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Javier's locations have large tequila selections and specialize in margaritas. Margarita flavors include tamarind, cucumber, jalapeño, and pineapple. [ 5 ] A signature cocktail is the Diamante Negro martini with Maestro Dobel tequila, agave nectar and lime juice served in a glass with a black salt rim.
Javier’s Mexican Restaurant took home the People’s Choice Award.) And Miguel’s food truck and catering food also landed on top of the Yelp.com Top 100 eateries list in November.
A selection of pan dulce is seen at Javier’s Champagne in this file photo from 2023. Javier’s Mexican Restaurant, the longtime family business, has been closed since mid June, but the family ...
Formerly a Polish Jewish neighborhood, [2] it was settled by a wave of Mexican immigrants beginning about 1910, and was recognized as Little Mexico by 1919, becoming a center of a Mexican-American community life in the city that lasted into the early 1980s, with a peak of population in the 1960s. Pike Park and a few structures are the remnants ...
Details: Javier’s Mexican Restaurant is at 5680 E. Kings Canyon Road. Brunch is from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sundays. 559-252-4511. Greg Rodriquez, with Rachel Rodriquez to the left, says he’s ...
After several years of operating his restaurant as a success, Arrambide turned his energy towards creating a Pancho's restaurant chain. The company eventually relocated its corporate office from El Paso to Fort Worth, Texas in 1966. [3] In 2007, Pancho's moved east again, this time to Dallas, Texas. Since 1979, the corporation has changed hands ...
Martinez was born in Dallas, Texas, in the Little Mexico neighborhood. Spanish was his first language, but when he was five years old, his family was the first Mexican-American family to move into Lakewood, Dallas, [1] where he learned to speak English so he could attend school. At the age of nine, he began working in his father's Mexican ...
As of 2002 the Mexican population lived in various parts of the DFW area, with concentrations in West Dallas, Oak Cliff, and Arlington. [ 1 ] As of 2000 there was a large group of ethnic Mexicans living north of Arlington in an area south of Interstate 30 , and a smaller group in the cities between Dallas and Fort Worth south of U.S. Highway 183 .