ATXGuide

Where To Take A Break From SXSW

Whether you live in Austin or you’re traveling here for SXSW, you’re eventually going to need an escape from the festival. Here’s where to go.
Where To Take A Break From SXSW image

photo credit: Taylor Hannan

Every year, around the second week of March, the floodgates of South By Southwest open, and every musician/tech nerd/media mogul/film geek in the country suddenly descends upon our city (some of them even dare to ask to crash on your couch).

You either fall into the camp of the descenders or the descended upon. But it doesn’t matter. If you’re a human being in Austin during SXSW, you’re going to feel the need to get the f*ck out at some point or another. And not just to the same place that every other attendee is using as an escape valve. You need actual distance. You need real food and alcohol, the kind you actually have to pay for. And you need a place where “networking” is considered a bad word. Here are the best restaurants, coffee shops, bars, and breweries we’d recommend for escaping SXSW.

THE SPOTS

photo credit: Holly Dirks

Bar Food

East Austin

$$$$Perfect For:Casual Weeknight DinnerDining Solo
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Stepping into The Cavalier feels a little like you’ve just walked into the bar from a sitcom where a group of friends meet up after work, everybody’s a regular, and an hour always feels like 15 minutes. The menu is made up mostly of Cajun classics—we especially love the wings and chicken sandwiches—and it’s consistently busy, but never crowded, even during Austin’s never-ending festival season. And sometimes, after a full day of listening to bands and pitches about “a revolutionary new app,” The Cavalier is exactly the escape you need. It’s also located not too far off East 6th Street, making it somewhat walkable from Downtown. 

Equal parts neighborhood cafe, bakery, and beer garden, you could spend an entire day at Sour Duck without even realizing it. And when you need a break from the festivities Downtown, you can. They’re located on East MLK, just a short ride or a very dedicated walk away from it all, but the large patio holds enough picnic tables to feel anything but busy. They also make some really great cookies, because there’s never a bad time to enjoy a cookie. 

This South Austin coffee shop is a great alternative to nearby Radio, which is usually crowded and barely has any parking. Cosmic Coffee also has a large porch and backyard complete with nighttime fire pits. Besides the space, we’re big fans of the food trucks parked outside, including Pueblo Viejo (for tacos) and LeRoy & Lewis, a barbecue truck serving things you won’t find everywhere else, like smoked beef cheeks and cauliflower burnt ends. Between their beer, coffee, wine, and cocktail selection, you can basically drink here for the entire day, and as if this place couldn’t get any more utopian, dogs are allowed both inside and outside.

Very few SXSW attendees (let alone locals) know about The Perch, a semi-hidden spot that’s literally a block from the Convention Center in the Waller Creek Boathouse. With an incredible view of Town Lake, the dog-friendly patio is a fantastic place to be—it even has plenty of outlets if you need to get some work done. The food menu is broad: breakfast tacos, avocado toast, cheese boards, salads, and sandwiches. To drink, there are smoothies, beer (and beer flights), wine, and very good coffee.

Scholz Garten isn’t just the oldest bar in Austin. It’s the oldest beer garden in the country. It also happens to be an incredibly chill spot to grab a beer and some German food, just a few short blocks south of UT. Despite being over 150 years old, they’ve managed to maintain a lively energy. But unlike us, they’ve done it without downing three espressos before noon.

This is how this East 6th dive bar feels about SXSW: They play Apocalypse Now on repeat the entire time. They’ve seen the horrors, and they know not to get out of the boat. The Grackle has cheap drinks, one of Austin’s best whiskey selections, and a big covered patio out front—so it’s a good place to take a break from the SXSW frenzy. Just maybe tuck your badge in your shirt or something.

On a quiet corner near Airport and Manor is Oddwood Brewing, a neighborhood brewery making excellent saisons, hoppy pale ales, and lagers. The inside feels very homey, with lots of wood and cozy lighting, and even a room full of old video games to help you decompress a bit. And if you need some food for soaking up a day’s worth of free booze, Oddwood makes a great bar pizza, but you can also find KG BBQ—a Central Texas-style barbecue spot with some Egyptian twists—parked on the pretty big patio that spills into the parking lot for when the weather is nice.

photo credit: Nicolai McCrary

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The patio at El Chile is bigger than the dining room, so this is a place that clearly has its priorities in order. And it looks out over a low-trafficked strip of Manor Road, so you don’t have to worry too much about road noise drowning out the sound of the waiter asking if you’re sure that you’d like a third margarita. Come here when you want some better-than-average Tex-Mex that’s just far enough from Downtown to escape the madness, without requiring a long or expensive ride to get there. 

Dirty Martin’s has been around since the 1920s, so it’s old enough to be the great-great-grandparent of SXSW. And in that time, many have taken refuge from the festivities to sit down with a cold beer, some queso, and a classic Kumbak burger. It’s also our favorite spot to enjoy some corn nuggets—deep-fried balls of creamed corn—at any time of the year. Preferably with an ice-cold schooner of beer.

When all you want is a quiet place to go read a book and drink some coffee in peace, go to Mozart’s. It’s right on Lake Austin, so you’ll feel slightly more refreshed and recharged while only being about seven minutes west of the heart of South By. Besides the coffee, they also serve very good pastries.

Posse East, just north of campus, is a sports bar that’s been around since 1971, and the kitchen turns out admirable bar food and Tex-Mex classics. The queso is excellent and you should get a large to share with the table. And you can get a very good patty melt alongside pitchers of beer. They don’t have a full liquor license, so there aren’t any mixed drinks, which in some ways keeps the rowdiness at bay. The odds of spotting a SXSW badge here will be very low.

We can really only think of one place in the world where you can get best-in-class barbecue, breakfast tacos, and pizza all in one place, and that’s on the massive patio of Meanwhile Brewing. That’s because they’re home to Distant Relatives, Pueblo Viejo, and Side Eye Pie, some of our favorite spots in town for what they each offer. Of course, Meanwhile is more than just a food trailer park—it's a brewery, and a good one at that. Come here to relax on a sprawling patio, eat more food than you can handle, converse with the squirrels, and enjoy some really fun beers. It’s easy to forget that anything else is going on when you’re here. 

Lala’s Little Nugget might just be the most festive dive bar in town, as it’s been continually decorated for Christmas since the ’70s. It’s a little out of the way in a strip mall in Crestview, but the odds of bumping into people from SXSW are slim to none, so you can revel in the Christmas cheer all on your own.

Things we look for in a good neighborhood bar: comfortable volume levels, ease of parking and/or seating, and good (but still affordable) cocktails. And The Aristocrat Lounge near Burnet and Koenig Lane checks every box. Come here to sit down after walking around all day, grab a house cocktail—they’re all under $10—and relax. And if you’re hungry, the Indonesian food trailer Yeni’s Fusion is parked out front, and almost guaranteed to be a better meal than those free breakfast tacos you debated waiting in line for.

Crown & Anchor is the place you go when you just want a really good burger and a beer. It’s cheap, it’s good, and best of all, nobody is going to try to pitch you on anything except for maybe the $4 beer special of the day. It tends to draw a crowd of grad students, professors, and whoever else lives just north of campus—generally a pretty chill crowd.

When you’re in charge of shepherding your visiting coworkers around town and want to prove to them that Austin is more than just Sixth Street and Rainey, head to ABGB down south. This huge indoor/outdoor beer garden with an equally large patio is well-equipped for large groups of people, and besides serving lots of beers in huge mugs, it also has surprisingly good pizza.

This Christmas light-covered dive just west of downtown looks like a set straight out of Friday Night Lights, but with more old hippies and fewer Tim Riggins sightings. Grab a pitcher of Lone Star or really whatever cheap beer you prefer, and play some pool while enjoying the sounds of Willie Nelson on repeat. When you get hungry (or decide you want a tiki drink), check out Pool Burger around back.

Hidden away on a residential street north of UT’s campus, Draught House is one of our favorite beer gardens in town. They’ve always had one of the city’s best rotating tap selections—even before most people started caring about beer—and they have a food truck outside serving chicken wings, burgers, and fish and chips. Check their website ahead of time because they offer discounts on select beers (and even free food) during certain days of the week.

Spend a chill Sunday afternoon hanging out on the picnic tables in The Little Darlin’s huge patio out back. There’s a stage for live music, but be warned that sometimes there are SXSW shows on the weekend, so check online first before heading out. As far as food goes, stick with the basics, like the burger or the cast-iron mac and cheese (add carnitas).

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