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    Take a load off

    Innovative Midtown restaurant refreshes with new chef and new look

    Eric Sandler
    May 11, 2020 | 1:33 pm

    Both significant and subtle changes have quietly taken place at Weights + Measures. The popular Midtown restaurant has a new executive chef, a refreshed interior, and a renovated kitchen — all courtesy of a new owner.

    Formerly silent partners, Gene Frazier and Katherine McNeal purchased the restaurant from founders/partners Jon Deal, Ian Rosenberg, Mike Sammons, and executive chef Richard Kaplan in late February. Selling his stake in the restaurant allowed Kaplan to retire, paving the way for the promotion of Fernando Rios to be Weights' new executive chef.

    Rios has been working alongside Kaplan since before Weights + Measures opened. Kaplan had planned to elevate him into the top role eventually, with the sale providing the right opportunity to put the Da Marco veteran in the top role.

    Rios tells CultureMap that the primary difference between his cooking and Kaplan’s is that he’s a fan of bigger, bolder flavors. Whereas Kaplan kept Weights pretty focused on an Italian-inspired mix of shareable plates, pizzas, and pastas, Rios is more open to a broader range of international ingredients.

    “My approach, if I see soy sauce or fish sauce, I’m more inclined to bring them in,” Rios says. “I’m not afraid to combine flavors. It all comes down to taste.”

    Of course, some staples will remain — regulars might riot if the signature roasted carrot pizza was suddenly unavailable — but the chef has recently rolled out new lunch and dinner menus that reflect his culinary perspective.

    The chef has an unusual technique for pasta — “just good flour and a good egg” without any water — that he says results in a more flexible dough that can be used in a wider variety of fresh or dried applications. It’s a method he developed during his time at fine dining institution Da Marco; while owner Marco Wiles expressed skepticism at the time, Rios recalls earning the approval of a visiting Italian for the finished product’s flavor.

    The chef has also overseen the addition of weekday breakfast service. While the restaurant has always had its bake shop open for coffee and pastries, the new menu — served Monday - Friday from 8 to 11 am — takes some of the favorite dishes from the brunch menu and makes the available during the week.

    Like Rios, general manager Angela Moore has been working at the restaurant for some time and remains in her role to provide a smooth transition from one ownership group to the next. Seeing an opportunity with the closure of Ibiza to transform Weights into Midtown’s new preferred dining destination for wine lovers, the former Pass & Provisions manager has created a new wine list with a budget-friendly two-times markup.

    “All the distributors are offering incredible deals, so why aren’t we passing it on to the public,” Moore says. “They’re sitting on wine that needs to move . . . it’s only right we pass those deals on.”

    Moore will also oversee the restaurant’s new, 50-seat private dining room. Formed by combining the restaurant’s former patio and part of its lounge, the private room is most obvious part of renovations conducted while the restaurant shut down for dine-in service. Other changes include the removal of the ‘70s-style shag carpeting on one wall, new paint throughout the dining room, and a slightly expanded kitchen.

    Whether diners notice how sparkling the refreshed interior is may be difficult to measure, but they’ll certainly notice the lower prices. Nothing on Rios’ new dinner menu costs more than $24, and that’s for grilled rack of lamb.

    “We’ve always wanted to be that neighborhood restaurant,” Moore says. “Now, the prices are down, much more affordable so you want to come two or three times a week.”

    Chicken crostini with tarragon yogurt and beets.

    Weights + Measures chicken crostini
    Courtesy of Weights + Measures
    Chicken crostini with tarragon yogurt and beets.
    news-you-can-eat
    news/restaurants-bars

    New Year's greetings

    Chris Shepherd gives thanks for underrated wine and talented Houston doctors

    Chris Shepherd
    Jan 2, 2026 | 1:00 pm
    Sandlands wine bottles
    Photo by Chris Shepherd
    Chris has been enjoying wines from California's Lodi region.

    I know my articles have been a bit scarce these past few months, and I owe you an apology. Life shifted in a big way. In September, my wife Lindsey was diagnosed with breast cancer, and our world narrowed, in the best possible way — to home, health, and the fight in front of us.

    The first and most important thing I’m thankful for is early detection and the city we live in. Having MD Anderson here in Houston is a gift I’ll never take lightly. Lindsey is doing great with treatment. She’s an absolute warrior, and this experience has a way of reframing everything. It forces you to look back, take inventory, and find purpose in both the good and the hard. Today, we’re focusing on the good.

    I love documenting delicious bottles, great bites, and the people we share them with. Every year, I scroll back through my photos to see if my drinking patterns have changed. The answer? A little, but not dramatically. That’s part of what makes wine so fascinating — it’s alive, always evolving, and so are we.

    Chablis and Sangiovese were heavy hitters in 2024 and carried right into 2025. But on the white side, I found myself diving deeper into Aligoté, Burgundy’s other white grape. While Chardonnay is the big dog, Aligoté deserves your attention. Think green apple, citrus, herbal, and floral notes, with bright energy and lift. The real bonus? You can drink Aligoté from top Burgundy producers at a much friendlier price point. It punches well above its weight and belongs on your table.

    I’ve also been blown away by Chardonnay from northern Oregon. Early mistakes with clones led to wines that never quite found balance, but producers committed to getting it right with different clones that did much better in cooler sites, with less oak and shorter barrel time. Barrels should be nurturing vessels, not seasoning agents. Producers like North Valley, Soter, and Alexana are making some of the best Chardonnay I’ve had in years, and I am here for it.

    This past year also brought new adventures, including a month-long stay in Healdsburg, California in July. With a Southern Smoke event and another trip already planned, we packed up the cats, rented a house, and lived somewhere else for a while. It was magical and something I hope we do again.

    While out there, my friend Tegan Passalacqua (Turley Vineyards, Sandlands) invited me to Lodi to taste what’s happening in that region. Lodi has long been known for bulk wine, but the story runs much deeper. Sitting just outside the Sierra Foothills, the region was shaped by massive geological shifts millions of years ago that helped it draw settlers searching for gold in the 1800s. They brought vines with them: Zinfandel, Syrah, and countless lesser-known varieties that are finally getting their moment.

    Zinfandel, genetically linked to Tribidrag (Croatia) and Primitivo (Italy), has been thriving there since the 1850s. After its boom in the early 2000s and an era of ultra-ripe, high-alcohol styles it lost some favor. But tastes change. What’s coming from Lodi’s old vines today is refined, balanced, and beautiful.

    “Think head-trained, dry-farmed, own-rooted vines — some 100 to 150 years old — producing wines that speak clearly of place,” Passalacqua tells me. His Zins sit around 14.5-percent alcohol, elegant and structured, a far cry from the 16-17-percent monsters of decades past.

    One of my newest obsessions is Old Vine Cinsault from the Bechthold Vineyard, planted in 1885. Traditionally a blending grape in southern France, here it shines on its own with bright red fruit and soft tannins — an incredibly crushable wine. If you love lighter Pinot Noir or Gamay, this will make you smile. Look for bottles from Sandlands, Turley, Lorenza, Birichino, and others.

    So here’s the takeaway, like always: break down the walls you’ve been drinking behind. Try something new. Aligoté and Lodi aren’t new but they don’t need to be. They just need people willing to make them cool again. Trust me, they’re delicious and deserving.

    And in the words of the late, great Jerry Garcia:

    Sandlands wine bottles

    Photo by Chris Shepherd

    Chris has been enjoying wines from California's Lodi region.

    Wake up to find out that you are the eyes of the world
    The heart has its beaches, its homeland and thoughts of its own
    Wake now, discover that you are the song that the morning brings
    The heart has its seasons, its evenings and songs of its own

    Happy New Year, team. Never forget to be kind and show love.

    chris shepherdwine
    news/restaurants-bars

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