Three older men sit at a table covered with a red and white checked cloth. On the table is a tray of sliced brisket with bread. Around the tray are baked beans, silverware, and mashed potatoes with gravy.
Goldee’s Barbecue
Kathy Tran

The 14 Essential DFW Barbecue Joints

The metroplex’s top destinations for barky brisket, snappy sausages, and a truly impressive bounty of side dishes

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Goldee’s Barbecue
| Kathy Tran

Whether you’re talking about smoky brisket or snappy, spicy sausage, barbecue is an essential part of Dallas’s dining scene. Even though the Hill Country still dominates the state’s barbecue conversation, there’s still plenty of stunning barbecue to be had in Dallas and Fort Worth.

From enormous beef ribs to perfectly juicy slabs of brisket, these Dallas barbecue destinations are a must for all smoked meat enthusiasts.

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Cattleack Barbeque

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Cattleack draws a line every time the doors are open, Wednesday to Friday and the first Saturday of every month. The brisket is nice and juicy, and the Hatch chile and cheese sausages are especially snappy. Looking to really feast? Order the Toddfather, an enormous sandwich topped with brisket, pulled pork, sausage, and a scoop of coleslaw for extra crunch.

Intrinsic Smokehouse Brewery + BBQ Catering

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It may go against everything you know about ordering at a barbecue place, but order the smoked turkey here. They brine it to perfection and it is moist, flavorful, and delicious. Intrinsic is also a great spot to come for weekend brunch, when the team get especially creative with the menu, serving up meals like brisket with burnt-end gravy on a biscuit with an egg on top. It’s also a brewery, so prepare to order some outrageous beers.

OAK'D BBQ

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In it for the brisket? Try OAK’D on Greenville. With wagyu beef from Rosewood Ranch in Ennis, and black angus prime beef, it aims to create a local-centric experience. Plus, grab some sweets at the in-house bake shop — a feature most barbecue joints don’t have.

Smokey John's Bar-B-Que

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This Dallas icon has been a staple of the smoked meats scene for decades, and that expertise shows. The brisket is tender and juicy, the ribs are nice and smoky, and the cooks here absolutely cannot be beat when it comes to sides. Chow down on collard greens, candied yams, and potato salad. Then be prepared to immediately need a nap.

The Slow Bone

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A stalwart of Dallas’s barbecue scene, the Slow Bone’s prime brisket, smoked ribs, and pulled pork just can’t be beat. Order a two-meat plate, or consider the pork rib sandwich, a saucy and messy open-faced offering that won’t disappoint.

Terry Black's Barbecue

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This join is an Austin export with a Lockhart pedigree. It serves barky brisket, snappy sausages, and giant beef ribs that pair beautifully with sides including mac and cheese, Mexican rice, and baked potato salad. Don’t forget to add a mini pecan pie to your order.

Pecan Lodge

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It’s an old favorite for a reason — this Deep Ellum joint still commands lunchtime lines most days of folks who line up for its beef ribs, burnt ends, and jalapeno sausage. Don’t skip the sandwiches here, however. A chopped brisket or pulled pork really hits the spot.

Off the Bone Barbeque

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The proteins here, including baby back ribs, tender chicken, and brisket, are smoked to perfection over pecan wood. Pair with sides like queso mac and cheese and baked beans, and prepare to be transported to barbecue heaven.

Lockhart Smokehouse

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With three locations in DFW, Lockhart Smokehouse makes reliably good, Central Texas style barbecue accessible. The sausages here, shipped in from the legendary Kreuz Market in Lockhart, Texas, are an especially yummy choice.

Panther City BBQ

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Panther City started as a food truck and turned into the place to get pork belly poppers: that is, burnt ends, a Fort Worth favorite, stuffed inside jalapenos with cream cheese and wrapped in bacon — a clever take on shrimp brioche. There are lots of other Mexican influenced barbecue plates here, including their brisket guisada, swimming in its meaty sauce, and brisket elote, layered into creamy corn and cilantro.

Hurtado Barbecue

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Blending traditional Central Texas barbecue techniques with Tex-Mex flavors, Arlington favorite Hurtado slings a slew of creative dishes alongside staples like brisket and smoked turkey. Get there early for birria tacos, brisket-topped tostadas, and gigantic beef ribs.

Heim Barbecue & Catering

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The brisket, sausage, and ribs at this Fort Worth barbecue joint are stellar, but the real star of the show is the bacon burnt ends. These delightfully smoky little nuggets of pork belly are slathered in a sweet and peppery glaze, and it’s damn near impossible to eat just one. Good news for Dallasites: Heim opened a location on Mockingbird.

Smoke'N Ash BBQ

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Patrick and Fasicka Hicks combine Texas barbecue and Ethiopian spices and dishes to make something new that they call Tex-Ethiopian. That looks like loaded injera nachos, awaze chicken or brisket plates, and family-sized platters with sides including shiro wat, gomen, and spiced rice pilaf. There are also straight-up Texas barbecue and Ethiopian options available.

Goldee's Barbecue

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After topping the Texas Monthly barbecue list for 2021, the lines to eat at Goldee’s are epic — and completely worth it. At this Fort Worth spot, diners can enjoy the work of a group of young pitmasters who got experience working in some of the state’s best barbecue spots. Pair brisket and pulled pork with pinto beans, collard greens, and super cheesy grits. Save room for dessert — the bread pudding is a real stunner.

Cattleack Barbeque

Cattleack draws a line every time the doors are open, Wednesday to Friday and the first Saturday of every month. The brisket is nice and juicy, and the Hatch chile and cheese sausages are especially snappy. Looking to really feast? Order the Toddfather, an enormous sandwich topped with brisket, pulled pork, sausage, and a scoop of coleslaw for extra crunch.

Intrinsic Smokehouse Brewery + BBQ Catering

It may go against everything you know about ordering at a barbecue place, but order the smoked turkey here. They brine it to perfection and it is moist, flavorful, and delicious. Intrinsic is also a great spot to come for weekend brunch, when the team get especially creative with the menu, serving up meals like brisket with burnt-end gravy on a biscuit with an egg on top. It’s also a brewery, so prepare to order some outrageous beers.

OAK'D BBQ

In it for the brisket? Try OAK’D on Greenville. With wagyu beef from Rosewood Ranch in Ennis, and black angus prime beef, it aims to create a local-centric experience. Plus, grab some sweets at the in-house bake shop — a feature most barbecue joints don’t have.

Smokey John's Bar-B-Que

This Dallas icon has been a staple of the smoked meats scene for decades, and that expertise shows. The brisket is tender and juicy, the ribs are nice and smoky, and the cooks here absolutely cannot be beat when it comes to sides. Chow down on collard greens, candied yams, and potato salad. Then be prepared to immediately need a nap.

The Slow Bone

A stalwart of Dallas’s barbecue scene, the Slow Bone’s prime brisket, smoked ribs, and pulled pork just can’t be beat. Order a two-meat plate, or consider the pork rib sandwich, a saucy and messy open-faced offering that won’t disappoint.

Terry Black's Barbecue

This join is an Austin export with a Lockhart pedigree. It serves barky brisket, snappy sausages, and giant beef ribs that pair beautifully with sides including mac and cheese, Mexican rice, and baked potato salad. Don’t forget to add a mini pecan pie to your order.

Pecan Lodge

It’s an old favorite for a reason — this Deep Ellum joint still commands lunchtime lines most days of folks who line up for its beef ribs, burnt ends, and jalapeno sausage. Don’t skip the sandwiches here, however. A chopped brisket or pulled pork really hits the spot.

Off the Bone Barbeque

The proteins here, including baby back ribs, tender chicken, and brisket, are smoked to perfection over pecan wood. Pair with sides like queso mac and cheese and baked beans, and prepare to be transported to barbecue heaven.

Lockhart Smokehouse

With three locations in DFW, Lockhart Smokehouse makes reliably good, Central Texas style barbecue accessible. The sausages here, shipped in from the legendary Kreuz Market in Lockhart, Texas, are an especially yummy choice.

Panther City BBQ

Panther City started as a food truck and turned into the place to get pork belly poppers: that is, burnt ends, a Fort Worth favorite, stuffed inside jalapenos with cream cheese and wrapped in bacon — a clever take on shrimp brioche. There are lots of other Mexican influenced barbecue plates here, including their brisket guisada, swimming in its meaty sauce, and brisket elote, layered into creamy corn and cilantro.

Hurtado Barbecue

Blending traditional Central Texas barbecue techniques with Tex-Mex flavors, Arlington favorite Hurtado slings a slew of creative dishes alongside staples like brisket and smoked turkey. Get there early for birria tacos, brisket-topped tostadas, and gigantic beef ribs.

Heim Barbecue & Catering

The brisket, sausage, and ribs at this Fort Worth barbecue joint are stellar, but the real star of the show is the bacon burnt ends. These delightfully smoky little nuggets of pork belly are slathered in a sweet and peppery glaze, and it’s damn near impossible to eat just one. Good news for Dallasites: Heim opened a location on Mockingbird.

Smoke'N Ash BBQ

Patrick and Fasicka Hicks combine Texas barbecue and Ethiopian spices and dishes to make something new that they call Tex-Ethiopian. That looks like loaded injera nachos, awaze chicken or brisket plates, and family-sized platters with sides including shiro wat, gomen, and spiced rice pilaf. There are also straight-up Texas barbecue and Ethiopian options available.

Goldee's Barbecue

After topping the Texas Monthly barbecue list for 2021, the lines to eat at Goldee’s are epic — and completely worth it. At this Fort Worth spot, diners can enjoy the work of a group of young pitmasters who got experience working in some of the state’s best barbecue spots. Pair brisket and pulled pork with pinto beans, collard greens, and super cheesy grits. Save room for dessert — the bread pudding is a real stunner.

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