Monk's does afternoon coffee and evening natural wine in the same room without feeling like it is trying to do two things at once. The wine list runs to 60 bottles with a focus on small-producer European natural wines. Cheese plate from a local cheesemonger. Twelve seats and a record player. The easiest bar in Dallas to spend three hours in without noticing.
The room is Bishop Arts District $$ 4.5's answer to Dallas's broader hidden gem scene. The bartenders take their craft seriously without making a show of it, and the menu rewards repeat visits rather than first-timers chasing the obvious order. The Hidden Gem programme is the right place to start.
Best time to visit is mid-week between 6pm and 9pm when the bar settles into its rhythm. Weekends fill up and the room takes on a different energy. Reservations are recommended for groups, and on Friday and Saturday for couples.
Monk's Wine and Coffee Bar sits in Bishop Arts District $$ 4.5, one of Dallas's most distinctive drinking neighbourhoods. The crowd skews toward thirty-something locals on weekdays and a slightly younger international mix on weekends. The lighting is low. Conversation works at the bar; the booths handle small groups.
Dress code is smart-casual. The bar is most rewarding for an unhurried 90-minute visit between 7pm and 9pm — early enough to talk to the bartender, late enough that the room has filled in. Tags worth knowing about: Hidden Gem.
Monk's Wine and Coffee Bar accepts walk-ins mid-week before 8pm. After that, expect a wait — reserve in advance through their Instagram or by phone. The bar takes cards. Tipping follows local convention in Dallas. Most regulars order two drinks at the bar, then move to a table when one opens up.
What to order
- 01
The Hidden Gem programme
- 02
Editor's Pick
- 03
Off-Menu Request
