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    This place has everything

    Palatial, over-the-top global Indian restaurant spices up Galleria with glitzy opening

    Eric Sandler
    May 15, 2020 | 10:35 am

    Houston’s most ambitious Indian restaurant is finally ready to serve customers. Musaafer by the Spice Route Company will officially open its doors Monday, May 18 (a quiet soft opening will take place Saturday, May 16).

    First announced two years ago, Musaafer, Hindi for “traveler,” aims to take diners on a journey across the subcontinent. With a high-style interior and Insta-worthy food presentations, Musaafer aspires to set itself apart from both its obvious competitors (Kiran's, Verandah) and its immediate neighbors such as global sushi powerhouse Nobu.

    “There are so many interpretations of Indian cuisine,” Mithu Malik, who owns the restaurant with her husband Shammi, said in a statement. “At Musaafer, our first U.S. restaurant, the intention is to showcase our homeland in a manner that authentically honors the country’s culinary diversity. Guests will have the opportunity to discover unique flavors and presentations – both traditional and cutting edge – from 29 states within a truly immersive space.”

    To create that “truly immersive space,” Malik turned to Chromed Design Studio. For its first American project, the Delhi-based firm created seven distinct rooms within Musaafer's 10,000-square-foot location in the Galleria VI. Influences draw from India’s spice markets, royal palaces, and opulent private homes.

    “The key concept was to build several spaces each with unique characteristics with the kitchen and bar as the two focal points,” Chromed Design Studio owner Abhigyan Neogi said. “Our approach was to convert Musaafer’s abstract meaning into a physical space that symbolizes multiple experiences threaded together by one common vision. The space is extremely vivid and feels more like a collection of artifacts, furniture, art and light fixtures that could have been acquired over travels throughout India.”

    Every surface has been carefully considered to create a distinct impression. For example, the “Traveler’s Room” includes a 12-foot statue, and the “Diwan Lounge” matches tufted sofas and chairs with marble tables and wine storage that’s inspired by an aviary. A private dining room above the main dining room, known as the “Sheesh Mahal,” has a ceiling decorated with 200,000 hand-cut antique mirrors. When the restaurant is allowed to operate at full capacity, it will seat just over 200 people.

    The Maliks have hired Mayank Istwal as Musaafer’s executive chef. Istwal brings experience from some of India’s top luxury hotels, according to a press release. To help prepare him for Musaafer, the chef traveled across India’s 29 states to collect recipes and ideas.

    Pastry chef Ruchit Harnej and bar manager Himanshu Desai bring their own high profile experiences from India to their roles. Sommelier Rebecca Beaman comes to Musaafer from acclaimed Texas resort The Inn at Dos Brisas, and Houston diners will recognize general manager Sebastien Laval from restaurants such as La Table and MAD.

    Istwal’s menu features familiar dishes with innovative presentations. Consider his butter chicken three ways, including one with “centrifuged and clear clarified tomato sauce,” or a lamb shank with saffron cauliflower risotto and pepper gremolata (pictured above). Appetizers include savory mushroom eclairs, raw tuna chaat, and oysters with smoked cumin. Entrees include lobster curry, slow cooked black lentils, and mutton biryani with rose and pandan water. Musaafer will also offer a separate to-go menu that features a range of appetizers and entrees.

    In keeping with the times, the restaurant has instituted a number of procedures to help mitigate the spread of the coronavirus. They include: hand sanitizer stations throughout the dining room; staff wearing masks; limiting restroom use to one customer at a time; and contactless payment. Valet service will not be available. The restaurant will operate at 25-percent capacity pending Gov. Greg Abbott’s announcement about when the state’s restaurants will enter “phase 2” with 50-percent capacity.

    When the Maliks announced their plans to open Musaafer two years ago, CultureMap compared its prospects to those of Baker Mayfield’s, who had just been selected as the first overall pick in the NFL draft, because the Heisman Trophy winner had the potential to lead the Cleveland Browns to success or become just another failed prospect. The analogy has never seemed more appropriate. In his first two years, Mayfield followed up an exciting first season that culminated in being a finalist for Rookie of the Year with a disappointing second season that featured him throwing almost as many interceptions as touchdowns.

    Opening an ultra-ambitious restaurant that took two years to build wouldn’t be easy under normal conditions, and that’s only going to be more difficult in the middle of a pandemic. Musaafer has several components that bode well for its prospects: a talented team, an interior so luxuriously over-the-top that it almost makes MAD look like Luby’s, and a menu that’s inspired by one of the world’s greatest culinary traditions.

    If it had opened six months ago, its potential would seem almost limitless, but the present moment makes its harder to predict the future. Hopefully, enough diners feel comfortable leaving their homes to give Musaafer a chance to succeed.

    Lamb shank with saffron cauliflower risotto.

    Musaafer nali nahari lamb shank
    Photo by Julie Soefer
    Lamb shank with saffron cauliflower risotto.
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    in like the rose

    Mimo duo open tiny Italian sandwich and gelato shop in Houston's East End

    Eric Sandler
    Apr 29, 2026 | 5:52 pm
    La Rosa Fernando Rios Mike Sammons
    Photo by Eric Sandler
    Chef Fernando Rios and Mike Sammons recently opened La Rosa.

    When sommelier Mike Sammons and chef Fernando Rios teamed up to open their East End Italian restaurant Mimo in 2023, they did so by serving sandwiches that eventually went away once the restaurant moved to only being open for dinner with full service.

    Thankfully, the sandwiches are back at La Rosa, the duo’s new sandwich restaurant that, like Mimo, is located in the East End’s Tlaquepaque Market shopping center. Currently, it’s open Tuesday-Sunday with sandwiches for lunch (12-3 pm) and gelato until the early evening.

    “I have always wanted to do a sandwich shop. That’s always been a weird dream since an experience I had in Italy when I was younger,” Sammons tells CultureMap. “Even back in the days at 13 Celsius, that was a big driver for the mortadella sandwich we still do there.”

    La Rosa’s menu is as compact as its space, which has four indoor tables, a little dining counter, and a couple of outdoor tables. It consists of three sandwiches:

    • Mortadella, with fior di latte, arugula, pesto di pistachio, mostarda, and garlic aioli
    • Formaggio, a vegetarian sandwich with corn and zucchini fritters, arugula, pesto di pistachio, mostarda, and garlic aioli
    • A daily special that, on April 29, was made with bresaola, pecorino, horseradish crema, capers, arugula, and lemon.

    La Rosa Fernando Rios Mike Sammons

    Photo by Eric Sandler

    Chef Fernando Rios and Mike Sammons recently opened La Rosa.

    “We R&D’ed the hell out of them,” Sammons says about the sandwiches. “I can’t tell you how many mortadellas we’ve tasted and how many different kinds of fior di latte. Even the way we do the pesto di pistachio — dry as a bone or super wet with lots of olive oil.”

    Alright, Mike, explain how nerdy you and chef got with the ingredients in the mortadella sandwich.

    “First of all, when it comes to the mortadella, you have to be able to cut it so thinly you can look through it. It has to have a certain integrity and still have bite to it,” he explains. “The fior di latte has to be creamy and snappy. You have to be able to crush it flat so it oozes all over the sandwich. The pesto di pistachio has to have a real presence of raw pistachio.”

    The duo applied a similar discipline to finding the right platform for La Rosa’s sandwiches. Sammons says he and Rios tried all kinds of bread, eventually settling on a telera roll from Houston favorite El Bolillo.

    “It’s more of a vessel. Bread is always the star of a sandwich, but we want the star of the show to be almost a little hidden, like an uncelebrated special guest,” he says. “It’s crisp and crunchy with a toothsome bite that’s light and airy in the middle. It holds everything together but doesn’t dominate.”

    Similarly, they’re sourcing gelato from Houston’s SweetCup Gelato. Sammons says he tried multiple vendors, but Sweet Cup’s lemon sorbet is the one flavor that most reminded him of Italy. In addition to classics like pistachio, chocolate, and strawberry, chef Rios can work with Sweet Cup on flavors that will be exclusive to La Rosa.

    Rios is already rotating the specials. The opening weekend’s meatball sandwich quickly gave way to this week’s bresaola. Diners have plenty to look forward to, including favorites from the old days like Italian beef and chicken parm.

    Sammons has some aspirations, too. He plans to add beer and wine to the current non-alcoholic offerings of soda and sparkling water.

    The little shop has been surprisingly busy, he adds.

    “We sold out Sunday, which was unexpected,” Sammons says. “If we keep doing that, we’ll make more. So far, everyone has been supportive. I’m really excited. I think it’s going to be great.”

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