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    on the blok

    Acclaimed West African restaurant set to open first brick and mortar location in Montrose

    Eric Sandler
    Jan 8, 2024 | 12:59 pm

    Montrose residents will soon have the opportunity to get on the block. Acclaimed West African restaurant ChópnBlọk will open its first brick and mortar location on lower Westheimer.

    Work has begun to transform the former Seafood Connection/Roots Bistro space at 507 Westheimer into ChópnBlọk. Founder Ope Amosu tells CultureMap he expects to be serving signature dishes like the Trad bowl and Greens and Tings to diners later this summer.

    Currently a stand at The Post food hall downtown, Amosu started ChópnBlọk as a pop-up. Known for its West African flavors, the restaurant has attracted some substantial media attention, including an appearance on celebrity chef Marcus Samuelsson’s PBS series No Passport Required, an appearance on the Top Chef’s Houston-based season, and a segment on Padma Lakshmi’s Hulu series Taste the Nation.

    Chopnblok restaurant interior rendering
      

    Rendering by Gin Design Group

    The new restaurant will feature West African textiles throughout its interior.

    As Amosu explains, he began looking for a brick and mortar location shortly after opening at the Post. He considered a number of inner loop neighborhoods before deciding on Montrose.

    “I looked at it from a few different perspectives. Who have we seen gravitate to our concept at the Post? We also wanted it to be close enough to support each location,” he says.

    “The neighborhoods we listed out, those are early adopters. Places where people are familiar with us to an extent and willing to come check us out. They really latch onto spaces they believe in.”

    With over 3,000-square-feet, the Westheimer location will be far larger than ChópnBlọk’s stand at The Post, although it will still operate with the elevated style of counter service that Amosu compares to restaurants like Loro and Local Foods. Other than more seating, having more room will allow Amosu to expand the restaurant’s offerings. For the first time, ChópnBlọk will be able to serve cocktails. Specific examples include using a Liberian rum and putting a spin on the Chapman, a gin cocktail that’s popular in Nigeria.

    “Being able to share the story of that beverage, it’s something that’s going to be different,” Amosu says. “There are so many different ways we can go with it that are unique and add to the neighborhood.”

    On the food side, expect a dedicated brunch menu that builds on the pop-ups ChópnBlọk held prior to opening at The Post. Amosu also plans to add more soups and stews.

    “You can do them with fufu like a swallow or with rice,” he says. “We’re very rice heavy with our concept. Being able to have something that can go both ways, I think we can make more of those.”

    Amosu has enlisted a number of collaborators to bring ChópnBlọk to life, including interiors by Gin Design Group (Jun, The Lymbar, etc.), design consultation by AMAO Creative, and construction by Pruitt Structures. The design will preserve the eclectic, market them of The Post location but on a grander scale.

    “I feel like a big part of what people notice of is our creation of storylines with cookbooks and the merchandise we have. The team at AMAO, it’s more experiential. People get their food and sift through all of these things,” Amosu says. “Now that we have a bigger canvas, let’s feature more of the artists of the diaspora and the work they’re doing on our walls. Let’s take the fabrication of the textiles and make sure it’s prominent in the design of our space.”

    Opening a brick and mortar restaurant has been Amosu’s goal since he started hosting pop ups in 2018. Back then, diners could get a refund if they were unhappy with the meal. Now that local acclaim and national attention have made the restaurant a sensation, Amosu is dreaming big about what the future might hold.

    “Even in 2018, my aspirations for this have been further than where we’re at now,” he says. “My vision is multiple locations in multiple cities across the country, but one step at a time. We’ve got to get Post right before we can go on to the next time. I already know there’s going to be so much shit that hits us left and right. We’ve only mastered so much of it.”

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    roll out

    Self-taught chef slices into Houston with high-quality sushi to go

    Eric Sandler
    Jul 17, 2025 | 5:57 pm
    Kaisen Sushi Houston nigiri
    Courtesy of Kaisen Sushi Houston
    Each order of nigiri comes with a house made sushi sauce.

    The ghost kitchen phenomenon may have diminished somewhat since the early days of the Covid-19 pandemic, but the idea of a delivery and to-go-only restaurant still draws talented chefs who want to focus on food at a lower overhead than a traditional brick-and-mortar. One of those chefs is Sunny Bertsch, whose restaurant Kaisen Sushi Houston is already drawing buzz from inner loopers looking for a more affordable, at-home sushi experience.

    Located at the Blodgett Food Hall in Third Ward, Kaisen Sushi serves typical nigiri, maki, and temaki (hand rolls), along with a steak bowl. Prices are a little lower than what someone would find at a typical sushi restaurant, with an eight-piece nigiri set priced at $18.99 when ordered through the Blodgett Food Hall website (expect to pay more if ordering via a third-party delivery service such as Uber Eats or DoorDash).

    While Bertsch’s food may be familiar, his story is not. The diners who’ve rated Kaisen with 4.9 stars on Google may be surprised to learn that he’s only been cooking professionally for two years. As Bertsch tells CultureMap, prior to becoming a professional chef, he worked in fields as varied as aerospace and dog walking.

    “I’d always been interested in cooking,” he says. “I was blessed to be born into a great Korean American family. My dad and my grandparents always cooked great food. I learned by osmosis.”

    Bertsch began his career as a private chef by working for friends. He built his business by catering lunches to powerhouse law firm Vinson & Elkins. Eventually, his clients asked for private sushi dinners, and he had to figure things out.

    “I got an opportunity to do a sushi omakase. It was brutal. It was messy. But I knew once I did that, I wanted to dedicate my life to sushi,” he says. “Since then, I have studied and practiced. I threw a lot of money and time and fish at it.”

    Bertsch improved his speed and knife skills by taking a $13-per-hour job at Japanese grocery store Seiwa Market. While there, he says he made thousands of pieces of nigiri, rolls, and sushi bowls. That experience, along with meals from similar to-go-only concepts in New York and San Francisco, convinced him to open Kaisen as a ghost kitchen.

    “So far, I’ve spent $90,000. That’s more than the average investment for a food hall kitchen,” Bertsch explains. “I’m a clean freak. I’m a technology freak. I’m an authenticity freak. I outfitted my kitchen in the way I thought was necessary for long-term success.”

    Just as he spared no expense in specing out his kitchen, Bertsch puts thoughtful touches into his food, too. For example, every order of nigiri comes with a dipping sauce Bertsch makes himself from low sodium soy sauce, kombu, vinegar, and sake.

    “It’s a complex sauce that’s less salty and tastes good,” he says. “You know when you don’t have it and you’re given cheap soy sauce.”

    Similarly, his California rolls use imitation crab (as do most restaurants), but it’s seasoned with a housemade, Japanese-style kewpie mayo, freshly squeezed lemon juice, and sesame oil for more umami and less sweetness. Since the chef uses more crab mix than other restaurants do in their rolls, Kaisen’s California roll not only tastes better — at $11.99, it’s a better value, too.

    The chef showcases Japanese techniques and Korean influences with his $25 steak bowl. A USDA Choice ribeye or strip is cooked sous vide with a marinade made from garlic, tamari, and seasoning salt. Once a diner orders the entree, the steak is seared in a pan, basted with Kerrygold butter, seasoned with furikake and sesame oil, and served with short-grain sushi rice and microgreens from local farm Zero Point Organics.

    Word of mouth has been building. Even though it’s only been open for a month, Kaisen already has over 2,000 followers on Instagram. Once he’s able to hire a full roster of cooks, Bertsch plans to expand the menu and offer lunch service. Despite some challenges, he’s pleased with the restaurant’s progress.

    “The support I've gotten on social media has blown me away,” he says. “It’s been amazing. I could not have done it without Instagram. It blows my mind.”

    Kaisen Sushi Houston nigiri
      

    Courtesy of Kaisen Sushi Houston

    Each order of nigiri comes with a house made sushi sauce.

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