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Modern Texas American
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Price≈$60
Dress CodeSmart Casual
ServiceUpscale Casual
NoiseConversational
CapacityMedium

Landrace at 111 Lexington Ave occupies a particular position in San Antonio's fine-dining scene: a restaurant that grounds its menu in regional and seasonal sourcing at a time when the city's upper tier is pulling in multiple directions. Compared to the tasting-menu formalism of Mixtli or the Texas-focused cooking at Isidore, Landrace reads as the farm-driven middle ground, where the editorial interest lies in what it says about San Antonio's evolving relationship with the land around it.

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Address
111 Lexington Ave, San Antonio, TX 78205
Phone
+12109426026
Landrace restaurant in San Antonio, United States
About

Where San Antonio's Farm-Driven Dining Finds Its Footing

Arrive at 111 Lexington Ave on a weekday evening and the neighbourhood gives you context before the menu does. Downtown San Antonio's dining core has shifted considerably over the past decade, moving away from Riverwalk tourist anchors toward a more considered set of restaurants that treat the city's culinary identity as something worth building rather than performing. Landrace sits inside that shift. The address places it in downtown San Antonio without leaning on scenic spectacle to do its work. What greets you instead is a room that signals intent: the kind of space where the sourcing philosophy is visible in the design before a dish arrives.

Across American fine dining, the farm-to-table positioning that dominated the 2010s has fractured into several distinct strands. One strand became marketing shorthand, disconnected from any operational reality. Another evolved into something more rigorous: kitchens that built genuine supply chains, worked directly with ranchers and growers, and let those relationships dictate the menu rather than the other way around. Operations like Blue Hill at Stone Barns in Tarrytown and Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg represent that second strand at its most developed, with on-site farming infrastructure and menus that shift week to week based on harvest. Landrace operates in that same philosophical current, applied to the specific ecology of South Texas.

The Sustainability Argument in a Texas Context

South Texas presents a particular set of conditions for ethical sourcing. The region's ranching culture is deep and the growing season is long, but the summer heat compresses certain windows and the distance from major agricultural hubs means that supply-chain discipline requires more deliberate effort here than in, say, Northern California. That context matters when assessing what a restaurant like Landrace is actually doing versus what it claims. In cities where sustainable sourcing has become a default marketing position, the interesting question is not whether a kitchen sources locally but how that sourcing shapes what ends up on the plate.

The restaurants in San Antonio's upper tier have taken different approaches to this. Mixtli runs a tasting-menu format built around Mexican regional cuisine, where ingredient provenance is tied to cultural geography as much as environmental logic. Isidore works within a Texan idiom with its own sourcing commitments. Landrace occupies a position that foregrounds the land itself as the editorial frame: the name, the address, and the restaurant's stated positioning all point toward a kitchen that wants the origin of ingredients to be legible to the diner. That is a harder promise to keep than it sounds, and the dining room is where the proof sits.

Nationally, the restaurants that have sustained this approach most credibly tend to share a few operational features: long-term supplier relationships rather than spot purchasing, menus that change in response to availability rather than driving it, and a willingness to work with less glamorous cuts and varieties when that is what the harvest yields. The French Laundry in Napa and Providence in Los Angeles have both built sourcing programs that operate at this level of granularity. For a San Antonio restaurant to hold a comparable standard, the local supplier network has to be there, and in recent years, the Texas Hill Country and surrounding regions have produced exactly that kind of small-farm infrastructure.

What the Menu Reflects

What can be said is that a kitchen operating under a genuine sustainability frame in this region would logically draw on heritage beef from Texas ranchers, seasonal vegetables from Hill Country growers, and Gulf Coast seafood during its natural windows. Waste reduction in this context means using whole animals, preserving surplus through fermentation or curing, and building the menu around what exists rather than what the kitchen wishes existed. That approach produces a different kind of dining from the precision tasting-menu format at venues like Alinea in Chicago or Atomix in New York City, where the sourcing serves a predetermined aesthetic. Here, if the commitment is genuine, the aesthetic serves the sourcing.

For San Antonio diners who want something with more regional grounding than the 2M Smokehouse (Barbecue) register or the casual cadence of 410 Diner, Landrace operates at a different altitude. It belongs in conversation with 1Watson as part of the city's effort to hold a serious dining identity without replicating the coastal fine-dining template wholesale.

San Antonio in a Wider Frame

The city's restaurant scene has spent years in the shadow of Austin's more loudly publicized food identity, but the comparison has always flattered Austin more than the evidence warrants. San Antonio's culinary character is distinct: shaped by deep Tejano and Mexican-American food culture, a military population that has brought varied tastes, and a tourism economy that has historically pulled restaurants toward safe, high-volume formats. The restaurants that push against that pull are doing something worth paying attention to. Emeril's in New Orleans and Le Bernardin in New York City both built their authority partly by insisting on a standard above what their cities were assumed to support. The same dynamic is playing out in San Antonio's upper dining tier, and Landrace is part of that argument.

For readers interested in sustainable dining at the serious end of the American restaurant spectrum, the comparison set extends to Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Addison in San Diego, and The Inn at Little Washington in Washington, all of which have built sourcing programs that shape the guest experience in ways that go beyond the menu description. Landrace is working at a smaller scale in a less publicized market, which is precisely why it merits attention from anyone tracking where American farm-driven dining is finding new ground. See our full San Antonio restaurants guide for further context on how Landrace sits within the broader city dining map.

Planning Your Visit

Landrace is located at 111 Lexington Ave in downtown San Antonio, accessible from the city's main hotel corridor and within walking distance of the Pearl district, which has become the most concentrated node of serious food and drink in the city. Reservations are recommended. The price tier is moderate to upscale, with an average spend of about $60 per person. Advance booking is recommended.

Signature Dishes
Wagyu beef burgerchicken club sandwichlobster mac'n cheese
Frequently asked questions

A Lean Comparison

Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.

At a Glance
Vibe
  • Modern
  • Elegant
  • Rustic
Best For
  • Date Night
  • Business Dinner
  • Special Occasion
Experience
  • Waterfront
  • Open Kitchen
  • Private Dining
  • Terrace
Drink Program
  • Craft Cocktails
Sourcing
  • Local Sourcing
  • Farm To Table
Views
  • Waterfront
  • Street Scene
Dress CodeSmart Casual
Noise LevelConversational
CapacityMedium
Service StyleUpscale Casual
Meal PacingStandard

Effortlessly cool Texas-inspired atmosphere with handsome rustic touches and scenic River Walk views through soaring windows.

Signature Dishes
Wagyu beef burgerchicken club sandwichlobster mac'n cheese