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    Introducing Bravery Chef Hall

    This ain't no food court: Chef-led stands coming to downtown tower

    Eric Sandler
    Dec 7, 2017 | 10:02 am

    Aris Market Square, the luxurious new high-rise that just opened downtown, offers plenty of amenities for its residents. For rental rates starting at almost $2,000 per month, residents enjoy a full gym, heated pool, a bicycle repair station — even a vinyl listening room with a vintage turntable.

    But the new building has a public component, too, in the form of a dining facility that’s designed to change the way people think about food halls. Property developer Hines has partnered with Conservatory owners Ahn Mai and Lian Nguyen to create the Bravery Chef Hall. Located at the corner of Travis and Preston, Bravery will occupy 9,000-square feet of Aris’ first floor when it opens next summer.

    “We wanted our retail space to be an amenity for the residents, something they could use over and over again, but would also be an amenity for the neighborhood: other residents downtown and also office employees and workers,” Hines director David Haltom told a group of media on Thursday. “From the moment we met with Ahn and Lian, we knew that was the thing. We’re very fortunate and proud of having come to an agreement with this team.”

    As its name implies, Bravery will be a more chef-focused take on a food hall. Rather than food court style stands where diners purchase their meals from a counter and eat them elsewhere, each of Bravery’s five stands are designed to be chef counter-style restaurants. Similar to the experience of sitting at a sushi bar, chefs will prepare meals right in front of diners who will occupy the approximately 40 seats. To-go will be available, of course, but the focus is squarely on an interactive experience.

    To help them achieve this vision, Mai and Nguyen have tapped some of the city’s top talent. Sommelier and restaurateur Shepard Ross (Glass Wall, Pax Americana, etc) will serve as general manager and beverage director: stocking the hall’s wine bar and developing beverage programs for the five restaurants. On the culinary side, chefs Ben McPherson (Prohibition, Krisp Bird & Batter), David Guerrero (Andes Cafe), and Gary Ly (Underbelly) have already signed on. Mai notes that they’re interviewing candidates for the last two spaces but are open to receiving more applications.

    “At most chef-driven restaurants, they have all these layers. We thought, let’s strip away some of the layers. Let’s get rid of the front of the house. Let’s get rid of the restaurateur. Let’s just leave the chef,” Mai said. “In essence, what we’re doing is putting chefs in a position where they can succeed. The cost of starting is much lower, and the cost of operating is much lower.”

    While the costs of entry are lower, the potential income could be higher. By serving customers directly, participating chefs and cooks are eligible to be tipped.

    “Even the line cooks who work for him, they can make two to three times what they normally make by engaging with guests at the counter,” Ross said. “It’s a much more personal experience at the counter.”

    For Ly, who earned a CultureMap Tastemaker Awards Rising Star Chef of the Year nomination for his work as Underbelly’s chef de cuisine, signing on with Bravery provides an opportunity to establish a more direct relationship with diners.

    “As a chef and a cook, when you plate something up and the server runs it to the table, your relationship with that dish is done. It’s up to the server or whoever else to carry it forward,” Ly told CultureMap. “With this concept, it takes it all out of the way. The chef is forced to interact with the people. Tell them where the food is coming from and why we put it on the plate.”

    Ly described his concept as a bit of a work in progress but said it would blend the French techniques he’s learned as a professional chef with Asian ingredients — sourced from local farms, of course — to create dishes inspired by his childhood eating both traditional Vietnamese food prepared by his parents and classic American fare he encountered outside his home.

    “I’m taking a lot of influences I’ve had in my career and stuff I like to eat and pairing it with flavors that I think might go together,” Ly said. “I wouldn’t say breaking the rules but definitely bending them.”

    The operators aren’t ready to announce the specifics of Guerrero and McPherson’s concepts yet, but McPherson said he’s planning an Italian concept inspired by the early part of his career. As for the other two, Mai said he’s open to hearing the right offer, but Bravery certainly seems like a great opportunity to open a high-quality sushi restaurant in downtown. Regardless of the specific, Ross realizes what an opportunity Bravery represents.

    “We can capture and recapture clientele morning, noon, and night. Because we’ve got different concepts, we can have different levels of food,” Ross said. “You can come for cocktails or a glass of wine. You can eat tapas style or you can eat a fully curated chef’s meal. You have all of those things on the table for you.”

    A rendering of the future Bravery Chef Hall.

    Bravery Chef Hall rendering
    Courtesy image
    A rendering of the future Bravery Chef Hall.
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    Let's Get Boozy

    Houston restaurant celebrates 3 years with new cocktail program

    Brianna McClane
    Mar 23, 2026 | 4:00 pm
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    Photo by Luke Chang Jia Media
    To celebrate its third anniversary, Jun has introduced a cocktail program to its menu with a newly-acquired liquor license.

    Heights restaurant Jūn has an additional reason to celebrate its third anniversary this year: liquor is officially on the menu.

    The Heights restaurant, led by owners Evelyn Garcia and Henry Lu, has built a loyal following and earned major recognition since its 2023 opening, including a 2026 CultureMap Tastemaker Awards nomination for Restaurant of the Year and two James Beard Award semifinalist nods.

    But one complaint has remained consistent throughout the years.

    “People will give us one star because we don't have the whiskey they want or we don't have a martini,” Lu tells CultureMap. “They're like, ‘Food is great. Service is amazing. We'll never come back here.’”

    That’s about to change.

    With a newly acquired liquor license, patrons can pair dishes like mussels with sour chorizo or tandoori-marinated lamb belly with drinks like the Pink Lady — a reimagining of the Texas classic White Lady made with beet-infused gin, citrus, and egg white.

    Several drinks are closely tied to Lu and Garcia’s own stories, including the Post/Shift, an homage to the spicy margarita that Lu has sipped nightly at 9 pm for the past 15 years. The Jūn iteration adds ginger and tamarind, with mezcal as the spirit.

    “We want to bring in things that are special to us, like the artwork in (Jūn), the food, the pottery — it all means something,” Lu says.

    Other creations include the Good Old Fashion Fun, Very Dirty Martini, and The Bronx, a play on The Manhattan.

    Before opening in 2023, Lu and Garcia looked into obtaining a liquor license but learned that installing a fire sprinkler system would be required due to an undefined occupancy limit. The pair planned to move forward with the installation, until they learned the wait time was at least a year.

    “We're a legitimate mom and pop restaurant — I cannot delay this project for a year. We wouldn’t have opened,” Lu recalls saying.

    After chatting with an industry colleague who had recently secured a license, Lu decided to revisit the process. With construction complete and an established occupancy limit, the restrictions had changed and a liquor license was easy to obtain. Jūn was in business.

    When Jūn opened, Garcia and Lu developed a low-ABV “cocktail” program focused on wine and sake, emphasizing flavor through smoke and infusions of herbs and spices.

    “We ran with what we had and we were really proud of it,” Lu says. “It really spoke of the creativity that this whole team strives for.”

    That approach to flavor development carries into the expanded program, such as the carajillo, Jūn’s twist on the beloved coffee cocktail. The addition of smoked sake to the tequila-forward drink nods to the restaurant’s earlier beverage program.

    “It gives it this well-rounded, beautiful, smoky flavor,” Lu says. “It's very homey. It's very reminiscent of a warm summer day.”

    To mark both the restaurant’s third anniversary and the addition of liquor, Lu and Garcia are inviting the community to a celebration on Tuesday, March 31.

    Attendees will find food by chefs Suu Khin of Burmalicious, Nina Fonte of Aleng Nina, and Ivan Chavez of Chavos BBQ, all regular pop-up participants at Third Place, Jūn’s daytime cafe and coffee concept.

    A live sketch artist will capture portraits of guests for a group composite illustration that will hang on the restaurant’s wall. A photo booth, mariachi band, and live DJ are a part of the festivities, with drag bingo occurring later in the evening. The event begins at 6 pm. Tables are first come, first served, and RSVPs are required through OpenTable.

    Jūn is open Wednesday through Monday from 5 pm to 10 pm at 420 East 20th Street, Suite A. Cocktails are not being served at Third Place.

    To celebrate its third anniversary, Jun has introduced a cocktail program to its menu with a newly-acquired liquor license.

    Jun Cocktail Program
    Photo by Luke Chang Jia Media
    To celebrate its third anniversary, Jun has introduced a cocktail program to its menu with a newly-acquired liquor license.
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