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    Major Chef Return

    He's back! Buzzed-over chef Randy Rucker finally returns with a new restaurant — and the lease is signed

    Eric Sandler
    Jun 10, 2014 | 3:57 pm

    Randy Rucker is back. Two years after abandoning his plans to open a restaurant called conāt in the Museum District, the chef, who's known for his extensive use of locally raised and foraged ingredients, has emerged with plans to open a restaurant called Bramble in the former Mancuso's Italian Table space on Voss.

    While skeptics will say they've heard this before, Rucker, along with business partners Eoghan Dillman and Thomas J. Holmes, III, have a lease on the space. Remodeling begins this week with design work by Collaborative Projects, the firm that's currently finishing up both Julep and the Bernie's Burger Bus brick and mortar restaurant spaces. Together, the partners expect Bramble to open this fall.

    Despite the time away, the man's cooking still attracts a crowd, as evidenced by the 40-plus people who attended a six course pop-up.

    Why now? Rucker tells CultureMap that he hadn't been inspired to cook professionally for over a year, but things have changed now that he's older and has found business partners who can fully support his vision for a restaurant.

    Despite the time away, the man's cooking still attracts a crowd, as evidenced by the 40-plus people who attended a six course pop-up dinner Friday night. Hubcap Grill owner Ricky Craig, Triniti chef/owner Ryan Hildebrand, pastry chef Plinio Sandalio and former Hawthorn chef Riccardo Palazzo-Giorgio were among the restaurant industry veterans who attended the dinner to see what Rucker's future holds.

    While Rucker tends to avoid characterizing his cuisine as being of any one style, he did offer diners a perspective on Bramble's ethos after the meal.

    The whole idea of what we’re trying to do here is reconnect y’all to your native reality.

    We want to show you what true luxury is. True luxury to us or to me as a restaurant is nothing you can put a price on. Anyone can go to a store and buy caviar or truffles or foie gras. . . . That’s not true luxury. To me, what luxury is white tail deer or certain things we have that are ours. . . . Blue crab, that’s what luxury is.

    Money is what it is. If you want to spend it, I’ll take it. But true luxury to me and hopefully to the guys is what’s ours. Our mushrooms we grow here, our wild edibles, our farmers, our ranchers.

    And yet, for Rucker's talk, Friday's meal didn't feel like a very luxurious experience, at least in the traditional sense. For example, only half the six courses were served individually. The rest were delivered on shared plates that guests had to split.

    The Facebook event page promised pre-dinner snacks that never appeared. For $65 per person, surely Rucker could have prepared enough food to feed everyone.

    Also, it seemed that each dish didn't receive the same level of attention in preparation. On the one hand, the final dish of cocks combs with Mung beans is exactly the sort of dish that demonstrates Rucker at his best — an unusual ingredient, prepared well, that delivered a rich flavor that made the gelatinous texture intriguing rather than unpleasant. A dish of raw beef was chewy but flavorful thanks to shiso peppers and a mysterious powder made from dehydrated goose.

    On the other, the fifth course of cured and grilled pig liver was undercooked for my portion and flat out cold for a friend's. The metallic flavor of liver can be a tough sell for even the most adventurous diner, and it becomes totally inedible when not cooked properly. And yet, another diner told me he devoured his entire portion.

    Similar lack of execution plagued a dish of "biscuits" with housemade buttermilk cheese curds and local honey. The flavors came together beautifully, but the biscuits never rose properly and were served as thin, pita-like strips. If Rucker had called his toasted yeast creations "dumplings" instead of "gnocchi," it might have been OK, but they were too gummy to match my expectations for Italian potato dumplings that are usually soft.

    After the meal, Rucker described the event as a "party," which make explain his lackadaisical attitude towards getting all the details right. After all, when would-be restaurants like Mangiamaccheroni or The Bull & The Pearl host a pop-up, it serves as both a meal and an audition for future investors. Rucker's financing is secure, and, if Friday night's turnout is any indication, his reputation among diners is still just as safe even after a two-year hiatus.

    Hopefully, he's able to bring the full force of his talent to Bramble, but, until it's open and consistent, a healthy dose of skepticism seems warranted.

    A sold out crowd of 40-plus turned out to previe Bramble.

    Randy Rucker Bramble pop-up dinner June 2014
    Photo by Eric Sandler
    A sold out crowd of 40-plus turned out to previe Bramble.
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    welcome murray's

    Growing Houston group spins up a Memorial pizzeria with date night vibes

    Eric Sandler
    Oct 21, 2025 | 3:53 pm
    Murray's Pizza and Wine
    Photo by Michael Ma
    Murray's serves a mix of pizza and shareable plates.

    The wait is nearly over for Memorial’s new pizzeria. Murray’s Pizza & Wine will open this Friday, October 24.

    Located in the former Texadelphia space near Memorial City Mall (9655 Katy Fwy), Murray’s is the latest project from the owners of Leaf & Grain, the locally-owned, salad-focused restaurant that just opened a new location next to Murray’s. Founder Deets Hoffman and co-founder Edward Thompson have stepped things up for Murray’s, adding both full service and alcohol for the first time.

    “It’s not a side project,” Hoffman tells CultureMap. “This is something we’ve been working on pretty thoughtfully for a long time.”

    Indeed, Murray’s roots trace back to 2018, but those plans were put on hold by the Covid pandemic. During that time, Leaf & Grain began making its own sourdough, learning important lessons about baking that helped revive Hoffman and Thompson’s interests in opening a pizzeria.

    To prepare for Murray’s, Thompson immersed himself into Modernist Bread, a five-volume, 24 chapter cookbook that explores all the techniques necessary for making dough. In the end, he created Murray’s pizza as a hybrid between New York style’s thin, foldable slices and lightly-topped neo-Neopolitan pies. The Murray’s dough uses flour sourced from Texas-based Barton Springs Mill and is fermented for multiple days.

    “It is naturally leavened. There is a small amount of commercial yeast, but it’s an extremely small amount,” Thompson says. “The sourdough provides a lot of flavor, especially with our extended fermentation. We use a little yeast to bring consistency and predictability.”

    With that much effort put into the dough, pizza toppings are restrained. Murray’s sources ingredients from local vendors and cheese from Houston Dairy Maids, so the pizzas aren’t loaded up with ingredients. Options include the Sausage a la Vodka Pizza, (Vodka sauce, Italian sausage, whipped ricotta, fennel, and basil) and the Not-Hawaiian (salami piccante, pickled shallots, and pineapple-infused hot honey), among others.

    “We want to let the dough shine and the flavor we’ve brought to it from fermentation and using really high quality flours. Our focus is on the quality of the toppings and letting the quality speak for itself,” Thompson says.

    “There’s no out there, crazy things in terms of toppings,” he adds. “I like to think of it as a responsible amount. No one wants a pizza that a drizzle of olive oil and a teaspoon of tomato, but we don’t want it to be greasy.”

    They’re paired with small plates such as hamachi-salmon crudo, focaccia Genovese with burrata, white bean hummus, and meatballs made with a mixture of Black Angus beef and Duroc pork. Hoffman says Murray’s had two goals for its small plates — adding “brightness and acidity” as well as some protein that would complement the pizza. Initially, the restaurant will be open for lunch and dinner with a weekend brunch menu to follow.

    Similarly, a restaurant with the word “wine” in its name needs to have compelling offerings, so Murray’s turned to veteran bartender Derek Brown, who consulted on a list of approximately 30 bottles and six to eight by-the-glass options with a a focus on smaller producers. Brown also created a list of classic cocktails as well as a couple of frozens that should be a hit with people who dine on the restaurant’s patio.

    “We want this to be a fun space that people are excited to come to,” Thompson says. “I think all of those pieces together, whatever anyone wants to find, we’ll have something in that mood. We’re focused on keeping a short list and doing it as well as we can.”

    To achieve the proper date night atmosphere, Murray’s turned to Houston’s Garrison Design Office (GDO). Diners will notice details such as “moody lighting,” refined finishes, and millwork by Eric Rosprim of Objektfab.

    “We’re excited for this one,” Hoffman says. “It’s a chance to do more fun things. Leaf and Grain is our baby, but this opens itself up to more fun.”


    Murray's Pizza and Wine

    Photo by Michael Ma

    Murray's serves a mix of pizza and shareable plates.

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