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    The Union Kitchen Ella Opens

    Popular neighborhood restaurant expands to Garden Oaks with funky wine list, craft beer options

    Eric Sandler
    Oct 17, 2016 | 11:03 am

    One of Houston’s most popular neighborhood restaurants takes another step forward on Monday when the fourth location of The Union Kitchen opens on Ella Boulevard. Part of the Gr8 Plate Hospitality Group (The Merrill House, Jax’s Grill, The Rollin’ Kitchen), the latest Union Kitchen builds on the company’s reputation for good food, high levels of customer satisfaction, and reasonable prices.

    At 5,000 square feet, TUK Ella (as the company calls it), offers seating for over 200 people in the dining room, with another 80 seats on the patio and a 60 person private dining room. As the first location built from a clean space in a renovated shopping plaza, the decor has been upgraded with better finishes like shiplap on the walls and table tops made from reclaimed, 100-year-old oak. Those touches are all part of owner Paul Miller’s plan to make the Union Kitchen a place where as many people as possible want to eat as often as possible.

    “People come in, they feel like they’re getting value, they come back. I don’t need to make a ton of money at one restaurant. I want to build the community,” Miller tells CultureMap. Later, he adds, “I want to be the neighborhood restaurant. I want to be able to satisfy that guest who’s getting off, and they want to have a happy hour, they want to take some to-go food back to the family. They can come in for a celebration.”

    Even though he’s studied competitors like Plonk and the Garden Oaks location of Liberty Kitchen, Miller says isn’t sure which of his other locations the new outpost will most closely resemble. In Bellaire, the crowd skews younger, with adventurous eaters who embrace ingredients like foie gras when they pop up as specials. In Memorial, the average cost of wines sold is higher ($75 versus $45), and the restaurant sells more steaks.

    “This neighborhood, I’m not 100-percent sure yet. We’re doing a funky wine list. We’re changing some things up a little bit. I’ve given Adam Sabir a lot more leeway on bringing stuff in, because he’s very knowledgeable about wine, and I want to see what the community wants,” Miller says.

    In addition to wine, craft beer will play a big role at the new location. The restaurant will feature eight taps, including two dedicated to locally-owned Spindletap brewery. Miller says that Spindletap owner Brody Chapman will make regular appearances at the bar to introduce new products and interact with patrons. He also expects to expand on the beer dinners that the restaurant has held with Saint Arnold owner Brock Wagner and others.

    “Karbach is right up the street, and we’re already talking to them,” Miller says. “Basically, if the neighborhood wants it, we’re going to do it. No two ways about it.”

    At opening, the food will feature the restaurant’s broad mix of crowd-pleasing dishes; 75 percent will overlap with the other three locations, including signature items like pistachio-crusted chicken and thin crust pizzas. After that, it will be up to the chef to determine what’s working.

    “We’re a battleship. We’re not an aircraft carrier,” Miller says. “It doesn’t take us three-and-a-half days to turn around. If we put something out there as a feature and it sells well, that’s going on the next menu.”

    Although the restaurant hasn’t even opened, Miller says he’s already been approached by developers who want to bring the company to their properties. Whether that means another project with his current landlord Braun Enterprises or someone else remains to be seen, but Miller’s already thinking about what’s next. Expect Gr8 Plate to grow again — as soon as everything is stable at Ella, of course — either with an existing concept like Union Kitchen or Jax Grill or a one-off.

    “I love trying to figure out what the next hot thing is going to be,” Miller says. “Burgers are blowing up right now, and you’ve got all these guys moving to town. At some point, people are going to get tired of paying $12 or $15 for a burger, and they’re going to go on to the next hot concept. It’s our job to figure out what that’s going to be and find a good neighborhood for it.”

    Whatever that restaurant is and wherever it’s located, expect it to meet Miller’s core requirements for any of his businesses.

    “I enjoy eating a meal with full service on a white tablecloth, but I want people to feel like it’s ridiculously approachable,” he says. “You can wear shorts and flip flops and still sit at a table in our dining room with a white tablecloth. That’s the way I want everyone to feel.”

    The new Union Kitchen features an expansive bar.

    Union Kitchen Ella interior
    Photo by Gary R. Wise
    The new Union Kitchen features an expansive bar.
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    news/restaurants-bars

    Houston's smallest restaurant?

    Michelin-recognized Houston sushi chef fires up 4-seat Japanese skewer spot

    Eric Sandler
    Feb 6, 2026 | 1:40 pm
    Sip & Skewer restaurant
    Courtesy of Sip & Skewer
    Diners sit in front of chefs cooking on a grill.

    The team behind one of Houston’s Michelin-recognized sushi restaurants is opening an intimate new izakaya. Sip & Skewer is the newest concept from Hidden Omakase owner Tuan Tran and chef Marcos Juarez.

    Opening Friday, February 13, Sip & Skewer is a four-seat restaurant devoted to skewered meats that’s located within Sushi by Hidden, the group’s affordable omakase restaurant in Rice Village. At Sip & Skewer, diners sit across from the chefs as they cook a 10-course, $90 meal on a Japanese binchotan grill.

    “Sip & Skewer is small, loud, and intentional. The kind of hidden experience you’d find in Tokyo,” Tran said. “And with Chef Marcos guiding the team at Sushi by Hidden, this space is getting new energy from every angle.”

    A four-seat restaurant within a 10-seat restaurant might seem kind of superfluous, but Tran explains that it’s part of a larger plan for his group of restaurants, which also includes West U. hand roll restaurant Norigami. It also builds on the success of Hidden Omakase, the Galleria-area sushi counter that earned a Recommended designation in the Michelin Guide.

    “Sip & Skewer is part of a larger vision. It’s designed as a stepping stone toward our next concept, Kōri, a new hand roll and craft cocktail bar opening in the Heights. Our plan is to open Sip & Skewer directly next to our hand roll spot, creating a small alley of Japanese concepts that feed into one another,” Tran explains.

    “This allows us to build awareness, train our team in a new format, and introduce guests to Japanese charcoal grilling in a very personal way before we scale the idea into a larger setting with Kōri. The four-seat format keeps overhead extremely low while serving as a live test kitchen and brand builder for what’s coming next,” he adds.

    On a related note, Juarez and the other chefs at Hidden Omakase are dividing their time between all three restaurants. Tuam explains that it’s a deliberate strategy to ensure a consistent customer experience.

    “The same team that works Michelin-recognized omakase service also runs the grill here, which keeps quality and execution consistent while allowing the chefs a creative outlet in a very different format,” Tran said. “Because Sip & Skewer is only four seats and reservations only, it does not require a dedicated full-time staff. It’s an extension of the team rather than a separate operation.”

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