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    Enjoy your stay

    3 mainstay Houston hotel restaurants go new and improved to draw diners

    Eric Sandler
    Oct 24, 2018 | 5:00 pm

    Houston may not have the grand history of high-profile hotel restaurants that cities like New York and New Orleans do, but that doesn’t stop the city’s various properties from chasing the elusive dream of opening a concept that attracts both guests and locals. Food-loving Houstonians may recall the days when Bryan Caswell led the kitchen at superstar chef Jean-Georges Vongerichten’s Bank in the Hotel Icon or when a pre-Coltivare Ryan Pera helmed *17 Restaurant at the Sam Houston hotel.

    Over the past few weeks, three prominent hotels have made major changes to their culinary operations by either opening new concepts or hiring a new chef. While realizing the dream of establishing a restaurant as acclaimed as Danny Meyer’s Maialino is in NYC may prove elusive, hope springs eternal.

    Let’s take a brief look at the new offerings from The Lancaster, the J.W. Marriott downtown, and the Houstonian.

    The Houstonian will throw open the doors to its new restaurant, Tribute, on October 26. Led by executive chef Neal Cox and sommelier Vanessa Treviño Boyd, the restaurant takes its inspiration from the traditional influences on the city’s culinary scene — literally paying tribute to them via the dishes it serves.

    That means traditional Texas fare like steaks and seafood grilled over Post Oak, as well as Louisiana-inspired dishes such as crab au gratin and a po-boy at lunch. Mexican influences run throughout: from savory options like spicy seafood cocktail and wild boar empanadas to churros and tres leches for dessert.

    A comprehensive redesign offers a fresh look compared to the space’s former incarnation as Olivette. The Gensler-designed space features custom branch chandeliers, antique mirrors, and private wine lockers. A new wine room provides storage for 1,000 bottles and also serves as an intimate private dining space for up to four people.

    “The Houstonian has been serving guests from all over the world, in addition to our club members and community for a long time,” said hotel general manager Steve Fronterhouse in a statement. “We want to show the world that Houston is a proud and friendly place. Tribute will present time-honored cuisine — a true representation of southeast Texas cooking at its best”

    Over at the Lancaster, a comprehensive renovation has the downtown hotel looking better than ever, and that includes its updated restaurant. Now known as Cultivated F+B, the establishment offers breakfast, lunch, and dinner for hotel guests, downtown denizens, and Theater District visitors.

    Regulars will recognize the space’s comprehensive remodel, which includes new, larger windows that look out towards Jones Plaza, a raised ceiling in the bar, and the removal of the old banquettes. A new espresso bar even adds a little grab-and-go convenience for people who need a caffeine fix on their way to the office.

    Director of food and beverage Allan Levine and executive chef Fernando Huerta collaborated on the menu that presents a fresh take on classic hotel fare. For example, the signature Lancaster salad comes with an appealing mix of kale, chicken, bacon cheese, apple, egg, and more that get tied together with a lemon vinaigrette. Similarly, classic roast chicken comes with an orange-fennel jus that brightens its flavors.

    As for Main Kitchen at the JW Marriott, it recently welcomed executive chef Josh Mouzakes, who comes to the hotel after spending three years as chef de cuisine for fine dining and executive banquet chef at the acclaimed Hotel del Coronado in San Diego. Mouzakes tells CultureMap that he initially planned to move to Miami when a recruiter approached him about coming to Houston instead.

    He really took me back. Dude, I don’t know anything about Houston. I never thought of going to Houston . . . I didn’t know much about Houston. It wasn’t near the beach. It wasn’t my normal lifestyle. As soon as I got here, all that changed. The doubts I had got smaller.

    Going out to a few places around town, I realized how artistic the city is. How many good restaurants there are, how many art galleries, just cultured people. I put the beach on the back burner. I can move to Houston.

    Dishes like roasted duck breast with smoked potato puree and bacon-wrapped pork tenderloin with plum bourbon glaze demonstrate Mousakes approach of presenting classic flavors with a twist. In an environment where guests want comfort at breakfast and convenience at lunch, the chef says he uses the dinner menu to deliver a more elevated experience.

    Roasted duck breast with smoked potatoes at Main Kitchen.

    Main Kitchen JW Marriott roasted duck breast
    Courtesy photo
    Roasted duck breast with smoked potatoes at Main Kitchen.
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    family friendly pies

    Delivery-focused pizzeria with affordable wine coming soon to the Heights

    Eric Sandler
    Jan 5, 2026 | 12:59 pm
    Shredders pizza
    Courtesy of Shredders Pizza
    Shredders will serve a New York-style pizza with affordable wines.

    Two Houston hospitality veterans are teaming up to open a family friendly, delivery-focused pizzeria in the Heights. Set to open in late January, Shredders Pizza will New York-style pies and affordable wines for dine, delivery, and to-go.

    Located in the former Chicago Italian Beef & Pizza space at 1777 Airline Drive, Shredders unites Benjy Mason (Johnny’s Gold Brick, Winnie’s, Starduster) with chef Jason Kerr, who operates Jersey Village eatery Little Kitchen. Houston food obsessives may recall Kerr’s time as the owner of the Zilla Eats food truck or as Monica Pope’s sous chef at pioneering Houston restaurant Boulevard Bistro. Kerr and Mason formed a friendship when they worked together in the kitchen at Down House.

    Mason tells CultureMap that, as a parent, he needs a reliable delivery pizza that’s better than a national chain but isn’t as sophisticated as what’s being produced by Houston's artisan pizzerias, which don’t always travel well or have flavors that appeal to kids. When Kerr told Mason he was already developing a casual pizzeria, Mason says he agreed to partner with him if they opened in the Heights and used the name “Shredders” (more on that below).

    Since its focused on delivery and to-go, Shredders will only have seating for about 15 people. Easy mobile ordering will appeal to busy parents, a group that Mason considers himself part of.

    “Where my needs lie is that delivery pizza option,” Mason tells CultureMap. “I wanted to focus on nailing that first. I want the delivery to be as smooth as possible. That’s why we’re doing it in house. I want it to be a hospitality-focused delivery experience.”

    The Pizza

    Kerr’s pizza dough uses a mix of King Arthur flour and whole wheat flour from Texas’ Barton Springs Mill. Fermented for 24-36 hours and baked in a traditional pizza oven, a Shredders pizza is intended to be light and crispy with “enough structure to eat around the table or on the couch,” according to a release.

    “It’s not exactly New York. Maybe closer to New Haven,” Kerr said in a statement. “Honestly, it’s just the pizza I like to make and my family likes to eat.”

    All pizzas use Grande Mozzarella and an uncooked tomato sauce. Shredders will serve familiar favorites such as cheese and pepperoni pizzas as well as house specials such as:

    • Sausage and Pepa: Cooked-from-raw Italian sausage, green peppers, and pickled tear-drop peppers
    • Jason the Dragon: Hot honey, arugula, whipped ricotta, and parmesan
    • That’s A Spicy Pepperoni: Cup ’n’ char pepperonis, Calabrian chile sauce, and roasted and pickled jalapeños.

    In addition, proceeds from one specialty pie — sometimes created in collaboration with a guest chef — will benefit the Southern Smoke Foundation, while proceeds from another seasonal pizza will rotate between local PTOs and kids’ arts programs.

    “It’s crispy and will fold,” Mason adds. “When you fold it, you get a crack, but it won’t crack all the way through.”

    The menu will also include wings, a couple of salads, garlic knots, and a dessert sourced from Little Kitchen and its companion dessert shop, Eat My Pastry.

    The Wine

    One other aspect of Shredders that will appeal to parents is its affordable wines. Mason has created a list of approximately 20 bottles of Italian wine that will be priced between $20 and $25.

    “We’re going for an absurdly low markup. We’re not working on the same math as a sit down restaurant. Wines that would be $30-40 on someone else’s menu will be $20-25,” Mason says.

    “Being able to drink an affordable bottle of wine on a Tuesday or Wednesday is personally appealing to me,” he adds.

    Turning to the name, it hints at the sort of 90s nostalgia that Shredders is conjuring. Obviously, cooks shred cheese before it goes on pizza. “Shredding” is also something a skateboarder or guitar play might do. Of course, fans of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles will immediately think of Shredder, the pizza-obsessed group’s nemesis, when they hear the word.

    In the ultimate test, Mason served served Shredders’ pizza to his children at a recent preview event. “My daughter said, ‘it’s pretty good,’” Mason says with a laugh. He assures everyone that’s high praise coming from her.

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