Coffee House Cafe
Coffee House Cafe on Frankford Road sits in the quieter northern reaches of Dallas, where the city's café culture operates at a different pace than the dense dining corridors of Uptown or Knox-Henderson. Without the awards machinery or tasting-menu ambition of Dallas's higher-profile rooms, it occupies the everyday-anchor tier of the city's coffee and café scene, a category that often goes underdocumented but rarely goes unused.
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- Address
- 6150 Frankford Rd, Dallas, TX 75252
- Phone
- +19722322333
- Website
- coffeehousecafe.com

Where Dallas Slows Down
Coffee House Cafe is a casual American breakfast and brunch cafe in Dallas, Texas, with a Google rating of 4.3 and an average price of about $20 per person. The northern edge of Dallas, where Frankford Road cuts through low-rise commercial strips and residential side streets, does not attract the food-press attention that pools around the Design District or Lower Greenville. That relative quietness is part of what defines a certain kind of café operation here: one that functions as a neighbourhood fixture rather than a destination address. Coffee House Cafe at 6150 Frankford Road sits in that context, in a part of the city where regulars arrive from nearby zip codes rather than across town, and where the atmosphere is shaped more by habit than by occasion.
Dallas's café category has broadened considerably in the past decade. The city now supports a spectrum that runs from specialty roaster outposts competing on single-origin sourcing and brew technique, to more traditional café formats built around comfort, familiarity, and a wider food offer. Coffee House Cafe belongs to the latter end of that spectrum, the kind of place where the measure of quality is consistency and the feeling of being known, rather than the provenance of a particular bean or the geometry of a latte pour.
The Atmosphere on Frankford Road
In café culture broadly, the sensory character of a room does much of the work that a menu cannot. The sound profile of a well-used neighbourhood café, the low-grade murmur of conversation, the rhythm of a coffee machine, surfaces worn to a particular sheen, creates a kind of ambient comfort that purpose-built hospitality spaces often fail to replicate. These are not designed effects but accumulated ones, and they register differently to a regular than to a first-time visitor.
The Frankford Road corridor itself contributes a particular texture: this is not a high-foot-traffic pedestrian strip but a car-oriented stretch where the parking lot matters as much as the door. That spatial context is not incidental. It shapes who comes in, how long they stay, and what the café is expected to provide. At this end of the market, in this part of Dallas, the expectation is a reliable cup, a familiar face, and somewhere to sit without pressure, a set of requirements that the surrounding neighbourhood generates in quantity.
For reference points in Dallas's broader dining geography, the distance between this kind of everyday café operation and the city's higher-register rooms is considerable. Mamani and Tatsu Dallas (Japanese) operate in entirely different registers of occasion and investment. 12 Cuts Brazilian Steakhouse and 3Eleven Kitchen and Cocktails draw evening-out energy. Even 360 Brunch House, which occupies a more casual tier, is built around a destination brunch format. Coffee House Cafe sits apart from all of them, not in competition with those rooms but operating in a different category of need.
The Café Tier in a City Built Around Restaurants
Dallas has a strong restaurant identity, Texas barbecue culture at places like Pecan Lodge, serious Japanese technique at counters running comparable programs to what you find in larger markets, Southwestern ambition at rooms like Fearing's. In that environment, the neighbourhood café occupies an understated but genuinely necessary role. Not every meal is an occasion. Not every hour calls for a wine list or a tasting menu. The afternoon coffee, the working-from-a-table session, the takeaway cup before a drive, these are the transactions that café culture is built to absorb, and the northern Dallas suburbs generate that demand consistently.
Nationally, the café category has attracted considerable critical attention in cities like New York, San Francisco, and Chicago, where specialty coffee has become a serious discipline evaluated with some of the same rigour applied to food. Restaurants like Le Bernardin in New York City, Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Smyth in Chicago, and Providence in Los Angeles anchor the high end of their respective city dining conversations. At the other end of that national spectrum sit the everyday café operations that sustain neighbourhoods without generating comparable coverage. Both ends are real and both serve genuine functions.
Internationally, the same pattern holds. Rooms like Atelier Moessmer Norbert Niederkofler in Brunico or The Inn at Little Washington in Washington set one kind of benchmark. The neighbourhood café sets another. These are not comparable categories, but the latter is not the lesser one in terms of daily relevance.
Other EP Club coverage includes Emeril's in New Orleans, The French Laundry in Napa, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, Blue Hill at Stone Barns in Tarrytown, Addison in San Diego, and Atomix in New York City for those whose Dallas visit is part of a wider American dining itinerary.
Know Before You Go
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Address | 6150 Frankford Rd, Dallas, TX 75252 |
| Phone | Not available |
| Website | Not available |
| Hours | Mon to Sun: 7 AM to 3 PM |
| Price range | Not confirmed |
| Reservations | Reservations recommended |
How It Stacks Up
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coffee House CafeThis venue — the venue you are viewing | American Breakfast & Brunch Cafe | $$ | , | |
| Second Floor Regionally Inspired Kitchen | Contemporary American with Regional Influences | $$ | , | Galleria Dallas |
| Ascension Coffee | Specialty Coffee & Brunch Cafe | $$ | , | LoMac |
| Smoky Rose | Texas BBQ with Chef-Driven Refinement | $$ | , | East Dallas |
| Dream Cafe Lakewood | American Eclectic Cafe | $$ | , | Caruth Terrace |
| The Rustic | American Grill with Southwestern Flair | $$ | , | Uptown |
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Browse all →At a Glance
- Cozy
- Casual
- Rustic
- Brunch
- Casual Hangout
- Group Dining
- Family
- Live Music
- Private Dining
- Terrace
- Extensive Wine List
- Craft Cocktails
- Organic
- Local Sourcing
Warm and inviting interior with brick and wood accents, cozy booths, and casual shabby-chic aesthetic; covered patio with fireplace and outdoor heaters creates comfortable gathering space.


















