Restaurant in Dallas, United States
The Sicilian Butcher
100Pearl PointsEasy Group Pick

About The Sicilian Butcher
The Sicilian Butcher is a useful North Dallas pick when the priority is an easy Italian-leaning dinner for a date, family meal, or casual celebration. It is not the choice for a credential-driven splurge, but it works when availability, comfort, group-friendliness matter more than a chef-led tasting-menu experience.
The Sicilian Butcher is a Dallas dining option with daily posted hours from 11 AM into the evening. Use it when the key planning facts you need are direct: it is in Dallas, the dress code is smart casual, the schedule runs every day of the week.
Because the verified public details are limited, this guide should not be read as a claim about a specific cuisine, menu format, price point, chef, awards, seating style, or reservation difficulty. For planning purposes, treat The Sicilian Butcher as a practical Dallas choice and confirm any menu, service, or booking needs directly before you go.
Use it for a direct Dallas meal
The clearest verified case is convenience. The Sicilian Butcher is open Monday through Thursday from 11 AM to 10 PM, Friday and Saturday from 11 AM to 10:30 PM, Sunday from 11 AM to 10 PM. Its smart-casual dress code also makes it easier to fit into a relaxed evening plan without dressing formally.
There is no verified award, chef profile, tasting-menu format, price level, or seating count in the available data, so avoid building expectations around those specifics. For a reader building a fuller Dallas plan, start with Our full Dallas restaurants guide, then branch into Our full Dallas hotels guide, Our full Dallas bars guide, Our full Dallas wineries guide, or Our full Dallas experiences guide if the meal is part of a bigger night.
Use the posted hours as your planning baseline
The posted hours give you some flexibility across the week, with the latest closing time on Friday and Saturday at 10:30 PM. If atmosphere, seating, or wait time matters, confirm directly with the restaurant before choosing a specific time.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is The Sicilian Butcher good for solo dining?
The verified details do not specify seating style or solo-dining setup. It is in Dallas, open daily from 11 AM, follows a smart-casual dress code, so solo diners should confirm any seating preferences directly before going.
Can I eat at the bar at The Sicilian Butcher?
Bar seating is not verified in the available information. If bar seating matters, contact The Sicilian Butcher directly before heading there.
Does The Sicilian Butcher handle dietary restrictions?
Dietary and allergy accommodations are not verified in the available information. If you have gluten-free, vegetarian, allergy, or other dietary needs, ask the restaurant directly before ordering.
What should I wear to The Sicilian Butcher?
The verified dress code is smart casual. That makes it suitable for a polished but relaxed Dallas meal.
How far ahead should I book The Sicilian Butcher?
Reservation timing and availability are not verified in the available information. The posted hours are Monday through Thursday 11 AM–10 PM, Friday and Saturday 11 AM–10:30 PM, Sunday 11 AM–10 PM; check the venue's official channels for booking guidance.
Location
5225 Belt Line Rd Suite 240, Dallas, TX 75254
Dallas, United States
Compare The Sicilian Butcher
| Venue | Location |
|---|---|
| The Sicilian Butcher | Dallas |
| Brentwood | Dallas |
| Takumi Hachi | Dallas |
| Kenny's Italian Kitchen | Dallas |
| Neighborhood Services | Dallas |
| Gorji Restaurant | Dallas |
How The Sicilian Butcher Dallas compares with similar nearby venues.
Also Consider
- Brentwood, Notable alternative
- Takumi Hachi, Notable alternative
- Kenny's Italian Kitchen, Notable alternative
- Neighborhood Services, Notable alternative
- Gorji Restaurant, Notable alternative
How it compares in Dallas
Choose The Sicilian Butcher when ease matters. Compared with Brentwood or Neighborhood Services, it reads as the lower-pressure option for a casual group dinner rather than a polished night out. If the occasion needs a sharper room or a more business-dinner feel, those two are the stronger cross-shops.
For Italian comfort, Kenny's Italian Kitchen is the cleaner comparison. Pick Kenny's when the meal is specifically about a classic Italian dinner; pick The Sicilian Butcher when location and easier logistics around Belt Line Road are the deciding factors. For a smaller, more controlled special-occasion dinner, Gorji Restaurant is likely the more occasion-focused choice.
Takumi Hachi sits in a different lane entirely, better for diners who want Japanese food and a more focused cuisine switch. If the group is split on formality and wants the path of least resistance, The Sicilian Butcher is the easier booking bet; if the goal is a more specific dining experience, cross-shop first.
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