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    New Minute Maid Offerings

    Astros partner with celebrity chef Andrew Zimmern for new menu items

    Eric Sandler
    Apr 9, 2016 | 1:15 pm

    In their continuing quest to offer baseball fans more to eat than hot dogs and nachos (not that there’s anything wrong with them), the Houston Astros are always introducing new menu items at Minute Maid Park. Although it will be hard to top last year’s smash success of a chicken and waffle cone that rung up 20,000 units in sales, the team has turned to a celebrity chef to keep diners coming back for more.

    That chef is none other than Andrew Zimmern, the author and TV host of Travel Channel programs in the Bizarre Foods series including Bizarre Foods with Andrew Zimmern, Bizarre Foods America, and the recently introduced Bizarre Foods: Delicious Destinations. In 2012, Zimmern began serving ballpark concessions in his native Minneapolis via his AZ Canteen brand, and now Houstonians get to taste what Minnesotans have been raving about.

    Available at the FiveSeven Grille and the Street Eats concessions in sections 126 and 409, the team will roll out to two of Zimmern’s dishes over the course of the season. The first is a battered, fried Korean pork belly sandwich that balances out its gochujang heat with a slice of sweet grilled pineapple. A lamb burrito is waiting in the proverbial culinary bullpen and will roll out later this season to give fans something new to try.

    Of course, the club is no stranger to celebrity chef partnerships; Minute Maid already offers food from Reef chef/owner Bryan Caswell via Little Bigs sliders and El Real tacos. Aramark district manager Mat Drain tells CultureMap that fans like “the comfort of something they know from outside” available in the stadium, and he thinks they’ll be intrigued by Zimmern’s offerings.

    “You see a lot of the things that he does on TV, but you wonder, what does he cook? What does his food taste like that? I think it will bring an attraction to what people want to see at the ballpark," Drain says.

    Of course, the club is also rolling out some other new items like street tacos, a hand-battered corn dog, and a Nolan Ryan branded jalapeno-cheese hot dog, but they're mostly variations on conventional ballpark fare. The two Zimmern-branded items are definitely something different and should tempt people who might have otherwise dined outside the stadium.

    Celebrity chef and TV host Andrew Zimmern is bringing two items to Minute Maid Park this season.

    Andrew Zimmern Astros concessions
    Andrew Zimmern/Twitter
    Celebrity chef and TV host Andrew Zimmern is bringing two items to Minute Maid Park this season.
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    news/restaurants-bars

    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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