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    Rave 'n' Rant

    Houston's a foodie haven in any decade

    Janice Schindeler
    Dec 29, 2009 | 9:00 am
    With the only Houston restaurant to get a front-page story on the dining section of the NY Times, Feast co-owners James Silk, Meagan Silk and Richard Knight elevate odd cuts to an art form. Ox heart with a carrot and coriander salad, anyone?

    The best of the decade? Wish I been assigned this job 10 years ago. My memory is feeble. Seriously, it’s tough to just whip this stuff out in time to make a deadline with little forewarning. Come Jan. 1, 2010, I will be taking notes should my opinion remain relevant 10 years on.

    But no worries. Houston’s a big city in love with food, and I am never short of oddball opinions.

    1. Genius chef: Robert Del Grande. Mega-talented Del Grande is one smart cookie. In danger of becoming old and dated, Del Grande played himself and the stunning new RDG + Bar Annie smack dab to the forefront of the Houston food scene, serving long-time Café Annie faves and some whiz-bang new dishes in a slick, hip, gotta-be-seen-in atmosphere. He has been reborn, hotter and better than ever. The place is sure to be a national food media magnet.

    2. I knew he was a master when Bryan Caswell presented the tuna ribbons sashimi while chefing at Bank. Now the whole country knows, thanks to the chef/owner of Reef being named one of the year’s top 10 chefs by Food & Wine Magazine. A champion of local, underused species and a keen fisherman, Caswell also writes a witty blog and co-hosts a raucous weekly radio show. With his Little Bigs and the recently opened Stella Sola, Caswell takes the leap from chef to restaurateur.

    3. With the only Houston restaurant to get a front-page story on the dining section of the NY Times, Feast co-owners James Silk, Meagan Silk and Richard Knight elevate odd cuts to an art form. Ox heart with a carrot and coriander salad? Frank Bruni said it all when he wrote, “Feast has no real peer in New York, Chicago, Los Angeles and other major cities that pride themselves on their epicurean adventurousness." Me? I like their reverence. Prior to Feast, the building housed Chez Georges, the brief home to the mighty fine French food of Georges Guy. Feast folks have left the gold-tone GUY letters on the building. Nice touch.

    4. Connecting city dwellers with farm-fresh food, the emergence of farmers' markets in Houston has made food shopping fun, tasty, nutritional and seasonal. Queen of the markets, chef/owner Monica Pope, took the direct approach. She wanted a market, so she created one in t'afia’s parking lot. Now to encourage purchasing, she runs a Saturday morning cooking class at the market. Urban Harvest sponsors the biggest Saturday market in the city. Highland Village and Houston farmers' markets have recently opened Saturday morning market as well. Rain or shine, hot or hotter, Houstonians politely queue for farm-fresh produce, carry cold, hard cash and most remember their canvas totes. Will wonders never cease?

    5. Best advocate of the other white meat: Chris Shepherd of Catalan. Pork waddled onto restaurant tables all over town, but Shepherd’s pork belly cubes on a stick with Steen cane syrup won my heart and threatened my waistline from the get-go. Much missed this year is Catalan’s aromatic garlic soup with perfectly poached egg (hint, hint).

    6. Best cooking school in town? Toques tipped to the culinary program of The Art Institute of Houston. Alumni of the culinary arts program are headlining all over town—Charles Clark at Ibiza, Chris Shepherd at Catalan, Randy Evans at Haven, Jonathan Jones at Beaver’s. Sure, nobody was an overnight success, but these grads of the '90s got their basics and their work ethics down right and early. I'm anxiously awaiting the maturation of culinary students from this decade.

    7. Best chef who deserves more national press (but rarely gets any): The modest, gracious Hugo Ortega, whose namesake restaurant, Hugo’s, elevates interior Mexican food to an art form. Moles of distinction, squash blossom soup of perfection and shockingly authentic grasshopper tacos, Ortega is committed to offering the authentic flavors of his homeland in an elegant far south of the border atmosphere. A teenager who came north looking for a better life, dishwasher, office cleaner, busboy, cook and now chef/owner—hell, not only should Ortega get more national press, his life could be a movie.

    8. Best flavor heroine: Anita Jaisinghani, chef/owner of Indika, takes the alluring spices and textures of her childhood and contemporizes them, creating modern Indian food of staggering excellence. Instead of cranking out curries, Jaisinghani creatively evolves the cuisine of her homeland to gastronomic heights. One bite of the corn-and-garbanzo chaat appetizer or her startlingly fresh chutneys will convince you I am right. Nationally, Jaisinghani has had her share of glowing national press, just seems that locally the buzz could be louder.

    9. Diligently crisscrossing rural Texas, Lindsey Schechter and her Houston Dairymaids has single-handedly introduced Houstonians to a plethora of boutique cheeses from micro-producers whose tasty goods would otherwise lanquish in far-flung counties. To cheesemakers, Schechter is a lifeline; to chefs committed to sustainable, local foods, she is priceless; and to farmers’ market attendees, she’s the cheese lady. Simply stated, Schechter has put Texas cheese on the national scene—Wisconsin and Vermont, watch out!

    10. Best food provider: Houston Food Bank. Not even Hurricane Ike could keep these devoted folks from their mission of feeding Houston’s hungry. Prior to Ike, they stocked shelters of last resort with food and water. In the immediate aftermath, as in the day after, while the rest of the city reeled, the Food Bank shifted into overdrive—operating at four times their normal capacity. (FEMA folks should take notes.) During the tedious and trying months that followed, they continued with the post-Ike relief effort, distributing a whopping 20 million pounds of food, water and personal care products.

    Honorable Mention: Discovery Green. This inner-city park provides food venues that cross socio-economic boundaries: picnic space for inner-city dwellers, casual fast food of exceptional quality, Del Grande's stunning The Grove for the well-heeled, a Sunday farmers' market for all and just added, Grizzaffi Coffee kiosk, serving coffee and espresso drinks made from Fontana Coffee Roasters.

    Chris Shepherd of Catalan is the city's best advocate of the other white meat: Pork. His pork belly cubes on a stick with Steen cane syrup won our columnist's heart and threatened her waistline from the get-go.

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    What's eric eating episodes 513 and 514

    Beard Award-winning chef and family dish on their new Houston restaurant

    CultureMap Staff
    Nov 21, 2025 | 1:43 pm
    Zaranda restaurant Tracy Vaught Hugo Ortega Sophia Ortega
    Photo by Nick de la Torre
    Zaranda owners Tracy Vaught, Hugo Ortega, and Sophia Ortega are this week's guests.

    On this week’s episode of “What’s Eric Eating,” James Beard Award-winning chef Hugo Ortega, his wife and business partner Tracy Vaught, and their daughter Sophia Ortega join CultureMap editor Eric Sandler to discuss H-Town Restaurant Group. The company operates a number of local concepts, including interior Mexican restaurant Hugo’s, Backstreet Cafe, Mexican street food eatery Urbe, and Zaranda, the company’s newly opened restaurant in downtown that’s inspired by California.



    After a brief discussion of the early days of Hugo’s, the trio dives into the process of opening Zaranda. Vaught explains how she became aware of the space in the Norton Rose Fulbright Tower and why it’s proximity to Discovery Green made it particularly appealing. Chef Ortega shares how a three-week road trip throughout Mexico provided some of the inspiration for both Zaranda and Caracol, his Galleria-area seafood restaurant.

    From there, chef Ortega describes how the zaranda — a wire metal basket used to cook seafood over an open flame — anchors much of the menu. He also recommends some dishes diners should try when they visit Zaranda.

    Sandler asks Sophia Ortega what it’s like working with her parents. “I get that comment a lot. It is very different. A lot of people can’t imagine working with family,” she says.

    “For me, I’m an only child. We’re a very close family unit. The restaurants have been a huge part of my growing up. For us, it comes very naturally to work together. It’s all we know. I’ve only ever worked for my restaurants. A lot of the employees have seen me grow up. I think we all have our own lane, but at the same time we overlap. We’re always open to hearing different opinions. That’s when the best decisions are made. I love it.”

    “Sophia is very intuitive. The way she communicates is very thoughtful and sensitive. I think that’s so valuable for our staff. Everybody loves her,” Vaught adds.



    Listen to the full episode for an update on Backstreet Cafe. Its original building was torn down last year to make way for an all-new structure that’s on track to open next year — hopefully in time for its legendary Mother’s Day brunch. Sandler also asks about the restaurant group’s conspicuous omission from the Michelin Guide.

    In this week’s other episode, Sandler and co-host Mary Clarkson, the proprietor of newly-open wine shop Montrose Grocer, discuss the news out of the week. They begin with a discussion about the Houston Chronicle’s list of the city’s top 100 restaurants, including a discussion of Aga’s as the No.1 selection, some of the new entries on the list, and restaurants that dropped off the list entirely, such as Himalaya, Kata Robata, and Killen’s Barbecue. They also talk about Bari Ristorante opening a new location in The Woodlands and restaurateur Brian Doke’s plans to open Lazy Lane restaurant in Garden Oaks.

    In the restaurant of the week segment, Clarkson and Sandler share thoughts on their recent meal at Maison Chinoise. Located next to Brasserie 19 in the River Oaks Shopping center, the new Chinese restaurant is the latest project from Dallas-based Lombardi Family Concepts, known locally for Toulouse Cafe and Bar, its French restaurant in River Oaks District, and Lombardi Cucina Italiana in Uptown Park.

    Listen to the episode to hear which dishes they liked best, as well as the one that missed the mark. They also discuss its decor and how it will fit with the other luxurious restaurants in the shopping center.

    -----

    Subscribe to "What's Eric Eating" on Apple podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts. Hear it Sunday at 9 am on ESPN 97.5.

    Zaranda owners Tracy Vaught, Hugo Ortega, and Sophia Ortega.

    Zaranda restaurant Tracy Vaught Hugo Ortega Sophia Ortega
    Photo by Nick de la Torre

    Zaranda owners Tracy Vaught, Hugo Ortega, and Sophia Ortega are this week's guests.

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