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    First Look at Dizzy Kaktus

    A different kind of taco joint opens in historic downtown Houston building

    Eric Sandler
    Dec 13, 2016 | 11:42 am

    The Salt N Pepper Group, the bar and restaurant company behind the Midtown party trio of Pub Fiction, Irish Cowboy, and 3rd Floor, has opened a new restaurant downtown. Located in the historic Sweeney, Coombs, and Fredericks Building at the corner of Main and Congress, Dizzy Kaktus offers an extensive selection of tacos as well as beer and frozen margaritas (as soon as it receives final approvals from TABC in the next week or so).

    Originally, the company had planned to lease the former Nit Noi space to an outside operator, but Daut Elshani, Salt N Pepper’s marketing and product director, tells CultureMap that his partners realized the space provided an opportunity to try something new.

    “We wanted to offer something that’s on the go, a place where people can have a quick bite but at the same time put a theme to it,” Elshani says. “We haven’t done a taco place before. We weren’t skeptical. We knew we could do it, but we wanted to do something that’s a little different amongst the competitors that are around here.”

    Being different is important, because the area around Dizzy Kaktus has at least four other restaurants that serve tacos nearby: tequila and taco purveyor El Big Bad, globally-inspired Fusion Taco, seafood-oriented La Fisheria, and recently opened La Calle. Dizzy Kaktus slots in somewhere between all four. Fast casual service makes it a little speedier than sit-down options like La Fisheria and El Big Bad.

    Those who prefer taco trucks to gringo taco purveyors like Torchy’s and Velvet Taco will choose La Calle, but Elshani readily notes that traditional Tex-Mex flavors are only one part of Dizzy Kaktus’s menu.

    “We also wanted to bring in Houston’s diversity with different flavors rather than just being very traditional, which we’re not,” he says. “I think we’ve hit a home run with the different tacos we’re going to be offering.”

    Corporate executive chef Franz Garcia’s menu features vegetarian options like the Krispy Kaktus (fried cactus strips, roasted bell pepper) and Buffalo Tofu, as well as seafood options that include grilled fish and fried octopus. Two different tacos incorporate chicken tenders, which sounds gimmicky but works in this fusion context. Those looking for something more traditional can choose chicken fajitas, beef fajitas, or carne asada. A dessert taco features chocolate covered vanilla ice cream in a frozen waffle shell.

    Corn and flour tortillas are shipped fresh from Austin “almost every day.” I found them a little chewy, but not using locally made tortillas hasn’t done anything to diminish Houstonians’ enthusiasm for Torchy’s. Perhaps El Bolillo offers a wholesale option?

    Courthouse regulars will appreciate that Dizzy Kaktus will serve breakfast tacos Monday through Friday starting at 7 am. Downtown revelers, including patrons of the company’s nearby Boots ‘n Shoots bar/nightclub, can take advantage of the restaurant staying open until 3 am on Friday and Saturday nights, which makes it a perfect last stop before climbing into an Uber and heading home.

    As excited as Elshani is to be launching this new concept, he’s also planning Super Bowl festivities for the company’s Midtown bars. As it does for its legendary St. Patrick’s Day bash, the company will close Hadley Street for 10 days leading up to the big game, which will allow it to combine all three bars into one giant entity. Expect live music, DJs, and other events. While some parts will be subject to buyouts by deep-pocketed out of towners, most of the time the bars will be open to the public.

    Until then, Dizzy Kaktus will make its first impression with diners. Like Salt N Pepper concepts Crisp and Beer Market Co., the company hopes the taco restaurant becomes successful enough to expand.

    “We never go into anything thinking it’s a one-off. If a concept works and people enjoy it, we’ll definitely multiply, absolutely. That’s always in the plans,” Elshani says.

    A look inside Dizzy Kaktus

    Dizzy Kaktus interior
    Photo by Eric Sandler
    A look inside Dizzy Kaktus
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    head east

    Eagerly-anticipated Houston barbecue joint hosts weekend preview pop-ups

    Eric Sandler
    Dec 18, 2025 | 3:30 pm
    Eastbound Barbecue food
    Courtesy of Eastbound Barbecue
    Get a first taste of Eastbound Barbecue this weekend.

    One of Houston’s most eagerly anticipated new barbecue joints is giving diners a preview of what’s to come. Eastbound Barbecue will host “Sneak Peak Weekends” every Saturday and Sunday beginning this Saturday, December 20, until the restaurant opens in early 2026.

    Held at the restaurant’s location in the East End (1105 Sampson Street) from 12-4 pm (or sold out), the weekend service gives diners their first chance to try Eastbound Barbecue’s smoked meats, sides, and desserts. That includes, smoked brisket, baby back ribs, jalapeno & cheese sausage, hatch chili lasagna mac & cheese, herbed potato salad, and more. Save room for the two dessert offerings, salted caramel banana pudding and cookie butter cake.

    To distinguish Eastbound’s barbecue, chefs Lopez and Granville use different seasonings than other restaurants, such as rosemary salt in the brisket rub and a miso-caramel sauce that gives its ribs a sweet and savory bite. During the preview, Eastbound’s prices are noticeably lower than many other Houston barbecue joints, with brisket priced at $29 per pound, ribs at $26 per pound, and pulled pork at $22 per pound.

    As CultureMap reported in August, Eastbound unites four friends, Ryan Penn, Ryan Powell, Luis Lopez, and Jake Granville, who also held senior roles at various restaurants owned by prominent Houston chef Ronnie Killen. Since then, the four partners have finished many of the improvements they needed to make prior to opening, including closing in the patio and installing offset smokers on the property.

    For Penn, leaving the Killen’s organization after almost 20 years was a difficult decision, but one he felt he had to make. “I could have worked for [Killen] forever and been happy. It was more along the lines of, if I don’t do this now, I don’t want to be 70 and wish that I had,” he said at the time.

    Eastbound Barbecue food

    Courtesy of Eastbound Barbecue

    Get a first taste of Eastbound Barbecue this weekend.

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