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    Houston's Best Lunches

    Eating cheap for Houston Restaurant Weeks: These lunch options are the best bargains of all

    Eric Sandler
    Aug 15, 2014 | 1:52 pm

    Since Texans value straight talk, allow me to indulge in a bit of honesty about Houston Restaurant Weeks. While it's wonderful that the event raises a lot of money for the Houston Food Bank (more than $1.2 million last year alone), the primary appeal for most people is the idea that they're getting a good deal on the meal. After all, it would be far better for the Food Bank if everyone who eats a HRW meal simply donated the $35 (or whatever they would spend on the menu) directly and stayed home for dinner one night.

    Of course, that isn't happening.

    To appeal to value-conscious diners doing good though, here's a list of restaurants that are offering both $45 dinner menus and $20 lunch menus. Figuring in a drink or glass of wine plus tax and tip, the $45 dinner can become $70 pretty easily, which is a definite birthday/anniversary-type splurge for most people.

    Considering most people probably won't drink at lunch, the total fee for those $20 lunches is closer to $30 for three courses. Now that feels pretty reasonable, and, in several instances, the dishes at both lunch and dinner overlap at least a little.

    Getting the same food for less than half the price? Now that's why HRW is so popular.

    Artisans

    The menu at this Midtown temple of French gastronomy is only two courses, but they're good ones. Entree choices consist of sauteed trout, braised chicken or a roasted pork filet. Since no French meal would be complete without pastries, the second course offers a choice of chocolate mousse, profiteroles or blueberry clafoutis.

    Regardless of the choice, you still get to enjoy Artisans' smooth service and luxuriously appointed dining room.

    Caracol

    Dinner at Hugo Ortega's white hot seafood restaurant near the Galleria involves multiple menus and optional wine pairings. Lunch is simpler, with only two choices and an a la carte approach of six entrees and three desserts. My top two picks are the octopus salad in pumpkin-seed dressing and the wood-roasted ribs served with rice and beans.

    Both are can't miss items on the regular menu, but vegetarians will appreciate the queso de vegetales that comes with fresh tortillas. For dessert, find out why Ruben Ortega's churros are the best in Houston.

    Del Frisco's Double Eagle Steakhouse

    The lunch menu at this Galleria steakhouse helps explain why it has been the top Houston Restaurant Weeks donor for the past few years. The two-course menu manages to include steak, in the form of sliced filet or filet medallions, for only $20.

    The lunch menu at this Galleria steakhouse helps explain why it has been the top Houston Restaurant Weeks donor for the past few years.

    Is it as satisfying as a perfectly medium-rare, 16-ounce New York Strip?

    Maybe not, but that steak is $46 by itself on the regular menu, and who can get any work done after a meal like that anyway? Start with a salad to keep things light and enjoy the value of a solid experience at a bargain price.

    L'Olivier

    Sadly, L'Olivier's recently celebrated fried chicken isn't on the Restaurant Weeks menu (still only available Wednesdays during happy hour), but the three-course menu still includes plenty of tempting choices. Start with the restaurant's signature homemade pate or enjoying refreshing watermelon gazpacho. The quiche of the day will satisfy Francophiles, while those looking for a more American option can go with the burger.

    Chocolate mousse, profiteroles or strawberry soup round out the meal.

    Mr. Peeples

    The Midtown steakhouse with the love it or hate it Vegas by way of Miami Vice decor recently started serving lunch, and the three-course Houston Restaurant Weeks menu features some of the best items. Of the three starters, the crab cake is a good version of the classic, with just enough breading to hold together lots of fresh crab meat.

    Go with the grilled pork chop for an entree, mostly just to get the chipotle mac and cheese. All of pastry chef Johnny Wesley's desserts are solid, but the black magic cake is one of his finest creations.

    Mockingbird Bistro

    This neighborhood restaurant that sits between River Oaks and Montrose has a strong, three-course menu that includes both vegetarian and gluten free choices. Appetizer choices include Mockingbird's award-winning Caesar salad, as well as salmon tartare and gazpacho. The five entree choices include a petite strip steak, salmon and rigatoni bolognese.

    This neighborhood restaurant that sits between River Oaks and Montrose has a strong, three-course menu that includes both vegetarian and gluten free choices.

    Those with a sweet tooth should focus on the flourless chocolate cake for dessert, but apple bread pudding and ricotta cheesecake make tempting alternatives.

    Pico's

    The 30-year old Mex-Mex favorite may have recently relocated to a more upscale space on Upper Kirby, but diners will find that chef/owner Arnaldo Richards has maintained his high standards for Pico's food. All of the choices on the three-course menu are gluten free. Of course, one can always order a side or tortillas to make them gluten full.

    Three three appetizer choices include calamari sauteed in olive oil and chicken soup. Of the four entrees, it would be hard to pass on Pico's signature roasted poblano pepper stuffed with chicken or pulled pork. Keep it simple for dessert with classic rice pudding.

    Quattro

    Hobnob with the high powered attorneys and other various titans who populate the dining room of this restaurant within the Four Seasons hotel downtown. The three-course menu starts with a choice of soup or one of two salads. For an entree, choose from a flatbread pizza, risotto or chicken milanese.

    Finish the meal off an affogato (espresso poured over gelato) or selection of sorbets.

    RDG + Bar Annie

    The Houston classic delivers a tidy three-course menu that showcases its Southwestern heritage as well as several gluten free items. Of the starters, white gazpacho and cipollini onion and blackberry salad sound the most appealing.

    Hard to resist the burger as an entree, but vegetarians will enjoy the seared avocado salad. For dessert, choose from chocolate, pineapple or vanilla ice cream.

    Sage 400

    Most of the sushi restaurants that are participating in HRW don't offer lunch, but longtime Galleria restaurant Sage 400 is one of the rare exceptions. Both the first and second courses include sushi options in the form of soft shell shrimp maki to start and a chef's choice of sushi and sashimi for an entree.

    Other options include miso-cured pork belly and salmon poke. As for whether to get mochi or green tea ice cream for dessert, well, that's a choice with no losers.

    Honorable Mention: 60 Degrees Mastercrafted

    The Upper Kirby ranch to table restaurant features a three-course menu. Click through to see CultureMap's video with chef Fritz Gitschner and sommelier Vanessa Trevino Boyd that takes an in-depth look at several of the choices.

    Sage 400 features this lobster salad as an entree choice.

    Sage 400 Japanese Cuisine lobster salad
    Sage 400 Japanese Cuisine Facebook
    Sage 400 features this lobster salad as an entree choice.
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    What's Eric Eating Episodes 523 and 524

    Acclaimed Austin duo dish on their wine-obsessed neighborhood restaurant

    CultureMap Staff
    Jan 16, 2026 | 1:08 pm
    Birdie's Arjav Ezekiel Tracy Malechek-Ezekiel
    Photo by Mackenzie Smith Kelly
    Birdie's owners Arjav Ezekiel and chef Tracy Malechek-Ezekiel are this week's guests.

    On this week’s episode of “What’s Eric Eating,” chef Tracy Malechek-Ezekiel and beverage director Arjav Ezekiel join CultureMap Houston editor Eric Sandler to discuss their Austin restaurant Birdie’s.



    Widely considered one of Austin’s top restaurants, Birdie’s has earned local, regional, and national acclaim, including a place of the 2025 Time100 Next list, Food & Wine magazine’s 2023 Restaurant of the Year, and a 2025 James Beard Award for Outstanding Professional in Beverage Service to Ezekiel. In a 2024 column, James Beard Award winner Chris Shepherd recommended that Houstonians visit Birdie’s the next time they’re in Austin.

    Sandler’s conversation with the duo begins with a little bit about how they met while working together in New York and their decision to move to Austin. From there, it turns to Birdie’s counter service model that’s unusual for a restaurant of its quality. Sandler asks whether not offering traditional table service has lowered the restaurant’s profits.

    “It’s the opposite. Because we have a leaner labor force in the dining room, our margins are probably double what they would be if we were a traditional restaurant,” Ezekiel explains. “What we’re able to do is take a portion of that margin and invest it back into our team. We talk about ‘Conscious Capitalism’ a lot. That extra margin pays for paid family leave that we offer to everybody on our team, the month of paid and planned vacation every year, the subsidized health insurance, the subsidized mental therapy we offer. We needed to find more change under the cushions, so we could invest it back into our team.”

    Initially, Birdie’s opened with an a la carte menu. In 2025, it switched to a prix fixe format that offers diners six courses for $80. The switch means the restaurant serves fewer diners per night, which has shortened the wait to order from up to an hour to 20 minutes or less. Chef Malechek-Ezekiel explains that this change has also expanded the range of dishes she’s able to serve and broadened the techniques she uses to create them.

    “We can cook fish confit. We can use the Japanese robata grill to cook on charcoal. We can hot smoke fish to order. Now, I feel like, wow, look what we can do now. Before, we had the skills, but we couldn’t physically do it with how tiny our space is.”

    Listen to the full episode to hear more about how Birdie’s guides diners through its wine list, which of the monthly prix fixe menus has been the most successful, and the couple’s thoughts on potentially opening a new restaurant.



    In this week’s other episode, Craft Pita chef-owner Raffi Nasr joins Sandler to discuss some recent news in the world of Houston restaurants. Their topics include Tex-Mex restaurant Superica transforming into a casual steakhouse; the imminent opening of delivery-focused Shredders Pizza; and a change in operations at Weights + Measures.

    In the restaurant of the week segment, Nasr and Sandler describe their recent meal at Oru, a new sushi restaurant in the Heights from the team behind Michelin-recognized omakase counter Neo and Upper Kirby hand roll concept Kira. Listen to hear their favorite dishes as well as Sandler’s quibbles with a couple of aspects of the experience.

    -----

    Subscribe to "What's Eric Eating" on Apple podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts. Hear it Sunday at 9 am on ESPN 97.5.

    Birdie's Arjav Ezekiel Tracy Malechek-Ezekiel

    Photo by Mackenzie Smith Kelly

    Birdie's owners Arjav Ezekiel and chef Tracy Malechek-Ezekiel are this week's guests.

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