Gene Dunston Has Been Cooking Steaks in Dallas Since 1955, He’s Still Not Done

A coin flip brought Gene Dunston to Dallas. His mother had scraped together enough money working in a country café in rural Alabama to get the family out and into a city with better prospects. She put it to a coin: heads was Dallas, tails was Miami. Heads came up, the family packed everything they had, and a 15-year-old boy arrived in North Texas in 1946 with no particular plan.

He washed dishes at the Topper hamburger stand after school and valeted cars downtown on weekends. The valet job is where he met the man he still calls the Jukebox Man — a cash-heavy operator who rented jukeboxes to bars and restaurants across the city and had money to lend. Gene was a good enough kid that the man loaned him enough to open his first restaurant, a place called the Silver Castle on Oak Lawn Avenue. That led to the Wheel-in Drive-In on Harry Hines Boulevard in 1955. Ten years after that, Gene installed an open-flame mesquite pit in the middle of the dining room, renamed the place Dunston’s Steakhouse, and the rest is the kind of Dallas history that doesn’t get written up enough.

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Luna Roja Opened Downtown in April, the TacoKase is the Reason to Go

Chef Omar Larson spent years in some of the most demanding fine dining kitchens in Dallas — Kessaku, Monarch — before opening his own room in downtown. Luna Roja opened April 2 at 1525 Elm Street, steps from the AT&T Discovery District, and it is doing something nobody else in downtown Dallas is doing.

The concept is modern Mexican — regional flavors, shareable plates, 50-plus tequilas and mezcals, all-day service from breakfast through dinner. That’s the daily operation. But once a month, Larson pulls the chairs together and runs the TacoKase: a chef-led taco tasting built on the omakase model, a curated progression of tacos made with seasonal ingredients that changes completely each time. It’s the kind of thing that sounds gimmicky until you think about what omakase actually is — a chef deciding what you eat based on what’s best right now — and realize the taco is as logical a vehicle for that format as any piece of fish. The monthly rotation means no two dinners are the same, and regulars are already tracking the dates.

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La Lupita Just Opened in the Design District

If you’ve spent any time in Los Cabos, you already know La Lupita. The original is open-air — no roof, just Baja sky — and has been one of the most reliably packed restaurants in Cabo San Lucas for years, earning recognition from Condé Nast Traveler, GOOP, and Marie Claire along the way. The concept built its reputation on al pastor done right, a mezcal program taken seriously, and the kind of room energy that makes a two-hour dinner feel like thirty minutes. It opened its first United States location on May 23 at 1201 Oak Lawn Avenue in the Design District, and Dallas is the right city to receive it.

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Dragon Casa in North Dallas Is Serving a Cuisine Most Texans Don’t Know Exists

Kung Pao Taco

Chinese-Mexican fusion sounds like a joke until you understand where it comes from. In the late 1800s, Chinese laborers working on the railroads and in the mines of northern Mexico put down roots rather than returning home. Over generations they built communities — in Mexicali, in Sonora, in Baja California — and their food blended with the Mexican cooking around them in ways that produced something completely its own. Birria and dim sum. Chile heat and wok smoke. Tacos with fillings nobody in either tradition had tried before. It’s a genuine culinary history, and most people in Texas have never encountered it.

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Nobody Has Done More for Bishop Arts than Amy Cowan

Walk through Bishop Arts on any given weekend and you’ll land in something Amy Cowan and Jason Roberts built. That’s been true for almost twenty years. Between them they’ve opened five concepts within a few blocks of each other in North Oak Cliff, organized the neighborhood’s two biggest street festivals, and done more to put Bishop Arts on the map than any developer or marketing campaign ever managed.

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El Chingon Just Opened on Ross Avenue and Dallas Is Already Showing Up

The kitchen at El Chingon on Ross Avenue is a repurposed shipping container sitting on a patio. The tacos coming out of it are made with house-ground corn masa tortillas pressed to order. The margaritas are cold and strong. The music is loud. It opened May 1 at 3404 Ross Avenue in Old East Dallas, in a former wholesale florist shop a few blocks from the Arts District, and if you haven’t been yet, someone you know probably has.

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Mister Charles on Knox Street is a Theatrical Dining Experience

The building at 3219 Knox Street served people for more than a hundred years as the Highland Park Soda Fountain — milkshakes, grilled cheese, a landmark three generations of Park Cities families took for granted. It closed in 2018 when a 12-story office tower went up around it. The facade was preserved. Everything else changed.

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The Bread Club Is What Happens When a Michelin Team Takes Bread Seriously

The team behind Mamani earned a Michelin star 48 days after opening. That’s not a typo. Forty-eight days. Brothers Brandon and Henry Cohanim built Feels Like Home Hospitality with a talent-scouting instinct that has been almost unsettling in its accuracy — they recruited Paris-born chef Christophe De Lellis, formerly of Joël Robuchon in Las Vegas, to run Mamani’s kitchen, and bar director Rubén Rolón, whose cocktail program at Bar Colette was nominated for Best New Bar by the James Beard Foundation.

When people who know Dallas dining tasted the bread service at Mamani — a rotating selection of freshly baked loaves served with Rodolphe Le Meunier butter flown in from France — the question wasn’t whether a bakery was coming. It was when.

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