• Home
  • popular
  • News
  • Restaurants + Bars
  • City Life
  • Entertainment
  • Travel
  • Real Estate
  • Arts
  • Society
  • Home + Design
  • Fashion + Beauty
  • Innovation
  • Sports
  • events
  • submit-new-event
  • subscribe
  • about
  • children
  • education
  • health
  • series
  • promoted
  • eventdetail
  • Veterans
  • Social Services
  • Arts + Culture
  • Animals
  • LGBTQ
  • New Charity
  • South Padre FW
  • Visit Frisco FW
  • Wrangler FW
  • Dogfish Head FW
  • LovBe FW
  • Claire St Amant podcast FW
  • Nasher FW
  • Greystar Jameson
  • Luck Springs FW
  • Fort Worth Tastemaker Awards 2021
  • Texas Motorplex FW
  • Port Aransas FW
  • Milan Laser
  • Bandera FW
  • Proximo Spirits
  • Balcones
  • Greystar Burnett Lofts
  • Briggs Neighborhood Guide
  • Highland Park Village
  • Gift Guide
  • Music Lane
  • Pioneer FW
  • Fort Worth Tastemaker Awards
  • Fort Worth Stock Show & Rodeo
  • Central Market
  • Athletic Brewing
  • Into the Garden
  • Panther City LAX
  • Bud Light Next
  • EnerGenie
  • El Paso
  • Visit Lubbock
  • JW Marriott San Antonio
  • Travel Texas
  • FWTX Renewable You
  • Where to Eat
  • Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth
  • Formula 1 Giveaway
  • Fort Worth Charity Challenge 2016
  • Texas Wine Talk Fort Worth
  • Okay to Say
  • Tastemaker Awards 2016 Fort Worth
  • Texas Traveler Fort Worth
  • Soldiers' Angels
  • Okay to Say Fort Worth
  • Bob's Steak and Chop House Fort Worth
  • Top Texans Under 30 Fort Worth
  • Shipt Fort Worth
  • State Fair of Texas 2016 Fort Worth
  • Soldier's Angels Fort Worth
  • WestBend Fort Worth
  • Tastemakers Forth Worth 2017
  • Winedown Relay at Waterside
  • DFW Showcase Tour of Homes FW
  • West 7th Crockett Creates
  • Sunset Sessions at Waterside
  • Galveston.com Fort Worth
  • Choctaw Fort Worth
  • Reliant Bright Ideas Fort Worth
  • State Fair 2017 Fort Worth
  • Methodist Health System Fort Worth
  • Eatzis
  • The Lofts at West 7th
  • Elan River District
  • Choctaw Fort Worth 2018
  • Elan West 7th
  • Crockett Row
  • 'Tis the Season Fort Worth
  • Joseph Berkes Williams Trew
  • Clean Juice Bar
  • Omni Hotels Fort Worth
  • Opendoor Fort Worth
  • Fort Worth Tastemakers 2018
  • San Marcos Fort Worth
  • City of Burleson Fort Worth
  • Visit Taos FW
  • Fort Worth Charity Guide
  • Pinstack Fort Worth
  • Pinstripes
  • GiftingMap Fort Worth
  • Woodchuck Cider Fort Worth
  • Partners Card Fort Worth 2018
  • Dallas Bike Ride Fort Worth
  • Waterside
  • Fort Worth Season's Eatings
  • Cirque Du Soleil Amaluna Fort Worth
  • Trinity Residences
  • Holiday Happenings Fort Worth 2018
  • Crockett Row food hall
  • Sundance Square
  • B&B Butchers Fort Worth
  • Grimaldi's Fort Worth
  • Galveston 2019 Fort Worth
  • Fort Worth Tastemaker Awards 2019
  • Trinity at Left Bank
  • Visit Plano Fort Worth
  • Omni Barton Creek FW
  • Lang Partners
  • Woodford Reserve FW
  • Bank of America Kaaboo FW
  • Valencia Group Hotels FW
  • Weekend Event Planner Fort Worth
  • Summer Getaways FW
  • VRBO Fort Worth
  • BestHotelRates.com FW
  • Real Weddings Fort Worth 2019
  • B.B. Lemon Fort Worth
  • Oskar Blues Wild Basin Fort Worth
  • Vine Connections Fort Worth
  • Deep Ellum Brewing Co FW
  • Cigar City Margarita Gose FW
  • Getaways FW
  • Crook Marker FW
  • Fort Worth Tastemaker Awards 2020
  • Fit in the City
  • CBD Take Out FW
  • Father's Day Gift Guide 2020 FW
  • Matthews and Associates FW
  • Travel Juneau FW
  • Grandes Vinos FW
  • Cutwater Spirits FW
  • RV Share FW
  • Babe Wine FW
  • Recovery Resource Council FW
  • Brixos FW
  • Gift Guide 2020 FW
  • Texas Original
  • Lalamove FW
  • Garrison Brothers
  • Jobs
  • Advertising Inquiry
  • media sponsorship request
  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Suggestions
  • Authors
  • Trinity Metro
  • Log in

Hotel news

New wine-inspired Hotel Vin pops the cork in historic Grapevine

Stephanie Allmon Merry
Sep 1, 2020 | 5:11 pm

A long-awaited boutique hotel in Grapevine is finally sabering the champagne. Hotel Vin, Autograph Collection — a 120-room luxury hotel located in the town's bustling historic district — debuts Thursday, September 3, with grand-opening fanfare extending through the long Labor Day weekend.

Part of the new, $114 million Grapevine Main development, Hotel Vin (pronounced "vin," not "veen") nods to the city's history as a wine-producing region. From design flourishes to an exclusive glassware program, the hotel's wine motif is carried through in refined ways reminiscent of a high-end Napa Valley resort, says Tom Santora, the hotel's managing director.

"It’s really thoughtful touches throughout the hotel that provide you the atmosphere that doesn’t scream 'wine' at all," Santora says.

Blink-or-you'll-miss-them examples include ballroom chandeliers that are made of wine glasses and champagne flutes; an art installation crafted from wine barrel staves; and a beautiful custom-made wall that houses decanters, goblets, and other wine decor.

The property will offer regular wine-tastings and seminars, and throughout the hotel and its restaurants, wine will be served in varietal-specific Riedel glassware to enhance its enjoyment. No more sipping New World Pinot Noir from a Tempranillo glass, thank you very much.

Dining and drinking
The hotel will house two eateries: the premier Bacchus Kitchen + Bar, and the tapas-style Rioja Rooftop Terrace.

Bacchus Kitchen + Bar (named for the Roman god of wine) will feature contemporary cuisine in an upscale and approachable setting. Headed by executive chef William Salisbury, it will include locally sourced fare from nearby purveyors and farms; handcrafted cocktails; craft beer; and an elevated wine program including a temperature-controlled wine wall stocked with more than 860 bottles. (More on the menu here.)

Coming in October will be much-buzzed-about Harvest Hall, a food hall whose operators will include Easy Sliders, Arepa TX, Chick & Biscuit Comfort Cuisine, Four Sisters – A Taste of Vietnam, Spuntino Bites of Italy, and Zatar, a Fort Worth food truck that does Mediterranean cuisine.

Throughout the hotel, an extensive wine program will showcase national and international wines. Santora says these include vintages from Bordeaux, Tuscany, Rioja, Napa, Sonoma, Oregon, and even Upstate New York. It does not, however, include wines from Grapevine.

"We're partnering with local vineyards for tastings and VIP tours," he says. "Our wine list itself is more about New and Old World Wines."

More highlights of Hotel Vin include:

  • Of the 120 rooms, there are six suites and one presidential suite. All feature high-tech amenities such as "Enseo," with allows guests to customize their in-room entertainment from the touch of a smartphone.
  • A 38,000 square-foot outdoor plaza.
  • A 500-space parking garage.
  • More than 20,000 square feet of flexible indoor-outdoor meeting space (including eight meeting rooms).
  • The Bordeaux ballroom, offering panoramic views of Main Street and the community plaza below.
  • State-of-the-art fitness center, luxe sunroom, and two outdoor patios.
  • Four private dining rooms, including a wine room and an intimate hidden alcove.
  • A location in front of the new TEXRail line, which connects DFW Airport to downtown Fort Worth, as well as steps from the shopping, dining, and entertainment along historic Main Street District.
  • Part of Marriott's Bonvoy loyalty program, which provides perks for travelers.

Santora acknowledges that opening a hotel during the COVID-19 pandemic has presented some challenges (health and safety precautions are outlined on their website). But, he says, the community has been supportive — opening night at the restaurant is sold out, and the hotel is booked 70 percent on opening weekend.

He also acknowledges that Grapevine is a hotel-dense town, with the massive Gaylord Texan Resort & Convention Center, staycation-friendly Great Wolf Lodge, and a dozen others within a few miles. He is sure Hotel Vin can stand out among the crowd.

"We're really the first and only boutique lifestyle hotel in Grapevine," he says. "So if you look at who we’re competing with, it's really the Joule or Crescent or Adolphus in Dallas, or the Sinclair in Fort Worth. Plus, we're the only hotel on Main Street and really have that advantage, whether for business travelers or staycations or a group coming in for a meeting."

Opening details
Hotel Vin, 215 E. Dallas Rd., is opening with a full weekend of dinner features, brunch specials, wine tastings, and live music, including:

Thursday, September 3
5-6:30 pm: Live music from La Pompe
6-10 pm: Bacchus Kitchen + Bar dinner special featuring Lobster Thermidor with Jadot Poully Fuisse
7-10 pm: Live music from Ricki Derek

Friday, September 4
3:39-5:39 pm: Bacchus Kitchen + Bar Inaugural Happy Hour
5-11 pm: Bacchus Kitchen + Bar dinner special featuring a 42 oz. Porterhouse with Blackbird’s Paramour
7-10 pm: Live music from the Joe Savage Band

Saturday, September 5
11 am-3 pm: Derby Day Brunch offerings by G.H. Mumm and Woodford Reserve
5-11 pm: Bacchus Kitchen + Bar dinner special featuring Whole Grilled Fish with Robert Mondavi Fume Blanc
7-10 pm: Live music from The British Are Coming
6-8 pm.: Complimentary cigar rolling from Ole Grapevine Cigar & Tobacco
6:30-8:30 pm: Blackbird Vineyards wine tasting (limited availability)
6:30-8:30 pm: Riedel Wine Glass tasting (limited availability)

Sunday, September 6
11 am-3 pm: Bacchus Kitchen + Bar brunch special
11 am-2 pm.: Live music from Maya Piata
5-11:00 pm: Bacchus Kitchen + Bar dinner special featuring Fried Chicken with Perrier Jouet

Monday, September 7
11 am-3 pm: Bacchus Kitchen + Bar brunch special

To mark the grand opening, two special guest packages are available September 3-December 30. The "76051 Locals Only" and "Escape to Grapevine" packages offer guests 15 to 50 percent off per night. Visit the website for additional details and to book.

Hotel Vin broke ground in January 2018 and is finally opening on September 3, 2020.

Hotel Vin, Grapevine
Photo courtesy of Hotel Vin
Hotel Vin broke ground in January 2018 and is finally opening on September 3, 2020.
vacationwinehotelsopenings
news/travel

CultureMap Emails Are Awesome
Get Fort Worth intel delivered daily.

We will not share or sell your email address.

most read posts

Fort Worth gets its first taste of acclaimed New York ice cream shop

These are the 13 best things to do in Fort Worth this weekend

Texas' Big Bend named one of the world's must-see destinations for 2023

Oh, what fun!

Expert Fort Worth Christmas lights family plugs in sweet new drive-thru Sugar Lane Lights

Cecilia Lenzen
Nov 8, 2022 | 3:38 pm
Tell Family Lights
Facebook/Tell Family Lights

They know a thing or two from their annual Tell Family Lights display in far north Fort Worth.

This year, Jeff Tell and his family are spreading holiday cheer even further than usual with their new drive-thru lights experience called "Sugar Lane Lights."

The Tell family has been lighting up their own home in far north Fort Worth since 2018 with Tell Family Lights, a synchronized Christmas lights show that annually makes CultureMap's lists of must-see displays. They still plan to host the free event at their 76244 home this year but have expanded their efforts to include Sugar Lane Lights, which they describe as the “sweetest holiday light show in Texas.”

Sugar Lane Lights will be hosted on rented land in Haslet and feature a mile-long drive with 2 million LED lights programmed to shine in sync with upbeat holiday songs. Each light can be changed to over 16 million possible colors, creating a unique holiday show.

Tell says the family worked with Murphy Christmas Lighting, a local Christmas light service company, but otherwise outsourced no help to create the show. The display’s props, configuration, network, sequencing, effects and everything else that went into creating the show was 100 percent designed by the family.

“A lot of these other displays are different,” Tell says of the rarity of their in-house model. “A lot of them are outsourced and kind of pieced together. So the person that owns it, if you ask them how it’s done, they have no idea. So doing this all ourselves, we have full control of everything.”

Tell’s experience as an IT consultant helped him manage the creation of the display. He says he has worked with other companies since 2018 to configure other major lights displays in Texas.

The Sugar Lane Lights display will feature 1,200 props, including a 50-foot tall Christmas tree decorated with 90,000 lights, a 25-foot tall gingerbread house, and a 16-foot tall snowflake. Guests will also be able to purchase battery-charged LED bracelets that are synced to the show’s music.

Tells says his wife, Jennifer, sequenced the show’s effects and programmed the lights to sync with the show’s music. Oftentimes, light shows will sequence all props to be doing the same thing — Sugar Lane Lights didn’t. Each of the eight songs took 180 hours of programming, Tell says.

“The artistic part of it is just going to be a lot more detailed than a lot of the other [shows],” he says.

Prices for the show vary from $30 to $55 per car depending on entry time, and tickets can be purchased online. Entry times are categorized on the website as sweet (no traffic), semi-sweet (light traffic) and toothache (medium to heavy traffic). Tell says the family decided to discount sweet entry times to encourage more people to visit the show during less popular hours and hopefully reduce traffic congestion.

There's a handy FAQ about vehicle height, pets, and more here.

Tell says the family hopes to open the show on Friday, November 11, but recent storms have caused delays. Most likely it will open on November 17, they predict. They'll be open nightly until December 31, 5:30-10 pm on weekdays and 5:30-11 pm on weekends.

Sugar Lane Lights can be found at 12452 Willow Springs Rd., Haslet. (The entrance is directly after the shipping containers, right before the Oasis Church.)

Follow their website or Facebook page for more information and updates.

news/travel

CultureMap Emails Are Awesome
Get Fort Worth intel delivered daily.

We will not share or sell your email address.

most read posts

Fort Worth gets its first taste of acclaimed New York ice cream shop

These are the 13 best things to do in Fort Worth this weekend

Texas' Big Bend named one of the world's must-see destinations for 2023

Closure News

Fort Worth chef reluctantly closes Near Southside brunch favorite

Teresa Gubbins
Nov 8, 2022 | 12:54 pm
Salmon, Fixture
Photo courtesy of Farrar Food Photography [http://www.farrarfoodphotography.com]

Fixture had many creative dishes at a reasonable price like this salmon.

A neighborhood restaurant from an acclaimed Fort Worth chef has closed: Fixture, which served comfort food and craft cocktails in Fort Worth's trendy Near Southside, closed on November 7, after eight years.

Chef-owner Ben Merritt says he was sad to have to shutter the restaurant, but that circumstances that have emerged since the pandemic forced the closure.

"We were able to survive COVID, but the tsunami that has occurred with rising labor costs and the cost of ingredients have made it hard for restaurants, especially a neighborhood restaurant like Fixture," he says.

"Last year was our best year in sales, everyone came out after the lockdown to support small businesses," he says. "But I think now we're seeing the real aftereffect of the pandemic. People aren't dining out as much as they used to, and the costs are so much higher."

That includes not only ingredients but wages.

"I remember when we opened eight years ago, a line cook would get $10 an hour," he says. "Now you can't find a dishwasher for that. I'm glad to see wages go up, but it makes it difficult for moderate priced restaurants."

Fixture was a revelation when it opened: a chef-driven great-quality restaurant with moderate prices in a hip neighborhood, and a philosophy that "food doesn't have to be expensive to be great, nor require a white tablecloth." It was nominated for Best New Restaurant of the year in CultureMap's 2016 Tastemaker awards.

The menu ranged from sandwiches like pork loin & apple and a Texas cheesesteak to entrees such as tenderloin with garlic mashed potatoes, shrimp & green chili cheese grits, and chicken & waffles.

Fixture was early on the brunch scene, a meal that Merritt says accounted for a good chunk of their business.

"We always did a great brunch, but it wasn't enough to pay the bills for the rest of the week," he says.

The chef also opened a small place in 2019 called Ben's Triple B: Biscuits, Burgers and Brews near the campus of Texas Wesleyan University, part of the Rosedale Renaissance, a charge led by Texas Wesleyan, in partnership with the City of Fort Worth and Tarrant County, to revitalize the historic Polytechnic Heights neighborhood and East Fort Worth. It closed it in 2021, also due to the pandemic.

Merritt has received numerous awards including a nomination for Best Chef of the Year in CultureMap's 2018 Tastemaker Awards, as well as a nomination for Best New Restaurant in 2022 for Fitzgerald, Merritt's upscale restaurant on Camp Bowie Boulevard, which he says is doing well.

"It's a higher price point and I think people don't bat an eye on the west side," he says.

"I feel horrible shutting Fixture down," he says. "Probably the best way to describe it is like the family pet that we spent a lot of money on vet bills to keep it alive, and you finally reach that point where it's time to put it down."

news/travel

CultureMap Emails Are Awesome
Get Fort Worth intel delivered daily.

We will not share or sell your email address.

most read posts

Fort Worth gets its first taste of acclaimed New York ice cream shop

These are the 13 best things to do in Fort Worth this weekend

Texas' Big Bend named one of the world's must-see destinations for 2023

This week in gluttony

These are the 5 best food and drink events in Fort Worth this week

Celestina Blok
Nov 8, 2022 | 9:17 am
Tacos a Go Go tacos
Photo by Julie Nong

Tacos for everyone this week.

It’s a week of giving and sharing, with multiple restaurants honoring veterans with complimentary meals and the return of a big free dinner to those who'd like one. Step back in time with a Dutch oven cooking demonstration at one of Fort Worth’s most cherished museums, learn to smoke the perfect BBQ brisket, and save room for tacos during a two-day festival.

Wednesday, November 9

Feast of Sharing 10th Annual Holiday Dinner
Hosted by H-E-B and Central Market, this community celebration will provide complimentary dinner to anyone who wishes to attend. The event is back after a two-year hiatus and is expected to draw around 10,000 people to Dickies Arena. (Volunteers are still needed.) Besides a meal, there will be kids’ activities, live entertainment, health and family services, and an appearance by Santa. The event will run from 3-7 pm.

Thursday, November 10-Friday, November 11

Veterans Day deals and discounts
Dozens of local restaurants are offering free and discounted meals and menu items for active military and veterans. For a complete list, go here.

Saturday, November 12

Dutch Oven Cooking at Log Cabin Village
Visit this living history museum and learn how ancestors used to prepare meals over hot coals during a Dutch oven cooking demonstration led by the Lone Star Dutch Oven Society. The demonstrations (which often include samples) will run from 10 am- 2 pm and are free with admission ($7 for adults, and $6 for kids ages 4-17 and adults 60-plus).

Texas Taco Festival at Texas Live
More than two dozen restaurants and food vendors will participate in the two-day event, which will feature not only tacos but margaritas, tequila flights, desserts, and more. Tickets range from general admission ($12.99 on Sunday, $16.99 on Saturday), which allows for entry at 2 pm and includes one beer or cocktail, to VIP ($59.99 Sunday, sold out for Saturday), which grants early admission at noon and includes private bars, five taco vouchers, chips and salsa, two beers or cocktails, and gift bag with swag. Additional vouchers may be purchased at the event. Children 10 and under do not need a ticket.

BrisketU at Rahr & Sons Brewing
Backyard Pitmasters’ acclaimed BrisketU class promises to teach the everyday meat lover how to work a pit and create a perfectly smoked brisket. Renowned pitmasters will teach participants about BBQ pits, choosing the right cut of brisket, trimming techniques, rubs and prep, wood selection, starting and managing a fire, timing the cook, and properly slicing the end result. The three-hour class is $119 per person; register here.

news-you-can-eat
news/travel

CultureMap Emails Are Awesome
Get Fort Worth intel delivered daily.

We will not share or sell your email address.

most read posts

Fort Worth gets its first taste of acclaimed New York ice cream shop

These are the 13 best things to do in Fort Worth this weekend

Texas' Big Bend named one of the world's must-see destinations for 2023

Loading Next Story...