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QUEEN OF SHEBA

Queen of Sheba
14875 Inwood Road
Addison, TX 75001
Phone (972) 980-9750
www.thequeensheba.com
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  • Mon - Sun 11 am - 11 pm
    Closest Intersection  
    Payment Methods Mastercard, Visa, AmEx, Cash, Debit
    Liquor Info Yes, Full Bar Available
    Dress Code Casual
       


    INFO & EVENTS

    Reopened after 3 years.
    Owner - Berhane and Elsa Kiflom

    Old location:
    Queen of Sheba
    3527 McKinney Ave
    Dallas, Texas 75204

    The Queen of Sheba has been called the monarch of Dallas' African restaurants. African-influenced decoration provides an eclectic, multi-cultural feel. Pretty furnishings and excellent service along with a wonderful Ethiopian-Italian-American menu make this a popular restaurant for families, couples and singles. Specialty dishes include deliciously sour Injera and the spicy Yebeg Wott. A lunch buffet is Italian-oriented on Monday and Tuesday, goes American Wednesday and Thursday, and is traditional Ethiopian on Friday. >>more

    PRESS & REVIEWS

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram
    All hail the Queen of Sheba
    Friday, February 17, 2006

    THE DRAW: Adventure-seeking diners have been waiting for the return of Queen of Sheba since the beloved Ethiopian restaurant closed its doors on Lemmon Avenue in 2002. Well, it's back -- this time in plush new Addison digs.

    THE FOOD: Ethiopian food works best for those who enjoy sharing. It comes on large flat rounds of injera, a moist, spongy, crepelike bread with a slight sour tang. If you want a fork, you need to ask for one; otherwise, you scoop up your food with strips of bread. Virgos and other neatniks need not apply, but the sharing aspect makes this a great place for dates and large groups.

    Boasting many vegetable and grain dishes, Ethiopian is also an excellent option for vegetarians, but even meat dishes come with an array of vegetables on the side.

    Whether you order beef, lamb or chicken, you usually get chunks of meat stewed in some kind of sauce, at varying levels of spicy heat. Doro wott ($13.95), spicy chicken stew, consisted of drumsticks, so tender that the dark meat slid from the bone. Gored-gored ($12.95) had bites of what was described as tenderloin, but they were surprisingly chewy and tough, not at all what you expect in a tenderloin cut. more >>



    ©2006 Ethiopian Restaurant .com