Dallas dining rec(s) near SMU

Peter Creasey

Peter Creasey
Please advise as to dining recommendation(s) on a Friday evening in June near SMU/Palomar Hotel in Dallas.

Walking distance or short cab ride preferred.

Thanks!

. . . . Pete
 
Tei-An is only 3.5 miles away. I had a great meal there with Bill Bounds on my last trip.

The microgreens and the chicken hearts stand out in my memory as exceptional but everything was good.
 
Also, here's a quote from a thread on another board. I haven't checked proximity for any of these restaurants:

"Dallas is about finding the top tier restaurants. Fearings and the Mansion are both good, but perhaps not the best deals in town. They're both very, very steep, and wine pairings are notoriously poor at Fearings.

Next time try FT-33, Suze, Driftwood, Salum, Abacus, Belly & Trumpet, Neighborhood Services, or Lark on the Park next time you're around. They're wonderful restaurants and fit much better into the delicious foodie meal box, as opposed to the super-pricey big name box like Pyles or Fearings. That said, I do enjoy Pyles, and you can find really neat wines on the list with a little looking."
 
Jay, thanks for the good touts.

Yours is the second solid tout I have received for Tei An. Unfortunately, I don't do sushi.

. . . . Pete
 
Tei An is a soba house rather than a sushi restaurant. I think there was some sushi on the menu but I don't recall ordering any.
 
White seaweed salad at Tei An is sublime.
Everything is excellent.
And if you go this Saturday night, I'll likely see you there.
Best, Jim
 
originally posted by Florida Jim: if you go this Saturday night, I'll likely see you there.

Jim, Wrong night and weekend...unfortunately.

How long in advance must reservations usually be made at Tei An for a June Friday night? Or is walk in usually okay?

. . . . Pete
 
Pete,
Tei An is a great restaurant; Teach, the chef has been a finalist for the James Beard Southwest Chef of the Year three times in the last four years. While Tei An does serve sushi, it is only a small portion of an extensive menu. SueSue and I are there every Saturday night that we are in town.

My advice is to first review the list of the evening’s specials and look for the tempura and fish specials. The fish collars are excellent, esp. the baby yellowtail collar. We are usually looking for fish that we have never had before, like cornet fish, bonnetmouth, or currently tilefish koji style. Then focus on the tempura dishes, recently French beans and fresh sea eel. If no special menu tempura dishes are interesting to you, order the vegetable tempura that is on the regular menu. Teach’s tempuras are amazing. Another favorite is green tea soba with micro greens a beautiful dish that illustrates Teach’s very light touch with dressings and seasoning. The dish is greatly enhanced with uni, which is optional. Also, on the regular menu is duck yanagawa an amazing dish. Other favorites include white seaweed salad, Shumai dumplings, chicken hearts, pork skewers, tuna carpaccio, and scallop carpaccio. Also you can trust the wait staff for their recommendations.

I will be there tonight with Florida Jim and Diane and will get tonight’s special list, scan it, and email it to you. Send me your email address to senna22@hotmail.com.

Feel free to use my name when making reservations it might help you. Yo is the front of the house manager. Or if you like, I will be happy to make the reservation for you.

It is a truly great restaurant and would be in any U.S. city. Despite eating every week, we always have great food adventures there every time.

best,
bill
 
Jay, Jim, and Bill, Good call on Tei An!

It's interesting that I posted my inquiry on 2 boards and quickly received similar touts on Tei An.

FOH Yo and Chef Teach and their staffs did stellar jobs.

We enjoyed and devoured...

White Seaweed Salad- luscious as predicted
Sishito Peppers - great accompaniment with just the right amount of crunch/salt/spice/texture
Soy Braised Broccoli - another fine accompaniment
Tei An Fried Shrimp - compelling with the accompanying sauce
Whole Fried Sole - amazing dish, including the edible bones which were terrific (bones were reminiscent of fried shrimp legs served at Restaurant RDG)
Noodles Kobe Bolognese - one of Tei An specialties...even among stalwarts perhaps the dish of the evening, absolutely not to be missed
Green Tea Flan - perfect finale with just the right pungently simplistic flavor and firm texture

Tei An, on a different scale of course, for some reason, reminded me of a recent trip to Le Taillevent. Both venues featured near-perfect execution of what they want to do.

. . . . Pete
 
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