Come for the Lobster Roll, Stay for Everything Else: A Nantucket Guide

There is a moment, usually right after the ferry rounds Brant Point and the harbor comes into full view, when Nantucket stops looking like a place you read about and starts looking real. The old gray-shingled buildings. The white clapboard. A lighthouse so modest it seems almost shy. You understand immediately why people come back every summer for thirty years running and can never quite explain why.

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This Is the Italian White Wine You’ve Been Missing

Most people have written off Soave entirely. That’s understandable. For decades the name meant cheap, thin Italian white wine — the kind of thing that ends up in a carafe at a red-checkered-tablecloth restaurant without anyone asking for it by name. A lot of Soave still is that. But the category has a ceiling most drinkers have never seen, and the 2023 Pieropan La Rocca is about as close to that ceiling as it gets.

The Pieropan family has been making wine in Soave since 1890. The fourth generation runs things now, and their La Rocca bottling — named for the single five-hectare vineyard it comes from on the slopes of Monte Rocchetta — has been one of the benchmarks of Italian white wine since its first release in 1978. The vineyard is farmed organically, the soils are limestone-rich clay, and the grape is 100 percent Garganega.

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Buy White Borneo Kratom Online: A Simple Guide for First-Time Buyers In 2026

Buying White Borneo Kratom online for the first time can seem easy at first; you can simply choose the product, add it to your cart, and wait for the delivery. But once you start comparing websites, the process gets more complicated. Some product pages may look similar, while others may have something different to offer. 

This makes the overall process tiring and confusing! Therefore, it is important to slow down and verify each detail before you buy White Borneo Kratom online. This guide might help you choose the right White Borneo product and shop online wisely. 

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Fly with me on a Journey of Burleson’s Honey

By Chef Annie Greenslade

Surrounded by Texas wildflowers on a crisp Texas spring morning with the steady hum of thousands of bees beginning their intensive work, Burleson’s Honey delivered something far more immersive than a standard tasting event. This was a firsthand look into one of Texas’ most enduring agricultural legacies — and it involved stepping directly into the world of the hive.

Chef Mallory Atkins, of the beloved “Farm to Belly,” and I suited up in full beekeeping gear before approaching active hives buzzing with life. There is something simultaneously thrilling and humbling about holding a frame directly from inside a hive, completely covered with live bees still working. What initially feels chaotic quickly reveals itself to be astonishingly organized.

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Dinner, Brunch, and Everything In Between at Encina

Matt Balke grew up in Uvalde, a small ranching town near San Antonio where the Spanish name for the place was once Encina — holm oak. He left for Texas Tech, then changed course and enrolled at the Culinary Institute of America, graduating salutatorian in 2007. None of that is what shaped him most. That came later, working under James Beard Award winner Sharon Hage at York Street in Dallas — the woman Balke credits as his real culinary education. After York Street, his path ran through Bolsa, The Rustic, SMOKE, and back to Bolsa as executive chef until its closure in early 2020.

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Meridian Launches “Meridian’s Chef Collective,” a New Dining Series 

Meridian has been on a quiet roll since reopening at The Village Dallas last fall under executive chef Eduardo Osorio, and now the restaurant is doing something genuinely interesting with the momentum. Starting this month, Meridian is launching the Chef Collective, an ongoing dinner series built around the relationships Osorio has curried in the Dallas dining scene over the past few years. One-night-only events, different collaborators each time, no two dinners the same.

It’s a smart move. Osorio came up through serious kitchens — Catch Hospitality, the 50 Eggs group, Yardbird — and he’s spent enough time in Dallas now to have a real network. This series is the payoff on that. Not a marketing exercise dressed up as a dinner. The chefs on this list are people he actually cooks with, eats with, respects.

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The Best Breakfast Burritos & Tacos in Dallas

Austin gets the credit. It always does. The breakfast taco conversation in Texas starts and ends there, and if you want to argue about it you’ll lose, because Juan in a Million has been in East Austin since 1980 and the Don Juan — eggs, potato, bacon, cheese, refried beans, wrapped in a flour tortilla the size of your forearm — is legitimately one of the great morning meals in the state. Veracruz All Natural built an empire out of a food truck. The whole city treats breakfast as a competitive sport and it shows.

But Dallas has been doing its own thing quietly for years, and the breakfast burrito scene here rewards people who know where to look. These aren’t the places that show up in hotel concierge guides. Most of them have small parking lots and a line out the door by 8 a.m. on Saturday, and that is exactly the point.

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Rose’s Bluebonnet Sandwich Shop: The Dallas Burger Legend Nobody Could Find

The address was 4515 Greenville Avenue, but that didn’t help much. The building sat back off the street, down an alley near Yale Boulevard, behind nothing that looked like a restaurant. No sign. No parking lot to speak of. No indication from the street that anything worth finding was back there. Judge Buchmeyer — a federal judge, a man accustomed to having things run efficiently — drove up and down Greenville trying to locate it before finally giving up, parking, and walking until he found the door. When he walked inside, Mickey Mantle was sitting at a table eating a burger.

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