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    Say hello to Xin Chao

    Houston star chef reveals delicious details for highly anticipated Vietnamese restaurant

    Eric Sandler
    Sep 29, 2020 | 2:05 pm

    Fall restaurant openings may not be arriving at their typically frantic pace (pre-COVID), but new establishments are making their debuts. One of the most eagerly anticipated is Xin Chao, the modern Vietnamese restaurant from chefs Christine Ha (The Blind Goat) and Tony Nguyen (Saigon House) that began its soft opening last week.

    Located in the former Beaver’s/Decatur Bar space at 2310 Decatur St., Xin Chao (“hello” in Vietnamese), unites two chefs who have each earned solid reputations for their work. Ha won Season 3 of the cooking competition show Masterchef and earned a James Beard Award semifinalist nomination in the Best New Restaurant category for The Blind Goat, her restaurant at downtown’s Bravery Chef Hall. Nguyen earned a spot on CultureMap’s list of Houston’s top 100 restaurants for Saigon House, his Viet-Cajun restaurant, and has consulted on a number of concepts, including Kamp, the recently opened bar and restaurant from the owners of Prospect Park.

    Ha tells CultureMap that Xin Chao will offer a more elevated experience than what’s on offer at The Blind Goat. For the first time, she’s able to offer a full beverage program, complete with cocktails developed by general manager Christopher Nguyen and local beverage consultant Linda Salinas.

    “I would say at The Blind Goat we’re taking a lot more inspiration from Vietnamese street food,” she explains. “Here, we’re doing a more elevated of Vietnamese dishes. We’re taking traditional flavors and using higher end ingredients or more modern cooking techniques or local cooking techniques like smoking and applying our understanding of that to these types of dishes.”

    For example, Xin Chao serves a take on Goi Vit, the salad made with pulled duck, cabbage, and herbs. Here, the duck gets smoked; then, it’s served with jackfruit, walnuts, and arugula in addition to cabbage and herbs.

    Some diners might recognize the inspiration for the restaurant’s braised pork belly and crispy rice — Ha served a version of the dish as her entree when she won Masterchef; the crispy rice takes its inspiration from Ha’s husband John Suh’s Korean heritage.

    “It’s something I grew up eating at least twice a month,” Ha says about the pork belly. “The same with Tony, that’s one of his favorite dishes.”

    Both chefs also share a love for fried chicken and decided to include it on Xin Chao’s menu. Their take starts with a marinade of buttermilk and lemongrass. The batter features grains of pandan rice, which means its crust has little green specks. Served family style in whole or half chicken portions, it comes with a rotating side (potato wedges for soft opening weekend), housemade pickles, beef tallow aioli, and hot saté honey from The Blind Goat.

    In addition to providing a Korean touch to the menu, Suh also led the interior and exterior renovation. Xin Chao aims to be lighter and brighter than the former occupants of the space. In addition, the interior feature a mural by local Vietnamese-American artist Caroline Truong as well as paintings originally purchased by Ha’s father, a retired architect, for her childhood home. A spacious patio provides plenty of outdoor seating, which both suits Covid concerns and is comfortable thanks to the recent cold front.

    View this post on Instagram

    Quick tour of #xinchaohtx by @theblindcook

    A post shared by Xin Chào (@xinchaohtx) on

    May 17, 2020 at 3:10pm PDT

    Currently, Xin Chao is only open for dinner Thursday-Monday, but Ha says she and Nguyen plan to add weekend brunch soon. The duo have been playing around with ideas such as fried chicken with pandan waffles, Vietnamese steak and eggs, and even avocado toast.

    Pork belly bun.

    Xin Chao pork belly bun
      
    Photo by John Suh/Xin Chao
    Pork belly bun.
    openingsnews-you-can-eat
    news/restaurants-bars

    Bourdain-inspired chef/writer

    Houston chef looks back at barbecue pop-ups with artful new zine

    Craig D. Lindsey
    May 15, 2025 | 4:00 pm
    Ryan Grimes Knives in Water
    Courtesy of Ryan Grimes
    Ryan Grimes has been serving food in bars for more than 10 years.

    If you frequent beloved dive bars like Two Headed Dog, Grand Prize Bar or Lil' Danny Speedo's Go Fly a Kite Lounge, there’s a good chance you’ve drunkenly bought food from Knives in Water.

    One of several pop-up kitchens that sells and serves bar food on a regular basis, Knives consists of one guy – Baltimore native Ryan Grimes – who knows his way around smoked meats, whether it’s ribs, turkey legs, buffalo wings, or a whole turkey (for Thanksgiving only). When it comes to barbecue, he sees himself as a culinary outlier.

    “The art of barbecue can kind of be gatekept by a lot of folks, which is ridiculous,” Grimes tells CultureMap. “I mean, it's three ingredients. It's a lot like punk rock: three chords and the truth, and you’re gonna get it right.

    On Saturday, May 24, Grimes will celebrate his 42nd birthday at Midtown bar Two Headed Dog, where he’ll be serving up more than just food. He’ll also debut Papercut, a zine filled with essays, remembrances and, yes, recipes. “A lot of it was taken from previous Instagram posts I had done that I expounded upon,” he says.

    With layout and artwork provided by bartender/artist Khrystah Luisa Gorham (who also designed Knives in Water’s logo and T-shirt merch), Grimes included many endearing entries to this brisk read. A 2015 post has him recalling the time he and his father went to the Million Man March when he was 12. A more recent piece has him cooking for his parents and maternal grandparents on Martin Luther King Day. He pays tribute to idol Anthony Bourdain (“I count him as a teacher of sorts, helping me find my own voice through food, culture and adventure.”) as well as an old friend whom he named a wing sauce after.

    The issue also runs down the various dishes Grimes tinkered with during the pandemic. “I took a look back at dishes that I had done in the past that I don't do anymore or, for one reason or another, I can't do,” he says. “Maybe they're too complicated or just wouldn't sell well at a dive bar, that kind of thing.”

    Papercut is basically a printed primer of the business Grimes has been operating since 2019. “Actually, [The Suffers frontwoman] Kam Franklin was the person that first put the idea in my head to do this, you know, professionally,” he remembers. “I did a dinner party for her. I mean, I can't remember what year it was — 2010, 2012, 2014… She was the first person to say, 'hey, you really got something here. You know, you're talented, your food's good. People seem to dig it.' So I guess you could kind of date it back to that.”

    Grimes got the idea for Papercut when he did a pop-up at last year’s Zine Fest Houston, held at the Orange Show. That’s where co-organizer Anastasia “Stacy” Kirages encouraged Grimes to put his thoughts and opinions down on paper. “It took her a while to convince me to do it,” he says. “Stacy's the most personable, likable person on the planet and I admire the hell out of her. So, it was kind of tough.”

    After he stopped procrastinating, Grimes found that creating a zine came quite easily to him. “Once I came up with the name, the silly name, it just kind of flew together in the space of maybe two months. I started writing it in February and I was holding a copy of it by late March, maybe early April. But yeah, it didn't take long at all.”

    Grimes has a limited number of copies, which he’ll be selling at his pop-ups. Copies will also be available at CLASS Bookstore and Gulf Coast Cosmos Comicbook Co. He isn’t ruling out dropping another volume if demand calls for it. If he does, Grimes assures readers that he’ll have fun with it and not become another culinary clout-chaser. “

    Yeah, it's really serious – the business of being a foodie, posting on Instagram and likes and all this stuff,” he says. “The competition is real and this is just a way to say it doesn't have to be that way. You know, you can do all of this yourselves. You and your friends can start a pop-up.

    “Starting a restaurant is something that will likely never happen for me,” he continues, “but that doesn't mean that I don't believe in my food and don't believe in my friends that do it as well. Umbrella Fellas, Annie’s Sammies, Tacos Bomberos. These are all pop-ups that are deserving of brick-and-mortar restaurants. They're deserving of all the accolades that we just don't get overshadowed because we're small-time, hanging out in dive bars, serving the people. But that's fine. No one I know is doing this for the laurels. It's just this punk rock DIY ethic that anyone can do this. Yeah, that's the beauty of it.”

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