The Best Conveyor-Belt Sushi, Bold Brunch Cocktails and More of this Week's Food News

The Best Conveyor-Belt Sushi, Bold Brunch Cocktails and More of this Week's Food News

The brunch bread basket at Rumi's Kitchen beckons.

NEW HOT SPOTS in Montrose, a happy-hour shakeup on Post Oak, and supreme sushi offerings are making headlines this week. Read on for more tasty tidbits!


Traveler's Cart

Traveler's Cart (photo by Jenn Duncan)

Traveler’s Cart is now open on Montrose at West Gray, a counter-service-style outfit from the owners of popular Traveler’s Table nearby. The food menu includes street snacks — think falafel bites and butter chicken samosas, and small plates like Thai fried chicken wings and pan-fried lamb dumplings — and main dishes that are sure to fill you up, like an American roadside burger and the more adventurous Peri Peri chicken and Jamaican jerk pork ribs.

Rumi's Kitchen

Boreka at Rumi's Kitchen

Having recently celebrated its one-year anniversary, Rumi’s Kitchen is unveiling a new brunch menu highlighting its signature Persian flavors in unique new dishes. Chef Ali Mesghali is serving a bread basket with Jerusalem bagels, za’atar biscuits and more, plus a stellar take on Shakshuka — and the Iranish Coffee, a spice-sprinkled beverage of Bruichladdich unpeated scotch, nocino, coffee and cream. Sweet tooth? Don’t skip the Dutch Baby Pancake with sour-cherry jam, cream and powdered sugar. Brunch is available on weekends between 11am and 2:30pm.

Kira

Destination sushi spot Kira — a sister restaurant to popular Neo in Montrose — has rolled out a new Sunday-night experience dubbed Bar Kira, a high-energy, music-fueled take on its intimate sushi counter. The menu on Sunday nights (7pm-midnight) includes a lobster roll on housemade milk bread; smoked-fish onigiri with yuzu aioli; and a Spanish-style iberico ham sandwich. The exclusive cocktail list is fun — try the seasonal In Limbo, with brown-butter bourbon, pear, kelp syrup, and lemon and lime.

Kaiten Sushi Ginza Onodera

Chef Akifumi Sakagami

A shopping center on Westheimer near Dairy Ashford has been dubbed West On West (WOW), and is home to several exciting and delicious concepts already beloved in Chinatown and Katy Asiatown, like SomiSomi ice cream and Paris Baguette. The latest restaurant to bow is Kaiten, from Michelin-starred group Sushi Ginza Onodera, who delivers their traditional Japanese fare via conveyor belt. The new Houston location marks Ginza Onodera’s first opening in the U.S. mainland and second international Kaiten Sushi restaurant outside Japan.

il Bracco

il Bracco happy hour

A pair of Post Oak hot spots have debuted new deals, just in time for the holidays! Available daily from 3-6pm, il Bracco and Balboa Surf Club’s new happy-hour menus have yummy bites, cocktails and wines by the glass. Balboa’s seafood-savvy offerings include tostadas with ahi tuna and macadamia nuts, and crispy fish tacos with jalapeno slaw. Meanwhile, il Bracco touts bar snacks — marinated olives, spiced Marcona almonds, housemade chips — for just $3, plus fritto misto, arancini, and more.

Alora

The sadly shuttered Kau Ba, which apparently garnered a Michelin star posthumously, will soon be Alora. Expect preview pop-ups of the new Vietnamese-Peruvian restaurant throughout the holiday season. An example of the fusion fare includes the Shaking Lomo Saltado, a marriage of Vietnamese shaking beef and a popular Peruvian dish.

Medium Rare

Opening any day in Midtown: Medium Rare, offering a single pre-fixe meal of steak frites with artisan bread and a green salad ($31 per person). The concept, born in Washington D.C. in 2011, has expanded all over the U.S., perhaps best known for its secret sauce — and more extensive dessert menu with a specialty sundae and tastily tart key-lime pie and more, which can be tacked on for an additional $12. Vegetarians and vegans can opt for a portobello mushroom entrée.

Food

Michelle Reyna Wymes, Owner of The Reyna Group

WHAT'S THE SECRET to running a successful business? It is so important to stay present every day. With the fast-paced patterns of today’s society and ever-evolving technologies, I stress to our agents how important it is to continue to learn. If one reaches a point at which the ego takes over or burnout sets in and progress takes a back seat, things will get stuck. Regardless of what field you are in, I believe in starting with the basics to set and strengthen your foundation. I treat everyone we work with from our contractors, clients, to our inspectors with respect, patience and care.

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JD Adamson & Tony Gibson, Realtors®️ at Douglas Elliman Real Estate

WHAT IS THE secret to a successful real estate business? Clear communication, reconciling requirements with desires, and preemptively managing expectations are paramount to a win-win deal. There is an art to predicting clients’ wants before they do; deep listening is a key ingredient. Behind-the-scenes efforts often mitigate client anxiety levels more than outward actions — avoid an urge to wear the hustle like a badge. It’s okay to work harder than it appears you do. They don’t have to see you sweat. Keep egos in check and empathy levels high. Make room for openness. Do business with friends and protect their money. The deck is stacked in our client’s favor when objectives are clear and goals are stated. A compromise is not a defeat; it is an elegant solution. Always aim for a win-win deal; if that isn’t viable, you must win.

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