Locations in San Antonio: Smoking Prohibited

38 results

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  • Bagel Factory

    15909 San Pedro, Suite 115 San Antonio

    (210) 499-0100; (210) 499-0103 (FAX)

    San Antonio's newest Bagel hot-spot! Try our fabulous New York-style bagels made fresh from scratch right here in our kitchen. We make 18 varieties of bagels and 9 flavors of cream cheese. We have several breakfast and lunch sandwiches, all available any time. Try our famous Cheese Grits and Bagelaches for a treat! If you love real bagels, you'll love Bagel Factory! San Antonio Magazine thinks we've done it right!
    1 article
  • Beto's Comida Latina

    8142 Broadway San Antonio

    (210) 930-9393

    Empanada aficionados can breathe a sigh of relief: Beto's is back. Torta fanciers, on the other hand, are pissed. On the streamlined menu that accompanied Beto's move to scaled-down quarters up Broadway a piece from the previous location, the south-of-the-border subs are absent, and their vocal partisans have made management amply aware of their displeasure. Lay off, guys: Tortas, we're told, will be back. But nobody seems to be complaining about the missing platos. Roasted chicken, grilled whole fish, Beto's Mixed Grill are also AWOL, victims of the pared-down (but definitely not down-and-out) mindset that characterizes the new location. There is a new enthusiasm: Symbolic of tenant-landlord discord, an office building is said to soon be going up in Beto's old backyard. The current backyard, reclaimed from a parking lot and casually landscaped, is utterly anti-office in its laid-back demeanor. This is the place to chill, even in the heat. A mojito won't hurt at other times, despite, or perhaps because of, its reduced rum content.;- Ron Bechtol
    2 articles
  • BJ's Tacos

    1438 W. Hutchin's Place San Antonio

    (210) 928-2499

    BJ's offers tasty, inexpensive tacos.
  • Bolo's Rotisserie-Grille

    9821 Colonnade, Omni Hotel San Antonio

    (210) 691-8888

    Delicious food in an elegant setting.
  • Bolo's Rotisserie-Grille

    9821 Colonnade Blvd. San Antonio

    (210) 699-0073

    Delicious food in an elegant setting.
  • Cafe Navarro

    414 Navarro St San Antonio

    (210) 579-3050

    The Nix Hospital's Cafe Navarro counters past notions of hospital dining with its polished floors and varied clientele. A tortilla wrap of turkey with chipotle mayo proved memorable, as did a bowl of potato-leek soup.
  • Continental Lunchroom

    705 Dolorosa San Antonio

    (210) 225-4676

    The Continental Lunchroom appeals to those whose palate runs toward the pedestrian. (And it's only natural, downtown streets are best navigated on foot.) Or say a judge is going to send you up the river for pot possession and you are down to your last $5. You're going to be eating boiled bologna in the pokey for the next 10 to 15 years, and you want one last home-cooked meal: The Continental Lunchroom is the place. ;- Michael Cary
  • Earl Abel's

    1639 Broadway Downtown

    (210) 822-3358; (210) 822-4541 (FAX)

    Serving southern comfort since 1933. Offering curbside pick-up for delicious family meals and grocery pack items.
    3 articles
  • Fool Moon Cafe

    204 Main, Bandera San Antonio

    (830) 460-8434

    At high noon in Bandera, the Cowboy Capital of the world, not much happens, I'd reckon. But at 9 on a Friday evening, the joint is jumping. Well, twitching, at least. A quick walk down Main Street revealed a seemly crowd at the Old Spanish Trail restaurant, chowing down on salads from the chuckwagon bar and swiveling on genuine saddle seats at the counter. Some serious boot scootin' was going on at the Bandera Saloon up the street. And in the ultra-atmospheric basement that is Arkey Blue's Silver Dollar, Arkey and his band were warming up for a long evening of Shiner suds and folks shuffling around in sawdust on the dance floor.;Fool Moon Café, on the other hand, was just winding up its evening operations. Open at odd hours, the diminutive café/bakery/coffee house, with its artfully aged walls, scarred pine floors (we imagined spurs doing the scarring, of course), and tables topped with butcher paper, had filled maybe half of its 45 seats during the two hours it's open for Friday dinner. At the leisurely pace of service, it is hard to imagine that much more of a crowd could be accommodated by Jason Boone and his hard-working sidekick Cory Winfield. We didn't feel neglected, but we did spend the two entire hours at table. - Ron Bechtol
  • Guenther House

    205 E. Guenther San Antonio

    (210) 227-1061

    Downtown San Antonio restaurant housed in an 1860 home built by the founder of Pioneer Flour Mills. Food includes breakfast: Pioneer biscuits, breakfast tacos, waffles, and pastries. ;Lunch is made up of spinach and other types of salads, deli-style sandwiches on whole-wheat buns, and main entrees.
  • La Madeleine (Broadway)

    4820 Broadway San Antonio

    (210) 829-7279

    Fine French cuisine served in a quiet, elegant atmosphere.
  • La Madeleine (Ih 10)

    11745 Ih 10 W San Antonio

    (210) 691-1227

    Fine French cuisine served in a quiet, elegant atmosphere.
  • La Madeleine (near 1604)

    18030 San Pedro San Antonio

    (210) 499-0208

    Fine French cuisine served in a quiet, elegant atmosphere.
  • La Madeleine (North Star Mall)

    7400 San Pedro San Antonio

    (210) 308-8028

    Fine French cuisine served in a quiet, elegant atmosphere.
    1 event
  • Las Canarias

    112 College, Omni La Mansion Hotel River Walk

    (210) 518-1000

    Under the hand of Chef John Brand, the ambitious New American menu is worth the trip for locals as well as tourists, and the River Walk seating is as romantic as ever. -- Ron Bechtol (05/09)
  • Lula's Mexican Café

    137 E. Travis San Antonio

    (210) 472-3300

    Mexican fare in a pedestrian downtown setting.
  • Lulu's Jailhouse Cafe

    1126 W. Commerce San Antonio

    (210) 224-5001

  • The Malt House

    115 S. Zarzamora San Antonio

    (210) 433-8441

    What would you expect from a place called the Malt House? If your answer is a thick, syrupy malt topped with whipped cream and a cherry, think again. The Malt House serves homestyle dishes simply made - meaning that the malts in question are actually just cups of soft-serve frozen yogurt - doused with a healthy topping of Hershey's if you order chocolate. Apart from this unusual deviation - after all, the beverage is the institution's namesake! - the Malt House doesn't stray from the traditional definitions of the dishes on its menu. Pull into the parking lot on Zarzamora and Commerce, and turn on your lights if you'd like to eat in your car. But since it's a bitter cold February, you would do better to go inside and cozy up to a plate of enchiladas. The atmosphere is friendly and chaotic - filled with families during dinner, coworkers and cops during lunch, and party-goers late at night. And the food - if not sophisticated or exotic, is just right for a cold San Antonio day. - Laura Fries
  • Mama's Cafe (N. Main)

    100 N. Main San Antonio

    (210) 354-2233

  • Mary Ann's Pig Stand

    1508 Broadway San Antonio

    (210) 222-9923

    ; Large, satisfying, inexpensive breakfasts are one of the Pig Stand's features. For lunch, the price is a bit higher but still reasonable and they feature a nice pork barbecue sandwich, known as the Pig Sandwich. They get their name from the size of their meals, if that gives you any idea.

    ;
  • Milam Building

    115 E Travis San Antonio

    (210) 226-0093

    The Milam Building at Travis and Soledad was erected in 1928, just in time for the Recession, a small setback that didn't deter it from becoming the center of the then-known oil universe. The Milam was also the first fully air-conditioned building in the world. Hold up your hand if you knew that. Although the oil industry has long since moved on to power centers in other cities, the Milam, with its classically detailed spit-and-polish lobby, still retains an air of burnished respectability. You half expect to see tenant remnants of the building's heyday walking the corridors - and perhaps you do. One friend, whose father had an office in the building, remembers eating there as a kid, not however, at the '30s-era prices: Roast Prime Rib of Fancy Northern Beef au jus topped that list at 22 cents. - Ron Bechtol
  • Mittman Fine Foods

    1125 S Mittman San Antonio

    (210) 532-3318

    Mom and pop restaurant with delicious homestyle mexican cooking, fresh homemade flour tortillas made to order, simply the best hole in the wall restaurant that needs the recognition it deserves.
  • ORO at the Emily Morgan Hotel

    705 E. Houston San Antonio

    (210) 244-0146

    In the lobby of the Emily Morgan Hotel, guests will find pure gold – the ORO Restaurant and Bar. Spanish for "gold," ORO provides diners in San Antonio with a superb culinary dining experience that centers upon Executive Chef Moses Cruz's regional Texas cuisine. ;Open daily for breakfast, lunch, and dinner, and with high-speed wireless Internet service throughout the restaurant and bar, ORO features a daily Happy Hour from 5:00 to 7:00pm with drink specials available. The ORO margarita was recently selected as the "Best Margarita in all of San Antonio." The extensive martini menu has been rated as one of the top three in all of San Antonio.;;For San Antonio fine dining, ORO offers a spectacular new menu each season served in one of the most stunning dining rooms in all of San Antonio. The sophisticated space features dark wood floors, high-backed booths, chairs upholstered in smoked-salmon colored fabric, and subtle lighting of custom-made fabric cones and votive candles.
  • Oro in the Emily Morgan Hotel

    705 E. Houston Downtown

    (210) 225-5100

    Here's a promise: In writing about Oro, there will be no cheap references to "good as gold," "gold standard," "fool's gold," etc. Although it's tempting, very tempting. My first comment does have to do with gold as a color: The faded blue denim shirts on the waiters have to go - with the possible exception of the one on our waiter. (It matched his eyes, according to a dining companion who notices such things.) As a part of last year's redo of the Emily Morgan, Oro rose from the ashes of the utterly undistinguished Yellow Rose Café. Now garbed in golds and deep browns, illuminated by handsome fabric pendants, sconces, and votive candles, and sporting such flagrantly opulent touches as an alabaster bar glowing from lights placed beneath, the restaurant has an air of elegance rivaled by few in the city. The second-string waitstaff is garbed in black, tunic-style jackets. So what's with the denim? Think of an evening at Oro as theater, and you'll understand where I'm coming from. Thinking of the menu as Modern Italian, as it claims to be, may help define its direction some, but isn't really necessary to enjoyment of the meal. - Ron Bechtol
  • Pam's Patio Kitchen

    11826 Wurzbach San Antonio

    (210) 492-1359

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