Saint Rocco's New York Italian |3011 Gulden Ln 100DallasTX75212 | (469) 320-9707
Saint Rocco's New York Italian
3011 Gulden Ln 100
DallasTX 75212
Devil's Back Porch
The Bar at Trinity Groves
Saint Rocco's New York Italian |3011 Gulden Ln 100DallasTX75212 | (469) 320-9707
devil's back porch logo

 

Devil’s Back Porch

Saint Rocco’s at Trinity Groves is a Dallas favorite for New York-inspired Italian food, with a menu serving red sauce pasta, chicken parmesan, pizza, and other staples. The rooftop bar has become one of the best spots in town to gather for a drink and look at the downtown skyline. But Saint Rocco’s executive chef and co-owner Jay Valley aren’t one to rest on his laurels—instead, he’s adding even more to the mix with a speakeasy bar.

The restaurant is turning its second-floor space into a Prohibition bar concept called Devil’s Back Porch. Guests will enter through a separate back entrance into a room awash in red and black, with old gangster photos displayed on the walls. The bar staff will be outfitted in black vests and newsboy caps to complete the scene. Think Peaky Blinders, but with a dart board, pool table, and poker table. The space will also host events, such as birthday parties, casino nights, Great Gatsby parties, and more.

Devil’s Back Porch will serve a menu of classic cocktails, like the Godfather (scotch, amaretto, lemon), a mezcal-laced riff on the Corpse Reviver No. 2, and the Bee Sting, a spicy take on the Bee’s Knees. The bar will also serve food courtesy of Jay Valley and the Saint Rocco’s team, with dishes including chicken wings, a spicy chicken sandwich, a cheeseburger, lobster quesadillas, and homemade cannoli.

Devil’s Back Porch was once the nickname for West Dallas, where Trinity Groves and Saint Rocco’s stand today. During the Great Depression, gangsters running from the law in the area used an escape route that ran west on Eagle Ford Road (now Singleton Blvd) and then jutted north towards the City of Irving, up to and over the West Fork of the Trinity River. The area hosted many notorious characters over the years, including Bonnie and Clyde, who grew up nearby and had family in West Dallas during their 1930s crime spree.

“This Prohibition-era speakeasy is the perfect complement to Saint Rocco’s and our New York Italian roots,” says Jay Valley. “Now we’re ready to share it with the city, and we can’t wait to serve good food and classic drinks in a fun, throwback atmosphere where our guests can live it up like the old days. Stop in for a drink before dinner, come upstairs after dinner, or make a whole night of it.

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