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    the cookies live on

    Shuttered Houston restaurant's iconic cookies revived with new name

    Eric Sandler
    Jan 20, 2026 | 11:00 am

    Montrose Italian restaurant Paulie’s may have closed in December, but its signature decorated shortbread cookies will live on.

    Baker Zoey Guerrero, who served as the restaurant’s cookie coordinator for the past two years, struck a deal with Paulie’s owner Paul Petronella to continue making the cookies under her own name. As of last week, the treats made by “Paulie’s Cookies” are now being sold as Zoey’s Cookies.

    “I’ve always loved the decorating part of baking,” Guerrero, 22, tells CultureMap. “I really enjoy making the cookies every day. It’s something that makes me happy, especially getting to be part of people’s events and making them happy.”

    “She has done a great job operating the bakery on her own with little oversight,” Petronella says about Guerrero. “She's proven she can keep the consistency without skipping a beat.”

    Zoey’s Cookies will make all of the seasonal Paulie’s cookies designs, using the same recipes and cookie cutters that made them a customer favorite. Guerrero is also making custom cookies for events, celebrations, or whatever other occasion would be enhanced with elaborately-decorated treats.

    “Zoey has no problem working on her own and making her own decisions,” Petronella adds. “ It didn't take long to no longer need my oversight. I had very little input on cookies when Zoey was behind the wheel.”

    Since Zoey’s Cookies doesn’t have a retail presence, people need to order their cookies three days in advance. That gives Guerrero time to bake, decorate, dry, and package the cookies. Currently, customers will need to pick up their orders at Guerrero’s workshop, but she plans to offer delivery for larger orders.

    Over time, Guerrero says she plans to introduce new designs to the seasonal offerings. For example, last fall she added Dia De Los Muertos-inspired sugar skull cookies to the Halloween designs.

    “I want to try some other techniques. Maybe add textures. I try to switch up the designs every season,” she says.

    Petronella notes that Guerrero attended Houston’s well-regarded Culinary Institute Lenotre. She’s capable of making more than decorated cookies.

    “I would encourage guests to challenge her capabilities,” he adds. “At Paulie's she was limited to Paulie's traditions. If you ask nicely maybe she'll branch out to other baked goods.”

    Even better, Guerrero has kept the pricing the same. Cookies start at $3.75 each. Customers can add writing, gold or silver details, and individual packaging for additional fees. To place an order, submit an inquiry via the Zoey’s Cookies website. Guerrero says she’s already hearing from people who want to place orders.

    “It’s been amazing” she says about the response. “This week will be the first week of orders. I have already gotten about 20 different orders and maybe five more on email in only two days. It was not what I was expecting.”

    Zoey's Cookies

    Courtesy of Zoey's Cookies

    Zoey's Cookies sells the decorated shortbread cookies from Paulie's restaurant.

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    Houston's smallest restaurant?

    Michelin-recognized Houston sushi chef fires up 4-seat Japanese skewer spot

    Eric Sandler
    Feb 6, 2026 | 1:40 pm
    Sip & Skewer restaurant
    Courtesy of Sip & Skewer
    Diners sit in front of chefs cooking on a grill.

    The team behind one of Houston’s Michelin-recognized sushi restaurants is opening an intimate new izakaya. Sip & Skewer is the newest concept from Hidden Omakase owner Tuan Tran and chef Marcos Juarez.

    Opening Friday, February 13, Sip & Skewer is a four-seat restaurant devoted to skewered meats that’s located within Sushi by Hidden, the group’s affordable omakase restaurant in Rice Village. At Sip & Skewer, diners sit across from the chefs as they cook a 10-course, $90 meal on a Japanese binchotan grill.

    “Sip & Skewer is small, loud, and intentional. The kind of hidden experience you’d find in Tokyo,” Tran said. “And with Chef Marcos guiding the team at Sushi by Hidden, this space is getting new energy from every angle.”

    A four-seat restaurant within a 10-seat restaurant might seem kind of superfluous, but Tran explains that it’s part of a larger plan for his group of restaurants, which also includes West U. hand roll restaurant Norigami. It also builds on the success of Hidden Omakase, the Galleria-area sushi counter that earned a Recommended designation in the Michelin Guide.

    “Sip & Skewer is part of a larger vision. It’s designed as a stepping stone toward our next concept, Kōri, a new hand roll and craft cocktail bar opening in the Heights. Our plan is to open Sip & Skewer directly next to our hand roll spot, creating a small alley of Japanese concepts that feed into one another,” Tran explains.

    “This allows us to build awareness, train our team in a new format, and introduce guests to Japanese charcoal grilling in a very personal way before we scale the idea into a larger setting with Kōri. The four-seat format keeps overhead extremely low while serving as a live test kitchen and brand builder for what’s coming next,” he adds.

    On a related note, Juarez and the other chefs at Hidden Omakase are dividing their time between all three restaurants. Tuam explains that it’s a deliberate strategy to ensure a consistent customer experience.

    “The same team that works Michelin-recognized omakase service also runs the grill here, which keeps quality and execution consistent while allowing the chefs a creative outlet in a very different format,” Tran said. “Because Sip & Skewer is only four seats and reservations only, it does not require a dedicated full-time staff. It’s an extension of the team rather than a separate operation.”

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