There are barbecue joints, and then there are institutions. Naaman’s BBQ, tucked along the well-worn roads of Texarkana, Texas, falls firmly into the second category — and the moment you catch the first drift of hickory smoke curling through the air as you pull into the parking lot, you already know you made the right decision.
Naaman’s has been feeding families, truckers, locals, and lucky out-of-towners for decades, and it wears that history with the quiet confidence of a place that has never needed a flashy sign or a social media campaign to fill its tables. Word of mouth has done all the heavy lifting here, and that reputation is absolutely earned.
Walk through the door and you step into something that feels genuinely Texarkanan — a little bit Texas, a little bit Arkansas, all heart. The interior is unpretentious and comfortable, the kind of place where you slide into a booth without a second thought and immediately start scanning the menu with the enthusiasm of someone who skipped breakfast on purpose. The staff greet you like a neighbor, and that warmth sets the tone for everything that follows.
Now, the food. The brisket at Naaman’s is the kind of slow-smoked, bark-crusted revelation that reminds you why this region takes its barbecue so personally. Each slice is tender through and through, with a smoke ring that would make any pitmaster proud. The ribs fall into that perfect middle ground — not so tender they disintegrate, but absolutely no sawing required. They arrive glistening, with just the right amount of char and a sweetness in the sauce that never tips into cloying.
The sides deserve their own paragraph. The beans are rich and smoky, clearly not an afterthought, and the coleslaw provides that cool, creamy contrast that every proper barbecue plate needs. If jalapeño cornbread is on offer the day you visit, do not pass it up under any circumstances.
What makes Naaman’s genuinely special beyond the food is the sense that you are participating in something local and lasting. This is not a chain trying to replicate Southern authenticity — this is the real thing, rooted in a community that takes its food seriously and serves it with pride. Families celebrate birthdays here. Old friends catch up over pulled pork sandwiches. First-time visitors leave as converts.
If you are passing through Texarkana — or better yet, if you have made the smart decision to spend a proper weekend exploring this underrated city — carve out a lunch or an early dinner for Naaman’s. Bring your appetite, bring someone you like, and prepare to leave considerably happier than when you arrived. This is Texarkana at its most delicious.