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    Foodie News

    A new Houston restaurant wants to shake up Midtown's party happy scene

    Eric Sandler
    Jan 22, 2014 | 5:43 pm

    Midtown suddenly has a new-look restaurant.

    Cook & Collins opened this week in the former El Patio/Xuco Xicana space on Brazos. The restaurant, a product of the IronCress hospitality group that's an offshoot from the owners of 3rd Floor, Pub Fiction and Crisp, is designed to be a casual neighborhood restaurant that serves classic comfort food. The restaurant is open everyday with brunch on the weekends.

    Hours are reasonable, with Cook & Collins closing by 11 p.m. on Friday and Saturday, to distinguish it from the bars that dominate Midtown's scene.

    "For me to keep making Midtown the single best neighborhood (in Houston), it needs more restaurants," co-owner Michael Paolucci told CultureMap in October. With Reef, Sparrow and Ibiza, Midtown doesn't lack for high-profile destinations, but when it comes to getting a good salad for lunch or a simple steak for dinner, the pickings are kind of thin.

    "For me to keep making Midtown the single best neighborhood (in Houston), it needs more restaurants."

    Cook & Collins aims to change that with a menu full of familiar flavors presented in new ways built from ingredients that are mostly local (and listed on the menu).

    At a recent preview, Paolucci, chef partner Jared Estes (from Crisp), general manager Donny Salvato and executive chef Josh Shobe showed off the new space. The change from its time as a Tex-Mex restaurant is dramatic. The restaurant feels like an upscale diner thanks to the blond wood, overstuffed banquets and subway tiles.

    While the restaurant will likely want to turn tables, the staff may discover diners prefer to linger over dessert or a final cocktail just to enjoy the atmosphere.

    First Taste

    As for the food, it's more of a mixed bag. The menu's strengths are the dishes that combine sweet and spicy flavors such as the Angry Birds fried chicken appetizer and the Pig Popper flatbread. Less successful were dishes that employed seafood.

    Fried mac and cheese can be a winner, but Cook & Collins adds crab meat that winds up coming out mushy, with the crab's sweetness lost in mix of batter, cheese and noodles. The mix of chili, mustard and fried egg for the Red Eye Fries simply didn't come together.

    It's reasonable to think Cook & Collins will improve to solidly better than average and become successful.

    Of the entrees, our group most enjoyed the brown butter-topped ribeye steak and the crispy fried chicken that's served with braised greens and mashed potatoes. The kitchen runs into trouble when it tries to extend itself, as in the not-quite-chowder seafood pot pie or an overcooked pork porterhouse with a too-sweet apple cider reduction.

    I was mostly too full for dessert, but the pink lemonade ice box pie had a nice sweet/tart balance that I'd go back to try again. A friend raved about the butterscotch pudding jar, but I didn't get the chance to try it.

    "This is all pretty average," one diner commented to me as the meal wrapped up. I thought it was a little better than that, and I think brand new restaurants deserve the benefit of the doubt. Execution will likely get better with practice, and recipes will be tweaked to match diners' tastes.

    Given the ownership's track record of success, it's reasonable to think Cook & Collins will improve to solidly better than average and become successful. After all, the neighborhood needs a casual, everyday restaurant, and this team understands Midtown well.

    But, please, ditch the crab in the fried mac & cheese.

    Signs like this one adorn the walls.

    Cook & Collins Houston January 2014 sign
    Photo by © Kim Coffman Cook & Collins
    Signs like this one adorn the walls.
    unspecified
    news/restaurants-bars

    What's Eric Eating Episode 507

    Houston dining insiders weigh in on Michelin Guide announcement

    CultureMap Staff
    Oct 29, 2025 | 5:00 pm
    Houston Michelin star restaurants 2025
    Courtesy of Houston First Corporation
    Chefs and owners of Houston's Michelin-recognized restaurants attended the ceremony on October 28.

    On the newest episode of “What’s Eric Eating,” CultureMap editor Eric Sandler seeks perspective on this week’s Michelin Guide announcement from three local experts:

    • Misha Govshteyn, a Houston entrepreneur who’s visited Michelin-starred restaurants around the world
    • Brianna McClane, a freelance writer who contributes to CultureMap
    • June Rodil, CEO of Goodnight Hospitality, a Houston hospitality group with three restaurants in the guide: March (one star), Rosie Cannonball (Bib Gourmand), and The Marigold Club (recommended)



    The panel begins by discussing how much Michelin seems to know about Texas based on the updates to the guide, which included five new Bib Gourmands and nine new Recommended restaurants, bringing Houston’s total to 44 entries. Although Govshteyn notes that Michelin’s preferences for high-end French and Japanese fare, especially as expressed via tasting menus, make it feel like the organization sees Texas through a “pinhole,” Rodil is feeling a little more optimistic.

    “It’s such a huge state. Not only is Houston diverse, but the state is diverse. When you think about that, I think it’s going to take a lot of time to have a foothold on what the identity is to the organization,” she says. “I’ve been eating and working in the state of Texas for 20 years. I still have so many things to learn.”

    While Michelin is easy to criticize — no one knows where the inspectors are based, when they visit, or how many times visit restaurants before deciding what level of recognition to award — it does play an important role in recognizing ambitious restaurants that are constantly striving for excellence.

    “A lot of times you see people see that next new shiny thing. It’s wonderful to have a list that goes back to restaurants and ensures they’re still maintaining that standard as well as bringing up new restaurants,” Rodil says. “It’s a daunting task. I think it could be 10 years before we have that synergy between the organization and the state.”

    Michelin Guide 2025 Houston bib gourmand Five new Houston restaurants earned Bib Gourmand designations. Courtesy of Houston First Corporation

    Eventually, they discuss some of the restaurants that are missing from the guide. Govshteyn knows that Camaraderie seems well suited to Michelin, given chef-owner Shawn Gawle’s pedigree of working at Michelin-starred restaurants in New York, Chicago, and San Francisco.

    “When I was there on Sunday, there were 22 French people in there eating tarte flambée,” Govshteyn says. If Michelin were interested in French food in Houston, they would zero in on this restaurant, but it’s not in there. I don’t understand the coverage.”

    Sandler calls out the absence of all of Hugo Ortega’s establishments as well as Chinese seafood legend Fung’s Kitchen. Rodil cites Katami, the ambitious Japanese fine dining restaurant, as another establishment that’s been overlooked.

    Listen to the full episode to hear the panel discuss when Texas might get its first two- or three-star restaurant. Rodil also discusses the pressure that the teams at March and Rosie Cannonball felt to maintain their places in the guide, among other topics.

    -----

    Subscribe to "What's Eric Eating" on Apple podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts. Hear it Sunday at 9 am on ESPN 97.5.

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