
Dallas doesn’t have a great many French restaurants, which is part of what makes the ones it has worth paying attention to. When a French kitchen works in this city, it works because someone decided that the cuisine was worth doing correctly rather than approximately. The following restaurants have all made that decision and kept it.
19009 Preston Road, Suite 200 | Tue–Sat 11:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. | Closed Sunday and Monday | Phone: (972) 248-1911

Pascal Cayet’s first job in food was at the Tour d’Argent in Paris — a restaurant overlooking Notre Dame that has been in operation since 1582, which is the kind of opening act that shapes everything that comes after. He came to Dallas in the 1980s, opened Chez Gerard on McKinney Avenue, turned it into one of Stanley Marcus’s favorite restaurants, and eventually moved north to Preston Road, where Lavendou has been his second chapter since 1996. Thirty years of the same hospitality, the same sourcing philosophy, and the same conviction that Provençal cooking — the lighter, herb-forward, olive-oil-driven cuisine of southern France — is what this city should have access to.
The room does what a good French bistro room should do. Blue and yellow color scheme, warm lighting, Pierre Deux fabrics, a covered patio for the right evening. You feel transported without being patronized. The menu begins where Provence begins — with the sea and the garden. Mussels in white wine cream sauce, French onion soup gratinéed properly under the broiler, foie gras, escargots Bourguignonne swimming in enough garlic and parsley butter to make a person reconsider their other dining plans. The main courses lean toward the classics: duck confit with a crisped skin and a yielding leg that has been cooking for hours, rack of lamb, fish preparations that change with the season. The soufflés — chocolate, raspberry, Grand Marnier — come out tall and trembling and are brought to the table immediately for a reason. Pascal pours the warm chocolate himself. Order at least one. We reviewed it here.
18111 Preston Road, Suite 120 | Mon–Wed 5 to 9 p.m., Thu–Fri 11 a.m. to 9 p.m., Sat 5 to 9 p.m. | Closed Sunday | Phone: (214) 267-5700

Chef Jean-Marie Cadot is a Parisian by birth and by training. His family has been in the restaurant, hotel, and bakery business since the 1700s — he began his apprenticeship at his father’s bakery at the age of eight. He went on to the Ferrandi Cooking School and the Grands Moulins de Paris, then apprenticed at Lasserre, a three-Michelin-starred Paris institution. He worked at two more Michelin-starred restaurants before coming to New York and then Dallas. That is the résumé of a man who takes the fundamentals seriously, and the kitchen at Cadot reflects it.
The room is divided into four adjoining spaces, each intimate enough for conversation, collectively large enough for a private event. White tablecloths, warm lighting, the kind of quiet that most Dallas restaurants have given up on. Live entertainment runs Monday through Friday from 5 to 7 p.m. — piano, usually — which deepens the impression that you have walked into a Parisian evening rather than a North Dallas strip mall, which is technically what surrounds you. The escargot in Pernod-spiked garlic sauce is the opener that announces the kitchen’s priorities. The foie gras with poached pears is the preparation that takes it further.
The butterflied trout with pistachio and mushroom white wine sauce is the dish that regulars return to specifically. The mussels in herb-infused white wine are the kind of moules that makes you wonder why you ever ordered them anywhere else. The fondant au chocolat — the molten chocolate cake, properly made with a liquid center and enough bitter cocoa to earn the sweetness — and the crème brûlée are the dessert reasons to stay at the table. The pommes frites are, by some accounts, the best in Dallas. We covered it here.
3230 Knox Street, Suite 140 | Mon–Wed 11 a.m. to 9 p.m., Thu 11 a.m. to 10 p.m., Fri 11 a.m. to 11 p.m., Sat 9:30 a.m. to 11 p.m., Sun 9:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. | Phone: (469) 250-4007

Knox Bistro is the Michelin-recognized member of the Travis Street Hospitality family — the group that Stephan Courseau and Daniele Garcia built on Knox-Henderson and that now includes Le Bilboquet, Georgie, and Frenchie. The approach here is what the French call cuisine de terroir — food rooted in a place, in this case the intersection of the Loire Valley sensibility that chef-partner Bruno Davaillon carries with him and the Knox Street neighborhood that the room has been serving since 2017. The seasonal menu changes with what’s available and what the kitchen is thinking about, which is how it should work.
Walk in and the room registers as comfortable before anything else — natural light, the Katy Trail just outside, a patio that earns its position on Knox Street. Breakfast brings fresh-baked pastries and proper café au lait. At lunch and dinner the kitchen opens up: smoked fish dip with trout roe, beef carpaccio fragrant with black truffle aioli, moules marinières with enough broth to require bread, a whole branzino in garlicky à la Provençale sauce that arrives looking exactly like the kind of fish preparation that reminds you why the French built a cuisine around olive oil and fresh herbs.
The steak frites are the benchmark dish — the kind of preparation that separates a kitchen that understands the assignment from one that is merely executing it. The soufflés are the reason to save room: the soufflé au fromage is the savory anchor, the chocolate dessert soufflé is, as one reviewer put it, borderline religious. We reviewed it here.
4514 Travis Street, Suite 124 | Mon 11 a.m. to 9 p.m., Tue–Thu 11 a.m. to 10 p.m., Fri 11 a.m. to 11 p.m., Sat 10:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. and 5 to 11 p.m., Sun 10:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. and 5 to 9 p.m. | Phone: (469) 730-2937

The original Le Bilboquet opened on the Upper East Side of Manhattan in 1986 and became one of New York’s most enduring French bistros on the strength of one idea: honest, classically prepared French food in a room that felt like Paris without trying too hard to feel like Paris. When Stephan Courseau brought it to Dallas in 2013, he brought Chef Momo Sow with him — the same chef from the New York kitchen — and the same philosophy intact. What arrived on Travis Street was not a Dallas interpretation of a New York French bistro. It was the thing itself, transplanted.
The room is the first argument. Black-and-white checkered floors, white tablecloths, candles, warm light, a garden room in the back that transports you somewhere between a Paris courtyard and a New Orleans patio. The crowd that fills it is Knox-Henderson at its most dressed-up, and the noise level on a Friday night is the productive kind — tables in full conversation, the room doing what it was built to do. The kitchen opens with foie gras terrine with fig jam and toasted brioche — the preparation that makes every other foie gras treatment feel like an approximation — and salmon tartare that is fresh and citrus-bright with a texture that stays coherent rather than dissolving. The crab and avocado salad is the lighter opener and the one that converts people who think they don’t want a salad at a bistro. The Cajun chicken is the dish that surprises — the New York original put it on the menu as a nod to the cultural mix of the city, and it has stayed because it’s genuinely good: crispy-skinned, spiced properly, nothing timid about it.
The filet au poivre with its peppercorn cream sauce is the steakhouse argument made in French — a preparation that requires a properly sourced cut and a sauce that doesn’t break, both of which this kitchen manages. The lobster risotto, the duck confit, and the apple tarte tatin for dessert round out a menu that doesn’t have a weak section. The wine list is French and American and well-considered throughout. We reviewed it here.
87 Highland Park Village | Mon–Wed 11 a.m. to 10 p.m., Thu–Fri 11 a.m. to 11 p.m., Sat 9 a.m. to 11 p.m., Sun 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. | Phone: (214) 413-3100

Highland Park Village is the oldest shopping center in the United States — built in 1931, operating continuously since, anchored by the same luxury retail mix that has defined it for decades. Bistro 31 sits inside it and takes the address seriously. The room is what a European bistro in a high-design setting should be: elegant without strain, warm without casualness, the kind of place that makes lunch feel like an event and dinner feel like a celebration without requiring either to be formal. The terrace overlooking the Village is one of the better outdoor dining situations in Dallas — Versailles it isn’t, but it earns its own comparison on a good afternoon.
The menu is French-European and broad enough to accommodate a table with different appetites. The escargot — six snails in the shell, classic garlic-parsley-butter preparation — is the dish that separates the kitchen’s French sensibility from its American surroundings. The moules marinières arrive in a pot big enough to share or consume alone, with enough white wine and shallot broth at the bottom to demand the accompanying bread. The duck leg confit with its crisp skin and fork-tender meat is the kind of preparation that takes the better part of a day and tastes like it. The steak frites are the benchmark test for any bistro kitchen and this one passes — the cut is correct, the frites are thin and salted properly, the sauce is not an afterthought.
The soufflé au fromage makes the case, again, that cheese cooked inside a soufflé is one of the more civilized things a kitchen can do. Weekend brunch from 9 a.m. Saturday and Sunday draws a crowd that the Village’s demographics would predict and that the kitchen handles without showing strain. We reviewed it here.
Also: Rise No. 1

Rise is the outlier on this list in the best possible way. Where the other restaurants are bistros and bouchons built around the breadth of French cooking, Rise dedicates most of its menu to a single technique: the soufflé. Savory and sweet, across twenty options that change with the season. The four cheese soufflé with Gruyère, Emmental, Parmesan, and cheddar is the crowd pleaser. The wild mushroom soufflé with thyme is the one for the serious table. The escargot soufflé with pesto is the preparation that makes you reconsider what a soufflé is even capable of. The Grand Marnier and chocolate soufflés are the dessert reason.
The Marshmallow Soup — a bruleed chèvre floating in a rich tomato-carrot bisque — is the dish that gets ordered at every table and remembered at every subsequent visit. Rise is not trying to be a full French bistro. It is trying to do one thing better than anyone else in the city. It succeeds. Multiple DFW locations. We reviewed it here.
















