The Lone Star State finally gets a spotlight. [View on web]( Gao Jing/Xinhua via Getty Images This month, the Michelin Guide â the eponymous French tire companyâs renowned international restaurant star rating system â will [arrive in Texas for the first time ever](. The newly announced guide will bring a magnifying glass to the dining scenes across five of the stateâs largest cities: Austin, Dallas, Houston, San Antonio, and Fort Worth. As Nadia Chaudhury, editor of Eater Austin explains, there are four ways to be included in the Michelin guide: - Thereâs the [famous prestigious star ratings](, which indicate high-caliber dining and service experiences through one- to three-star scores.
- Then thereâs [the Bib Gourmand awards](, which highlight comparatively more affordable great restaurants and food experiences.
- The [Michelin Green Star designations]( are given to restaurants with high standards for sustainable and eco-friendly efforts.
- Finally, there are [Michelinâs recommended restaurants](, a list of places that are good but not good enough for stars or the other labels. Although the final list of the recipients who have earned one-, two-, or three-star ratings will not be announced until later this year, Eaterâs Texas-based city editors couldnât wait to discuss just what Michelinâs arrival could mean for the state and restaurant industry at large. Here, Chaudhury, along with Eater editors from Houston and the Dallas-Fort Worth area highlight a few of the restaurants theyâre keeping an eye on. Which restaurants in your cities do you believe deserve Michelin recognition? Courtney E. Smith, Eater Dallas editor: Iâm thinking about which restaurants not only raise the bar regionally but nationally too. Don Artemio in Fort Worth is my strongest pick in that city. Every dish in this excellent Mexican restaurant is Michelin-worthy. The care that it takes to represent the culture and the personality in the food (see the bacon fatâfried cactus dish) from executive chef Rodrigo Cárdenas Garza and founder/chef Juan Ramón Cárdenas make it a standout immediately deserving of stars. In Dallas, it is [El Carlos Elegante](. Sure, Iâm partial to it because it was our Eater Awards pick for Dallas Restaurant of the Year in 2023 due to its fantastic food and the story behind it. A recent trip back yielded only the best of the best dishes as the menu has evolved. Choosing these two is wild because I always talk about how important it is for local reporters to have high standards for the Tex-Mex here, especially compared to other cities in Texas or along the U.S.-Mexico border. But thereâs one thing I never fail to say: Our nice Mexican restaurants are damn good. As always, some frontrunners emerge because theyâre independently excellent but might be successors to a chain or series of restaurants that have already received recognition, while others are wildcards. Are there any Houston restaurants that fit this bill? Which ones could feel like a welcome surprise? Brittany Britto Garley, Eater Houston editor: Le Jardinier feels like an obvious pick for exactly that reason: You can find beautiful, Michelin star- and exhibit-worthy dishes at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houstonâs fine dining restaurant. Chef de cuisine Felipe Botero creates an inventive menu that displays seasonal fruits, vegetables, and herbs and locally sourced meats and seafood that are pleasing to both the eye and palate, like the feather-light heirloom squash carpaccio, made with romesco, almonds, and caper berries; and Sakura pork chop served with polenta and piperade. Gao Jing/Xinhua via Getty Images Personally, Iâm most excited about Tatemó and March receiving some form of recognition. The former showcases the beauty and breadth of masa in a reservation-only, multi-course tasting menu restaurant that gives many diners a whole new appreciation for Mexican cuisine. Though the menu at Tatemó constantly changes, diners can find masa-fueled bites like the fan-favorite quesadilla or a version of the enmolada, which features a plantain tortilla, mole negro, and masa tempura sweet potato. Meanwhile, March is chef Felipe Riccioâs reservation-only tasting menu restaurant which aims to transport diners to various regions across the Mediterranean. The menu spotlights a specific area for a few months at a time, and then the restaurant closes to regroup and relaunch with a new focus after the brief hiatus. Most recently, March captivated diners with the flavors of Països Catalans, a region influenced by Mediterranean, Pyrenean, and French cuisine, in six- and nine-course tastings. Oftentimes, great contenders are also the most obvious. Are there any Austin standouts hiding in plain sight? Chaudhury: The Mueller omakase at Tsuke Edomae is Austinâs hardest reservation to book for good reason: Chef Micheal Che deeply honors the ingredients he serves his guests through the edomae-style menu, and itâs always worth the splurge. [The Yelp home page.]( Lille Allen/Eater More for the table: - Twenty years after its debut, Yelp has [changed how we think about reviewing]( everything and anything.
- More than 200 Houston restaurants are suing Centerpoint, the city's primary energy provider, over power outages. [Hereâs what you should know](. - [Kamala Harris has always been a food fanatic](. Her cooking show might finally convince you of that. - After slumping sales, McDonaldâs, Starbucks, and more fast food titans are trying to [get customers back in the drive-thru]( with meal deals. But are they actually a good value? If you like this email, please forward it to a friend. If you aren't signed up for this newsletter, you can [do so right here](.
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