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    Foodie News

    Uchi is opening another restaurant in Austin with a different concept, a newchef and lower prices

    Sarah Rufca
    Nov 13, 2012 | 12:27 pm
    • Jack Yoss, who recently spent time cooking in Bali, has been tapped to helmUchi's new, more casual concept.
    • Uchi is cooking up a new concept in Austin.
      Uchi Houston/Facebook

    For the first time since 2010, Tyson Cole and the brilliant culinary powers behind Uchi are planning a new restaurant concept.

    There's no name and no confirmed location but director of culinary operations Philip Speer describes the forthcoming Austin restaurant as "something more casual" with a lower price point.

    "It's something Austin's never seen," Speer says, "kinda different and cool."

    Confirming the news, Cole adds that the new restaurant will be a fast-casual Southeast Asian kitchen.

    "It's something Austin's never seen," Speer says, "kinda different and cool."

    At the helm of the new restaurant will be Jack Yoss, a recent addition to the Uchi family. Yoss got his culinary start at Chinois in Las Vegas and caught the attention of owner Wolfgang Puck. Moving to Puck's Postrio restaurant in San Francisco, Yoss rose to chef de cuisine before garnering executive chef stints at NineThirty in Los Angeles and Portland's late Ten 01.

    After traveling around the country and the globe, Yoss has spent the last couple years in the kitchen of the W Retreat & Spa on the Indonesian island of Bali, so he's bringing some of the Southeast Asian flavors he's been playing with into his new job.

    The original Uchi was in 2003, followed by Uchiko in 2010 and Uchi Houston in early 2012. This will be the second new restaurant for Uchi this year, with the company confirming rumors in September that an Uchi Dallas is imminent.

    unspecified
    news/restaurants-bars

    Coffee culture

    Why Yemeni coffeehouses are booming in Houston and across the U.S.

    Associated Press
    May 5, 2026 | 4:30 pm
    coffee and sweet bread, Arwa
    Arwa Coffee
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    Hundreds of years ago, Yemen helped introduce the world to coffee. Lately, the mountainous, war-ravaged country that borders Saudi Arabia and Oman is exporting something else: its coffee culture.

    Yemeni coffeehouses are opening at a rapid pace across the U.S. The number of cafes run by six major chains that serve Yemeni-style drinks grew 50% last year to 136, according to Technomic, a restaurant industry consulting company. The count doesn’t include the many smaller chains and independent cafes serving coffees and teas imported from Yemen.

    Yemeni coffeehouses are meeting the moment for several reasons. They stay open late — sometimes past 3 am, especially during Ramadan — and provide a place to socialize for the growing number of Americans who don’t drink alcohol. Last year, a Gallup poll found that just 54% U.S. adults reported drinking alcohol, the lowest percentage in 90 years.

    “Generally in the Middle East, our nightlife is coffee, right? People hang out at coffee shops, they play cards, they talk. We wanted to bring that here,” said Ahmad Badr, who owns an Arwa Yemeni Coffee franchise in Sunnyvale, California.

    Another reason for the cafes’ popularity is the growing number of Americans of Arab descent. Between 2010 and 2024, the Arab American population in the U.S. rose by 43%, compared to around 10% growth for the U.S. population as a whole, according to the Arab American Institute.

    While most Yemeni coffee shops are in places with high concentrations of Arab Americans, including Texas, Michigan, and California, they’re also opening in locations as diverse as Alpharetta, Georgia; Overland Park, Kansas; and Portland, Maine.

    A taste of home
    Faris Almatrahi is the co-founder and owner of Texas-based Arwa Yemeni Coffee, a chain with 11 cafes across the U.S. and 30 more in development.

    He said an ongoing civil war in Yemen that began in 2014 has prevented Yemeni Americans like himself from visiting their homeland, so he has tried to evoke Yemen in his cafes.

    Arwa locations are painted in natural desert tones, with archways that mimic mosques and lampshades shaped like the hats worn by Yemen’s coffee farmers.

    “One of the ways to actually visit without traveling there was to bring that experience to the U.S., and that was a huge passion for us when we opened our first location,” Almatrahi said. “It was extremely emotional for all of us due to the fact that it really transported us to Yemen."

    But Almatrahi noted that most of his customers aren’t of Arab descent. In fact, Americans of all backgrounds are seeking out new global flavors and authentic experiences, according to market research company Datassential. Food trends are also spreading quickly through social media.

    In addition to Arwa's location in Richmond, the Houston-area is home to a number of other Yemeni coffeehouses, including Qamaria Yemeni Coffee Co., Mazajj Organic Coffee, and Yemex Bakehouse & Specialty Coffee, an only-in-Houston mashup of Yemeni and Mexican flavors.

    Menus vary, but Yemeni cafes generally serve specialties like Adeni tea, a spiced tea similar to chai, and qishr, a traditional drink made from the dried husks of coffee cherries. Familiar drinks like lattes might contain special spices or honey; at Haraz, lattes are sometimes topped with saffron threads.

    Bakery cases might contain khaliat nahal, or Yemeni honeycomb bread, a cheese-filled pastry drizzled with honey, or basboosa, a cake soaked in sugar syrup and often flavored with lemon or rose water. Many Yemeni menus also mix in more typical U.S. coffeeshop fare, like matcha lattes or berry refreshers.

    Choices for coffee lovers
    Peter Giuliano, a researcher with the Specialty Coffee Association, a California-based nonprofit, said culturally specific cafes have been a key growth driver in the U.S. coffee industry for the last few years. In addition to Yemeni cafes, he cited the Latin-style chain Tierra Mia in California and Nguyen Coffee Supply, a New York-based company that roasts Vietnamese beans.

    A customer who visited Badr's shop in Sunnyvale for the first time said an internet search brought her there on a recent weekday. Cindy Donovan said she’s always on the hunt for good coffee and was excited by Yemeni coffees she tried.

    “I think they're much more refined and mellow, and much more full of flavor than a regular cup of dark roast, for instance,” Donovan said. “The cardamom in the drinks is fantastic. Very, very flavorful, rich but not heavy.”

    Most Yemeni coffee is sun-dried, which enhances its flavor and brings out undertones of chocolate and fruit, Almatrahi said. Yemeni cafes often mix coffee with special spice mixes – or hawaij – that may contain cardamon, ginger, cinnamon, cloves, coriander or nutmeg.

    “Our coffee and teas are not just made through a fully automatic machine,” said Mohamed Nasser, the director of operations for Haraz Coffee House. “We have to manually blend and mix our coffee and tea, boil it with water and evaporated milk, make sure that it comes out (with the) perfect taste, perfect color.”

    Yemen's flavorful history
    Coffee has a long history in Yemen. While the plant was likely discovered in Ethiopia, by the 1400s it was being cultivated in Yemen, where monks brewed it to stay awake during prayers, according to the National Coffee Association, a U.S. trade group. Yemen monopolized the coffee trade for around 200 years until Dutch merchants smuggled coffee seeds to Indonesia and began growing plants there.

    Almatrahi said a revitalization of the Yemeni coffee industry over the last two decades, led by coffee companies, foundations and young entrepreneurs, helped make the current U.S. boom possible. Coffee is one of the most promising sectors for economic development in Yemen, where more than 80% of the population lives in poverty, according to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations.

    “We are ambassadors for our culture and our people. So when we open these shops, we want to perform the outreach, to show the hospitality, to show what we have to offer,” Almatrahi said.

    ---

    Stephanie Allmon Merry and Eric Sandler contributed to this story.

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