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    First taste of Saint Arnold

    Saint Arnold spreads the gospel with ambitious new church-inspired restaurant and beer garden

    Eric Sandler
    Jul 24, 2018 | 1:54 pm

    Brock Wagner almost can’t believe what he’s seeing. As he sits down for lunch at Saint Arnold Brewing Company’s newly opened restaurant and beer garden, Wagner, who founded the brewery in 1994, recognizes how far he’s come.

    “This is sort of a culmination of a pipe dream I had a long time ago but never thought it would be a reality,” Wagner says.

    As Wagner notes, the new restaurant represents the next evolution of a process that’s been going on he founded Saint Arnold. First, he held tours in the brewery’s original location. Then it moved to its current location with air conditioning and a kitchen. A change in Texas law that allowed breweries to sell beer for on-premise consumption spurred the growth of numerous tap rooms around the Houston area that offered both indoor and outdoor space, which was something Saint Arnold couldn’t do with the tap room at its brewery. So once again, Saint Arnold has stepped up with its most ambitious offering to date.

    “With all the breweries opening up, I really felt like we were starting to be at a disadvantage in the experience we could deliver to our visitors,” Wagner says. “It didn’t have all the elements that people wanted.”

    Problem solved. Now people can dine in air-conditioned comfort in a newly constructed building that sits next to the Saint Arnold brewery. The “disappearing” design by Natalye Appel + Associates transitions from a fully enclosed restaurant to a covered patio to open-air seating with a first-rate view of the downtown skyline. Inside, the design puts the “saint” in Saint Arnold with a church-inspired design that features six mini “chapels” featuring custom designs from Houston artists GONZO247, Carlos Hernandez, Nick Papas, Robynn Sanders, Matthew Schott, and Jeff Szymanski.

    “I really imagined this immersive thing. When they came in, I told each artist, ‘here’s your chapel. Do something with it,’” Wagner says. “In my wildest dreams, this is what I imagined but I didn’t really believe it would happen like this . . . It turn out that nobody ever says to them, ‘do whatever you want.’ With artists, when you do that, they go to town.”

    Whether inside or out, diners choose from full menu of pizzas, sandwiches, shareable items, and entrees created by Saint Arnold executive chef Ryan Savoie and his team — everything from fried, pickled green tomatoes (Wagner’s early favorite) to a 16-ounce ribeye and a twin-patty cheeseburger with all the trimmings. After four years of serving a limited lunch menu from a tiny kitchen in the brewery’s tap room, the restaurant's offerings represent a step up in terms of quality and ambition. Savoie also has a couple of ringers helping him execute the food with chefs Jason “Big Sexy” Hill (H-Town StrEATs, Luv Me Tenders) and Jason Tedford, who has spent the past few years as Wayne Mueller’s right hand at Louie Mueller Barbecue. Savoie tells CultureMap that the kitchen does have a smoker, which means that Tedford could start turning out at least a little barbecue sometime soon.

    “I want our kitchen to be competing with our beer for what’s the best thing here. It doesn’t mean we bring the beer down. It means the food has to come up,” Wagner says. “I think the food that Ryan did next door was amazing, especially given that tiny kitchen. When it was time to come here, we want food, when people come in, I want them to say ‘I was not expecting that.’”

    While the food is the big news, Wagner still wants people to feel comfortable just coming in for a pint. The restaurant offers all 12 of Saint Arnold’s year-round beers as well as its seasonal specials and a few that will only be served there. Non-drinkers have options like iced tea and the brewery’s root beer.

    Members of the Saint Arnold Society may enjoy one free pint daily served in an engraved pewter mug. Wagner says about 170 people have paid the $1,000 membership fee, and the demand has been sufficient to open it up to new applicants. While that’s certainly appealing to Houston beer lovers, Wagner has even grander ambitions for his new creation.

    “If I’ve really, truly succeeded in this, people around the country and around the world will say the Saint Arnold beer garden is a place you’ve got to go visit,” Wagner says. “I want people in Houston to be proud of it and when their visitors come, rather than taking them to the Galleria or NASA, want to come here.”

    ---

    Take a video tour of Saint Arnold's new restaurant courtesy of our content partner ABC13.

    Saint Arnold just opened its massive new beer garden and restaurant.

    Saint Arnold Beer Garden aerial view
    Courtesy of Courtesy of OJB Landscape Architecture
    Saint Arnold just opened its massive new beer garden and restaurant.
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    slice of life

    Exclusive: Houston pizza legend to open new neighborhood joint in Spring

    Eric Sandler
    May 14, 2026 | 5:35 pm
    Anthony Calleo Galaxy Pizza
    Photo by Eric Sandler
    Anthony Calleo will open Galaxy Pizza in the coming weeks.

    Any conversation about the evolution of Houston’s pizza offerings over the last decade or so would have to include a discussion of chef Anthony Calleo. As the founder of Pi Pizza, the co-founder of Gold Tooth Tony’s, and a consultant for Betelgeuse Betelgeuse, he’s contributed to the rise (sorry) of better pizza in the Bayou City.

    After some time away from the restaurant business (more on that in a minute), Calleo will soon open his latest project, a neighborhood pizza joint in Spring that he’s calling Galaxy Pizza. Smaller in size and more focused than his previous restaurants, Galaxy Pizza showcases many of the lessons Calleo has learned along the way.

    As Calleo tells CultureMap, he quietly left Gold Tooth Tony’s and his partnership in Rudyard’s last year after being diagnosed as autistic right around his 45th birthday. He says it pained him to leave — Gold Tooth Tony’s had just opened its Bellaire location and Rudyard’s was doing well — but his doctors gave him an ultimatum.

    “‘You need to take time to stop and rest or die,’” Calleo says they told him. “I love this, but I don’t want to die. I had to stop. I didn’t think there was a way for me to do this again.”

    The Location

    Calleo took time off to rest. He got back into commercial real estate and began consulting with restaurateurs about new concepts they wanted to open. Through those efforts, he found the former Jackpot Pizza space at 6450 Louetta Rd. in Spring, a small space that’s ideally suited to carryout and to-go with just a couple of tables for either dine-in or waiting.

    While the location may seem obscure to people who know Calleo for his inner loop eateries, it’s part of a busy dining district that includes the Spring location of Trill Burgers as well as neighborhood favorites like Toki, a Japanese restaurant that serves ramen and sushi.

    “I have found so much good food up here. Really good food. At a bunch of mom-and-pop places. Some are trucks. Some are little restaurants that have been here forever,” he says.

    As Calleo studied the location’s economics, he came to a realization. “At the end of the day, I really miss doing this. I miss making pizza. It is my autistic special interest,” he says.

    The location’s lower lease rate compared to what landlords can get inside the loop allows Galaxy Pizza to be closed on Tuesday and Wednesday. That will give both its staff and its owner some much-needed time off.

    “The rent makes it doable. I can sell food out here and actually make a living and not just pay a lease,” Calleo says.

    While it has a small footprint, the interior features murals by Houston artist Brian Dibala (aka Neon Thrash), who contributed to the design of both Endless Bummer, the speakeasy-style tiki bar in Montrose, and Radio Tave, Houston's Meow Wolf installation.

    The Pizza

    Calleo made “Houston pizza” at Pi Pizza and Detroit-style pizza at Gold Tooth Tony’s and Rudyard’s. For Galaxy, he’s chasing something a little more, shall we say, nostalgic.

    “It’s a classic neighborhood pizzeria. It’s almost a thing that doesn’t exist anymore. It’s how Pizza Hut made pizza in 1987,” he says. “It’s got a good rise on the crust. It doesn’t droop, but it’s not stiff like a cracker. It’s got a little too much cheese and sauce on it. It’s slutty, do you know what I mean?

    “A culinary instructor would tell you it’s unbalanced, and that’s the point. There’s some sneaky tricks we’re going to do that will be really nostalgic, but done with cheffy intention.”

    The menu is still being finalized, but Calleo acknowledges he’ll serve classics like pepperoni and cheese. He’ll have salads, sandwiches, and appetizers like breadsticks and cheesy garlic bread. Notably, the menu doesn’t contain any chicken, which covers its sandwiches, pizza toppings, and appetizers, which means no wings or buffalo chicken pizza — at least for now.

    Generally speaking, the preparations will be simpler and more traditional than his previous stops, where toppings included bacon-braised collard greens with pancetta or blackberries with chevre. For example, Galaxy Pizza will be the first time Calleo will serve raw onions rather than caramelizing them.

    “This is a neighborhood pizza place,” he says. “There’s no goat cheese on the menu. This place doesn’t know how to spell ‘confit,’ and it doesn’t need to.”

    In an acknowledgement of the neighborhood’s demographics, all of the beef at Galaxy Pizza will be halal. The restaurant will have two pizza ovens and two prep stations — one for pizzas with pork and one for pizzas without. Each oven will also have dedicated pans, utensils, and other cooking tools to prevent cross-contamination. Calleo acknowledges it won’t satisfy the most observant Muslims in the area, but he hopes it will help demonstrate a commitment to serving that community well.

    The restaurant will soon host an invite-only friends and family service to see how its team works in the space. Then, they’ll go dark for a couple of weeks of practice before announcing an official opening date.

    Once it’s open, Galaxy Pizza will offer carryout and delivery via third-party apps. Those who want more of a dine-in experience can walk next door to HR Bar and Grill.

    Wherever a customer decides to eat his pizza, Calleo hopes it conjures a very specific memory.

    “I am still chasing Showbiz Pizza in 1986 from my fifth birthday — the way it smelled, how it made me feel, the way the pepperoni crunched and how it tasted. I’m still chasing that. This is my chasing it in its most authentic form” he says.

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