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    First Look

    Cursed restaurant location gets a new lease on life with two-in-one dining concept

    Eric Sandler
    Aug 26, 2015 | 10:46 am

    The Heights restaurant market is so hot that even an allegedly cursed location has a new lease on life. Since Stella Sola closed three years ago, the space, which was also home to a fine dining restaurant called Bedford, has been empty. Ronnie Killen briefly flirted with the idea of opening a second steakhouse in the location, but ultimately abandoned the idea and threw himself into building his meat-centric empire in Pearland.

    Could a desirable location in the middle of the Heights be so tainted by its history that no one would touch it? Enter Hernan Garcia. As the owner of three establishments in Mexico City and a partner in the development of 1252 Tapas in The Woodlands, Garcia is no stranger to the restaurant industry. Where others saw difficulties, he saw opportunity.

    "This part of the Heights is amazing. For us, it’s been great. My partner even wants to live here."

    "The site we just saw it one day. We loved the Heights, and we said, ‘well, this is amazing,'" Garcia tells CultureMap. "They say it’s cursed or whatever. I was, like, this is a great place. This part of the Heights is amazing. For us, it’s been great. My partner even wants to live here."

    On Monday, Garcia opened Black & White in the space. Billed as a dual concept restaurant, White is a casual, Mexican-inspired seafood restaurant; Black is a more formal, Mediterranean style affair.

    "We decided the project was so big. At first we thought about only doing seafood. I said, no, it’s going to be overpowering. If it isn’t full, people may think (the restaurant) isn’t doing good," Garcia says. "How about if we do a divorced restaurant with two sides? We started working on that. (The name) Black and White just popped in my head."

    White & Black menus

    The White Label menu features a mix of shareable items that include raw and cooked oysters, tacos and tostadas. True to the logo seen at its entrance, octopus appears in many forms. The mollusk, which seems to be having a moment at restaurants across the city from Coltivare to Peska to SaltAir Seafood Kitchen, can be found in three dishes: carpaccio, fried and ceviche (on a tostada).

    "Most of the White menu is seafood," Garcia explains. "It has a little bit of a Mexican punch, but it’s not Mexican. I don’t like it to be Mexican, because then people will say Tex-Mex. Once you start saying Mexican, people will categorize it, and we’re trying to get away from there."

    Regardless of which side diners choose, Garcia intends to keep prices reasonable.

    Conversely, the Black Label menu has a more Mediterranean flair that trades on the chef's experience cooking for Michelin-starred restaurants and hotels in Spain and incorporates Spanish, Italian and French flavors. Look for roasted duck, grilled pork chops and bouillabaisse. A group may choose to indulge in a special paella that's designed to feed four to six people ($150).

    Regardless of which side diners choose, Garcia intends to keep prices reasonable. The White Label share plates run between $10 and $15; even the fancier Black Label cuisine stays under $40, with the exception of an 18-ounce ribeye and a 12-ounce grilled lobster tail ($45 and 52, respectively).

    "One of the sayings we have here is honest, real food," general manager Eric Anderson says. "We priced it at a point where we’re not gouging the market. From here to Memorial, you’ll see oysters run $3.50 to $4. Here, you’re looking at $2.50 and under . . . I’d rather have this placed packed every day and people love it than to be the high end."

    Cocktails, too

    That pricing extends to cocktails, too. Anderson has created a roster of drinks priced under $10 that build on familiar concepts with a twist; his Negroni Royale pairs campari with sweet red vermouth but using sparkling white wine instead of gin to for a lighter flavor. Another blends roasted blueberries with basil and bourbon. Garcia also decided to keep his wine markups low.

    Perhaps the biggest challenge will be convincing people to treat the space like two separate restaurants. Decor, menu and service style will help differentiate them, but Anderson says he's already considered what happens once the restaurant has established a group of regulars who are familiar with both sides.

    "At the beginning, we’re going to try to hold true to the fact that it is separate on both sides," he says. "That being said, the customer is always right. If you’ve dined with us before, and your wife loved the white side, and you loved the black label, I don’t have a problem taking care of that."

    The White Label menu also incorporates a variety of tostadas.

    Black and White
    Photo by Eric Sandler
    The White Label menu also incorporates a variety of tostadas.
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    in like the rose

    Mimo duo open tiny Italian sandwich and gelato shop in Houston's East End

    Eric Sandler
    Apr 29, 2026 | 5:52 pm
    La Rosa Fernando Rios Mike Sammons
    Photo by Eric Sandler
    Chef Fernando Rios and Mike Sammons recently opened La Rosa.

    When sommelier Mike Sammons and chef Fernando Rios teamed up to open their East End Italian restaurant Mimo in 2023, they did so by serving sandwiches that eventually went away once the restaurant moved to only being open for dinner with full service.

    Thankfully, the sandwiches are back at La Rosa, the duo’s new sandwich restaurant that, like Mimo, is located in the East End’s Tlaquepaque Market shopping center. Currently, it’s open Tuesday-Sunday with sandwiches for lunch (12-3 pm) and gelato until the early evening.

    “I have always wanted to do a sandwich shop. That’s always been a weird dream since an experience I had in Italy when I was younger,” Sammons tells CultureMap. “Even back in the days at 13 Celsius, that was a big driver for the mortadella sandwich we still do there.”

    La Rosa’s menu is as compact as its space, which has four indoor tables, a little dining counter, and a couple of outdoor tables. It consists of three sandwiches:

    • Mortadella, with fior di latte, arugula, pesto di pistachio, mostarda, and garlic aioli
    • Formaggio, a vegetarian sandwich with corn and zucchini fritters, arugula, pesto di pistachio, mostarda, and garlic aioli
    • A daily special that, on April 29, was made with bresaola, pecorino, horseradish crema, capers, arugula, and lemon.

    La Rosa Fernando Rios Mike Sammons

    Photo by Eric Sandler

    Chef Fernando Rios and Mike Sammons recently opened La Rosa.

    “We R&D’ed the hell out of them,” Sammons says about the sandwiches. “I can’t tell you how many mortadellas we’ve tasted and how many different kinds of fior di latte. Even the way we do the pesto di pistachio — dry as a bone or super wet with lots of olive oil.”

    Alright, Mike, explain how nerdy you and chef got with the ingredients in the mortadella sandwich.

    “First of all, when it comes to the mortadella, you have to be able to cut it so thinly you can look through it. It has to have a certain integrity and still have bite to it,” he explains. “The fior di latte has to be creamy and snappy. You have to be able to crush it flat so it oozes all over the sandwich. The pesto di pistachio has to have a real presence of raw pistachio.”

    The duo applied a similar discipline to finding the right platform for La Rosa’s sandwiches. Sammons says he and Rios tried all kinds of bread, eventually settling on a telera roll from Houston favorite El Bolillo.

    “It’s more of a vessel. Bread is always the star of a sandwich, but we want the star of the show to be almost a little hidden, like an uncelebrated special guest,” he says. “It’s crisp and crunchy with a toothsome bite that’s light and airy in the middle. It holds everything together but doesn’t dominate.”

    Similarly, they’re sourcing gelato from Houston’s SweetCup Gelato. Sammons says he tried multiple vendors, but Sweet Cup’s lemon sorbet is the one flavor that most reminded him of Italy. In addition to classics like pistachio, chocolate, and strawberry, chef Rios can work with Sweet Cup on flavors that will be exclusive to La Rosa.

    Rios is already rotating the specials. The opening weekend’s meatball sandwich quickly gave way to this week’s bresaola. Diners have plenty to look forward to, including favorites from the old days like Italian beef and chicken parm.

    Sammons has some aspirations, too. He plans to add beer and wine to the current non-alcoholic offerings of soda and sparkling water.

    The little shop has been surprisingly busy, he adds.

    “We sold out Sunday, which was unexpected,” Sammons says. “If we keep doing that, we’ll make more. So far, everyone has been supportive. I’m really excited. I think it’s going to be great.”

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