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    Oxbow 7 gets ready

    Sneak peek: Restaurant power couple set opening date for highly-anticipated downtown destination spot

    Eric Sandler
    Aug 18, 2017 | 10:30 am

    One of this summer’s most-eagerly anticipated restaurants has an opening date. Oxbow 7, Reef chef-owner Bryan Caswell’s restaurant in downtown’s new Le Meridien hotel, will make its debut on August 29 (Update 8/25: The opening has been postponed until September 12).

    Caswell and his wife Jennifer announced the project back in May on CultureMap’s podcast “What’s Eric Eating.” It’s his first new chef-driven concept since opening Stella Sola in 2009. At the time, Caswell said Oxbow 7 would serve “elevated bayou cuisine,” which he described as follows:

    If you think of everything east of Houston and west of Mobile, that’s our defining area, 50 to 100 miles (from the coast): inland fish, inland game. Kind of harks to my childhood where I was a redneck Huck Finn that would run around the bayous. I was allowed to run and dig up crawfish and gig for frogs and do all these kind of things that for me were very natural.

    If anyone knows anything about the history of haute cuisine, once Escoffier started, it was the common man food that created haute cuisine. That’s what we’re trying to do. Take this common man food of the people and elevate it a little bit. Jennifer just spit it out, ‘elevated bayou cuisine.’

    Prior to opening Reef, Caswell served as the chef de cuisine at Bank Jean-Georges in the Hotel Icon, an experience that left him thinking Houstonians wouldn’t embrace a hotel restaurant the same way diners in cities like New York, New Orleans, and Chicago do. However, a meeting with the Le Meredien hotel’s owners convinced him to give it another shot.

    “They offered us the opportunity to be completely autonomous from a restaurant standpoint while still running the (food and beverage) with the hotel,” Caswell says. “If they wouldn’t have done that, I wouldn’t have done it. It gives us an opportunity to really build a team and try to do something that I don’t think has been done very much in the city, and that’s create a really good hotel restaurant.”

    To help Caswell realize his vision, he’s assembled a talented crew whose resumes span some of Houston’s best restaurants. Chef de cuisine Michael Hoffman has worked at both Cafe Annie and Mark’s American Cuisine. Sarah Schnitzer, one of three sous chefs at the restaurant, left her role as the pastry chef at Pax Americana for an opportunity to create both sweet and savory dishes. Bar manager Judith Piotrowski will be on a restaurant's opening crew for the fourth time in her career (after Coppa Osteria, Weights + Measures, and Bayou & Bottle).

    Wine expert Nathan Rose brings a wealth of experience to his role creating Oxbow’s wine list. He’s served as both a fine wine buyer for Spec’s and a broker who helped small, independent wineries find distribution in Texas. Rose tells CultureMap that he’s teaching both Caswells how to create a modern wine list that’s different than what Reef has been known for.

    “My goal, and what they’re paying me to do, is to move what’s into my head into their heads, to build a brand,” Rose says. “What I’m putting in front of them are savory wines. They’re family winemakers . . . very cool, hip wines . . . The wines have to be food-friendly. Reef has been a California center, because five years ago Napa killed it in Houston. The wine business has moved on, and chef’s cuisine has moved on.”

    Of all the cooks in the kitchen, both Jennifer and Bryan seem most excited about giving Schnitzer an opportunity to step into a larger role and raise her public profile. After including the chef at their most recent Salty Supper fundraiser, the couple invited Schnitzer to join Oxbow’s team.

    “I think Sarah is one of the most underutilized cooks I’ve seen at a restaurant,” Caswell says. Later, he adds, “so far, she’s been so much fun to work with.”

    Bryan says that Schnitzer is already working on her versions of Le Meridien’s signature eclairs: bourbon milk punch with pecan, cafe sua da, and a savory, kolache-inspired version that uses an East Texas-style hot link with jalapeno jelly.

    Piotrowski will oversee the bar program at both Oxbow 7 and Hoggbirds, the hotel’s rooftop bar. Jennifer says that she and Bryan sought Piotrowski out after receiving recommendations from close friends in the restaurant industry.

    “The thing is with a lot of bartenders they migrate quite a bit. They move on to the new thing . . . the most buzzed about thing. I don’t blame them. That’s where you make money,” Jennifer says. “With Judith, we tried the cocktails based on your recommendation, and everyone kept saying she’s a good person. She’s a hard worker. She’s accountable. Her drinks are amazing, but to hear that she’s a good human along with making great drinks was a big bonus for me.”

    Piotrowski tells CultureMap that Oxbow 7’s cocktail list will focus on classic Southern cocktails that suit Caswell’s cuisine, but she has different plans for Hoggbirds. “It’s going to be more light and fun: a lot of gin and tequila, everything you would want when you’re in the sun on the rooftop looking over the city,” she says.

    With so much talent on board, Oxbow 7 looks poised to break Houston’s hotel restaurant curse. Beginning in two weeks, the city’s diners will get their first chance to form a first impression on whether they agree.

    Nathan Rose, Bryan Caswell, and Jennifer Caswell supervise the construction of Oxbow 7.

    Oxbow 7 Nathan Rose Bryan Jennifer Caswell
      
    Photo by Jennifer Caswell
    Nathan Rose, Bryan Caswell, and Jennifer Caswell supervise the construction of Oxbow 7.
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    a fresh start

    River Oaks gourmet grocer unveils cozy new name and big Dallas plans

    Eric Sandler
    May 8, 2025 | 10:32 am
    The Cottage Grocery exterior
    Photo by Julie Soefer
    Tres Market is now known as The Cottage Grocery.

    River Oaks’ favorite gourmet grocer is switching things up with a new name and a second location. Tres Market is now known as The Cottage Grocery, but that’s only one of many changes for the five-year old market, bakery, and cafe.

    The rebrand comes after founder Julie Rhyne and her business partner Jeannine Holland decided to end their partnership and go their separate ways. While the name may be new, Rhyne’s recipes are the same. The store offers about 450 items, all of which are prepared fresh on site and are available to-go in the restaurant’s refrigerated cases, along with specialty items, wine, and more. Customers have come to rely on The Cottage Grocery for heat-and-serve soups, salads, and entrees that range from roast chicken to pastas to pork tenderloin, meatloaf, and more.

    Although the store has only been open for about five years, Rhyne’s history in the business goes back to 1989, when she started a catering company from her home kitchen. Things got bigger when she and her husband moved to Houston. The store took off during the early days of the pandemic, when nearby families turned to then-Tres Market for restaurant quality meals they could heat up at home. Now the store’s 30 cooks produce more than 2,000 containers of food daily, along with cookies, cakes, and other sweets for the store’s bakery.

    A Family Affair

    Rather than operate The Cottage Grocery on her own, Rhyne is now working with her daughter, Lauren Van Wagenen, and her son, Taylor Rhyne, as well as their spouses. The new name is an homage to the business’ location — Rhyne refers to the building adjacent to the market as ‘The Cottage’ — as well as a nod to the family’s preference for taking vacations to cozy places that offer comfort and respite without being too fancy.

    “When we go on vacation, the whole family goes — my kids, their spouses, the grandkids, the whole fam-dam-ily,” she tells CultureMap. “We love going to places that are laidback and relaxed. They all have a common theme. You walk in and realize they get it. It’s how people would spend all their time if they could.”

    Coming to Dallas

    Van Wagenen, an accountant who worked in finance for more than a decade, will take the lead on the store’s new Dallas location that’s expected to open this summer. She’s already made her mark on the business by creating barcodes for all of the store’s prepared items. The simple change cut check out times down from five minutes to 30 seconds, she says.

    Both Rhyne and Van Wagenen are excited about the upcoming Dallas location, which will be located in the Highland Park neighborhood at 4919 McKinney. They see a lot of similarities between Highland Park and the store’s original location in River Oaks.

    “The site itself is kind of an island where three roads intersect,” Van Wagenen says. “You can’t miss us. When we were looking, we wanted to be in Highland Park. It’s similar to River Oaks — tree-lined streets, a lot of walkability.”

    Just as Rhyne’s constant presence at the River Oaks location assures customers that an owner is keeping an eye on the business, Van Wagenen and her husband David plan to be fixtures at the Dallas store. As in Houston, everything will be prepared fresh at the store from Rhyne’s recipes.

    “It’s a two-story, cottage-looking house with these huge high-rises around it,” Rhyne adds. “Everyone’s going to be looking down at us, and we’ll be out there waving cookies at them.”

    Once Dallas is open and running smoothly, Rhyne and her son Taylor, an IT specialist, will begin looking for a second Houston location. More details on those plans will be revealed in the future.

    The Cottage Grocery exterior
      

    Photo by Julie Soefer

    Tres Market is now known as The Cottage Grocery.

    news-you-can-eatopeningsthe cottage grocerytres market
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