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    Where to brunch on New Year's Day

    Where to eat on New Year's Day: 10 brunch options to ease a hangover

    Eric Sandler
    Dec 31, 2018 | 1:45 pm

    If New Year’s Eve is all about excess, New Year’s Day is more subdued. A day off from work provides people with the opportunity to look back at the year that was, make plans for the year to come, and atone for any excesses the night before.

    New Year’s Day dining is similarly low-key. If the night before is all about multi-course menu and luxury ingredients, brunch on New Year’s Day focuses on familiar flavors that offer a little comfort.

    With that in mind, this New Year’s Day dining guide offers a few suggestion from some of 2018’s new arrivals and a few old favorites. All of them offer tasty options to ease into the new year — plus a little hair of the dog to help ease a hangover. Get fed, take a nap, and then watch Georgia take out its frustrations on the Longhorns; 2019 is going to be alright.

    BCK Kitchen & Cocktails: This Heights restaurant, a sister concept to Bosscat Kitchen, offers diners the opportunity to start the new year with some decadent fare. Options include the sloppy Jose (made with chorizo and topped with a fried egg), an Apple Jacks breakfast fun with cereal milk glaze, and skillet home fries. To drink, opt for a Bloody Mary topped with Flamin’ Hot Cheetos or a build-your-own mimosa with a bottle of sparkling wine and choice of juice.

    FM Kitchen & Bar: In addition to its usual burgers and comfort food fare, chef Ryan Hildebrand’s New Year’s Day menu includes cornbread and brown sugar muffins, house-smoked salmon toast, and Hoppin’ John hash and eggs. Pair them with a cocktail or a craft beer.

    Hungry’s Cafe: The Rice Village institution will serve its full brunch menu on New Year’s Day. Match that crab cake Benedict or smoked salmon avocado toast with a $5 Bloody Mary or half-off carafes of mimosas.

    Jack & Ginger’s: Midtown’s newly opened Irish pub will serve a special New Year’s Day brunch from 10 am to 3 pm. For $15, diners have the option of choosing pub classics like bangers and shepherd’s pie as well as traditional American fare like eggs, bacon, French toast, and chicken fingers. Beverage options include pint-sized mimosas ($5), as well as a Bloody Mary bar and an Irish coffee bar — complete with boozy whipped creams.

    La Calle: Once again, the downtown taco joint will help people ease into the new year with three of Mexico’s most celebrated hangover cures: all-you-can-eat menudo, birria, and pozole for $15.99. La Calle’s next door cantina will feature a variety of drink specials, including mimosa pitchers ($9.99), 32-ounce caguamas ($11.99), and tequila or vodka ($4.99) that can be mixed in with offerings from the Bloody Mary/michelada bar ($3.99).

    Leeland House: This neighborhood spot in EaDo has a number of intriguing options on its New Year’s Day “hangover brunch” menu. Keep things classic with brisket hash, a blt, one of two Benedicts, or shrimp and grits. For those looking for something a little more decadent, chef Jennifer Hoffman offers hangover poutine or French toast with Fruity Pebbles cereal. Vegetarian and vegan options are also available.

    Liberty Kitchen: All three outposts of the Southern-inspired comfort food restaurant will serve brunch on New Year’s Day, which means that staples like fried chicken sliders and the B. Bollinger fried rice (bacon, chopped fried chicken, andouille, vegetables, pineapple, soy, fried eggs) are available to help soothe any aches and pains from the night before.

    The Rustic: The newly opened bar, restaurant, and concert venue will serve its family-style brunch from 10 am to 3 pm. The menu includes Nashville-style hot chicken, avocado toast, French toast, and smoked cheddar grits. Get a little hair of the dog via carafes of mimosas or pitchers of Bloody Marys, bellinis, screwdrivers, or the Ruby Redhouse (Deep Eddy grapefruit vodka with grapefruit juice).

    Sweet Paris Crepêrie: For a more low-key brunch option, consider this French-inspired cafe with four Houston-area locations, including its newly-opened Highland Village flagship. Whether going with a savory breakfast option like Le Mexicain (eggs, queso fresco, refried beans, carnitas), a sweet option with Nutella and fruit, or both — after all, that New Year’s diet can wait until January 2. The Highland Village location’s expanded wine selection means plenty of sparkling options to add an appropriately festive note.

    Weights + Measures: The Midtown restaurant will serve its popular brunch from 10 am to 3 pm. Picking a favorite dish is tricky, but an order of chocolate chip pancakes to share with the entire table seems like a pretty good call. A full selection of beer, wine, and cocktails make the meal a little more festive.

    Start the new year with a crepe at Sweet Paris.

    Sweet Paris Creperie Highland Village interior
    Photo by Shannon O’Hara
    Start the new year with a crepe at Sweet Paris.
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    firing up Montrose

    New Houston seafood restaurant adds live-fire flair to Japanese flavors

    Eric Sandler
    Dec 3, 2025 | 10:02 am
    Casa Kenji restaurant
    Photo by Becca Wright
    Spanish sea bass, scallop crudo, nigiri, bluefin binchotan, and bluefin crudo.

    An ambitious new seafood restaurant is coming to Montrose next week. Casa Kenji will open on Tuesday, December 9.

    Located in the former Andiron space (3201 Allen Pkwy), Casa Kenji is the first Houston project for New Orleans restaurateur Malachi DuPre, a former LSU standout who played briefly in the NFL before establishing Kenji and Kenji Kazoku restaurants in New Orleans. Together with former LSU teammate John “B-John” Ballis and Houston chef Bigler “Biggie” Cruz, Casa Kenji will blend Latin and Japanese influences while also incorporating live-fire elements into the restaurant’s dishes. Cruz, whose resume includes a lengthy stint at Uchi as well as working at critically acclaimed Houston seafood restaurant Golfstrømmen, tells CultureMap that Casa Kenji’s approach is the first time he can be himself in the kitchen.

    “My perfect restaurant was always based on the live fire and sushi combination,” Cruz says. “My mom cooked with wood for my entire life. The live fire creates completely different flavors. The smoky flavors, the sear from the charcoal — they create a different type of memory for me.”

    The use of live fire techniques will permeate Casa Kenji’s menus in ways both big and small. For example, diners will be able to feast on prawns grilled directly on charcoal and served with yuzu chili garlic, or savor lightly seared Japanese wagyu tataki paired with mushrooms. Even raw dishes will benefit from the restaurant’s wood-burning grill and stove.

    “Every vegetable we peel, we make into an ash that’s a topping for the dishes. It adds a different layer of flavor,” Cruz says. Look for it in the scallop aguachile, among others.

    Even vegetables get a smoky component, as in a cabbage dish that’s braised with dashi and soy sauce before being roasted and served with an onion soubise that Cruz says he developed based on techniques he learned from Golfstrømmen chef Christopher Haatuft.

    “It’s rich, super savory, with smoky layers, and you get brightness from the shiso gremolata. I think it will be a signature dish for us,” the chef says.

    One change to the interior is the addition of a six-seat omakase counter that looks into the kitchen. Cruz promises those diners will have an even more elevated experience than the restaurant’s regular menu, including ingredients such as Japanese wagyu and premium fish flown in from Tokyo’s Toyosu fish market.

    Beyond its cuisine, Casa Kenji hopes to stand out with its spacious outdoor patio. Since very few Japanese-inspired restaurants in Houston offer outdoor seating, it should appeal to diners who want a little vitamin D along with their tuna crudo.

    “We’re proud to showcase the craft and creativity that defines Casa Kenji,” co-founders Cruz, Ballis, and DuPre said in a statement. “With chef Bigler Cruz at the helm — blending live-fire technique with the discipline of Japanese tradition — we’re equally honored and excited to share a unique concept that is truly rooted in passion, culture, and community.”

    Casa Kenji will be open for dinner Tuesday through Sunday beginning at 4 pm. Reservations are available on Resy.

    Casa Kenji restaurant

    Photo by Becca Wright

    Spanish sea bass, scallop crudo, nigiri, bluefin binchotan, and bluefin crudo.

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