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    where to eat right now

    Where to eat in Houston right now: 11 best patios for socially distanced dining

    Eric Sandler
    Aug 11, 2020 | 3:45 pm

    Houstonians don’t need a weatherman to know it gets hot in August. But you also don’t need to be an epidemiologist to recognize that outdoor dining is preferable to indoor dining during a pandemic.

    Towards that end, the City of Houston has initiated the More Space program that allows restaurants to convert 50 percent of their off-street parking spaces into dining areas. The Phoenix on Westheimer became the city’s first restaurant to submit an application to join the program, and others are jumping on the bandwagon.

    Of course, some restaurants already feature expansive patios and don’t need to opt-in to the program. They’re already adept at outdoor dining.

    Consider this list that includes participants in the program, a couple of stone cold Houston patio classics, and some newer arrivals that diners may not yet be familiar with. All provide a socially distant dining experience, tasty food, and refreshing drinks. For those who aren't ready to dine-in, they also offer to-go.

    Backstreet Cafe
    Hugo Ortega and Tracy Vaught’s River Oaks restaurant offers both a street-facing patio and an inner, open-air courtyard, both of which provide enough shade to be relatively comfortable despite the heat. At dinner, Backstreet offers four different, three-course, $35 Houston Restaurant Weeks menus: dishes paired with white wines, dishes paired with red wines, vegetarian items, and one with signature items like tortilla soup and red corn chicken enchiladas. Beverage director Sean Beck’s extensive wine and cocktail lists ensure customers will find something refreshing to pair with their meals.

    Candente
    This sister concept to Montrose barbecue joint The Pit Room features a massive covered patio with plenty of fans to keep things cool(ish). Standout dishes include classic cheese enchiladas, carnitas with crispy exterior, and the wood grilled fajitas. A frozen margarita is de rigueur at any Tex-Mex restaurant — and Candente serves a good one — or choose a frozen paloma for a refreshing alternative

    La Lucha/Superica
    Expansive oak trees provide plenty of shade at Ford Fry’s twin restaurants in The Heights. Head to La Lucha for its first-rate fried chicken, instant classic Pharmacy burger, and or roasted oysters, or opt for Tex-Mex staples like enchiladas and tacos at Superica. Both restaurants offer plenty of refreshing beverage options to help diners stay cool.

    One Fifth
    Chris Shepherd’s Mediterranean restaurant converted part of its parking lot into the Lexus patio, a fenced-off seating area with a big tent to provide relief from the heat. Picking a favorite from the menu is tricky, but the light flavors seem particularly well suited to Houston’s humidity. Best of all, wines by-the-glass are half-off for patio diners.

    Picos
    For its contribution to the More Space program, the Upper Kirby restaurant has deployed planters around five parking spots to extend its north-facing patio with decking extending from the roof to provide shade. All of which means more socially distanced room to enjoy chef Arnaldo Richards’ cuisine from Mexico’s seven regions, including all of the items on its HRW lunch and dinner menus. Look to the restaurant’s extensive selection of agave spirits for a cocktail to cool things off.

    Pondicheri
    Anita Jaisinghani’s all-day cafe only offers patio seating, and the More Space program allows it to extend those efforts with a raised deck that’s shaded by umbrellas. Feast on dishes from the restaurant’s limited-time-only pepper menu that uses ingredients sourced from Knopp Branch Farm such as the pickled pepper pizza or the fried pepper pakora stuffed with paneer cheese. A pitcher of rum-spiked mango-coconut lassi is just one of the many cooling beverage choices.

    Relish Restaurant & Bar
    An extended awning and ceiling fans keep temperatures pleasant on the Westheimer-facing patio at this River Oaks restaurant. Chef-owner Dustin Teague — hearty congratulations to him and his wife/business parter Addie on the recent birth of their daughter — offers a wide-ranging menu that includes Relish favorites like fried chicken and deviled eggs alongside freshly made pastas, salads, and entrees. A well-priced wine list and classic cocktails complete the experience.

    Rosie Cannonball
    Led by Tastemaker Awards Rising Star Chef of the Year winner Felipe Riccio, the Montrose restaurant recently claimed space from its currently shuttered sister concept Goodnight Charlie’s to create the “Spritz Patio.” The menu includes a selection of shareable items such as arancini, “spreads & breads” such as chicken liver mousse with baguette, and frozen treats for dessert. Beverage options include cocktails, wines by-the-glass, beers, and smoothies.

    Squable
    This Heights establishment features both covered and uncovered outdoor seating. Fresh off a James Beard Award semifinalist nomination for America’s best new restaurant, diners will find the kitchen has recently stepped up the menu with new additions like leg of lamb with spicy harissa and canary melon with tomato consomme. Those who splurge on a $20 Terry’s martini will discover that the staff periodically replaces its glass to keep the drink properly chilled.

    The Toasted Coconut
    Catch a tropical breeze under the palapa at this tiki-inspired from the team behind Nobie’s. The Montrose restaurant’s eclectic menu ranges from dumplings and chickpea curry to a classic, thin patty cheeseburger. Boozy frozen cocktails pour from the bar’s blenders.

    The patio at La Lucha is shaded by trees.

    La Lucha patio
    Photo by Ralph Smith
    The patio at La Lucha is shaded by trees.
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    in like the rose

    Mimo duo open tiny Italian sandwich and gelato shop in Houston's East End

    Eric Sandler
    Apr 29, 2026 | 5:52 pm
    La Rosa Fernando Rios Mike Sammons
    Photo by Eric Sandler
    Chef Fernando Rios and Mike Sammons recently opened La Rosa.

    When sommelier Mike Sammons and chef Fernando Rios teamed up to open their East End Italian restaurant Mimo in 2023, they did so by serving sandwiches that eventually went away once the restaurant moved to only being open for dinner with full service.

    Thankfully, the sandwiches are back at La Rosa, the duo’s new sandwich restaurant that, like Mimo, is located in the East End’s Tlaquepaque Market shopping center. Currently, it’s open Tuesday-Sunday with sandwiches for lunch (12-3 pm) and gelato until the early evening.

    “I have always wanted to do a sandwich shop. That’s always been a weird dream since an experience I had in Italy when I was younger,” Sammons tells CultureMap. “Even back in the days at 13 Celsius, that was a big driver for the mortadella sandwich we still do there.”

    La Rosa’s menu is as compact as its space, which has four indoor tables, a little dining counter, and a couple of outdoor tables. It consists of three sandwiches:

    • Mortadella, with fior di latte, arugula, pesto di pistachio, mostarda, and garlic aioli
    • Formaggio, a vegetarian sandwich with corn and zucchini fritters, arugula, pesto di pistachio, mostarda, and garlic aioli
    • A daily special that, on April 29, was made with bresaola, pecorino, horseradish crema, capers, arugula, and lemon.

    La Rosa Fernando Rios Mike Sammons

    Photo by Eric Sandler

    Chef Fernando Rios and Mike Sammons recently opened La Rosa.

    “We R&D’ed the hell out of them,” Sammons says about the sandwiches. “I can’t tell you how many mortadellas we’ve tasted and how many different kinds of fior di latte. Even the way we do the pesto di pistachio — dry as a bone or super wet with lots of olive oil.”

    Alright, Mike, explain how nerdy you and chef got with the ingredients in the mortadella sandwich.

    “First of all, when it comes to the mortadella, you have to be able to cut it so thinly you can look through it. It has to have a certain integrity and still have bite to it,” he explains. “The fior di latte has to be creamy and snappy. You have to be able to crush it flat so it oozes all over the sandwich. The pesto di pistachio has to have a real presence of raw pistachio.”

    The duo applied a similar discipline to finding the right platform for La Rosa’s sandwiches. Sammons says he and Rios tried all kinds of bread, eventually settling on a telera roll from Houston favorite El Bolillo.

    “It’s more of a vessel. Bread is always the star of a sandwich, but we want the star of the show to be almost a little hidden, like an uncelebrated special guest,” he says. “It’s crisp and crunchy with a toothsome bite that’s light and airy in the middle. It holds everything together but doesn’t dominate.”

    Similarly, they’re sourcing gelato from Houston’s SweetCup Gelato. Sammons says he tried multiple vendors, but Sweet Cup’s lemon sorbet is the one flavor that most reminded him of Italy. In addition to classics like pistachio, chocolate, and strawberry, chef Rios can work with Sweet Cup on flavors that will be exclusive to La Rosa.

    Rios is already rotating the specials. The opening weekend’s meatball sandwich quickly gave way to this week’s bresaola. Diners have plenty to look forward to, including favorites from the old days like Italian beef and chicken parm.

    Sammons has some aspirations, too. He plans to add beer and wine to the current non-alcoholic offerings of soda and sparkling water.

    The little shop has been surprisingly busy, he adds.

    “We sold out Sunday, which was unexpected,” Sammons says. “If we keep doing that, we’ll make more. So far, everyone has been supportive. I’m really excited. I think it’s going to be great.”

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