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    Meatopia Wrapup

    All-star chefs give meat-eaters a lot to gnaw on at Texas-sized feast

    Eric Sandler
    Nov 4, 2013 | 1:00 pm

    This weekend San Antonio's Pearl Brewery complex played host to the first Texas edition of Meatopia, the ode to meat-eating and live-fire cooking conceived by James Beard Award-winning food writer Josh Ozersky.

    At Saturday night's kick-off event, a dinner for 300 called The Beefsteak, Ozersky neatly summed up the motivation for and philosophy behind the two-day event. "I came to Texas to eat meat with people who like to eat meat," Ozersky proclaimed to cheers and applause.

    Indeed, the meat did flow. Three chefs, Tim Rattray of San Antonio's The Granary, Tim Byres from Smoke Restaurant in Dallas and New York chef Andrew Toscano prepared steak dishes that came out sliced and ready to eat to the communal tables. To quench their thirst, diners had their choice of wine, beer and cocktails from the event's sponsors. Together with live music, excess was the theme; even the small, token bowl of vegetables present to each table had a root beer glaze.

    "I came to Texas to eat meat with people who like to eat meat," Ozersky proclaimed to cheers and applause.

    Of the dishes, Rattray's steak with barbecue butter had the best crust, which made for an excellent contrast with the fatty, properly medium rare meat. But everything was delicious. Sitting next to a couple other Houstonians, we immediately began plotting our dream team of chefs for an all-steak fest.

    Two quibbles. First, there didn't seem to be a system in place for evenly distributing the entrees. After checking in with friends, they never received Tim Byres's coffee-cured steak with relish; since our table had an extra plate, we sent it their way. At my table, we only received one plate of Andrew Toscano's Calabrian-chile rubbed steak. Second, for an event which is inspired by Gilded Age excess, none of us reported being as ridiculously over-the-top full as we expected. A couple more plates of meat per table would have finished us off, although our cardiologists probably approve of the organizer's relative restraint.

    Choosing from among 32 chefs

    With an extra hour of sleep, I arrived at Meatopia Sunday morning ready to attack the 32 chefs who were serving meat in all its forms across the Pearl complex. For a first-time event, I thought it was extremely well-organized. Only the highest profile chefs, like Austin's Paul Qui, Dallas's John Tesar and San Antonio's Johnny Hernandez, attracted significant lines, and they moved quickly. Also, the model of paying one price that includes all food and beverages is a welcome respite from other festivals that require constantly paying additional money for food or coupons.

    Although I made a heroic effort to sample all 32 options, I gave up with five or six to go. Sadly, that meant I missed San Antonio chef Jason Dady's porchetta, which looked absolutely spectacular and attracted a consistent crowd. I also didn't try cookbook author Adam Perry Lang's barbecue sandwich, but his rig and setup were among the most impressive looking displays of the day. There's always next year.

    Underbelly was Houston's sole representative, but Chris Shepherd and his crew acquitted themselves well with a whole roasted pig prepared with Korean spices. The restaurant brought enough people, including sous chefs Ryan Lachaine and Lyle Bento and pastry chef Victoria Dearmond, that they were able to sample some of the other dishes between tending to the booth. In particular, Shepherd enjoyed the lamb neck gyro prepared by California chef John Fink.

    My Top Six dishes of Meatopia

    Johnny Hernandez of La Gloria in San Antonio: There was something almost medieval looking about Hernandez's stretched out, roasted cabrito. He served the tender goat meat on freshly made tortillas with an array of salsas. "Best taco I ever had," Ozersky tweeted.

    Rene Ortiz, formerly of Sway in Austin & Ford Fry of The Optimist (among others) in Atlanta: Amidst the beef heart, lamb necks and bison, anyone preparing chicken has to be pretty impressive to be memorable. Ortiz's grilled chicken with chile paste and other spices delivered in a big way: moist, flavorful, spicy. If not for this tweet from Eater National's Paula Forbes, I might have missed it. Although Fry has made his name in Atlanta, he's a Houston native who graduated from Lamar High School. His chicken parts included feet and breast. Asked about how to eat it, Fry told one diner "just gnaw on it." Yes, chef.

    Geronimo Lopez of Nao in San Antonio: Lopez serves as both executive chef and instructor at this restaurant that's part of the Culinary Institute of America's campus at Pearl; he made the most of his home field advantage. The large, hanging veal legs cooked at Nao's outdoor kitchen was among the day's most impressive displays, and the side of creamy polenta was so delicious I briefly pondered a second helping.

    Andrew Weissman of Il Sogno Osteria in San Antonio: The chef's braised, stuffed breast of veal was tender, juicy and beautifully cooked. Amidst a lot of chefs with bold flavors, Weissman stood out with his subtlety. Well played.

    Ned Elliot of Foreign & Domestic in Austin: Which isn't to say there wasn't a place for bold flavors. Elliot's crispy lamb ribs were spicy, intensely flavored and a total mess to eat. Isn't that half the fun of attending an event called Meatopia?

    Chorizo lollipop, anyone?

    5 Meatopia in San Antonio November 2013
      
    Photo by Eric Sandler
    Chorizo lollipop, anyone?
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    A CultureMap exclusive

    Cult favorite Houston burger joint adds new co-owner to power future growth

    Eric Sandler
    Apr 17, 2025 | 2:56 pm
    Burger Chan owners
    Photo by Eric Sandler
    Ryan Stewart, Willet Feng, and Diane Feng.

    A major change has come to one of Houston’s most well-regarded burger restaurants, but the owners assure fans that the restaurant they love will stay (mostly) the same.

    Burger Chan owners Diane and Willet Feng tell CultureMap that they’ve partnered with chef Ryan Stewart and his Silver Linings Hospitality company to take over day-to-day operations of the restaurant. Stewart, a native of South Africa who previously served as a chef and partner of shuttered South African restaurant Peli Peli, has spent five months learning the restaurant’s operations to prepare for the switchover.

    First opened as Kuma Burger in 2016, Burger Chan opened its current location near the Galleria in 2022. Chef Willet Feng brings his fine dining background to the restaurant’s burgers, which get an umami boost from a tare glaze on the patties. The build-your-own format allows diners to create their perfect combo from two patty sizes, four buns, three cheese, and more than a dozen vegetables and sauces, including favorites like charred jalapenos, sambal mayo, and scallion aioli. In a 2023 clip that’s been viewed more than 300,000 times, YouTube food tourist Mike Chen created a burger topped with 17 ingredients.

    burger-chan burgerBurger Chan offers a wide range of toppings. Photo by Terence Tang

    But all of the acclaim has come with a downside. Willet Feng explains that the restaurant has struggled to find a roster of employees who can perform to his admittedly high standards.

    “It’s never been more tiring. You’re successful, then you have people call out,” he says. “That’s a lot more stress and work for everyone who shows up. As the owners, most of the extra work gets dumped on us.”

    Feng thinks that Stewart, who has experience operating multiple locations, will be able to implement systems that allow Burger Chan to maintain its high quality while utilizing employees who might struggle to replicate the chef’s exact method for perfectly slicing tomatoes by hand.

    “What makes this a good partnership is that I’ve worked perpetually in kitchens like Oxheart where a lot of things are done manually. It doesn’t matter how long it takes or how painful it is. That’s not scalable,” Feng says.

    “What Ryan and his team can do is they have systems. They have ways of training people that I can’t do cause I get really f—ing mad, or they provide tools so people f— up less,” he adds.

    Where Feng sees frustration, Stewart sees opportunity. He says he took about a year away from the restaurant business after Peli Peli (then operating as Mozambik) closed. A few visits to Burger Chan sparked his interest in returning to restaurant life.

    “I came to Burger Chan and fell in love with the flavors. I thought it was a great opportunity to help expand it,” he says.

    Stewart plans to start small by adding Monday lunch service and Burger Chan’s first dinner hours on Fridays and Saturdays. Next up is adding weeknight dinner service. If everything goes smoothly, Silver Linings would begin looking for a second location.

    “I’ve been here for five months and seen who’s the next [person on the current staff] to step up and run their own location,” Stewart says. “We never want to lose that loving feeling, that quality. The second one we want to open quite quickly. It would be our prep kitchen to make things easier to control.”

    As Diane Feng notes, she and Willet aren’t walking away from the restaurant. They’ll still be involved but not the daily presence they have been. Over the past month, they’ve been less present physically to allow Stewart and his team the opportunity to learn how to operate the restaurant on their own, but Feng promises diners will still see her at the restaurant.

    “I enjoy my interactions with our customers. I want to make sure that everyone is taken care of,” she says.

    “We’ve been pretty hands-off for over a month now,” Willet adds. “I don’t think people have noticed from a quality perspective. We go in to check and improve things.”

    Taking a step back from day-to-day involvement in Burger Chan frees up the Fengs to devote more time to Borrowed Goods, the Singaporean-inspired pop-up series they launched in March. Next up is dinner service on April 27 at Narwhal Jousting Club, the ghost kitchen owned by Ninja Ramen’s Christopher Huang.

    “It will most likely stay as a pop-up for a really long time,” Willet Feng says. “Having just gotten out of the responsibilities of one brick and mortar, we’re not dying to jump into another one. There is no timeline. It could be years. We don’t know.”

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