with onion marinade, peppercorns, garlic and lemon gremolata. This savory layer of goodness does not distract but rather adds to the marrow experience, and the toasted rustic bread provided is no slouch, either. 408 N. Bishop Ave., No. 108 214-942-1828, dallasboulevardier.com Best Breakfast Pastries Carte Blanche Nestled in the strip of retail shops on Lower Greenville in the space that used to house Mudsmith is a unique two-for- one concept. Husband and wife team Amy and Casey La Rue offer a coffee and pastry establishment in the morning and a five- or 12-course tasting menu in the evening. The pastries are nothing short of fantastic. Try the pain au chocolat or the honey white wine poached pear Danish to start your morning. If you prefer savory, the chicken poblano croissant or the mushroom and cheddar quiche will do the trick. 2114 Greenville Ave. carteblanchedallas.com Best Breakfast Sandwich Ascension’s Aussi Bacon and Egg Roll You can find Ascension Coffee locations all over Dallas-Fort Worth. It’s a good thing, too, because that means you’re never too far from one of their Aussi Bacon and Egg Rolls. It’s a simple sandwich with four main ingredients: a roll, egg (usually cooked over easy), some strips of bacon and just the right amount of sweet and smoky barbecue sauce. When you bite into it, the sauce might gush out the sides, the egg yolk might pop and the sandwich’s innards may drip all over you. You won’t realize the mess you’ve made until the Aussi Bacon and Egg Roll trance fades away and you slip back into reality. Even then, you’ll just want to go back for more. You may need a napkin. 1621 Oak Lawn Ave. and other locations 214-741-3211, ascensiondallas.com Best Brewery 70 Community Beer Company Community Beer Company, without question, is producing some of the best local craft beer. But that’s not the only thing that makes a brewery great. While most of the world shut down during the worst of the pandemic, Community was busy working on a new brewery. In a time when plans were thrown out the window, trying to get this brewery completed and open was almost impossible. For a while, things got rough. But, good beer always prevails. Now Dallas has a large stunning brewery that is a monument to how far the local craft beer game has come in just BEST BREWERY > COMMUNITY BEER COMPANY Nathan Hunsinger one decade. 3110 Commonwealth Drive 214-751-7921, communitybeer.com Best Brewing Method Kyoto Towers at Ascension Coffee Two tall glass towers brew a small but exceptional cup of joe at most, if not all, Ascension Coffee locations. Ascension Coffee’s Kyoto Towers resemble something out of a Breaking Bad episode, and odds are you’ll see one in action when you stop by one of their locations. That’s because they’re used to make the coffee shop’s cold brew, which requires about 12 hours. Ice water is poured into a top glass chamber. A bed of coffee grounds sits between the top and bottom chamber. Gravity takes it from there, slowly dropping the water through the coffee grounds and into the bottom chamber until it’s full. The end product is a strong- as-hell coffee concentrate. It’s used for Ascension’s regular cold brew (which has water added to it) or their Doki Doki, the shop’s nitro brew. 1621 Oak Lawn Ave. 214-741-3211, ascensiondallas.com Best Burger Knox Bistro There’s no shortage of standup burgers in Dallas, but recently Michelin-starred chef Bruno Davaillon helped to reinvent Up On Knox into a French bistro, appropriately called Knox Bistro. The previous concept had a good burger, but this new iteration is all oo-la-la. A thick patty that’s cooked to order comes smothered in a creamy peppercorn sauce and topped with caramelized onions. Don’t try to dig in with your hands, this is a cutlery burger. Order fries with an extra side of that peppercorn sauce. Then sit in a corner and dig in. 3230 Knox St., No. 140 469-250-4007, knoxbistro.com Best Cafe Cafe Duro This Italian-inspired spot on Greenville Avenue is the best kind of cafe. It serves both coffee and wine, the bookends to a perfect day. The space is tiled and marbled to the nines and serves pastries for breakfast (or dessert), pizzettas and sandwiches the rest of the day. They also have some prepackaged pastas, meats and cheeses for a quick dinner; two parking spots just out front make it easy to pop- in. They serve Illy nitro cold brew on tap, sandwiched between red and white wines also on tap. They open at 7 a.m. and don’t close shop until 10 p.m. Don’t miss the cheesy wagyu pastrami muffuletta. 2804 Greenville Ave. 214-888-8485, cafe-duro.com Best Cajun Restaurant Nate’s Seafood & Steakhouse Nate’s Seafood & Steakhouse is a family- owned business that has been serving some of the best Cajun food to Dallas since 1988. The original owner, Nate, is from Lafayette in the heart of Louisiana’s Cajun country. He is semi-retired now but has handed down the restaurant and recipes to other members of his family. From crawfish etouffee, seafood gumbo, boiled crawfish, po’-boys and signature dishes such as Stuffed Flounder Atchafalaya or Grilled Redfish Canal, this is one of the few places to get dishes like those back on the bayou. Any good Cajun also knows that boiled crawfish is not meant to be served in a plastic bag. Nate’s is one of the few local places that serves them properly in a plastic tray, and if you like your mudbugs with an extra kick, be sure to order them with turbo seasoning. 14951 Midway Road 972-701-9622, natesseafood.com Best Chef Misti Norris Misti Norris is a James Beard- nominated chef and was one of Food & Wine’s Best New Chefs of 2019. She’s also the owner and executive chef of Petra and the Beast, where she has put forth her “farm, forage, fermentation, fire” philosophy to great effect. Her other ongoing project is Stepchild, which is the first entry into Attalie, The Exchange’s rotating chef concept, bringing her fresh spin on French Acadian cuisine. Her use of local ingredients prepared and presented in a unique, fresh manner shines at both locations. Petra and the Beast, 601 N. Haskell Ave. 318-935-0906, petraandthebeast.com Best Chicken- Fried Steak AllGood Cafe Yeah, it’s as big as your head, but stop being so whiny. And just because it has size doesn’t mean it lacks art. Here, a crisp batter perfectly encases a tender steak that is topped with a just-peppery- enough gravy. This is all enhanced by the restaurant’s charm that has made it a Deep Ellum staple for decades. AllGood is open for breakfast and lunch (yes, the CFS SEPTEMBER 22-28, 2022 DALLAS OBSERVER CONTENTS | SHOPPING & SERVICES | ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT | FOOD & DRINK | SPORTS & RECREATION dallasobserver.com