Born from a backyard smoker, built on years of patience and a whole lot of firewood.
The people who keep the fires burning and the plates moving.
Pitmaster & Owner
Self-taught pitmaster who traded spreadsheets for smoke. Ray manages every fire, tastes every batch, and hasn't taken a Monday off since opening day. His brisket has won three regional competitions and earned a feature in Texas Monthly.
Sous Chef
Classically trained at the Culinary Institute, Maria brings precision to the side dishes that most BBQ joints treat as afterthoughts. Her smoked mac and cheese recipe took six months to perfect and has a cult following. She also developed all four of our house sauces.
Bar Manager
Darnell curates the drink program at Smokehouse & Vine, pairing Texas craft beers and boutique wines with everything coming off the pit. He built the bar list from scratch and runs the popular Thursday night beer-and-burnt-ends pairing events.
Four steps. No shortcuts. Every cut that leaves our kitchen has earned its place on the plate.
We source post oak from the Texas Hill Country and hickory from East Texas. Every delivery gets inspected for moisture content and seasoning. Green wood produces bitter smoke. We only burn wood that's been aged a minimum of nine months. Different cuts get different wood blends, dialed in over years of testing.
Our rubs are mixed in-house every morning. The brisket rub is simple on purpose: coarse black pepper, kosher salt, garlic powder, and a touch of paprika. The rib rub leans sweeter with brown sugar and cayenne. We apply by hand and let the meat sit uncovered in the cooler overnight so the rub sets into the surface.
Briskets go on the smoker at 10pm the night before service. The fire stays between 225 and 250 degrees, managed by hand through the night. No pellet cookers, no electric assists. Our pit crew rotates in shifts, checking temps every 30 minutes. The smoke is thin and blue, never white and billowing. That's how you know the fire is clean.
When the internal temp hits 203 and the probe slides in like butter, the brisket comes off. But it doesn't get sliced right away. It goes into a holding cabinet and rests for a minimum of two hours. This lets the juices redistribute and the collagen set. A brisket that's sliced too early loses everything. Patience is the last ingredient.
The smokers are running and the chairs are open. We'd love to feed you.