7 Best Restaurants in Fort Worth, Dallas and Fort Worth

The Lonesome Dove Western Bistro

$$$$ | Stockyards Fodor's choice

If you can get to the Stockyards, you shouldn't miss dining at Lonesome Dove, where sophisticated and exotic food is served in a setting of brick walls, rustic hardwoods, and a pressed-tin ceiling. Chef Tim Love's creations include kangaroo carpaccio nachos with avocado relish, chili-rubbed foie-gras brûlée, and grilled New Zealand red deer chops served with truffle mac and cheese. Less adventurous options include, at lunch, meatloaf with barbecue sauce, chipotle mashed potatoes, and sautéed spinach and a grilled ham-and-cheese sandwich with tomato-basil soup.

Angelo's Barbecue

$$ | Cultural District

A Fort Worth institution since 1958, Angelo's is famous for succulent smoked ribs, so tender that the meat falls off the bone, and for the stuffed bear that guards the front door. The small parking lot, filled with minivans, European sedans, pickup trucks and motorcycles, reflects the diverse customer base that returns for those ribs, schooners of beer, traditional sides (mustard potato salad, Western-style beans, cole slaw), and other meats, including turkey, sliced or chopped beef, and sausage. Arrive early, as they've been known to run out of ribs well before closing.

2533 White Settlement Rd., Fort Worth, Texas, 76107, USA
817-332--0357
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun., Credit cards accepted, Reservations not accepted

Cattlemen's Fort Worth Steak House

$$$ | Stockyards

Steaks are charcoal-grilled at the front of the room, and you can pick out your own cut of meat. Those steaks are the biggest draw, but the menu also includes seafood, chicken-fried steak, fried chicken, and grilled pork chops. The trusty, basic fare is served in a laid-back, unpretentious setting reminiscent of the 1950s.

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Joe T. Garcia's

$$ | Stockyards

This is the ultimate Tex-Mex joint. There's usually a wait for tables, but with seating for more than 1,000 in the maze of dining rooms and patio areas, the line moves quickly. Dinner is limited to two choices: an enchilada-and-taco combo plate or fajitas. Lunch offers a more traditional menu, and on weekends there are Mexican breakfast specials, including purported hangover-cure menudo (stew made with tripe, hominy, onions, and chili). Folks from all over the area drive to Fort Worth to take out-of-town guests to this lively restaurant about three blocks from the Stockyards—and often hope they'll be seated in one of many relaxing outdoor spots.

Lucile's Stateside Bistro

$$$

There's been a restaurant of some sort in this building since the 1930s; the original pressed-tin ceiling is still in place. The bistro attracts diners from the neighborhood as well as a lot of folks from horse shows and other events at Will Rogers Memorial Center, just 2 mi away. Known for its pasta, wood-roasted entrées, and chicken-fried steak, and weekend prime rib, the restaurant also has seven tables on a patio with umbrellas to ward off the Southwestern sun. Breakfast is available weekends.

Reata

$$$ | Sundance Square

Diners get a modern spin on the Old West at this Fort Worth favorite. The rustic dining room is decorated with saddles, animal trophies, and artistic cacti. Specialties here include stacked enchiladas, tenderloin tacos, and bone-in rib-eye steak. Portions are oversized; an order of the precariously stacked onion rings—thick, tall, and evenly fried—could easily feed four.

Saint-Emilion

$$$$ | Cultural District

Though it doesn't look like much from the outside, this is one of Tarrant County's best restaurants, with a legendary crispy roast duck, lamb, fresh fish, excellent daily specials, and a long wine list. The prix-fixe option ($39.95 for four courses) makes dinner an affordable taste of French country cuisine. The intimate French-inspired dining room holds just 16 tables.