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Hillcrest Village, the Far North Dallas shopping center that sat mostly vacant five years ago, continues to reinvent itself. Starship Bagel and Ka Thai are expected to move in, their owners confirm.
The two restaurants will bring more Dallas-Fort Worth-owned eateries to the resurrected shopping center at Hillcrest and Arapaho roads. The complex already has North Texas-born shops like Cane Rosso pizza, Haystack Burgers and Haute Sweets Patisserie. Don Pepe’s Rancho Mexican Grill & Tequila Bar moved into the development a few years ago after serving Mexican food in the neighborhood since 1985.
Hillcrest Village is also home to a $4.3 million park and lawn that some have called a “mini Klyde Warren Park.” Developer David Sacher said in 2020 that he intends to bring back the “small town” feel of the neighborhood from when he was a kid, living close by.
Starship Bagel owner Oren Salomon grew up near there, too. His coming-soon Starship Bagel will replace the Blockbuster Video he used to walk to as a middle-schooler at Parkhill Junior High.
“I have a nostalgic and childhood connection with this space,” Salomon said.
He sees the potential of the shopping center he remembers fondly. “It’s a template and model for the future of suburban design,” Salomon said. Adding the park and re-using existing buildings from the 1970s and ‘80s creates “gathering spaces and city squares” in a commercial area that needed a facelift, Salomon said. The home he grew up in, where his dad still lives, is nearby.
Ka Thai will open in place of the shuttered Chinese restaurant Mandarin by Howard Wang’s. Previously, it was enchilada shop Lada — a first-of-its-kind restaurant that didn’t thrive.
Here’s a little bit more about each of the new Hillcrest Village restaurants.
Owner Jackie Kaewlamduan started Ka Thai in a cramped, 1,800-square-foot restaurant on McKinney Avenue in Dallas, north of Knox Street. It was too small to sustain its growing take-out business, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic, so Kaewlamduan moved Ka Thai south of Lemmon Avenue on McKinney, where it remains today.
The Hillcrest Village restaurant will be Ka Thai’s second location.
Popular items include Heaven Beef with tamarind dipping sauce and sticky rice, fried rice and papaya salad. Kaewlamduan’s favorite is the Massaman Curry, made in honor of her grandmother, whose curry was so beloved, she made it in large quantities for her village in Thailand on holidays.
Kaewlamduan moved to the Dallas area to get a master’s degree in management, but she found that she enjoyed working in restaurants more than she liked the 9-to-5. Eventually, she became a full-time restaurateur. She calls Ka Thai “my dream.”
Dallas-Fort Worth was once a bit of a bagel desert, but it’s now brimming with great shops in nearly every corner. Starship Bagel brought national attention back to D-FW in October 2023, when it won Best Bagel in a blind taste test at BagelFest in New York.
Starship’s plain bagel is its most popular. Owner Salomon likes it smeared with fermented jalapeño cream cheese, but cream cheese options abound: green olive, honey almond, strawberry, vegan avocado and more. The shop also sells bagel sandwiches, including the signature lox with tomato, cucumber, red onion and capers.
Starship started in Lewisville and has expanded to downtown Dallas. The Hillcrest Village restaurant will be “an evolution” of the downtown Dallas walk-up window, in that it’ll have the same menu but more indoor seating and more than one ordering line.
“We’re hoping to serve a lot of people,” Salomon said.
Ka Thai and Starship Bagel are both expected to open at 6859 Arapaho Road (in Hillcrest Village), Dallas. Tentative opening dates are spring 2024.
The Dallas Stars have one win in their last seven games and are looking to right the ship in the second game of a West Coast road trip.
Dallas fell in overtime to San Jose on Saturday and now look to bounce back against the Los Angeles Kings.
Here’s everything to know about the matchup.
When: Monday, 9 p.m.
Where: Crypto.com Arena in LA
TV/streaming: Victory+
Radio: Sportsradio 96.7/1310 The Ticket
The Kings host the Stars after LA beat the Edmonton Oilers 4-3 in a shootout.
Los Angeles has a 19-15-10 record overall and a 7-9-5 record on its home ice. The Kings have given up 120 goals while scoring 116 for a -4 scoring differential.
Dallas has a 26-10-9 record overall and a 14-4-6 record on the road. The Stars rank second in the league with 154 total goals (averaging 3.4 per game).
The teams meet Monday for the third time this season. The Stars won the previous meeting 4-1.
Jason Robertson has 26 goals and 28 assists for the Stars. Wyatt Johnston has scored five goals with four assists over the past 10 games.
Alex Laferriere has scored 12 goals with 10 assists for the Kings. Andrei Kuzmenko has four goals and four assists over the last 10 games.
Stars: 3-3-4, averaging 3.7 goals, 6.1 assists, 3.9 penalties and 8.1 penalty minutes while giving up 3.5 goals per game.
Kings: 4-5-1, averaging 2.9 goals, five assists, 4.1 penalties and 8.7 penalty minutes while giving up 3.3 goals per game.
Twitter: @dmn_stars
Find more Stars coverage from The Dallas Morning News here.
Every offseason it seems like I see a linebacker’s name pop up that the Cowboys need to get to help the defense. This year it may be Quincy Williams. Could he be the guy the middle of the defense is missing? I’ve seen some reactions, and when you dig into the type of player he is the coverage numbers may make you second guess. And honestly, I get it because it doesn’t look pretty. When you actually dig into how Quincy Williams plays, and how he is used, the conversation changes fast. So let’s talk it through like fans, not scouts trying to sound smart.
The First Thing You Need to Know: This Dude Lives in the Box
Quincy Williams is not a coverage linebacker, and he never has been. He will not be floating around in space trying to run with slot receivers or carry tight ends down the seams. When you look at the snap data, it’s not even debatable. He spent hundreds of snaps in the box, very few on the edge, only a handful in the slot, and almost none on the outside.
That tells you exactly how defenses should play him. He is there to attack downhill. If you judge this man based on coverage stats alone, you’re grading a fish on how well it climbs trees. How Quincy Williams Actually Plays
What I like about Quincy Williams is simple: when he sees it, he goes. There’s no dancing, no waiting for someone else to make the play. He triggers fast and shows up with bad intentions. Is he perfect? Absolutely not, but were any of the Cowboys linebackers last season even above average.
He will miss a tackle here and there because of his aggressive play style, but I’ll take that every day over a linebacker who catches blocks and gets pancaked. What I found even more impressive was he lines up all over the box. He can play weak side, strong side, and take inside looks, but he rarely just sat in the middle calling things out. He’s a flow-and-hunt guy, so the Cowboys would need to let him scrape, chase, and hit. That is where his game makes sense.
Not Much of a Pass Rusher
This may be another area where people will get twisted. Yes, you will see him walked up near the line sometimes, but he’s not an edge rusher. He is not winning with moves or stacking sacks. Those snaps are about pressure and confusion to make the offense account for him, mess with protection calls, and let the defense work around it. He’s a blitzer, not a technician, and if used incorrectly, it looks ugly.
A man has died after a dog attacked him inside a home in North Texas on Thursday afternoon, officials say.
Dallas police officers responded to a call in the 4100 block of Esmalda Drive at about 3 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 7. Investigators determined the man was attacked by a dog inside a residence in the 4100 block of Pringle Drive.
The victim was taken to a local hospital, where he died from his injuries, police said.
According to a press release, the Dallas Police Department is treating the case as a homicide.
Police ask anyone with information to contact Detective Kenneth Castoral at 469‑781‑1261 or by email at kenneth.castoral@dallaspolice.gov.
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