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    Alison Cook's Top 100

    Breaking down Alison Cook's latest list of Houston's 100 top restaurants: Has Chron critic gotten bored?

    Eric Sandler
    Sep 15, 2017 | 10:07 am

    As I read over Alison Cook’s latest list of Houston’s 100 best restaurants, published Thursday night by the Houston Chronicle, one thought kept popping up.

    Is Alison Cook bored? The Chronicle touts her 45 years of experience writing about food, but I sincerely wonder whether she’s over it.

    The first reason I asked that question is that, once again, she didn’t rank the entire list. This year, the first 30 come in numeric order (up from 25 last year) and the rest are listed alphabetically. While I suppose it might be tricky to weigh the relative merits of 68 versus 72, Jonathan Gold, the Pulitzer Prize-winning food critic for the Los Angeles Times, manages to parse those distinctions when he ranks that city’s restaurants. It isn’t unreasonable for Cook’s readers to expect the same from her.

    The list that once caused controversy has become pretty staid, in my opinion, and most of the choices seem pretty obvious. That the critic would anoint Xochi as Houston’s new best restaurant — Oxheart’s closure ensured a new No. 1— seemed so obvious to me that I predicted in on my podcast back in August (listen at about the 8:30 mark).

    I mean no disrespect to Xochi’s owners chef Hugo Ortega and Tracy Vaught with that opinion. Opening a Oaxacan restaurant in a luxurious downtown hotel took courage, and the restaurant has to walk a tricky balancing act of representing its region well while serving dishes in a form that will appeal to mainstream tastes. My most recent meal at Xochi a few weeks ago has been one of my favorite dining experiences of the year.

    Count Ronnie Killen as one of the list’s other big winners. He’s the only chef with three restaurants in the ranked section of the list: Killen’s Barbecue (8), Killen’s STQ (15), and Killen’s Steakhouse (27). After being snubbed by Texas Monthly, which elevated Tejas Chocolates and CorkScrew BBQ over Killen’s Barbecue in its ranking of Texas’s 50 best barbecue joints, Killen comes out on top here with the only barbecue restaurant in the ranked section of the list.

    Congratulations are also due to places like Brasserie 1895, Riel, Nobie's, and Roost. Houston can always benefit from more independently-owned, one-off establishments that reflect a chef's unique vision. Hopefully, Cook's attention fills their dining rooms.

    Hard to parse

    As always, Cook’s criteria are hard to parse. “Ambition matters, whether it is broad-based or tightly focused,” she writes. “A sense of Houston place, however, is one of those intangibles that can make a difference.”

    “Can make a difference,” but won’t necessarily, even at the top of the list. BCN, which is ranked No. 2, offers a delicious, luxurious, and expensive way to spend an evening, but chef Luis Roger’s Spanish cuisine is deliberately designed to transport diners to another part of the world. Realistically, it could be located in just about any city in America.

    I wonder about the restaurants that fell off the list entirely. What could have happened at Cafe Annie to drop it from 19 last year — when Cook hailed chef Robert del Grande’s decision to revive the restaurant’s name and Southwestern dishes as “a stroke of genius” — to completely off the list? Additionally, it’s hard to fathom having a take on Houston’s restaurant world in which neither Brennan’s nor Paulie’s are among the city’s best, yet neither one makes this year’s list.

    Another reason I think Cook might be tired of this exercise is that she’s included relatively few new restaurants. The list touts 16 new additions, but by my count, only eight opened since last year’s list: Xochi, Maba Pan-Asian Diner, Killen’s STQ, Riel, Nobie’s, Pi Pizza, Pinkerton’s Barbecue, and Yauatcha. Two restaurants that relocated and broadened their menus, Kitchen 713 and Kiran’s, could be considered new-ish, but that’s still only 10. One Fifth probably would have found a spot on the list, but the decision to close in August and reopen in September with a new concept makes it almost impossible for the critic to evaluate each new version in time to include it.

    Left out

    Where are some of the other leading lights of the last year like The Pit Room or Star Fish? Why not find a spot for at least one of the new breed of bars that serve carefully prepared food like Presidio, Edison & Patton, Heights Bier Garten, or even Better Luck Tomorrow, which comes with the status of being owned by Bobby Heugel and Justin Yu? Jonathan Jones and Matt Wommack deserve more credit for bringing a new culinary perspective to the Houston locations of Cane Rosso that have transformed it from a solid pizza option into a sophisticated, locally-inspired take on casual Italian cuisine.

    How about mixing up the Chinatown picks by making room for the hand-pulled noodles at Let’s Noodle, the Sichuan spices at Chengdu Taste, or creative spin on Korean food at Ohn?

    If Cook gives Maba so much credit for its updated take on (mostly) Vietnamese food that it’s Houston’s 11th best restaurant, then shouldn’t Les Baget have a spot for its own creative preparations and inventive twists on Vietnamese flavors? And if Bernie’s Burger Bus, Hubcap Grill, and burger-chan are on the list, then shouldn’t The Burger Joint be, too?

    Restaurants evolve, but Cook doesn’t seem to notice. She cites Shepard Ross as a "co-owner" of Pax Americana who shapes the wine list and cocktails, but Ross departed from Pax this summer to work as a restaurant consultant on projects like the upcoming Maison Pucha Bistro. In her blurb for Riel, she touts the borscht that’s been off the menu all summer. In the passage for Weights + Measures, she mentions Mike Sammons’ influence on the wine list and cocktails, but it’s general manager Isaac Johnson, not Sammons, who has been responsible for them the last two years. Did she revisit these restaurant this summer during the almost three month gap between her last review (Tejas Chocolates on June 19) and the list's publication to ensure she experience their most current versions?

    Still doubt that the critic is out of touch? She tweeted Thursday night that she had never had queso at Pappasito's before that day. Pardon me for stealing a bit from Seth Meyers and Tina Fey, but, really, Alison Cook? Houston's most prominent food writer has never had a basic appetizer at the city's most popular Tex-Mex restaurant (at least by number of locations)? Really?!?

    Ultimately, the list reflects one critic's opinion. Cook can write what she wants. Let’s just stop pretending her list is anything more than that.

    Count Ronnie Killen as one of the list's big winners.

    Ronnie Killen Killen's STQ Barbecue
    Photo by Kimberly Park
    Count Ronnie Killen as one of the list's big winners.
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    food news roundup

    6 things to know in Houston food: Openings, a closing, and more

    Eric Sandler
    Mar 27, 2026 | 3:34 pm
    Atlantic Ocean food spread
    Photo by Madelynne Grace
    Atlantic Ocean recently opened on Washington Avenue.

    From an intimate new Italian restaurant in West U. to the surprise shutter of a Midtown pickleball venue, the Houston food scene moves pretty fast. Read on to find out how Winsome Prime is celebrating its anniversary, an Atlanta chef who just opened his first Houston restaurant, and an exciting new dinner series that’s bringing one of Austin’s best chefs to the Heights for a one-night-only meal.

    Openings and closings

    Osteria di Mercato has opened in West University Place. A sister concept to Mercato and Company, a gourmet grocer that opened last year, the 30-seat, dinner-only restaurant aims to serve traditional Italian fare in an intimate environment. The menu features dishes such as saffron arancini, tuna crudo with passion fruit chili sauce, fettuccine with braised rabbit, smoked ricotta and spinach agnoloti, swiss chard-stuffed quail.

    Executive chef Mauricio Alvarado spent 16 years working for various Tony Vallone restaurants, including Ciao Bello, Vallone’s, and Tony’s. The Michelin Guide designated general manager Marco Thompson as Toronto’s sommelier of the year in 2023.

    The restaurant is open Tuesday through Saturday from 5:30-9:30 pm. Reservations are available on Resy.

    Atlantic Ocean has opened in the former Passerella space at 6011 Washington Ave. Open for dinner Wednesday through Sunday, the wide-ranging menu offers seafood dishes from around the globe.

    Starters include cornmeal-crusted crab cake, chargrilled oysters, clams calabrese, and Moroccan lamb shots. Entrees offer similar diversity, ranging from blackened redfish and grilled branzino with chimichurri and citrus mojo to a soy-martinated ribeye and lobster pasta that’s made with butter-poached claw meat.

    Chef-owner Virgil Harper is best known for Toast on Lenox, his acclaimed brunch concept in Atlanta. He’s joined in the kitchen by executive chef and partner Aliyah Watley.

    "Atlantic Ocean was created to deliver a dining experience where every detail feels intentional, from the quality of the seafood to the warmth of the service and the atmosphere around you,” Harper said in a statement. “Houston’s dynamic food culture makes it the perfect home for this concept, and we’re excited to share a menu that respects seafood traditions while bringing a fresh, creative perspective."

    Midtown pickleball bar Solarium has closed, according to its Instagram page. Opened in April 25, the bar transformed the former Holman Draft Hall space with six outdoor courts and five private rooms to watch the action.

    Solarium was a joint venture between the Kirby Group and Rex Hospitality, the restaurant group owned by Astros pitcher Lance McCullers, Jr. and his business partners, Juan Carlos de Aldecoa and Jimmy Doan. Earlier this year, Rex closed its Maven Coffee location in Sawyer Yards to concentrate on its wholesale business that sells coffee products such as cold brew concentrate.

    Other news and notes

    Zaranda, Hugo Ortega’s California-inspired restaurant in downtown, is now open Sunday. It will serve an a la carte brunch from 11 am-3 pm. Options include cornbread with Mandarin-honey butter; tostada de campechana with octopus, shrimp, raw oysters, cucumber, avocado, ancho-morita purée, Clamato, Maggi, soy, and olive oil; steak and eggs with refried beans, guacamole, salsa, and flour tortillas; Baja breakfast burrito with bacon, chorizo, scrambled eggs, potato, onion, salsa roja y verde, avocado, and cheese-crusted sobaquera; chilaquiles with shredded chicken, sunny-side-up eggs, totopos, salsa verde, crema, and housemade queso fresco; and more. It will also be open for dinner from 4-9 pm.

    Winsome Prime is celebrating its fifth anniversary with a limited time menu. The three-course, $50, prix fixe menu includes choices such as chili-glazed shrimp, crab beignets, spinach and artichoke dip, kung pao pasta, and chicken royale. Upgrade to the signature Hawaiian ribeye — a nod to the location once being home to Houston’s — for $10. Choose one of three desserts to complete the meal.

    Food events

    Doke concepts will host a series of guest chef dinners in April, May, and June. Each evening will begin with champagne and hors d’oeuvres at Lazy Land. Diners will then be driven to The Green Room for a three-course dinner, followed by dessert cocktails and s’mores at Heights & Co. The lineup includes chefs recognized by the Michelin Guide and the most recent winner of the James Beard Award for Best Chef: Texas.

    • April 15: Joseph Geiskopf, chef and co-owner of The On’ry, a traveling culinary concept based out of Houston, formerly of Ciel and Credence
    • April 29: Kevin Fink, chef and co-owner of Emmer and Rye Hospitality, which operates Michelin-recognized restaurants Emmer & Rye, Hestia, Isidore, and others.
    • May 13: Louis Maldonado, a former Top Chef contestant who held one Michelin star at Cortez restaurant in San Francisco.
    • May 26: Thomas Bille, chef-owner of Belly of the Beast in Spring and 2025 James Beard Award winner for Best Chef: Texas
    • June 10: To be announced
    • June 24: Ryan Lachine, executive chef of State of Grace, formerly chef-owner of Riel

    Atlantic Ocean food spread

    Photo by Madelynne Grace

    Atlantic Ocean recently opened on Washington Avenue.

    “This dinner party series is designed to give our guests an upscale, unique dining experience while highlighting each of our restaurants' distinct personalities,” Doke Concepts owner Brian Doke said in a statement. “With the help of our incredible guest chefs, we’re confident we’re going to give our guests an unforgettable evening.

    Tickets will be available via the Lazy Lane website.

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