Get Your Staycation on at ZaZa Dallas

The case for a staycation is simple: you live twenty minutes from one of the best boutique hotels in Texas, and you’ve never actually stayed there. Hotel ZaZa has been on the Uptown Dallas skyline at 2332 Leonard Street since 2000, pulling in a two-time Michelin Key recognition for 2024 and 2025, and it remains the most personality-forward hotel in the city. The rooms alone justify the trip. Everything else is a bonus.

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The Hot Pot at Yoshi Shabu Shabu in Plano Has Been Perfected Over 140 Years

The Itoyama family has been making shabu shabu in Osaka for five generations. That is approximately 140 years of one family doing one thing, refining the same dipping sauces, sourcing the same quality of meat, and understanding something that most restaurants never figure out: that the cook at the table should be the guest, not the chef. When the family brought that tradition to DFW — first to Richardson in 2014, then to Plano in 2018 — they introduced a style of dining that most of this city had never encountered. A decade later, Yoshi Shabu Shabu is the standard by which every hot pot experience in North Texas gets measured.

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The Mansion on Turtle Creek: A History of the Most Important Restaurant in Dallas

In 1908, cotton magnate Sheppard W. King and his wife Bertha Wilcox went to Europe and came home with a vision. They wanted a house unlike anything in Dallas — something palatial, something European, something that would stop people cold. They traveled with their architect, collecting antique pieces and authentic fixtures from across the continent. When they built on Turtle Creek Boulevard, they built accordingly.

The result was a Mission Revival manor that became the social epicenter of Dallas almost immediately. President Franklin Roosevelt dined there. Tennessee Williams visited. The house was, as they say in that world, important.

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Kalachandji’s on Gurley Avenue Has Been Feeding Dallas Since 1982

The address is on Gurley Avenue in East Dallas, a quiet residential street that gives no indication of what’s at the end of it. You pull into a parking lot, walk through a gate, and find yourself on the grounds of the Radha Kalachandji Temple — Mughal-influenced architecture, a garden courtyard shaded by a large tree, peacocks that have been known to wander through, and the smell of incense and something cooking. The restaurant is through the hall, past the temple entrance. Kalachandji’s has been operating here since 1982, making it the longest-serving vegetarian restaurant in Dallas by a significant margin.

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The Most Ordered Plate in Dallas Has a Hundred-Year History Worth Knowing

At some point in the last hundred years, someone decided that two enchiladas, a crispy taco, a scoop of rice, and a ladle of refried beans constituted a complete meal, put it on a plate, and charged you a fixed price for the whole thing. Half the country has been ordering that plate ever since without once asking where it came from. The answer is Texas, and the story is more interesting than the plate.

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Where to Drink in Dallas This Weekend

Bar Colette

Dallas has always had good bars. What it has right now is something more specific — a cocktail scene that’s earning national attention, with a handful of rooms that are genuinely doing something interesting. Whether you’re looking for a statement night out, a well-made drink at a reasonable price, or a cold pint in a room with character, here’s where to go this weekend.

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The Brunch at Winsome Prime in Trinity Groves

Winsome Prime landed at 331 Singleton Boulevard in spring 2025 and immediately became the best reason to cross the Margaret Hunt Hill Bridge on a weekend. The Black-owned Houston import opened at 331 Singleton Boulevard in spring 2025, and the brunch it runs Saturday and Sunday from 11am to 4pm is the most interesting weekend meal on that side of the Margaret Hunt Hill Bridge.

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A Spoonful of Everywhere is Abaraham Salum’s New Book, Here’s Why You Need This

Abraham Salum has been cooking in Dallas for more than twenty years, and the room at Salum Restaurant on Cole Avenue still fills up the way it did when he opened in 2005. That kind of staying power doesn’t happen by accident. It happens because the food is consistently excellent, the menu changes every single month — never repeated in two decades — and the chef himself is the kind of person who makes a dining room feel like somewhere you belong.

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