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    Be Brave

    Sneak peek: Downtown Houston's highly anticipated food hall opens for business

    Eric Sandler
    Jul 24, 2019 | 4:27 pm

    Downtown Houston's fourth food hall has officially arrived. The five restaurants and three bars at Bravery Chef Hall are officially open for business.

    As its name implies, Bravery offers a twist on the typical food hall format. Instead of ordering at a counter and finding a seat in a common area, each of Bravery's restaurants offer counter seating areas from which diners can watch the chefs prepare their meals. The arrangement both gives diners a more intimate experience with the people preparing their food and allows the chefs to receive tips, which they are traditionally forbidden from doing in a typical restaurant.

    Ahn Mai and Lian Nguyen bring the lessons they've learned from owning the Conservatory food hall to the project. They've partnered with Shepard Ross, who brings operational experience from numerous restaurants (Pax Americana, Glass Wall) and time as a consultant (Kiran's, Jonathan's the Rub Memorial Green, Tea & Victory etc).

    Located on the street level of Aris Market Square, real estate developer Hines’ all-rental luxury high-rise at 409 Travis St., Bravery's restaurants are currently open for dinner starting at 5 pm daily. Lunch service will start on Tuesday, July 30. Ultimately, Lockwood Stn, The Secret Garden, and Atlas Diner will be open late on the weekends.

    Before diving in to each concept individually, here's a quick overview:

    • Atlas Diner: a retro-styled concept from chef Richard Knight (Feast, Hunky Dory).
    • The Blind Goat: a modern, Vietnamese gastropub from Masterchef winner Christine Ha.
    • BOH Pasta: a pizza and pasta restaurant from chef Ben McPherson (Prohibition, Krisp Bird & Batter).
    • Cherry Block Craft Butcher + Kitchen: a steakhouse from owner Felix Florez (Black Hill Meats, Ritual) and chef Jess DeSham Timmons (The Redneck Country Club, Caboose BBQ).
    • Kokoro: a sushi and yakitori offering from chefs Patrick Pham and Daniel Lee, who met when they worked together at Uchi.

    On the beverage side, the options are:

    • Bravery Wine Bar: Ross' wine bar serves as the space's control center; it offers 30 wines on tap, as well as selections by-the-bottle.
    • Lockwood Stn: bartender David Cedeno (better known as David Daquiri) focuses on draft cocktails, vermouth, rum, and whiskey.
    • Secret Garden Patio Bar: proprietor Jonathan Gallardo (Prohibition) serves cocktail and espresso at this bar, which is located on Bravery's outdoor patio.

    "I've taken the basic Richard Knight lunacy to a diner," the chef tells CultureMap. The concept's eclectic menu shows a diverse array of influences: British-Indian on the "butter chicken and chips," Mexican for a nachos plate called "The Aris Tower - Floor 9 3/4," and who knows what for the "Knickerbocker Sunrise," a parfait that comes either "nice" with yogurt and fruit or "naughty" with ice cream, candy, and chocolate sauce.

    Atlas will be open almost constantly: serving breakfast during the week, with both brunch and late night on the weekends. Knight has big plans for the late-night menu, including "The Sleepwalker," which consists of a whole bottle of milk and a full size box of cereal. It's also the only restaurant at Bravery with a dedicated pastry chef who will produce pies, sweets, and more.

    Beef carpaccio and stir-fried noodles with tofu may not be dishes found at most Vietnamese restaurants around town, but they're already winning fans at The Blind Goat. The menu offers some more familiar fare in the form of egg rolls and a beef short rib bowl, but options like apple pie and freshly-pressed sugarcane juice serve as notice that the options are a little different. Although Ha still has to jet off to Los Angeles for occasional Masterchef appearances, expect to see her on the line at her first restaurant.

    Ben McPherson tells CultureMap that he's always be fascinated by the simplicity of Italian cuisine. He traveled to the country after he completed culinary school and has been looking for the right opportunity to open an Italian restaurant ever since.

    At BOH, Italian slang for "I don't know," the chef is serving pastas he makes on-site (bucatini carbonara, spaghetti with tomato sauce, etc.), small plates like roasted beet salad, and pizza al taglio, a style from Rome that's typically sold by-the-slice. In addition, the chef uses ingredients that diners can feel good about, such as eggs from Yonder Way Farms and flour from Texas purveyor Barton Springs Mill.

    By serving as both supplier and distributor for the meat at Cherry Block, Florez has more control over the steaks the restaurant serves and is able to offer them at a lower cost. That means an 8-ounce choice ribeye only costs $16, and a 6-ounce filet is $18.

    Timmons shows some creativity in the kitchen. For example, the "Gulf and Ranch" features a ribeye cap stuffed with shrimp andouille sausage. The oversized, baked-to-order cookie, made with salted caramel, already sounds like a winner.

    Lee and Pham have been wowing diners at their Secret Taste pop-up series with over-the-top omakase meals that are loaded with caviar, Japanese wagyu, and edible gold. Needless to say, Kokoro is considerably more traditional, but the chefs still have some outlets to showcase their creativity.

    For now, Kokoro focuses on familiar fish like tuna (sourced from Mexico), salmon (from New Zealand's acclaimed Ora King fishery), and Japanese selections such as madai and hamachi. Two kinds of yakitori are available (chicken thigh and chicken wing), although that will expand over time.

    Bravery Wine Bar's 30 taps all feature vintages that can be paired with different dishes from its restaurants: California cabernets for Cherry Block, riesling for The Blind Goat, sake for Kokoro, etc. Best of all, the bar's staff will work the entire space; they can deliver wines to any of Bravery's other counters. Ross has utilized his relationships with wine makers to get exclusive vintages; his own MadCat wines will be available as well.

    Cedeno won the competition to operate Bravery's bar incubator. He's given Lockwood Stn a mid-century feel. Four draft cocktails help ensure speedy service, but Cedeno will make traditional shaken or stirred drinks as well.

    In addition, he's using the bar as an opportunity to share his passion for vermouth. With 20 selections available, diners will almost certainly find one that suits their palate. Since it has its own entrance and restroom, Lockwood Stn can stay open even with the other restaurants have closed.

    Located along Main Street, The Secret Garden pairs with Atlas Diner as Bravery's morning destinations. It will offer a full range of espresso beverages. At night, the focus shifts to cocktails: most of which will be carbonated, bottled, or frozen to expedite service.

    Richard Knight with the "naughty" version of the Knickerbocker Sunrise.

    Bravery Chef Hall Atlas Diner Richard Knight sundae
    Photo by Eric Sandler
    Richard Knight with the "naughty" version of the Knickerbocker Sunrise.
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    something for everyone

    New brewery pours into Houston with craft beer, cocktails, and homebrew

    Ralph Palmer
    Apr 10, 2026 | 12:29 pm
    Farmboy Brewing Company
    Photo by Ralph Palmer
    Farmboy Brewing Company is now open on N. Shepherd.

    The tides of craft breweries in Houston and across the country have shifted dramatically over the past five years, marked by closures and a clear softening of the once unstoppable boom, with names like True Anomaly, Elder Son, and Buffalo Bayou Brewing serving as recent reminders of how quickly the landscape can change. What is emerging in its place is a new phase that is far less rigid about labels and more focused on flexibility and meeting customers where they actually are.

    For Landon Weiershausen, that evolution is not guesswork. It's the entire business plan.

    After more than a decade running Farmboy Brew Shop and working across nearly every space of the beer supply chain, (hops to kegs to fruit) Weiershausen has stepped back into ownership with a new brewery. Farmboy Brewing Company (4816 N Shepherd Dr.) blends a taproom, full cocktail bar, and homebrew retail shop into a single, community-driven space. The location will be familiar to many craft beer fans, as it previously housed both North Shepherd Brewing and Astral Brewing.

    “It’s about giving people what they actually want when they walk in the door,” Weiershausen tells CultureMap.

    Weiershausen’s roots in Houston’s beer world stretch back to 2014, when he opened Farmboy Brew Shop, a go-to spot for local Oak Forest/Garden Oaks homebrewers looking for ingredients, gear, and advice. With the launch of Farmboy Brewing, that business still exists, but it’s now integrated into the new brewery.

    The move creates something unique in the world of Houston beer — a space where hobbyists, beer nerds, and casual drinkers can intersect. In the 9,000-square-foot space, customers can shop for grains and yeast then walk a few steps over and grab a pint or a cocktail.

    “The majority of people coming in for homebrew are also interested in drinking,” Weiershausen says. “Now they don’t have to choose.”

    Instead of fighting changes in the beverage industry, Weiershausen is leaning into diversification. His brewery operates with a mixed beverage license, allowing for a full cocktail program alongside beer, wine, non-alcoholic options, and THC-infused drinks. That last category, while politically contentious in Texas, represents what he sees as an undeniable shift in consumer behavior. Currently, Weiershausen is stocking a few verities of THC-infused offerings from Eureka Heights Brew Co.

    “There’s a huge market for it,” he says. “Whether people like it or not, customers are choosing those products over traditional alcoholic beverages."

    Rather than drawing lines between beer drinkers and everyone else, the goal is to make the space work for large groups that have diverse drink preferences.

    “If someone doesn’t drink beer, or doesn’t drink alcohol at all, we still want them to have options.”

    Despite the brewery name on the door, Weiershausen isn’t rushing his own beer to market. Instead, the tap list currently leans on guest kegs from local and regional breweries such as Great Heights, Spindletap, Saint Arnold, and Lone Pint. This decision is a deliberate move that buys time while new brewing equipment is installed and optimized. It’s a patient approach that prioritizes long-term quality over a fast rollout and reflects lessons learned from years inside the industry. In the meantime, the guest taps double as a nod to relationships that Weiershausen has built over many years.

    “A lot of these are people who took care of me over the years,” he says. “This is a way to return the favor.”

    Once the brewing program is rolled out in the next few weeks, expect the first batch of offering to include a West Coast IPA, Hazy IPA, Light Lager, and an American Wheat. The program itself will also be led by head brewer Steven Treleaven, formerly of Conroe’s B-52 Brewing.

    Weiershausen’s vision prioritizes education. The homebrew shop has always served as an entry point for teaching its customers more about beer, but the expanded space opens the door to something he describes as an “education escalator.” Plans include monthly workshops covering everything from brewing basics to off-flavor detection (a critical skill for anyone serious about improving their homebrew).

    Like most breweries, the space will feature familiar weekly staples including trivia nights, but Weiershausen is also looking to mix in less predictable programming. Think dance classes, themed events, and rotating concepts that go beyond the usual bingo-and-beer formula.

    On the food side, Weiershausen has chosen not to build an in-house kitchen. Instead, the brewery will host food trucks, including the return of fan-favorite El Alabrije, known for its Oaxacan-inspired menu.

    At its core, the concept reflects something bigger than one brewery. It’s a response to a changing market, a shifting customer base, and a city that’s never fit neatly into one category anyway. For Weiershausen, the path forward isn’t about choosing between beer, cocktails, or anything else. It’s about building a place where all of it works together.

    “We’re just trying to create something for the community,” he says. “Whatever that means for them.”

    ----

    Ralph Palmer is a co-owner of the Deckle and Hyde barbecue pop-up and a longtime craft beer enthusiast. Follow him on Instagram at eyefearnobeer.

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