hold the coals, a hemisphere on the top to trap heat and smoke — changed backyard cooking so completely that we stopped noticing it. Every grill made since has responded to or borrowed from that shape in some way.

The Weber Original Kettle is still the one. Not because nothing better exists — several things reviewed in this guide are better — but because for $239 it delivers more than it has any right to. The 363 square inches of cooking surface handles a whole chicken, a full rack of ribs, or twelve burgers without crowding. The two-zone fire setup — coals on one side, nothing on the other — gives you both a searing zone and an indirect cooking area, which means this is not just a burger grill. The vents on the bottom and the lid give you real temperature control if you’re willing to learn how to use them, which is part of the point. A kettle grill teaches you to cook with fire rather than insulating you from it. The skills you develop here transfer to every other live-fire situation you’ll encounter for the rest of your life.

Weber has been making this grill for over 70 years. The parts are interchangeable across decades of models. Replacement grates, ash catchers, and handles are available everywhere. This is a tool designed to outlast the people who buy it, and at $239, it is possibly the best value in outdoor cooking equipment made in this century.

The American Classic: Hasty Bake Legacy 131
Around $799

In 1948 — four years before George Stephen cut that buoy in half — Grant Hastings built the first Hasty Bake in a garage in Tulsa, Oklahoma. His idea was different from the kettle’s: instead of controlling temperature through airflow and vent adjustments, he put the firebox on a crank mechanism that raises and lowers it relative to the cooking grate. Move the coals up and you’re searing at 600 degrees. Move them down and you’re roasting at 350. Move them all the way down and close the ventless hood and you’re smoking at 225. Same fire, same session, three completely different cooking environments. He was solving the temperature control problem before the kettle grill existed.

The Hasty Bake Legacy 131 is still built in Tulsa, still uses the same crank-adjustable firebox design, and is still made by hand. Men’s Journal named it the best charcoal grill overall in 2026 after testing it against every significant competitor. AmazingRibs.com gave it their Platinum Medal. The 523 square inches of cooking surface is large enough for a full packer brisket. The V-shaped nickel-plated grates channel grease to a side tray rather than dripping it onto the coals. The side door gives you access to the firebox without lifting the lid and releasing all your heat. The 18-gauge powder-coated steel body weighs 163 pounds, which tells you something about the engineering priorities of a company that has been doing one thing for 77 years.

What makes the Hasty Bake worth the premium over the kettle is versatility within a single cook. You don’t need a separate smoker. You don’t need a separate searing station. You put your brisket on at low heat for eight hours, then crank it up and sear the exterior to finish. The skill ceiling here is high — this is a grill that rewards practice and attention — and the food it produces is better than what comes off any gas or pellet grill at this price or above. Five-year warranty on parts and workmanship. Made in the USA, and has been since before most of the competing brands existed.

The Ceramicist: Kamado Joe Classic III
Around $1,199

Ceramic kamado-style cookers trace their history back thousands of years to clay cooking vessels used in Asia and India. The Japanese mushikamado — a clay pot with a domed lid used for cooking rice — is the direct ancestor of the modern kamado grill. American GIs brought the design home after World War II. The thick ceramic walls retain heat so efficiently that a kamado grill preheated to 225 degrees will hold that temperature for eight to ten hours on a modest amount of charcoal without adjustment, which is what makes it exceptional for low-and-slow smoking.

The Kamado Joe Classic III is the version of this concept built for serious cooks who want a single outdoor cooker that does everything. The divide-and-conquer multi-level cooking system lets you run different temperature zones at different heights simultaneously — searing on one grate, roasting on another. The SlōRoller hyperbolic insert creates a cyclone of heat and smoke for low-and-slow cooking that is more even than a flat heat deflector. The AirLift hinge removes 96 percent of the dome’s weight so you can open it with one finger. The 18-inch ceramic cooking surface handles a full packer brisket, four racks of ribs, or a beer-can chicken with room around it.

The ceramic body is impervious to rust and doesn’t conduct heat — the exterior surface stays cool to the touch even when the interior is at 700 degrees, which means you can have this grill in a tight patio space without scorching the fence. The heat retention also means fuel efficiency: a bag of charcoal that would last one session on a kettle will run two or three sessions on a kamado. The Kamado Joe’s weak point is time-to-temperature — the thick ceramic walls take 15 to 20 minutes to fully heat up, which means this is not the grill for a Tuesday night impulse cook. Plan ahead, and the food it produces at any temperature will be among the best you’ve made.

The Gas Option: Weber Spirit II E-310
Around $599

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One gas grill appears in this guide. That’s intentional. Gas grills are not the path to the best food — they will never produce the smoke, the crust, or the Maillard reaction depth that a charcoal fire creates. What they produce is convenience: push a button, wait eight minutes, start cooking. For households with children, weeknight schedules, and no patience for fire management, that trade is entirely rational.

The Weber Spirit II E-310 is the best gas grill for most people in 2026, according to every major review that tested it — Good Housekeeping, Yahoo Shopping, multiple consumer labs. Three burners covering 529 square inches of cooking surface. The GS4 grilling system: stainless steel burners, flavorizer bars that vaporize drippings and add flavor, an infinity ignition that lights on the first push every time. The porcelain-enameled grates retain heat, clean up easily, and don’t rust. The iGrill 3 thermometer port lets you plug in a wireless meat thermometer. The frame is solid, the lid is heavy, and the grease management system is the cleanest in its class.

Weber’s Spirit line has been the standard recommendation for gas grills for over two decades because it builds to a standard rather than to a price. The E-310 will last 10 to 15 years with basic maintenance. The burners and grates are replaceable. If you are going to own one gas grill for the next decade, this is the one to buy.

The Pitmaster’s Tool: Yoder Smokers YS640S Pellet Grill
Around $1,895

Pellet grills are a polarizing subject among serious cooks. The argument against them is valid: compressed wood pellets fed automatically into a firepot by an auger controlled by a thermostat produce convection oven heat with light smoke flavor. They are not smokers in the traditional sense. The argument for them is also valid: they hold temperature with extraordinary precision, they require almost no attention during a long cook, and the best of them produce genuinely good smoked food — not competition-level brisket, but real, properly smoky, properly tender barbecue that most backyards could not otherwise produce.

The Yoder Smokers YS640S is where pellet grills stop being a compromise. Built in Hutchinson, Kansas, with 10-gauge steel construction — heavier than anything else in its category — the YS640S produces a smoke flavor profile noticeably closer to an offset smoker than a standard pellet grill. The 640 square inches of cooking surface runs across two levels. The Wi-Fi connectivity lets you monitor and adjust temperature remotely, which matters when you’re eight hours into a brisket cook at 3 a.m. The direct-flame access option — a sliding plate that exposes the fire pot — gives you a searing zone that most pellet grills can’t produce. The ash cleanout system is the easiest in the category.

Yoder builds their grills with the expectation that they’ll outlast most of the competition by decades. The warranty reflects that confidence. This is not a grill for someone who wants to set it and forget it and not think about fire. It is a grill for someone who wants to take pellet cooking seriously, produce consistently excellent results, and own something built well enough to hand down. At $1,895 it is the most expensive grill in this guide, and also the only one that will make your neighbors ask what you’re cooking from three houses away.

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Piattello Italian Kitchen Is Moving to Clearfork This Fall

Piattello Italian Kitchen is leaving Waterside after nearly ten years and moving about a mile down the road to The Shops at Clearfork this November.

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What Tex-Mex Actually Is — and Where to Find the Real Thing in Dallas

People from other parts of the country come to Texas and order Tex-Mex expecting Mexican food. That confusion is understandable and also wrong, and it matters because once you understand the difference you stop ordering the wrong things and start eating a lot better.

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Si Tapas on Allen Street Is the Most Spanish Thing in Dallas

Most Americans think tapas means appetizers. Small plates. Overpriced bites you order before the real food arrives. That misunderstanding has been doing a lot of damage to a lot of menus for a long time.

In Spain, tapas are not a course. They are a way of spending an evening. You go to a bar, you order a few things, you drink, you talk, you order a few more things. There is no entrée waiting at the end. There is no defined arc from start to finish. The meal is the conversation, and the food is what you eat while the conversation is happening. You might be at the same table for three hours. You might move to a different bar and start over. The food is almost incidental to the rhythm — and yet the food is also the whole point, because the best tapas are made with the same care as anything else in a serious kitchen, just without the ceremony.

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Where to Watch the FIFA World Cup 2026 in Dallas — Every Bar, Pub, Fan Zone, and Free Screen in North Texas

Dallas is hosting nine World Cup matches — more than any other city in the tournament. Most people watching those matches won’t be inside AT&T Stadium. Tickets are expensive, parking in Arlington is a commitment, and frankly some of the best World Cup viewing in North Texas happens nowhere near the stadium. The city has been building toward this summer for years, and the watch party scene that has developed around it is genuinely impressive. Here is every option, organized by neighborhood and type, so you can find your spot before June 12.

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Road Trip Food Ideas for Texans Who Love Local Restaurants

Have you ever started a Texas road trip with a full tank of gas but no real plan for what to eat along the way? 

That can make the drive feel longer than it needs to. Food is part of the fun, especially in Texas, where small towns, local restaurants, roadside diners, bakeries, smokehouses, and taco spots can turn a simple stop into a good memory.

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