Dallas, TX
11 Food Tours in Dallas That Let You Eat Your Way Across the City
Dallas is big Texas spirit personified.
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The city balances its historical past with its current identity as a Lone Star hub for its Wild West culture, unique arts district, JFK history, and, increasingly, as a hub for big businesses. (Some have started to call it Silicon Prairie.)
If you’ve visited Dallas before, you might already know that the city is also very well known for its restaurants, food trucks, and love of great eats. There are even wineries dotting the area around Dallas, giving residents access to delicious pinots, cabernets, and more.
Tex-Mex and barbecue are part of Dallas, just like its cowboy heritage. And you can take a bite out of this culture with a few city-crossing food tours. They let you sample beloved dishes from restaurants and food trucks you might not hear about otherwise.
If you want to taste true Texan culture, book one of these food tours in Dallas—or more. Food Tours of America is a well-known company that offers a few tours in a large-group setup, but you can also branch out into more indie territory, if you want.
Food tours in Dallas that deliver on great bites & culture
5 Local Food Tastings in Deep Ellum (Secret Food Tours)
Deep Ellum is one of Dallas’s most popular neighborhoods because it has a long history, an artistic and creative feel, and is home to some of the city’s best bars. It’s also a gastronomic hub where you can sample city staples, from brisket to Tex-Mex. Think: great eats, a bit of history, and street art galore.
Deep Ellum Foodie & Street Art Tour (Food Tours of America)

This is a similar tour to the first one listed. You’ll get a fantastic balance of history, street art, and food tastings from eateries around Deep Ellum. Both tour groups (Secret Food Tours and Food Tours of America) are highly rated and have plenty of experience. They also cost almost the same price.
JFK Food & Culture Walking Tour (Food Tours of America)

Visitors usually get an earful (or two) about JFK when touring Dallas. If you want to dive a bit deeper into President John F. Kennedy’s life and legacy in the city while also savoring local flavors, look no further. You get to see important landmarks like Dealey Plaza and the Grassy Knoll between food tastings. Perfect for history buffs with an appetite.
Uptown Eats Trolley Tour (Food Tours of America)

Prefer to be ferried around by trolley instead of walking during a food tour? Here’s your perfect tour. You board a vintage trolley, then cruise through Dallas’s lovely Uptown neighborhood. Along the way, you’ll stop to sample diverse eats from some of Dallas’s top local haunts. The tour also includes a VIP look at the McKinney Avenue Trolley Car Barn.
5-Course Walking Food Tour in Dallas + History (Incloodie Food Tour)

Foodies, assemble! This is a small-group tour with a focus on Dallas culture that can be tasted through its top cuisine. In other words, you’ll sample a diverse range of eats that showcase the people who make Dallas what it is. Make sure you come hungry—this is a five-course tour, as the title says. You can also request gluten-free and vegetarian options.
Dallas Flavor & History Tour (Fun Texas Tours)

You can choose from two or four-hour tours on this straightforward option. The tour includes transportation in a climate-controlled van. You also stop at historical and cultural sights along the way.
Downtown Dallas Historic Food Tour: Taste What Dallas Invented (Incloodie Food Tour)

This three-hour walking tour takes you through Downtown Dallas and its Historic West End. Along the way, you’ll stop to eat some of Dallas’s most iconic dishes that originate in the city, including homemade Tex-Mex bites, BBQ, and more. Between stops to eat, you’ll learn about important historical monuments and markers.
Grapevine Foodie and Winery Tour (Food Tours of America)

Head to the scenic historic Grapevine area, just outside the city of Dallas. (The tour below is also based in Grapevine.) You can explore the downtown area as you go on a gastronomic journey that includes famous Dallas dishes, like brisket. You also get to visit a boutique winery and taproom to sample premium Texas wines.
Grapevine’s Wine & Chocolate Happy Hour (Grapevine Food Tours)

Head to Grapevine—this time, with a sweeter journey at your destination. This tour includes access to two wineries on Historic Main Street in Grapevine, along with a range of chocolate pairings to enjoy. You also get to learn about sabering, which is the art of lobbing off a champagne’s bottles top with a sharp saber.
1-Hour Distillery and Tasting Tour in Dallas (New Artisan Distillery)

I’m rounding off this list with two boozy tours. The first is a distillery tour where you get to dive deep into the art of crafting gin and bourbon. The tour is hosted at the New Artisan Distillery and is designed to be an experience. You’ll learn about distillation, then get to sample products in a Glencairn tasting glass in a classy tasting room.
Downtown Dallas Cocktail Crawl (Food Tours of America)

This cocktail crawl gives you plenty of culture to enjoy. You’ll walk from location to location in the AT&T Discovery District, doing some sightseeing on the way. At each spot, you get to sample a hand-crafted cocktail, sometimes paired with bites, as you learn about the city and its favorite flavors.
[Just a heads-up: We may earn an affiliate commission when you make a purchase from a link in our articles.]
Dallas, TX
Dallas millionaire files lawsuit against groundwater district
Subscribe to The Y’all — a weekly dispatch about the people, places and policies defining Texas, produced by Texas Tribune journalists living in communities across the state.
Two companies tied to a Dallas investor filed a federal lawsuit to lift a moratorium in an ongoing East Texas water dispute, alleging a groundwater district has illegally blocked their efforts to extract water from beneath land they own.
This is the latest legal action taken in a growing battle over groundwater resources in East Texas.
Kyle Bass, a venture capitalist and owner of Redtown Ranch Holdings LLC and Pine Bliss LLC, is seeking to end a moratorium on large-scale water extraction projects imposed by the Neches & Trinity Valleys Groundwater Conservation District. The lawsuit, filed through Redtown Ranch and Pine Bliss, argues that the conservation district violated the constitutional rights of Bass and his companies by denying access to water beneath the land and also seeks an undisclosed amount of compensation.
Redtown Ranch and Pine Bliss, both funded by Bass’ private equity firm Conservation Equity Management, filed permits with the Neches & Trinity Valleys Groundwater Conservation District to drill 43 water wells across two counties that, when fully operational, could extract billions of gallons of water from the Carrizo-Wilcox Aquifer.
“What we’re trying to do here is just prevent the district from weaponizing its regulatory power to strip my clients of their property rights,” said Mollie Mallory, an attorney with Tillotson Patton, the law firm representing Redtown Ranch and Pine Bliss LLC. “The whole purpose here is just to hold them accountable and to get them to follow their own rules.”
Bass said he hasn’t been treated fairly by the district despite following its rules for years. He said the roadblocks enacted by the district, such as the moratorium, prevented his company from testing the groundwater beneath land he owns.
“This is bigger than just what happened to me,” Bass wrote in a statement to The Texas Tribune. “My lawsuit is about protecting the property rights of all Texas landowners and making clear that government regulators cannot simply change the rules to pick winners and losers.”
The groundwater district had not been served with the new lawsuit as of Wednesday afternoon, said Holli Pryor-Baze of Skelton Slusher Barnhill Watkins Wells PLLC, the attorney representing the groundwater district.
“We certainly disagree with the allegations, but are not prepared to say more than that,” she said.
A board meeting for the district will be held next week, at which time Pryor-Baze said she hoped to have been served and given time to think through the lawsuit.
Battle over water rights
The lawsuit follows a yearslong battle over groundwater access that reached a fevered pitch during the second special session of the 2025 legislative session in August. State lawmakers at the time tried and failed to set a statewide moratorium on projects of this magnitude until the state could study its aquifers to determine how much water is available and how quickly the groundwater supply replenishes.
It all began when Conservation Equity Management purchased thousands of acres in Houston, Anderson and Henderson counties with the intent to drill 43 high-capacity water wells. The latter two counties are represented by a groundwater conservation district that gave initial approvals for the project to move forward because the applications were administratively complete, a legal term meaning they were filled out properly.
The project drew the ire of East Texans, who were already angry at a number of Dallas-area organizations seeking to extract water from the region. But poultry producer Wayne-Sanderson Farms LLC, which has operations in East Texas, sued to stop the project, claiming that the wells would drain the area of its main water source and impact its operations. Wayne-Sanderson Farms uses water from the Carrizo-Wilcox Aquifer for its processing plants and feed mills.
A district judge approved a settlement between the groundwater conservation district and Sanderson Farms and barred the district from approving certain applications until the aquifer could be studied. It also voided the original decision that the applications were administratively complete.
Then, on May 21, 2026, the district adopted a resolution calling for a moratorium on any “new non-exempt groundwater permit applications.” This moratorium prevents the district from taking action on applications for projects that don’t provide water for local use, such as for households, agriculture or local businesses.
The moratorium will end in October or when the district finishes reviewing and updating its rules — whichever is later. The district is in the process of doing so right now, Pryor-Baze said.
Conservation Equity Management sued to vacate the judge’s moratorium, then filed the latest lawsuit to stop the district’s moratorium in federal court in Tyler on July 7.
The goal is to allow Pine Bliss and Redtown Ranch to finish the administrative process as laid out in the district’s bylaws. This would include going through the State Office of Administrative Hearings before beginning operations.
“We would just continue down that road with the hope that we eventually get to do exploratory drilling to see what water is on their land,” Mallory said.
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Dallas, TX
Role Call: Tyrus Wheat looking to make most of second stint with Cowboys
(Editor’s Note: As part of the preparation for training camp, this series will introduce 25 players who are new to the Cowboys’ roster, rookies and veterans alike. We’ll continue with outside linebacker Tyrus Wheat.)
The 2026 season will mark a homecoming for Wheat, who is now back in Dallas for his second stint with the Cowboys. As an undrafted free agent out of Mississippi State, Wheat signed with the Cowboys in 2023 on the practice squad before quickly being signed to the active roster a few months afterwards.
In his rookie season, Wheat saw a majority of his snaps come on special teams with 197, and only 31 snaps on defense. That would flip in his second season, with 165 snaps on defense and 46 on special teams. Through two years, Wheat played in 20 games and tallied 18 tackles and half a sack before spending a year with the Lions in 2025.
As is true across all levels of football, you can never have enough pass rushers. Wheat gives the Cowboys another pass rusher, who has the added ability to be able to help out on special teams as well as a blocker on kickoffs.
As for how much he’ll be in the defensive rotation, that’ll have to be something he earns in training camp. The Cowboys have some younger pass rushers ahead of him now like Donovan Ezeiruaku and first-round pick Malachi Lawrence, so there’ll need to be some proving done. That said, Wheat is also coming off his best year yet with the Lions. Will it be enough to find a role in the pass rush rotation? Oxnard will give us a good idea of that.
- Wheat played a vital special teams role for the Lions last season, tallying 11 special teams tackles which was the third-most for Detroit in 2025. He played a career-high 215 special teams snaps in order to get to that point.
- Wheat’s one and only season away from the Cowboys thus far in his career saw him play in 15 games for the Lions, where he also tallied a career-high 15 tackles and 1.5 sacks despite only playing 66 defensive snaps.
- After wearing 91 in his first stint with Dallas, Wheat returns to the Cowboys wearing 90 now, which was last worn by defensive tackle Solomon Thomas.
Dallas, TX
Detroit Pistons trade Marcus Sasser to Dusty May’s Dallas Mavericks
Detroit Pistons introduce second-round pick Ugonna Onyenso
Detroit Pistons rookie second-round pick Ugonna Onyenso is introduced to members of the media July 6, 2026.
The Detroit Pistons have traded a third player this summer.
The Pistons agreed to deal 25-year-old combo guard Marcus Sasser to the Dallas Mavericks, coached by ex-Michigan coach Dusty May, on Tuesday, July 7, according to ESPN. The Pistons are also sending a protected 2028 second-round pick to the Los Angeles Clippers.
This comes as part of a complex six-team trade that includes the Pistons dealing Caris LeVert in a salary-saving move to the Milwaukee Bucks on Tuesday evening. The six-team trade also involves the previously reported moves of the Pistons trading Isaiah Stewart to the Memphis Grizzlies and the Pistons’ acquisition of John Collins from the Clippers.
The Pistons generate a trade exception worth $15 million in the trade-palooza, a person with first-hand knowledge told the Free Press, granted anonymity because they are not authorized to speak publicly. The trade exception is worth the same amount as Stewart’s outgoing salary for 2026-27 and allows the Pistons to take in salary up to $15 million without having to send any back. It expires in exactly one year.
Sasser joins a Mavs backcourt where Kyrie Irving is the starting lead guard, and could compete with second-year undrafted guard Ryan Nembhard for the backup role.
Sasser, who the Pistons traded up to draft 25th overall out of Houston in 2023 under previous general manager Troy Weaver, averaged 5.2 points and shot 41.5% from 3. He is on an expiring contract worth $5.2 million from his four-year, $13.5 million rookie deal.
When called upon, Sasser proved he can play. The 6-foot-1, 195-pounder was one of the team’s best shooters, but only appeared in 38 games last season due to injury and the Pistons’ depth at guard.
Pistons president of basketball operations Trajan Langdon indicated a desire to add more ball-handling and shooting this offseason, after a 60-22 season ended in Game 7 of the second round.
Sasser’s path to minutes wasn’t going to get easier following the addition of first-round pick Ebuka Okorie, a 19-year-old from Stanford, whom the Pistons traded up four spots to draft No. 17 overall.
Then, Langdon traded for one of the NBA’s best 3-point shooters in guard Isaiah Joe in a deal with the Oklahoma City Thunder.
Sasser, who was out of the playoff rotation until Game 5 of the second round, sparked the Pistons in Game 6 at Cleveland, pouring in nine points on 4-for-5 shooting in 18 minutes in a win-or-go-home setting. He played 23 minutes in Game 7, scoring nine points on 3-for-12 shooting in a 125-94 blowout loss to the Cavaliers at home.
Pistons roster moves this offseason
The Pistons have turned over much of the roster this summer through the draft and NBA free agency.
Here’s who they’ve added and who they’ve lost:
Lost
- Traded Marcus Sasser (Mavericks)
- Traded Caris LeVert (Bucks)
- Traded Isaiah Stewart (Grizzlies)
- Tobias Harris (Spurs)
Added
- Drafted Ebuka Okorie (No. 17)
- Drafted Ugonna Onyenso (No. 53, two-way contract)
- Acquired Isaiah Joe (Thunder)
- Acquired John Collins (Clippers)
- Acquired Taurean Prince (Bucks)
- Acquired Gary Harris (Bucks)
The Pistons also re-signed bench wings Kevin Huerter and Javonte Green.
Pistons depth chart
The Pistons have 16 players on their 15-man roster, plus two of three two-way slots filled. Here’s where their depth chart currently stands as of Wednesday morning:
*Jalen Duren remains unsigned as a restricted free agent.
- PG: Cade Cunningham, Daniss Jenkins, Ebuka Okorie.
- SG: Duncan Robinson, Isaiah Joe, Javonte Green, Chaz Lanier, Gary Harris.
- SF: Ausar Thompson, Ron Holland, Kevin Huerter, Taurean Prince.
- PF: John Collins, Isaac Jones (two-way).
- C: *Jalen Duren, Paul Reed, Tolu Smith, Ugonna Onyenso (two-way).
[ MUST WATCH: Make “The Pistons Pulse” your go-to Pistons podcast, listen available anywhere you listen to podcasts (Apple, Spotify) or watch live on YouTube. ]
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