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    Keeping It Real

    "Missing" woman makes food bloggers look like a complete joke as she preys on H-Town hospitality

    Joel Luks
    Jan 29, 2013 | 2:12 pm

    Victoria Moon Erickson obviously has never heard of a vacation.

    Because that's what people do when they need a respite from the grind of daily life. Book a cruise, take off to Neverland and get some sun to return with your head cleared ready to change what's not working.

    Instead, this Atlanta-born, 32-year-old woman, who the media has continuously identified as a vegan blogger (as if that tidbit matters) decided that she would stage a disappearing act by abandoning her car, computer, cellphone and her "beloved" dog, Jet, with a Houston business owner who generously offered her work and shelter while Erickson was gallivanting cross country documenting her gourmand adventures.

    "That stuff belongs to Vicky and I'm not Vicky anymore," her father, William Erickson, reported she said to him about the personal items discarded at Pat Greer's Kitchen, a raw vegan food catering business in the Montrose area.

    While the community at large, including her twin sister Cat Moon Erickson, thought something terrible had happened to this petite 5-foot, 100-pound gal, what Victoria Moon Erickson truly wanted was to escape the confines of her identity. But she failed. She's been spotted by a friend in Austin, who drove her to a truck stop, and by a truck driver in Carlsbad, N.M., who gave her a ride on her journey to California.

    Victoria Moon Erickson gave non-vegans another reason to think that herbivores are dense fruitcakes.

    "The first thing I would tell her is that I love her," Cat Moon Erickson tells KHOU, implying she felt she had wronged her sister in some fashion. "I always love her. I never want to judge her again."

    Whatever pressures or physical ailments Victoria Moon Erickson may have felt, she surely is delusional in believing that vanishing into thin air is plausible in this era of speedy communications. That's unless you are murdered or can pull off a faux death. Or move to Brazil. Or commit a heinous political crime in North Korea.

    But alas, Victoria Moon Erickson, if you read between the lines of her latest blog post, dated Tuesday, 9:30 a.m., has found her home. In her poem "Welcome Home" (oh, how predictable), illustrated by a photograph of a woman draped in white textiles attempting to take flight amid a serene coastal scene, she writes about the "warrior's plight," the "lust for bleeding green" and "rising against the uncommon dream."

    Though most of the text is a verbose and confusing New Age diatribe, it's the concluding paragraphs that are of concern.

    The illusion of "too late"
    has taken its toll
    "control" is the lie
    we tell ourselves
    when we are afraid to
    let go.

    We get it. We live in a horrible, cruel world teeming with injustices, though most of us choose to look for beauty rather than negating reality.

    Victoria Moon Erickson has, in essence, discarded her four-legged companion (very vegan), took the easy way out by not being straight with people and gave non-vegans another reason to think that herbivores are dense fruitcakes.

    One good thing came out of this ordeal: More people now know about Pat Greer's big heart. By the way, her food is fabulous.

    Victoria Moon Erickson staged a disappearing act by abandoning her car, computer, cell phone and her dog Jet.

    Victoria Moon Erickson, vegan blogger, January 2013, with cow
    Photo courtesy of KHOU Houston Channel 11
    Victoria Moon Erickson staged a disappearing act by abandoning her car, computer, cell phone and her dog Jet.
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    most read posts

    James Beard-winning chef opens 26-seat new restaurant in the Heights

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    Rising Star

    Houston restaurateur dishes on swapping Tex-Mex for new retro steakhouse

    Eric Sandler
    Feb 27, 2026 | 11:15 am
    Star Rover exterior
    Photo by Eric Sandler
    Star Rover is now open in the Heights.

    Restaurateur Ford Fry surprised Houston diners when he announced in January that he was closing his Tex-Mex restaurant Superica and replacing it with Star Rover, a casual, family-friendly steakhouse. With Star Rover now open for dinner and weekend brunch, Fry — who also owns Star Rover's neighbor La Lucha, casual taqueria Little Rey, and River Oaks fine dining restaurant State of Grace — explains that the decision came down to both economics and his own desire to provide the Heights with something he thought was lacking.

    “This was our smallest Superica. Superica for us takes so much — every day you’re making salsas, tortillas, it’s so prep heavy,” Fry says. “We weren’t big enough to be that successful. We didn’t have enough seats to make the labor make sense.”

    Rather than compete against Houston’s seemingly limitless roster of Tex-Mex restaurants, Fry saw an opportunity for a steakhouse that occupied a space somewhere between chains like Texas Roadhouse and Outback and fine dining staples like Pappas Bros. Enter Star Rover, which already has a popular location in Nashville.

    Just as La Lucha channels Fry’s childhood memories of the San Jacinto Inn, Star Rover takes some inspiration from iconic Houston restaurant Hofbrau. Diners of a certain age will see places like Hofbrau in the restaurant’s design. The walls are adorned with framed pictures, taxidermy, vintage advertising, and more.

    “The inspiration is if you were some old Texas dude who wanted to start a steakhouse you’d find a bunch of crap and put it on the walls,” Fry says. “We want to make it cool, but it’s got to take you away from what it was. Did we achieve that? I hope so.”

    Fry tasked chef Bobby Matos with updating the Star Rover menu for Houston. It starts with a selection of steaks — chopped, filet, T-bone, ribeye, or skirt — along with a half-chicken, blackened redfish, and chicken fried chicken. All of them come with milk rolls, salad, fries, and onion rings. Diners who want a little surf and turf can add either a crab cake or a fried lobster tail.

    The appetizer menu is similarly tidy, consisting of shrimp cocktail, oysters (raw or fried), potato skins, and vegetable crudités. Desserts include a selection of pies as well as soft serve ice cream.

    Since the steaks are thinner than those served at upscale steakhouses, they’re cooked hot and fast on a plancha and basted in butter.

    “We control the costs by the size of the meat,” Fry explains. “Meat is so expensive, how do you do a family-friendly steakhouse? It’s a 12-ounce ribeye and it’s choice. We put the right amount of age on it.”

    Tucked away in the corner of the menu is text that reads “Cheeseburger?! Just ask!” People should, because it’s a hearty half-pound, New York tavern-style burger that sits on grilled onions, is topped with cheese and mayonnaise, and is served on a classic potato bun. Think of it as the thick-patty counterpart to La Lucha’s thin-patty Pharmacy Burger.

    “I call it a lowbrow steakhouse burger,” Fry says. “It’s not a Peter Luger, but it may be better and it won’t cost as much.”

    Star Rover’s weekend brunch menu features the same pancakes that had been a staple at Superica. They’re joined by some new items, including baked-to-order cinnamon rolls, breakfast tacos, and kolaches that use sausage from Houston’s Roegels Barbecue Co.

    Star Rover exterior

    Photo by Eric Sandler

    Star Rover is now open in the Heights.

    The restaurant has one other old-school touch in the form of an eating challenge called the “I Ate the 76er.” Available with 24 hours notice, diners who finish a 76-ounce steak, milk rolls, salad, onion rings, and fries in under an hour will receive the meal for free, plus a t-shirt and the opportunity to sign a winners’ wall. The challenge reflects the spirit Fry is bringing to Star Rover.

    “A lot of it is scratching that itch of something fun I want to do versus what I think the neighborhood will like,” he says. “We did a version of this in Nashville with a stage. It’s where I eat when I’m in Nashville, because it’s what I want to eat when I’m there.”

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