Lebanese in Dallas

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  • Al-Amir Restaurant

    3885 Belt line Rd. Addison

    972-488-2647

    4 articles
  • Ali Baba

    2103 N. Central Expressway Richardson & Vicinity

    972-437-1222

    1 article
  • Fenjani

    2238 W Walnut Hill Lane Irving/Las Colinas

    1 article
  • Zatar Lebanese Tapas & Bar

    2825 Commerce St. Downtown/Deep Ellum

    972-863-7100

    For this city, for too long, “Mediterranean” food — the euphemism restaurateurs use to avoid racist sentiment — meant a simple diet of gyros, hummus and lukewarm lunch buffets. Zatar Lebanese Tapas ditches the word “Mediterranean” and presents a menu of foods which are difficult, or impossible, to find elsewhere in North Texas. The cheese board offers choices from Lebanon: grilled halloumi, kashkaval and yogurt-based labneh. Baba ghannouj, or roasted eggplant dip, is fairly mild-mannered; muhammara, a roasted red bell pepper dip with pureed walnuts and pomegranate molasses, is a scene-stealer. Sujuk “pies” are ultra-thin-crust Lebanese pizzas with toppings like akawi, a briney Palestinian cheese. The main courses, too, offer happy twists on the familiar. Nothing exemplifies this better than moussaka, which Greek restaurants have trained us to think of as a sort of eggplant lasagna. At Zatar, the moussaka is a hearty, wintry vegetable stew of eggplant, tomatoes and chickpeas.
    3 articles
  • Zaytinya

    6655 Winning Dr. Frisco

    972-324-3060

    The first Dallas-area restaurant from celebrity chef José Andrés, Zaytinya serves creative, even eccentric riffs on Greek and Turkish cuisine. Some sections of the menu are producing big hits, like tender octopus “Santorini,” splendid salads or meats cooked over an open charcoal-fired hearth. But there are lingering issues with consistency, and the free basket of paper-thin pita with bitter, metallic olive oil makes a poor first impression. Zaytinya isn’t helped by comparison to the similar, better and more affordable Sachet, but then again, Sachet is a long way from Frisco.
    1 article