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IN A FIRST CLASS DINING EXPERIENCE

Thursday & Friday
5pm-9pm
Saturdays & Sunday
11am-9pm

*Call for live music schedule
For Reservations
Call 830-537-3700

The Cafe  >  Cafe Reviews
  Welfare Cafe Journal and Magazine Reviews     
Texas Monthly - Head for the Hills (May 2005)

At this rustic former post office, general store, and café, we dined on a delicious mixed grill special of juicy duck, lamb, and quail that was too generous to finish. In warm weather, dine under the vines and witness goats and donkeys doing the same. Live music Sundays and Thursdays. Beer & wine...
Bandera Electric - Gourmet Food in a Unique Setting (Jan 2006)

If you are looking for an off-the-beaten-path local eatery with loads of character and good food, check out the Welfare Café. You will be blown away by the...
FortWorth Star-Telegram - Small towns, big tastes (Apr 2006)

A jaunt in the Hill Country used to mean barbecue, chicken-fried steak and more barbecue. Now it's rare yellowfin tuna and big-city sophistication - in a world-unto-itself setting...
Natalie Steele - The Welfare Café and Biergarten

Treat yourself to an unforgettable Hill Country dining experience marinated in German delicacies at the Welfare Café and Biergarten. Just west of Boerne, you will find this small paradise of delicious entrees, fine wines...
Express News - Welfare Café, 223 Waring Welfare Road

In their way, the Germans have made the potato theirs as much as the Irish have. In this comfortable German hideaway, you can get pan-fried new potatoes or mashed potatoes but the best way to have them is in the appetizers called Kartoffelpfannekuchen...
Express News - Good food, rural setting revive the spirit (Aug 2005)

As much as I love the city, sometimes I long for a place more like the area in which I grew up - one that's a little quieter, a little slower, a little more relaxed...
Country Lifestyles - Greater Welfare (Oct 2005)

Fresh, high quality food, old-world family recipes, and intimate, fine dining in a rustic, Texas setting that feels like home...

Welfare Café Reviews

Texas Monthly
Head for the Hills
25 Things I Love
About the Hill Country
by
Suzy Banks

Welfare Café Dining

The service at the Welfare Café one Saturday lunch was friendly enough but mystifyingly slow, considering that I was the only customer at this 1916 general-store-turned-restaurant. But the tomato-garlic soup was so tasty and soul-warming on that drizzly afternoon, I quickly forgot about the wait.

Anyway, it had given me time to contemplate the wide-ranging selection of imported beers, the German entrées, and the ambitious dinner specials, like a wild-mushroom-and-vegetable cassoulet; take a peek at the rambling outdoor patio; and imagine the café when it's hopping on a balmy spring night.To get to the town of Welfare, take the Welfare exit off Interstate 10, seven miles north of Boerne; 830-537-3700. Lunch Saturday and Sunday, dinner Wednesday through Sunday (entrées $10 to $21.95).

Texas Monthly
May 2005 Restaurant Reviews for Welfare
Our Editors' selections of restaurant reviews
from the May 2005 issue.
April 2005 / Restaurant Reviews
or...Around the State for May 2005


At this rustic former post office, general store, and café, we dined on a delicious mixed grill special of juicy duck, lamb, and quail that was too generous to finish. In warm weather, dine under the vines and witness goats and donkeys doing the same. Live music Sundays and Thursdays. Beer & wine. 223 Waring Welfare Rd; from Boerne, go north on I-10 to exit 533, stay on access road, at fork stay to right, at the T go right and continue 2 more miles (830-537-3700). Open Wed-Sat 5-9, Sun 11-9. Closed Mon & Tue. Reservations recommended. AE DS, MC, V. $$-$$$


Dining in Welfare Tx

Bandera Electric Cooperative 

January 2006
Gourmet Food in a Unique Setting.
If you are looking for an off-the-beaten-path local eatery with loads of character and good food, check out the Welfare Café. You will be blown away by the original decor and the gourmet food selection.

The Welfare Café was originally established as a general store and post office. It was owned and operated by Perry J. Laas and his wife, Alma, from 1921 to 1978. After they stopped operating the store, it remained closed and the building vacant for 20 years. A love of cooking, an itch to get out of the city, and German roots prompted Gabriele Meissner McCormick and her husband, David Lawhorn, to reopen the establishment as a unique restaurant. They brought life back to this historically rich landmark, reopening it in November 1998 after extensive renovation.

The couple painstakingly restored the building, keeping it in character with its original form. They have created a charming café using original materials and local artifacts for the decor. They were able to recover many of Perry J. Laas' original signs used when the building was a general store. There are even some old dry goods displayed in the main dining area that were sold by Laas.

 

 
Outdoor Seating at the Welfare Cafe

Perry J. Laas Signage

The Welfare Café has a charming outdoor seating area. Original signs
such as the one to the right highlight the rich history of the Welfare Café.

It is a place full of charm. Everything that was upgraded or added was done using reclaimed materials. David has taken wood scraps from fallen barns and buildings around the area. "I love using existing materials," said David. "It is the way the German settlers did things, and we want to keep this place true to its roots." Speaking of roots, Gabriele (Gaby) was born in Frankfurt, Germany, and she still speaks fluent German. Gaby is not only a co-owner of the establishment, but also its head chef. She is mostly a self-taught cook, but she believes her talent and passion for cooking came from her grandmother. "Running this café is a labor of love for me," said Gaby.

She has created a unique menu in both the cuisine offered and the names used. Many of the entrées are named after some of the first postmasters of Welfare. With a staff of 10, including waitresses and cooks, Gabriele and David have maintained the café's reputation as a premium food destination for tourists and locals alike. "We love what we do," said Bonnie Teel, a waitress at the café. "This job is one of Welfare's best kept secrets."

Patrons can dine in or sit outside. There are a number of tables placed under cozy arbors surrounded by landscaping that adds a romantic touch. On Thursdays and Sundays, you can even hear live music.

The café is only beginning for David and Gabriele. They are still developing the property and have transformed an old goat barn into a place for parties that can accommodate up to 120 people. The newly refurbished building has a beautiful fireplace, a second floor and a banquet area. It is well suited for wine tasting events, parties and even wedding receptions. A new patio area will soon be completed, adding even more room for entertainment. If the food alone is not enough to pique your interest, come check out its rich history - it's a unique destination. The café sits a few miles off Interstate 10; just take the Welfare exit, between Boerne and Comfort. Follow the Waring/Welfare road until you find the white plank building. It is open Wednesday through Friday, 6 to 9 p.m. On Saturday it is open from 5 p.m. to 10 p.m.; Sunday 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. It is always a good idea to make a reservation on weekends by calling (830) 537-3700.

Bonnie Teel and Joseph Brantley
Bonnie Teel, waitress, and Joseph Brantley,
assistant chef, prepare for a busy night
The Welfare Cafe

The Old Goat Barn
The old goat barn has been restored for parties.Owners David Lawhorn and Gabriele McCormick
Owners of the Welfare Café David Lawhorn
and Gabriele Meissner McCormick
 

Welfare Café Reviews

Jump to more about the Welfare Café

April 5, 2006
Section: Food
Edition: Tarrant

Small towns, big tastes

A jaunt in the Hill Country used to mean barbecue, chicken-fried steak and more barbecue. Now it's rare yellowfin tuna and big-city sophistication - in a world-unto-itself setting.
AMY CULBERTSON
Star-Telegram Staff Writer

I had never tasted yacon before, nor ever seen it listed on a menu. It was a tuber from the Andes, the chef told me, something like jicama, only sweeter. The nuns who supply her restaurant with organic produce grow it on their nearby farm, having discovered it on their mission trips to South America. She wasn't using the yacon in any of that night's dishes, but, certainly, she'd be glad to show me some.

A few minutes later, chef Gabriele McCormick was back from her kitchen with a dark purple-brown tuber about the size of a large sweet potato, along with a plate holding a row of precisely sliced batons of the vegetable's pale-ivory flesh.

I took a bite, and then several more: The yacon was crisp, crunchy, juicy, refreshing and - yes - sweet, with a faint, husky peppercorn kick. I could see trendy chefs from San Francisco to New York vying to be the first to put it on their Bernardaud salad plates. But I wasn't in San Francisco, or the Napa Valley. I was in Welfare, Texas, population 10. The day before, when I'd driven by the old Welfare general store in the Hill Country just northwest of Boerne, I'd had to backtrack to make sure this was the place.

Now, on a Thursday night, I was seated at a linen-clad table in a rustic, warmly lighted dining room along with a score of well-dressed diners, trying to decide whether to start with pistachio shrimp or a gratin of roasted poblanos and goat cheese.

Mention the Texas Hill Country, and most Texans think of bluebonnets and scenic overlooks; fishing on the lakes and hiking up Enchanted Rock; or possibly wineries and quaint antique shops. Mention Hill Country food, and the associations will most likely be burgers, barbecue and blue-plate specials. But on a recent five days in the Hill Country, I dined on oven-braised duck with wild mushrooms in Marble Falls; pancetta-stuffed portobello mushrooms in Leander; a tower of Dungeness crab drizzled with wasabi aioli just outside Fredericksburg; and rare-grilled yellowfin tuna with green-chile mascarpone butter in tiny Tarpley.

This is what happens when chefs leave the high-pressure fine-dining scene in New York or Dallas to go back home - or to find a new home where the living is easier: They bring their big-city ways with them. Not only are the tourists loving it, but the locals are taking to it, too. Call it Texas fusion or rustic refinement, it amounts to a revolution in Texas small-town dining.

"This is the same restaurant I would have opened in Dallas or Houston," says chef-owner Mark Schmidt of Marble Falls' celebrated Café 909. "We're not competing with the Bluebonnet; we're competing with York Street in Dallas."
It makes sense, when you think about the high-end residential developments and resorts such as Lake LBJ's Horseshoe Bay that are being carved out of the Hill Country's rugged ranch land; or about the Hollywood types and other affluent folks who are buying vacation and retirement spreads. These days, along with wildflower gazers, the region's winding farm-to-market roads are traveled by wine tourists doing their own Sideways tours of Central Texas' growing network of vineyards.

"They say this little corridor will be the next Napa Valley," says Kay Pratt, owner of the Silver K Café in Johnson City, "and I believe it."

Everybody agrees that the Hill Country fine-dining trail was blazed in the mid-'80s by the legendary Hudson's on the Bend just west of Austin. In the years that followed, upscale country inns such as Rose Hill Manor near Stonewall and Blair House in Wimberley began serving multicourse dinners with wine pairings, making cuisine an integral part of their attraction. And the quaintsy-posh tourist mecca of downtown Fredericksburg has become a magnet for upscale eateries.

On my tour, though, I chose to head for the smaller towns, to check out this second generation of free-standing chef-owned fine-dining spots. Here's what I found:

August E's, east of Fredericksburg
The setting: Between the tiny communities of Rocky Hill and Blumenthal on U.S. 290 lies a cluster of craft shops anchored by an imposing rough-hewn stone and log building.
Inside this reconstructed 1850s rail depot, the rustic chink-and-stone walls surround elegantly appointed tables, ivory-linened, set with tall, graceful Riedel wineglasses. The stately carved chairs have soft leather seats and striking tapestry backs. Behind the main dining room, a spacious deck with two stone fireplaces and a long bar looks west toward the sunset.

The story: Owners Leu and Dawn Savanh met in the Metroplex, when Leu, a native of Laos who grew up in Thailand, was operating martial-arts schools in Arlington and Fort Worth. Dawn, who had worked in the hotel industry and for the Dallas Convention & Visitors Bureau, was his student. On trips to the Hill Country, the couple fell in love with the Fredericksburg area.

Eventually, they bought the old depot building, which had been moved a decade before from Greeley, Colo. They also bought the nearby family homestead of pioneer settler August Ebers, where they operate a bed-and-breakfast, and the restaurant is named for him (with a nod to French culinary patriarch Auguste Escoffier).

Cooking had always been Leu's hobby and passion, and Dawn, whose hotel background included stints in Asia and Europe, had the experience to run the front of the house. With advice from high-profile mentors such as David McMillan (62 Main, Nana) and Dallas steakhouse owner Al Biernat, they opened August E's in November 2004.

The food: Not surprisingly, Leu's cuisine has an Asian accent, including appetizers such as Asian pumpkin and asparagus soup ($8) and Siam egg roll ($7). You'll find both glass noodles and soba noodles in the salad under his sweet-soy-glazed grilled quail legs ($8), and on Thursday nights, sushi-deprived locals come by for sashimi, nigiri, sakes and Asian beers.
Leu uses local produce when it's available (he swears the organic asparagus from Luckenbach Farms grows "2 feet long"), buys quail from Bandera and venison from Ingram's Broken Arrow Ranch. His fish are flown in from Hawaii and both coasts; on a recent visit, a "Fish Lovers' Medley" brought together marinated salmon, marlin and silky escolar ($32).
There are 14 imported beers on the impressive drinks list, as well as 27 wines by the glass, including five dessert wines.

The details
August E's
6258 U.S. 290 E., at the Rocky Hill Shops 5.5 miles east of Fredericksburg

(830) 997-1585

Dinner 5-9 p.m. Tuesday-Wednesday and Sunday, 5-10 p.m. Thursday-Saturday (closing hours may vary); lunch 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Friday-Saturday; brunch 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Sunday

www.august-es.com


Café 909, Marble Falls

The setting: Rustic exposed cinder block meets cool urbane chic in this little cutting-edge café. It's just off old Marble Falls' downtown Main Street, increasingly populated with galleries and boutiques.

With its bead-board hardwood ceiling, exposed beams and ductwork, serene pale-celadon walls, glass-block windows and mix of vintage French posters and Santa Fe-chic paintings on the walls, Café 909 could easily be transplanted from Austin or Dallas. Beyond the small but sleek granite bar is an exposed kitchen fronted with a food bar where diners can watch chef/owner Mark Schmidt in action.
The story: It's hard to believe this isn't an old building, artfully updated, but it was built 2 1/2 years ago. Mark and Shelly Schmidt's home is upstairs, in the European tradition of living over the store.

Texas native Schmidt says he "always wanted to be a chef," but he got his degree in geology instead. In 1983, when the oil market crashed, he took the chance to follow his early passion.

He "bounced around" in Dallas and Houston, "working at the type of restaurant I wanted to own": Deep Ellum Café, the Grape, Jennivine, City Café, Zizikis and Stephan Pyles' AquaKnox. Schmidt eventually hooked up with an old friend, Mark Kiffin, who had just bought Santa Fe's landmark Compound restaurant. Working with Kiffin, who went on to win a James Beard award for best Southwest chef in 2005, Schmidt finally felt ready "to go out on my own."

On a trip to Marble Falls to visit his wife's relatives, her uncle told them about a new building that was about to start construction downtown, and "we decided to go ahead and make the move."

The food: What Schmidt wanted to do in his 40-seat restaurant was big-city fare that made sense - "gourmet food but with a lack of pretension."

That means the likes of foie gras hollandaise and earthy-sweet parsnip and chanterelle home fries as accompaniments to a tender pepper-crusted grass-fed beef tenderloin ($30), or Schmidt's signature sweetbreads: On his new spring menu, he's sauteing the rich organ meat with enoki mushrooms, foie gras, crawfish tails and Sweet 100 cherry tomatoes, finishing the dish with a veal jus ($13).
Schmidt's creamy-textured frozen pistachio parfait with burnt-honey caramel, reminiscent of an Italian semifreddo, has become a local classic ($7), and his wife's wine list mirrors the sophistication of the menu.


The details
Café 909
909 Second St., Marble Falls (two blocks west of U.S. 281)
(830) 693-2126
Dinner 5:30-9:30 p.m. Tuesday-Saturday

www.cafe909.com


Patton's on Main, Marble Falls

The setting:
The '50s-style neon sign on the roof and the screaming-yellow '42 Ford panel van parked outside signal that Patton's is no stuffy spot. And toward week's end, the cedar-post-framed patio attracts a party crowd with its live music.

Inside, though, is a serious restaurant, with walls of windows overlooking Main Street's shops and galleries. The handsome main dining room, with its original pressed-tin ceiling, wraps around the exposed brick of the interior bar.

The building began life as the Quick Filling Station; chef/owner Patton Robertson remembers it as a used-appliance store when he was going to school in Marble Falls.
The story: A true local boy, Robertson grew up in Horseshoe Bay and graduated from Marble Falls High School in 1988, when "I swore I would never be back."
He started cooking seriously during college at the University of Mississippi and finished his schooling at Le Cordon Bleu Culinary Institute in London. After landing a job at Wolfgang Puck's Las Vegas outpost of Spago, he worked his way up through the kitchen ranks for seven years before being named executive chef at Cili's on the Strip. His wife, meanwhile, had a top managerial post at the high-fashion Escada boutique. But Vegas was not their idea of the best place to raise a child.

Reassured by the success of Café 909 as well as reports from Robertson's mother, who works in the title business in the area, they found a restaurant up for sale, closed it down for a week and reopened in August 2004 as Patton's on Main.

The food: The energetic Robertson's playful side emerges in appetizers such as smoked-brisket spring rolls, with avocados, jalapenos and barbecue butter ($9), and he freely admits that he came up with his "Texas chop salad" ($8 lunch, $9 dinner) - grilled portobellos, avocado, buffalo mozzarella and a red-wine vinaigrette - one day when his wife was cleaning out the fridge.

His cooking features plenty of heat, from the turkey and habanero pizza on the lunch menu ($10) to the rich and spicy cheese grits he tops with plump sauteed shrimp and scatters with mushrooms, bacon and scallions ($13 lunch, $23 dinner). And those grits go great with a $7 flute of real French bubbly, Carousel Blanc de Blancs.

The details
Patton's on Main
201 Main St., Marble Falls (corner of Main and Second, two blocks west of U.S. 281)
(830) 693-8664
Lunch 11 a.m.-3 p.m., dinner 5-9:30 p.m. Wednesday-Saturday

www.pattonsonmain.com


Mac & Ernie's Roadside Eatery, Tarpley


The setting:
It doesn't have an address; it doesn't really have a dining room. It's a neat little wood shack set in the gravelly parking lot of the equally unprepossessing Williams Creek Depot store, just above the Williams Creek bridge on FM 470 west of Bandera.

You walk up to the window to order from the chalkboard menu; be sure you have cash with you, because there's no credit-card machine. In back, chef/owner Naylene Dillingham-Stolzer, who is clearly having a great deal of fun, will cook your steak or lamb chops or quail in her open-air 10-by-16 lean-to kitchen.

You buy a beer, a soft drink or a bottle of wine in the store (you can bring your own for a $4 corkage fee), then find a seat and wait for your food.

If it's a nice night, you can settle in under the lichen-clad limbs of the live oak. If it's rainy, you'll want to nab one of the red-checked-oilcloth tables on the tin-roofed patio attached to the store, or a picnic table under the catering tent Dillingham-Stolzer had to set up when the crowds got too big to accommodate.

Mac & Ernie's doesn't exactly fit the fine-dining criteria, as the plates are paper and the utensils plastic. But bending the rules is nothing new for Dillingham-Stolzer, who often cooks in a T-shirt proclaiming "Well-behaved women rarely make history." Yes, she fries a lot of catfish. But she also turns her hand to the likes of lemon-grass pork tenderloin with Vietnamese dipping sauce.The truth is, Mac & Ernie's doesn't fit into any category - but if you're going to be anywhere near Tarpley, population somewhere around 50, on a Friday or Saturday, you need to know about it.

The story: First of all, there is no Mac or Ernie. It's a play on the name of the couple with whom Dillingham-Stolzer and her husband, Steve, started the restaurant, the McKinnerneys.
Both couples raised goats near Tarpley, and Naylene had cooked at San Antonio's Liberty Bar and Grey Moss Inn and at Castroville's Alsatian Inn. In 1999, they "had the idea of opening a restaurant to market our goat meat."

When a job offer took the McKinnerneys to another state, "we bought their half out."

The food:
They started with cabrito tacos, sausage wraps, fajitas and beans, but Dillingham-Stolzer tends to get bored easily. These days, it's the weekend dinners she's celebrated for.

"I cook what I want to eat," she says simply.

It was what we wanted to eat, too: hefty pork loin kebabs for $13.95, served with a little cup of addictive chipotle cream, and a lush slab of yellowfin tuna, grilled to a bright-pink shade of rare as ordered and topped with a rich layer of cilantro-tinged mascarpone butter. When was the last time you got a top-grade tuna entree for $13.95 - not to mention a perfect coconut cream pie?

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The details

Mac & Ernie's Roadside Eatery
Williams Creek Depot, Tarpley, on FM 470 southwest of Bandera
(830) 562-3250

Lunch 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Wednesday and Friday-Saturday, dinner 5-9 p.m, Friday-Saturday

www.macandernies.com


Welfare Café, Welfare

The setting: The Welfare Café's Web site lists the population of Welfare as 10, but the numbers swell considerably on those days when Gabriele McCormick is cooking.

"She feeds 500 people a week out of that 10-by-13 tin kitchen," says her husband, David Lawhorn, whose day job is brokering commercial real estate.

McCormick's kitchen is wedged between the front dining room of the old Welfare general store and post office and the back dining room, where a neon sign reading "Hofner Room" refers to the aged planks that line the walls, preserved by Lawhorn from an old barn that once belonged to Western swing pioneer Adolph Hofner.

The story: McCormick and Lawhorn, who had been living in San Antonio, bought the property in Welfare 14 years ago. They restored the house to live in and had planned to tear down the crumbling old tin-roofed building next door. When they began to find out more about the old store's history, they decided instead to restore it.
Halfway through, Lawhorn says, "she told me she was going to open a restaurant."
"One day we put a sign up," he said. "We had two customers that day." They never advertised, but, as word of McCormick's food spread, "it just took off."

They've since added a balmy outdoor biergarten in back, where their dogs Maggie and Lady like to hang out, and a spacious party building they call the Goat Barn.

The food: It is clear that McCormick was born to cook, though she credits her skills to the tutelage of the grandmother who raised her in Frankfurt - her family immigrated from Germany to Baltimore when she was 10 - and to her former mother-in-law, after she married into the McCormick spice family.

McCormick smokes her own meats, as well as the peppers for the smoked-jalapeno tartar sauce she serves with her lump crab cakes ($10.95). The night we were there, the generous medallions of pork tenderloin ($15.95), brushed with a dried-cherry and molasses glaze, fairly sang with smoky flavor. And McCormick's Chicken Fredericksburg ($15.95) has become a signature dish: a tender breast sauteed with peaches, onions and jalapenos, with a classic white-wine cream sauce soaking into the pillowy little spaetzle dumplings underneath.
McCormick's German heritage is evident in the menu, but the rouladen and schnitzels share space with pad thai, and the demiglace sauces she offers with steaks range from tamarind poblano to pink-peppercorn pomegranate.
Certainly, the adventure of finding a gracefully restored slice of the past in this bucolic little ghost town is part of the allure of the Welfare Café, but it is McCormick's assured, honest, inspired fare that brings the restaurant's legions of fans back.
This is food worth driving almost any distance for, and it's safe to say there is no other place quite like the Welfare Café.

The details

Welfare Café
223 Waring Welfare Road, Welfare (northwest of Boerne; take the Welfare exit north off Interstate 10)
(830) 537-3700
5-9 p.m. Wednesday-Friday, 5-10 p.m. Saturday, 11 a.m.-9 p.m. Sunday

www.welfaretexas.com



Also worth a try

Selene's Bistro, Leander:
Chef Andy L'Heureux has built an open, airy new restaurant with frosted-glass windows and peachy-hued faux Tuscan walls in this rapidly developing town north of Austin. The San-Francisco-born L'Heureux, whose résumé includes Café Cassis and Evergreen in Santa Fe, keeps his prices reasonable and describes his menu as "fresh, seasonal bistro food." Cannonball Adderley and Gerry Mulligan classics on the sound system provide a sophisticated background for such appetizers as grilled portobello mushrooms stuffed with rich herbed cheese and pancetta ($5.99) and entrees such as venison potpie ($12.99) or salmon filets sparked with ginger and scallions and wrapped in phyllo pastry ($11.99). L'Heureux likes to do wine dinners, and his wine list reflects his interest, including one of Texas' best wines, the Super Texan sangiovese from the Hill Country's Flat Creek Estate, for a very reasonable $28.
1906 S. Bagdad Road, Leander (Crystal Falls Parkway west from U.S. 183; left on Bagdad); (512) 528-9595;

www.selenes.com.

11 a.m.-9 p.m. Tuesday-Thursday, 11 a.m.-10 p.m. Friday-Saturday, 10 a.m.-9 p.m. Sunday.

Silver K Café, Johnson City:


"Texas food, Texas wine and beer, Texas music" is the slogan at this handsome Western-themed restaurant in the Old Lumber Yard shopping complex in downtown Johnson City. Owner Kay Pratt had a long-running catering business in Seattle before moving to the Hill Country, but she has adopted Texas with a passion. During the first part of the week, she serves a home-style supper menu of well-prepared favorites such as chicken potpie ($9.95) and meatloaf with tomato relish ($9.95). Thursdays through Saturdays, the menu gets a shot of elegance, with starters like a gorgonzola walnut cheese torte ($6.95) and entrees such as a blackberry-and-pecan-crusted smoked pork chop ($15.95). Texas singer-songwriters often perform on weekends, and gospel music accompanies Sunday's brunch.

209 E. Main St., Johnson City; 830-868-2911; www.silverkcafe.com. Lunch 11 a.m.-3 p.m. daily, dinner 5-8 p.m. Sunday-Wednesday (home-style menu), 5-9 p.m. Thursday-Saturday (fine dining); brunch buffet 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Sun.

Amy Culbertson, (817) 390-7421 aculbertson@star-telegram.com

California Crab Stack is a tower of flavor at August E's, 5 1/2 miles east of Fredericksburg.

Copyright (c) 2006 Fort Worth Star-Telegram

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INDULGE YOURSELF . . .
IN A FIRST CLASS DINING EXPERIENCE.


Wednesday thru Friday

5pm-9pm
Saturdays
11am-10pm
Sundays
11am-7p

*Enjoy live music on Thursdays and Sundays*
For Reservations Call 830-537-3700

The Welfare Cafe
post officeThe Welfare Café and Biergarten
Article and Photos by Natalie Steele

Treat yourself to an unforgettable Hill Country dining experience marinated in German delicacies at the Welfare Café and Biergarten. Just west of Boerne, you will find this small paradise of delicious entrees, fine wines, and all the pleasures your palette can endure. With an intimately unique setting and an exquisite menu, you can’t go wrong.

This quaint little spot is nestled in an abandoned post office and general store, and dressed in Hill Country heritage from head to toe. Never-the-less, beneath the tin roof you’ll find more than a touch of class. At the Welfare Café, you will find a combination of the freshest ingredients, and true culinary artistry. For an unforgettable start, try
dinner with winethe crab cakes. Hand-breaded and pan-seared to perfection, these are a must everytime. With such a unique bouquet of entrees, deciding what to order will be a bit tougher than usual.

We chose the Potato Cakes and the Chicken Artichoke for our interview. The texture and flavor captured in the food is like no other. The chicken was topped with fresh artichokes, jumbo shrimp, and served over a steaming bed of pasta. After just one taste, you will insist on coming back for more. For

a ghost town, Welfare’s Biergarten is alive and well. Indulge yourself in a first class dining experience at this historic German café. Follow I-10 West, exit Welfare, and follow the Waring-Welfare Rd. to The Welfare Café and General Store. Store. You won’t be disappointed.

Express News
Welfare Café, 223 Waring Welfare Road, Welfare:

In their way, the Germans have made the potato theirs as much as the Irish have. In this comfortable German hideaway, you can get pan-fried new potatoes or mashed potatoes but the best way to have them is in the appetizers called Kartoffelpfannekuchen.

The name is a mouthful, but .so is this treat made from freshly grated potatoes seasoned with nutmeg. The shreds are formed into cakes and then fried to a deep, crisp brown. The finishing touch is a spoon of sour cream or applesauce.

John Griffin, Karen Haram and Bonnie Walker contributed to this report.

Good food, rural setting revive the spirit
By Karen Haram
August 19th 2005
EXPRESS-NEWS FOOD EDITOR

As much as I love the city, sometimes I long for a place more like the area in which I grew up - one that's a little quieter, a little slower, a little more relaxed.

When I get that urge, Welfare Café is one of my favorite destinations. Here, I know I'll not only get great food in a casual, relaxed atmosphere, I'll be able to enjoy a leisurely drive down a country road, see the stars tinkling above, and maybe, if I'm lucky hear a few sounds of nature.

A trip to this Hill Country country gem not only revived my spirits but made me think, once again, what a great find this restaurant it.

Because we went on a Saturday night, there was no live music, an additional draw at the restaurant on Thursday and Sunday evening. But we hardly missed it, thanks to the casual camaraderie at the surrounding tables.

The restaurant itself is as comfy as they come, thanks to a rustic Texana feel including vintage signage and mismatched tables that have been full every time we've been there, thanks to solid German food with a contemporary twist.

Whether you're looking for seafood, beef or pasta, Welfare Café's menu has plenty of options. No matter what we order, we always start with Kartoffelpfannekuchen, potato cakes made the old-fashioned way with fresh grated potatoes seasoned with a touch of nutmeg and fried to a crisp golden brown. Served with either sour cream or applesauce, these are one of the restaurant's delights.

Just as you don't want to skip the potato cakes, the schnitzels are a must-order as well. Welfare Café pounds its pork loin until it's thin, then runs it through crisp crumbs and pan-fries it until tender and light.

Amazingly, I've never had a greasy schnitzel there. The hardest choice is deciding how you want it served from an assortment of options. I usually opt for the plain or Holstein, in which the cutlet is toped with lean Black Forest ham, crunch asparagus and a sunny-side-up egg.

Sausage lovers will appreciate Welfare Café's menu as well. The Poebnert offers a sausage assortment that includes a juicy Bratwurst and Knockwurst as well as a pork chop served with a sweet-sour Bavarian sauerkraut.

We're also fans of the tender beef fillet with its crunchy, tangy coffee, chile and pepper crust.

If you're looking to eat a little lighter, the garlicky shrimp seasoned with a spritz of fresh lemon juice is satisfying as well.

We seldom have room for dessert, but if you've planned better than we usually do, you'll want to try any of the restaurant's pies, peach desserts or chocolate offerings, which are a great ending to a satisfying meal.

We we headed back to the city, we took the time to drive slowly, enjoy the bucolic setting and plan our return visit. It can't come too soon to suit us.


kharam@express-news.net


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