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    From Feast To Beast

    Behind the scenes with Hunky Dory chef: From Feast to beast at Houston's hot new restaurant

    Eric Sandler
    Oct 8, 2015 | 9:48 am

    It's 4:30 pm on a recent weekday, and Hunky Dory is buzzing. The two-year build out has been completed, and the property that was once the site for a used car lot and a couple of dilapidated houses now contains two of Houston's most eagerly anticipated restaurants.

    Soon, 100 or so invited guests will dine at the restaurant for a friends and family service. The staff sets tables with napkins and flatware while sous chef Daniel Blue tosses another log onto the wood-burning hearth — sending sparks flying. While the audience of significant others, fellow Treadsack employees and family members will be sympathetic to any stumbles, the staff wants to put its best foot forward before the public arrives the next night.

    For executive chef Richard Knight, Hunky Dory's opening marks his first return to a full-time restaurant since Feast shuttered in 2013. Although he would probably rather be in the kitchen with his cooks, he graciously agrees to sit down and answer a few questions about the restaurant's development, how Hunky Dory compares to Feast and whether he's planning on getting a new tattoo.

    CultureMap: How does it feel to be here now that the restaurant is almost open?

    Richard Knight: Like a strange dream . . . Now that it’s actually here it’s not really exactly as I imagined it in my head — even though I saw all the drawings and designed the kitchen. When you actually see life in it and the finishing touches like the lighting and the bottles behind the bar, it’s become this thing that’s alive. It was just this dead shell for so many months, but now it’s full of smells and hubbub and chefs running around. It’s got a life of its own. It’s just going to organically grow into this beautiful thing.

    CM: Are you ready?

    RK: I think so. I’ve got an amazing crew. Daniel Blue, who worked with me at Feast and then went to John Besh and worked in Germany, came back at just the right time a year ago. We know each other really well, which has helped things move along. We just got a new sous chef Matthew Boson who’s originally from Houston and done some work in really cool places in San Francisco. We’ve also got another guy coming down from New York. We all seem to be on the same page and we all seem to be wanting this thing to be so beautiful and so magical and such a good experience for people.

    CM: How many items from Feast are on the menu?

    RK: Actual Feast recipes there’s probably one or two: sticky toffee pudding and something else. It’s going to be a little bit of Feast coming through once we get established. The menu, especially when we’re starting out, is just going to be about getting things right. There will be a little more Feast stuff creeping in. It was be more sort of blackboard stuff where we get to play a little more and have things for the more adventurous people and the Feast diehards.

    CM: I saw some chatter on Twitter that people are hoping for Exmoor toasts.

    RK: That'll be back. Everybody loves that.

    CM: What's the biggest difference between the experience of opening Hunky Dory versus Feast?

    RK: It’s just going into a slightly different world and doing steaks and more mainline stuff, which I’ve been out of that world for quite a time. The thing about having staff is another. At Feast it was two of us and on weekends there was three of us. Literally, Santiago, our garde manager, did most of his own stuff. The rest of the stuff me and James did everyday.

    At Feast, we got a couple of credit cards, signed the lease, bought some food and some wine, met some people and off we went. Here it’s been literally a year into testing and putting that in books and extrapolating that into stations.

    It’s a beast in a lot of respects. Feast we just toodled along everyday. We created stuff, and we just did it. Here I’ve got to tell all these people what to do.

    I did corporate work. I had a very big kitchen at the old Enron building. Just getting back into that world of having this army of people around you and being hands-off. I’m just wanting to get into everything. I just need to step back and teach them how to do it and let them roll. That’s been the hardest part so far is letting other people cook.

    CM: Some of the media accounts have referred to Hunky Dory as a steakhouse. Do you think of it that way?

    RK: It started out a little more in that direction in the early days, and we kept tweaking the idea and realized that’s not what we’re going for. Just because we have a big, wood-burning hearth grill doesn’t mean we’re a steakhouse. We can be so much more. We are doing a couple of steaks, and we’re doing a monster steak from hell, a giant porterhouse to share. It’s going to be at least 32-ounces, I think.

    Benjy (Mason, Treadsack director of restaurant operations) had this great idea from a restaurant he went to in Vermont that did mashed potatoes and fries with all the steaks, like, both. That’s the best idea ever. If I got that in a restaurant, I would be ecstatic. We’re going to do that. Our hearth items, everything comes with mashed and fries.

    Steakhouse, no, not really. Restaurant and tavern is a good kind of direction for it. I didn’t want to call it a pub or a gastropub, because there’s so many god awful people who have that in front of their restaurant name. It’s been so abused, one of those trend things that’s gone by.

    I suppose we’re New American. Perhaps we’re New English. That’s what we’re doing here. 'New English,' I don’t know if anyone’s coined that phrase, but perhaps I should. Taking from my roots, I am still using a lot of the old recipes from the old cookbooks which I love and melding it with the local stuff here.

    It’ll be interesting to see from the public and you guys what we get labeled as. But, 'New English,' I’m liking this word.

    CM: You have a pig tattoo from the Feast days. Will you add a Hunky Dory rabbit?

    RK: I know Chris (Cusack) will. I think we should. You should, too. Absolutely, I’m going to. Damn right, sir.

    Hunky Dory is open for dinner seven days a week and brunch on the weekends. Lunch will follow in a month. Reservations available via Open Table.

    Portions of this interview have been edited for length and clarity.

    Chef de cuisine Daniel Blue at the hearth.

    Hunky Dory
    Photo by Eric Sandler
    Chef de cuisine Daniel Blue at the hearth.
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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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