Restaurant Workers Featured on Cover of New Issue of ‘CityBook’

Restaurant Workers Featured on Cover of New Issue of ‘CityBook’

Gabrielle McTopy

THE WINTER 2021 edition of Houston CityBook will begin arriving on newsstands all over the city today. The cover of the annual Food Issue this year features restaurant-industry survivors as fashion models.


"No other businesses have been hit harder by the ongoing pandemic, here in Houston and all over the country, than restaurants and bars," says CityBook editor Jeff Gremillion. "And the cooks, servers, bartenders, hostesses, dish washers and others who make those businesses run — and make Houston the world-class food town it's become — have been buffeted by a year of setbacks, cutbacks, slowdowns, furloughs, layoffs and terrible uncertainty. It's been brutal.

Home subscriber edition featuring Willie G's Seafood hostess Gabrielle McTopy

Newsstand edition featuring Southern Smoke operations manager Chris Wise

"So we decided to highlight a bit of that grit and grace in the Food Issue by featuring just a few of those workers in our fashion feature, and selecting two of them for the cover," Gremillion adds. "Their personal stories are inspiring and interesting, and they all made excellent models!"

There are two versions of the winter cover. The one for home subscribers touts Willie G's Seafood hostess Gabrielle McTopy in a Michael Kors dress. She persevered through a three-month furlough in the pandemic's early days and is now back at work. "The hope I have for the future — for myself, and for those I love — is what keeps me going," McTopy says.

The cover of the newsstand edition features Chris Wise in a cherry-red suit by Hugo Boss. Wise, a musician as well as hospitality-industry veteran, was a bartender at the Cantina Barba bar until Covid shut it down. He bounced back by joining Southern Smoke, the nonprofit for food and beverage workers in crisis, as operations manager. "Southern Smoke started as a means to an end," Wise tells the magazine, "but soon became a source of purpose."

Other hospitality-business survivors featured in the fashion story inside the magazine include The Oaks bartender Joao Diniz, Le Colonial lead mixologist Alexa Braeswell and Tim Reading, who became a private chef when his exec-chef job at Caracol ended due to Covid. The inside story and covers were photographed by Ashkan Roayaee and styled by Todd Ramos under the direction of CityBook Creative Director Patrick Magee. Edward Sanchez oversaw hair and makeup.

The Food Issue also includes extensive coverage of the latest Houston restaurant news, highlighting the top chefs, hottest trends, tastiest dishes and best places to eat — for dine-in or takeaway — right now.

People + Places
Reyna Group Owner Leads Real Estate Market with Passion and Excellence

MICHELLE REYNA WYMES, a distinguished name in the Houston real estate market, is the owner of the successful boutique brokerage, Reyna Group. Born and raised in Houston, Texas, Michelle has deep-rooted connections to the community she serves with dedication and pride.

Keep Reading Show less

The lobby of White Elephant Palm Beach

COVERED IN VERDANT vines and flanked by tall palm trees, the entrance to the White Elephant Palm Beach feels like passing into a stately home, rather than one of the island’s newest resorts. The building is 101 years old, and while the original footprint and façade remain, the interior has a decidedly updated, ultra-luxe beach vibe.

Keep Reading Show less

Photographer Jhane Hoang with two covers she photographed

ONE OF Houston CityBook’s most beloved photographers was recently diagnosed with stage four cervical cancer. Jhane Hoang has been behind the camera for some of the magazine’s most ambitious shoots — including an overnight shoot at the then-new Weiss Energy Hall at the Houston Museum of Natural Science, and a cold rainy shoot at the Houston Zoo where the crew used a concessions stand as a staging area for hair and makeup.

Keep Reading Show less
Art + Entertainment