Dallas’ Most Historic Restaurants: 10 Classics That Have Stood the Test of Time

Each month brings a new wave of restaurants debuting with bells, whistles, and enough glamour to command the city’s attention. At the same time, Dallas loses some of its most thoughtful kitchens—places built on technique, precision, creativity, and care. Most recently, Michelin-recognized Rye announced its closure.

Amid the whiplash of flash and heartbreak, a select group of restaurants has quietly endured. These Dallas institutions have weathered trends, recessions, an industry-crushing pandemic, and reinvention. Consider them the city’s culinary founding fathers: the oldest restaurants still standing, and still feeding Dallas.

Behold 10 of Dallas’ tried and true that have stood the test of time.

Bob’s Steak & Chop House

Founded in 1993 by Bob Sambol, Bob’s Steak & Chop House debuted with the core pillars of good food and exacting service. The classic steakhouse’s legacy now stretches nationwide through a partnership with Omni Hotels. On Lemmon Avenue, Sambol remains the flagship’s general manager. His original vision still shines through, from prime steaks cut by the Chicago Stock Yards Meat Packing Company and hot, crumbly loaves of bread to signature half-sour pickles and the restaurant’s famous Texas-sized glazed carrot.. 4300 Lemmon Ave., Dallas, bobs-steakandchop.com

Mi Cocina

Mi Cocina leveled up Dallas’ margarita game in 1991 when restaurateur Michael “Mico” Rodriguez, with his partners, opened the 12-table restaurant in Dallas’ Preston Forest neighborhood. The booze-forward frozen swirl of margarita and sangria quickly rose to icon status, helping the restaurant expand to Highland Park Village two years later. Over the last three decades, the Tex-Mex institution has weathered its fair share of controversy and cultural shifts. Today, Mi Cocina operates more than 20 locations across North Texas, where frosty Mambo Taxis flow freely and fajitas arrive sizzling, just as they have for generations of Dallas diners. Multiple locations, micocina.com

Dunston’s Steakhouse

Alabama transplant Gene Dunston laid the blueprint for Dallas’ steak-and-potatoes reputation when he opened the Wheel-In Drive-In in 1955. A decade later, an open-flame mesquite pit transformed the drive-in concept into a sit-down restaurant renamed as Dunston’s Steakhouse. It later became the first restaurant to receive a liquor license post-Prohibition. More than 60 years after reinvention, Dunston’s remains oh-so Dallas, with an old-school steakhouse vibe complete with mesquite-grilled steaks, chicken-fried steaks, enchiladas, and even barbecue brisket and sausage served on Fridays. Multiple locations, dunstonssteakhouse.com

TJ’s Seafood Market

In 1989, Tom Haden and Jim Kearnen founded TJ’s Seafood Market, cementing Preston Road and Royal Lane as a longtime Dallas destination for fresh seafood and coastal cuisine. The market-restaurant hybrid is a seafood haven in a gridlocked city, offering Prince Edward Island mussels, Chilean sea bass, clams, and East Coast oysters. On the menu, spicy curry mussels, tuna poke, and miso-glazed seabass are a pescatarian’s dream. Today, TJ’s is steered by Jon Alexis, a self-proclaimed “seafood apostle” and TJ loyalist since its opening days, and his wife. 6025 Royal Ln., Ste. 110, Dallas, tjsseafood.com

Keller’s Drive-In

Jack Keller opened Keller’s Drive-In in the 1950s and, thankfully, not much has changed. The nostalgic burger joint is a true relic of the past, with carhops still taking orders and a nearly non-existent social media presence. Consistency is the name of the game. The menu is straightforward, focusing on fist-sized cheeseburgers, corn dogs, fries, tater tots, and onion rings—all for well under $10. The grilled onions are always free of charge. Multiple locations

S&D Oyster Company

This year, S&D Oyster Company celebrates the big 5-0. In 1976, Navy pilot Herb Story opened the New Orleans-channeling restaurant after searching Dallas for Gulf Coast-fresh seafood. The McKinney Avenue staple serves New Orleans Bar-B-Q Shrimp, fried fish and shrimp, gumbo, and B.A.’s spicy shrimp and cream cheese dip—all still prepared by the same chef who opened the restaurant. In 2023, the Bellamy Hospitality Group acquired the historic restaurant. It remains the same coastal comfort Dallas has loved for half a century, with one added indulgence: Caché, a sultry hidden cocktail lounge tucked above the iconic Uptown institution. 2701 McKinney Ave., Dallas, sdoyster.com

Campisi’s

Eighty years ago, Sicilian immigrant Carlo Campisi paved the way for Dallasites to enjoy a cheesy slice of pizza. At the time, Campisi owned Idle Hour, a bar at the corner of Knox and McKinney, where he made history by serving Dallas’ first pizza. By 1950, Campisi and his wife, Antonia, took over Egyptian Lounge on Mockingbird Lane, which would later be rebranded as Campisi’s. The Italian restaurant continues to live out Campisi’s American dream, now with his great-grandson David Campisi at the helm. Not only is it widely credited as the oldest pizzeria in Dallas, it’s also the first in the Lone Star State. Multiple locations, campisis.us

Norma’s Cafe

Norma’s Cafe has been feeding Dallas home-cooked, Texas-style breakfasts for 70 years. The Oak Cliff cafe opened on West Davis Street in 1956, founded by Bob and Norma McGhee as Bob McGhee’s Davis Cafe. It quickly became a neighborhood anchor, serving fluffy pancakes and country-style breakfast plates piled high with chicken-fried steak, cream gravy, hashbrowns, eggs, and made-from-scratch biscuits. Diner Ed Murph loved it so much as a child that he later bought it from Norma, preserving Dallas’ foundational diner for generations of locals to come. Multiple locations, normascafe.com

Javier’s Gourmet Mexicano

In Dallas, Tex-Mex reigns supreme, but Javier’s Gourmet Mexicano has made Mexico City cuisine a Big D essential since 1977. The Oak Lawn mainstay serves true Mexico City cooking, with vibrant plates rooted in Aztec traditions and the capital’s European influence. Complete with a lounge and cigar bar, the restaurant is built for long nights fueled by Acapulco-style ceviche, cabrito fajitas, and flan al Kahlúa made with founder Javier Gutierrez’s mother’s recipe. The Filete Cantinflas is a quintessential Dallas dish: a Chihuahua cheese-stuffed beef filet drenched in chile mulato. 4912 Cole Ave., Dallas, javiers.net

Bubba’s Cooks Country

Bubba’s Cooks Country is small-town country cooking in the big city. The Park Cities cornerstone opened in 1981, when Paul “Bubba” Vineyard and his wife, Mary Beth, converted a Texaco gas station into a casual restaurant serving comforting plates of crispy fried chicken, yeast rolls, mashed potatoes, green beans, and ambrosia salad. The menu pays homage to the meals they grew up eating: hearty, simple, and just like mama made it. More than four decades later, the flagship still holds strong in Park Cities, serving breakfast, lunch, dinner, and dessert, and standing as the original springboard for the Vineyard family’s Babe’s Chicken Dinner House and Sweetie Pie’s Ribeyes. 6617 Hillcrest Ave., Dallas, bubbascookscountry.com

Story continues

TRENDING NOW

LATEST LOCAL NEWS