3 Best Restaurants in West Texas and the Panhandle, Texas

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Due to a mix of geographic isolation and Hispanic heritage, the food is a redolent, sumptuous mix of north Mexican cooking and Southern home cooking, giving area dishes a very rich, heavy and spicy character. Sometimes the menus are in Spanish.

Tex-Mex, Mexican, and Southern cooking are what this region does best. In general, steer away from East Asian; stick with items like country-fried steaks, barbecue, and Mexican dishes like burritos, asado (a tangy dish, often pork, cooked in oil and ground-up chiles), chiles rellenos (raw green chiles that are stuffed with meat, cheeses, and spices and then baked; can be hot or mild), and barbacoa (slow-cooked beef seasoned with tangy marinade). (Note that some barbacoa is actually from the head of the cow [called barbacoa de cabeza].)

Reata

$$ Fodor's Choice

A favorite of many West Texans spending the day in Alpine, Reata ("rope" in Spanish) feels both welcoming and upscale, with big, wooden tables and a pleasant rancher/cowboy vibe. It's a "howdy"-type place with prompt, down-home service and a menu that emphasizes creative Southwestern and Tex-Mex fare, such as tortilla soup, calf fries with cream gravy, and beef tamales with pecan mash, plus generously portioned steaks from a legendary ranch in the nearby Davis Mountains. There's a long, fabulous dessert list.

203 N. 5th St., Alpine, TX, 79830, USA
432-837–9232
Known For
  • West Texas buttermilk pecan pie
  • Jalapeño-and-bacon mac and cheese
  • Well-chosen wine list
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted
Closed Sun.
Reservations essential

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The Bean Cafe

$
This homey, modest roadside café is a good bet for sustenance before visiting Big Bend Ranch State Park. Open daily for breakfast and lunch, the Bean serves up hearty stick-to-your-ribs fare, such as machaca (spicy dried beef) omelets, Reuben sandwiches, and salads topped with crispy-fried chicken.
201 W. O'Reilly St., Presidio, TX, 79845, USA
432-229–3131
Known For
  • Mexican-American breakfast fare
  • Chicken-fried steak
  • Friendly, down-home service
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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Starlight Theatre

$$
This convivial restaurant-saloon with live-music is ground zero for all the ghosts and other characters of Terlingua. The menu includes plenty of local flavor, such as Terlingua chili and chicken-fried wild boar with Terlingua gold beer gravy. The Starlight is next door to the Terlingua Trading Post, where locals, some of whom look like prospectors from the Old West, sit on the shaded porch, tell stories, drink beer, and play one of the house guitars lying around.
631 Ivey Rd., Terlingua, TX, 79852, USA
432-371–3400
Known For
  • The mixed grill of wild boar–venison sausage, grilled quail, and steak
  • Mesquite-smoked brisket
  • Ice cold local beers
Restaurant Details
No lunch

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