city was founded

For more than three hundred years, San Antonio has been a meeting place. Pearl is where it all still gathers — the food, the music, the faith, and the fiesta.
A place old enough to have shaped a nation — and alive enough to throw the best party in Texas.
San Antonio was a crossroads long before it was a city — home to the Payaya and Coahuiltecan peoples on the banks of the river they called Yanaguana. In 1718 the Spanish founded a mission and a presidio here, and the city grew at the meeting of Indigenous, Spanish, and Mexican worlds.
A century later, German immigrants arrived — among them the brewers who would raise Pearl. The brewery's founders, and Emma Koehler who ran it, were part of that German wave that built churches, schoolhouses, and a taste for cold beer into the city's bones.
Out of that blending came something wholly its own: Tejano culture — its food, its language, its conjunto accordion and bajo sexto. To be from San Antonio is to carry all of it at once. Puro San Antonio.


San Antonio is one of only a handful of U.S. cities named a UNESCO Creative City of Gastronomy — recognition of a food culture three centuries deep. Puffy tacos and barbacoa, pan dulce and street-corner churros, chili queens and James Beard kitchens.
At Pearl, that lineage lives on in chef-led restaurants and a weekend market of Texas growers and makers.

Mariachi from Mexico met the German and Czech accordion on the South Texas border, and conjunto and Tejano music were born. San Antonio is its heartland — from Plaza stages to the Tejano Conjunto Festival.
On a Pearl evening, you'll hear all of it drift across the plaza, often with the next generation already on stage.

For ten days each spring, the whole city wears flowers and confetti for Fiesta. Come autumn, marigolds and Catrinas fill the plazas for Día de los Muertos — and Pearl hosts one of the city's most beloved celebrations.
Here, a holiday isn't watched. It's joined.

From the missions to the market to the music — the faces and places that make San Antonio.









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