14 February 12 - 18, 2026 dallasobserver.com DALLAS OBSERVER Classified | MusiC | dish | Culture | unfair Park | Contents mozzarella are nestled in a soft sesame seed bun. This was the best damn sandwich I’ve had in a long time and it’s only $10. And while we’re smitten with the vibes here and that amazing sandwich, the best part of our visit was The Gravy Back, a shot of Wild Turkey 101 served with a side- car of smooth brown gravy for 10 bucks. Slam the whiskey, then the gravy, don’t dawdle around about it, get it all down. It works! And it tastes like the af- ter-party with your cousins on Thanks- giving. The gravy is a vel- vety smooth brown variety. Nothing like the kind Mom makes with giblets and little chunks of undissolved flour. We asked about what magic they’re putting in it — it’s a simple jazzed-up instant mix. It’s perfect. The folks at Easy Slider say that since they added it to their drink menu, it’s been the most popular drink order. The full shot menu, which should wear an ankle monitor, includes Hot Buttered Rum, Aged Rum with Spiced Butter and a Gone South, which is a Lakewood Temptress with a house-made eggnog back. Other events Easy Slider hosts include a steak night on the first Sunday of each month. Get a steak, salad, asparagus, tots and a dessert for $48. Call it church. The happy hour is gracious. Wednesday through Sunday (not a typo), from 4 to 7 p.m., get $10 select boilermakers, $8 hurri- canes, spaghetts and butterfield lemonade, plus $1 off drafts and wells. You can also get a $6 grilled cheese and $8 burger. And we saved the best part for last: street parking is ample and free. Follow them on Instagram for what’s next. ▼ INFLATION IS BRISKET THE NEW FILET MIGNON? BEEF PRICES EXPECTED TO CLIMB, CREATING AN ‘AN EXISTENTIAL CRISIS IN THE BBQ INDUSTRY.’ BY LAUREN DREWES DANIELS B ack in 1991, I loved going to Zimmer- hanzel’s Barbecue in Smithville, Texas, at lunch for a chopped beef sandwich. It cost $1.65. I remember that amount because once I wrote a check for it. Those were the days, huh? You’ve likely no- ticed that barbecue has gotten a lot more expensive. And the trend, unfortunately, will continue. According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the price of brisket was $6.44 per pound for the week ending Jan. 23, 2025. This year, brisket is $7.53 a pound, a 17% increase. But that increase is nothing. In late January 2020, brisket was just $2.60 a pound. That’s a 189% increase since then. The USDA’s latest cattle inventory re- port saw just over a 1% drop in the number of beef cattle, a sharper decline than ex- pected in the industry. David Anderson, an AgriLife Extension economist in the Texas A&M Department of Agricultural Econom- ics, says in a press release that this is “a clear signal that the U.S. beef herd has yet to turn the corner.” Declining herd numbers are a bad sign and will take years to rebuild. “A slower rebuild and tighter cattle sup- plies will continue to ripple from cow-calf operations to feedlots and packers, all the way to grocery stores,” Anderson said. These high prices, coupled with an emerging drought, meaning it’s going to cost more to raise a herd, are causing some ranchers to cash in instead of building for the long term. “Bred-heifer values reaching $4,000– $5,000 have created an incentive for pro- ducers to sell rather than hold on to calves,” AgriLife Extension beef cattle specialist Ja- son Cleere says. “There’s pressure to just sell them and take advantage of the market and then worry about rebuilding next year.” Make sense, right? Because when the prices come back down, well, then they won’t get as much for their cattle. And maybe they want to put in a pool. Or, more likely, pay down the debt that perennially dogs farmers and ranchers. Restaurants are dealing with higher costs across the board, including labor. Barbecue restaurants that rely on smoked brisket are having an especially hard time now. “It’s creating an existential crisis in the barbecue industry,” says Justin Fourton of Pecan Lodge in Deep Ellum. “And it’s not just a problem for restaurants; consumers are seeing exorbitant prices in the grocery store as well.” Pecan Lodge started as a stand at the Dallas Farmers Market and has grown into one of the most popular restaurants in Deep Ellum, often with lines snaking out the front door. The business is built on beef. “Beef is at an all-time high, yet both ranchers and the four largest beef packers in the United States say they’re losing money. Something doesn’t add up, and it’s all starting to come to a head,” he says, then references a podcast he’s part of, Smokeless (available on Spotify), where they try to tackle this issue. In late January, Texas Monthly barbecue editor Daniel Vaughn published an article titled “Why So Many Texas BBQ Joints Are Closing,” chronicling several family-run spots around Texas trying, often in vain, to make it work. They can only “mark up a menu item so much before they price out their clientele,” Vaughn writes. Chris Manning owns Smokey Joe’s BBQ along Interstate 35 in southern Dallas. He says his customers have been shocked this week when asking for a brisket for Super Bowl Sunday. “A brisket is $200, $225, and people are looking at us like, ‘Huh?’” “I think it’s going to get to a point where brisket is like filet mignon,” Manning says about the rising price. “And that is scary be- cause I think a lot of people don’t under- stand how much brisket really costs.” Manning stretches cuts of beef as far as he can, wasting nothing, whether pieces go in the beans or the sausage. “But aside from that, a lot of places I’ve been seeing have scaled back on brisket, I think, which is smart, just utilizing other meats. So, instead of doing a Frito Pie with brisket, we’ll switch it to pulled pork. The same with brisket taco specials. We’ll have to switch those just to keep our cost of goods down because it’s not survivable at this point to try to keep using brisket the way we used to. It’s become a delicacy,” Manning says. He refers to the Michelin one-star res- taurant LeRoy and Lewis in Austin, where beef cheek is a menu highlight; the Mi- chelin Guide notes that brisket isn’t the fo- cus at this spot and is only a special at the end of the week. At H-E-B this week, beef cheek is $4.76 a pound, whereas the cheap- est slab of brisket was $5.99 a pound (mar- ket-trimmed USDA Prime is $8.99 a pound). Scaling back on brisket might be the path forward for barbecue restaurants. Either way, a lot of things are stacking up against your next chopped beef sand- wich. In the AgriLife report, beef cattle specialist Cleere said that Texas long-term cattle capacity has been thinned by “rapid urban expansion, land fragmentation and the conversion of quality pasture into solar and other non-agricultural uses.” He says those losses contribute to fewer cows. Add to that an emerging drought in Texas. Anderson and Cleere both expect calf prices to go “even higher in 2026 and 2027” due to tightened supplies. Lauren Drewes Daniels The Gravy Back shot combo at Easy Slider. Kathy Tran Kris Manning at Smokey Joe’s BBQ is smoking some of the best barbecue in Dallas — at a price. City of Ate from p13 THE BEST PART OF OUR VISIT WAS THE GRAVY BACK, A SHOT OF WILD TURKEY 101 SERVED WITH A SIDECAR OF SMOOTH BROWN GRAVY FOR 10 BUCKS.