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    Breaking down #Alison100

    The big winners and losers in Chronicle critic's list of 100 best Houston restaurants: Does it matter?

    Eric Sandler
    Sep 25, 2014 | 10:10 am

    Chronicle food critic Alison Cook revealed her list of Houston’s top 100 restaurants Wednesday night. For the first time in the three-year history of the list, the paper chose to celebrate the occasion with a party, dubbed Culinary Stars, that drew a sold-out crowd of 600.

    In addition to corporate sponsors and a splashy location at the downtown Hilton Americas-Houston hotel, 20 Houston restaurants paid tribute to Cook by serving food at the event. No puny sous chefs or proxies either: James Beard Award winner Chris Shepherd sliced ham for Underbelly; nearby, James Beard Award winner Robert Del Grande and wife Mimi greeted diners at the RDG + Bar Annie table. Monica Pope served Sparrow’s pad thai, and Kevin Naderi doled out Roost’s antelope tartare (dish of the night, in my opinion). Triniti chef/owner Ryan Hildebrand filled plastic cups with tomato soup and Ronnie Killen supervised chefs Teddy Lopez and Patrick Feges as they served a smoked beef short rib.

    When Eater first published Cook's picture two years ago, it set off a wave of controversy, but that's all gone now. She addressed the audience from the stage as photographers snapped away and posed for pictures with attendees. Asked about the change on Twitter, Cook was philosophical.

    @Fulmer Laughing earlier tonight at how much tonight's event(s) would have horrified me. Today, it's just making a living.

    — Alison Cook (@alisoncook) September 25, 2014

    The turnout speaks to Cook's lofty position in Houston's culinary scene. Like it or not, her list matters. Almost every conversation I’ve had with various restaurant industry insiders over the last three weeks has touched on it. Who will be up compared to 2013? Who’s going down? How big a splash will the class of 2014 make? Will Oxheart three-peat in the top spot? (Of course it did.)

    Five new entries cracked the top 10 and sent some previous standouts tumbling down the list.

    While Oxheart and The Pass may have held on to the top two spots for the second consecutive year, five new entries cracked the top 10 and sent some previous standouts tumbling down the list. Killen’s Barbecue (3), Common Bond (4) and Caracol (5) dropped Underbelly out of the top 5. Coltivare debuted at No. 9, and Melange Creperie, a tiny food cart that features imaginative, seasonal fillings, jumped from 15 to 10.

    Although it’s only been open for six weeks, Pax Americana landed at 12.

    The night’s big winners have to be chef and restaurateurs Hugo Ortega (Caracol, Hugo's), Ronnie Killen (Killen's barbecue, steakhouse), Marco Wiles (Dolce Vita, Da Marco), and Anita Jaisinghani (Indika, Pondicheri), who each had two establishments in the top 25. It was a good night for food trucks that opened brick and mortar outposts as Good Dog (23), Bernie’s Burger Bus (45) and Eatsie Boys Cafe (77) all received recognition. Andes Café (44) and 60 Degrees Mastercrafted (51) both earned two-star reviews in 2014 that netted them coveted spots. Roost entered the top 20 for the first time, and Provisions made a big jump from 60 to 34.

    The losers list starts with Uchi and Tony’s, which fell from three and five in 2013 to 32 and 27. Cook opines that Uchi suffers from the “parent company’s expansion mode (that) seems to have dulled its once razor-sharp focus." As for Tony’s, she writes that chef de cuisine Kate McLean needs to “find her footing” with the restaurant’s tasting menus to earn a top spot.

    RDG + Bar Annie fell from 28 to 65. Lucille’s (49), Asia Market (59), Poscol (64) and La Fisheria (66) highlight places that all had spots in 2013 and are completely absent in 2014. A few high-profile newcomers that Cook snubbed include Bradley’s Fine Diner, Songkran Thai, Nara, KUU and Vallone’s Steakhouse. Better luck next year.

    Sticking to what works may help explain why venerable temples of fine dining like Mark’s have never found a spot on the list.

    What caused some to fall? It’s hard to imagine that Del Grande’s cooking got somehow measurably worse in a year. “I tend to prize excitement and evolution over comfortable stasis in a kitchen, or in a restaurant operation as a whole,” Cook writes in a companion piece. Consistency, which can be prized by diners who may go to a restaurant just to order one favorite dish, loses out to novelty in the rankings. Sticking to what works may help explain why venerable temples of fine dining like Mark’s have never found a spot on the list.

    “Beverage programs matter: not just the wine lists of yore, but the cocktail and beer lists that have become more important in recent years,” Cook writes. Perhaps the departure of former Anvil manager Chris Frankel from RDG helps explain its slip. Did adding Matt Tanner, another former Anvil manager, enable Pappas Bros. Steakhouse (unranked in 2013, now 56) to rise above rival Vic & Anthony’s (59, down from 38)? Probably not just that — new executive chef Daniel Bridges may have played a role, too — but it certainly couldn’t have hurt.

    While the list makes for good conversation (and undoubtedly good web traffic for the Chron), it’s hard to know how much impact it really has. Last year’s ranking at 37 didn’t save Philippe, and 45 wasn’t enough to keep Haven open. Oxheart taking the top spot in 2012 helped bring attention to the tiny restaurant, but chef Justin Yu has now earned enough national acclaim that his celebrity status is assured. Conversely, don’t expect Uchi’s dip to make getting a reservation easier.

    In the end, it’s a free country. Feel free to disagree with even a thoroughly researched opinion. If a restaurant makes you happy, who cares what some critic thinks?

    Which restaurants got what it deserved? Who's too high or too low? Sound off in the comments.

    Chris Shepherd, right, congratulates Seth Siegel-Gardner and Terrence Gallivan on The Pass's second place finish.

    Seth Siegel-Gardner Terrence Gallivan Chris Shepherd Alison 100
    Photo by Eric Sandler
    Chris Shepherd, right, congratulates Seth Siegel-Gardner and Terrence Gallivan on The Pass's second place finish.
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    Wine Guy Wednesday

    Chris Shepherd breaks bread with chefs and musicians at new conversation series

    Chris Shepherd
    Feb 25, 2026 | 2:00 pm
    Chris Shepherd headshot
    Photo by Tiffany Hofeldt
    Chris Shepherd will host three Breaking Bread conversations.

    I wanted to tell you about something new that I have coming up that we have been working on. I am starting a new conversation series called “Breaking Bread” which is going to be part of the Live at the Founder’s Club series at the Hobby Center.

    Why “Breaking Bread?” I have always said that breaking bread at the table is one of the last true forms of building community. When I had restaurants, I would serve whole loaves of bread uncut and have people break them together to join a communal dining experience where they could have conversations — a breaking of awkward silence if you didn’t know people.

    Breaking bread opens the door for talking and learning over a meal and to build a community that might not have existed before. It is the ice breaker for a lot of people to learn about each other and break down walls and barriers that we have unintentionally put up because of fear of the unknown. It’s not just a saying but a way of thinking that has shifted my life to want to learn about people.

    Through this new Breaking Bread conversation series, I will share the stories of people I look up to and ask them to tell stories they haven’t told before about what led them here to this moment on stage with me.

    Moving this series to Founders Club at the Hobby Center is even more special for me since I’ve had such a great time working with the team to update the food and drink menus so guests can have a really wonderful experience from the time they arrive. We have worked to redo the food menu to make it fun and approachable with items like Full Tilt hot dogs, braised beef birria taquitos, coffee roasted beets, and Altima Caviar with sour cream & onion Pringles just to name a few.

    The wine list is filled with delicious things that I just want to drink all the time. Pierre Gimonnet 1er cru Blanc de Blanc Brut, yep. Marine Layer Vermentino, The Hilt Estate Chardonnay, Robert Sinskey Vin Gris of Pinot Noir, also yes! Want more? North Valley Vineyards Pinot Noir, Produttori Del Barbaresco Barbaresco, and Cruse Wine Co. Monkey Jacket Red Blend are all available, just to name a few.

    Then the cocktails are based on the classics. This is what we should have when we go out to our theaters downtown — delicious things to eat and drink while watching amazing shows!

    I have the opportunity to have personal conversations with my friends, who also happen to be incredible artists and even better people.

    Here is a quick look at the lineup from the Hobby Center:

    “Breaking Bread” 2026 Conversation Series

    Bun B: Wednesday, April 8, 7:30pm
    Grammy-nominated American rapper and Houston legend Bun B sits down with Chris for an unfiltered conversation on music, culture, and a career that keeps reinventing itself. From pioneering rapper to Rice University professor and trusted civic voice, Bun B will reflect on the moments that shaped him. The two will also get into his jump into the restaurant world and how Trill Burgers became a citywide obsession, plus his move into podcasting and storytelling — and what it means to build a legacy that stretches far beyond the mic.

    Joe Kwon: Saturday, May 16, 7:30pm
    Known to many as the cellist of The Avett Brothers, Joe Kwon joins Chris for a thoughtful, wide-ranging conversation about curiosity, craft, and creativity. Born in South Korea and raised in High Point, North Carolina, the self-described foodie shares his roots on stages around the world as they explore his path from lifelong musician — with a detour through computer science — to artist, wine enthusiast, and collaborator, reflecting on how discipline and instinct shape everything he pursues, from music to food. It’s a behind-the-scenes look at how passions evolve, how ideas connect across worlds, and why a melody or a shared meal can mean more than the moment itself.

    A Michelin Roundtable with Felipe Riccio, Emmanuel Chavez, and Mayank Istwal: Saturday, June 13, 7:30pm
    Three of Houston’s Michelin-starred chefs — Emmanuel Chavez (Tatemó), Felipe Riccio (March), and Mayank Istwal (Musaafer) — join Chris for an honest, wide-ranging conversation about what a star really means for their kitchens and their teams. They’ll debate whether rankings push the industry forward or hold it back, reflect on the turning points that shaped their paths, and share the lessons behind becoming some of the city’s most celebrated chefs. It’s a rare behind-the-scenes look at success, pressure, creativity, and what it takes to build something that lasts.

    ----

    Send Chris an email at chris@chrisshepherd.is.

    Chris Shepherd won a James Beard Award for Best Chef: Southwest in 2014. The Southern Smoke Foundation, a nonprofit he co-founded with his wife Lindsey Brown, has distributed more than $15 million to hospitality workers in crisis through its Emergency Relief Fund. Catch his TV show, Eat Like a Local, every Saturday at 10 am on KPRC Channel 2 or on YouTube.

    Chris Shepherd headshot

    Photo by Tiffany Hofeldt

    Chris Shepherd will host three Breaking Bread conversations.

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