Fort Worth has never lacked for good steak, strong martinis, or the kind of dining rooms where deals are sealed over white tablecloths. What’s newer — and increasingly defining — is a generation of chefs willing to blur boundaries, collaborate across concepts, and treat the city itself as a shared creative canvas. That spirit will be on full display next February when the Fort Worth Food + Wine Foundation(FWFWF) hosts “Metamorphosis,” a one-night-only dinner that brings together four of the city’s most compelling restaurants under one roof.
On Thursday, February 19, 2026, The Fort Worth Club will trade its familiar formality for something more experimental. Five chefs from The Chumley House, Dos Mares, The Mont Fort Worth, and the Club itself will collaborate on a four-course dinner designed not as a tasting menu, but as a conversation among styles, backgrounds, and ideas shaping the future of Fort Worth dining.
The theme, “Metamorphosis,” is less a marketing hook than a guiding principle. Rather than dividing courses by restaurant or showcasing signature dishes, the chefs are working toward a single, cohesive narrative. Ingredients will move through hands and perspectives. Techniques will evolve from course to course. The goal is transformation — of raw product into finished dish, and of individual vision into something collective.
That lineup reflects the city’s current moment. Craig Walter and Jared Harms represent The Chumley House, a European-inspired restaurant whose old-world atmosphere belies its modern ambition. Since opening, it has quickly become shorthand for Fort Worth’s ability to compete — stylistically and technically — with dining rooms far beyond North Texas. Their counterparts include Rodrigo Cárdenas of Don Artemio and Dos Mares, whose refined Mexican seafood cooking has helped redefine the Cultural District’s dining landscape, and Michael Arlt of The Mont Fort Worth, whose seasonal New American approach has made the Museum District feel a little more cosmopolitan without losing its warmth.
Anchoring the evening is Tim Prefontaine, executive chef of The Fort Worth Club and a quiet constant in the city’s culinary evolution. His presence underscores the point that “Metamorphosis” isn’t about chasing trends. It’s about continuity—how legacy institutions and newer concepts can inform each other when egos are set aside.
The dinner will also serve as the setting for the presentation of the Walter Kaufmann Lifetime Achievement Award, one of the Foundation’s highest honors. This year’s recipient, Ben E. Keith Foods, has been woven into Fort Worth’s food economy for more than a century — supplying restaurants, supporting chefs, and shaping what ends up on plates across the region. It’s a reminder that transformation doesn’t happen in isolation; it requires infrastructure, investment, and long-term commitment.
As with all FWFWF events, “Metamorphosis” is ultimately about more than a single night. Proceeds support year-round initiatives focused on education, workforce development, and industry sustainability — from mental health resources for hospitality workers to mentorship opportunities for students just beginning to imagine careers in food.
For diners lucky enough to secure one of the limited seats — tickets are $250 per person or $2,500 for a table of eight — the reward is access. Not just to rare dishes or exceptional wines, but to a moment when Fort Worth’s culinary community pauses long enough to cook together, rather than alongside one another.
“We’re truly grateful to these chefs for coming together and sharing their talent with our community,” said Julie Eastman, executive director of FWFWF. “Each brings something distinct to the table, and seeing their ideas take shape in a single menu is a reminder of just how dynamic and creative Fort Worth’s culinary scene really is. We’re proud to offer people the chance to experience that creativity up close and to celebrate the collaborative spirit that defines this city.”