Riel World

At glowing new Montrose bistro Riel, at once neighborhoody and global, a rising-star chef comes into his own.

Shannon O'Hara
Web 1

“I am able to cook my own food, and make the food I want to make,” says chef Ryan Lachaine, 41. With his new restaurant Riel (1927 Fairview St., 832.831.9109), Lachaine — who worked with the several of the city’s most celebrated chefs in the kitchens of Gravitas, Stella Sola, Reef and Underbelly — now has a place he can call his own. It’s a place where he can prepare the food that has inspired him throughout his life: the French-Canadian food of his childhood, the Ukrainian food prepared by his mother and grandmother, and the food of the Texas Gulf Coast he’s made his home.

Keep Reading Show less
Uncategorized

Mr. Nice Guy

And that’s pronounced 'Neece', as in the French city that inspires the chef-owner of Montrose’s new neighborhood hit, the wonderfully unfussy and accomplished Café Azur.

Shannon O'Hara
For-Web

IMAGINE YOU'RE IN A BEACHFRONT RESTAURANT in Nice, or perhaps a ’70s-era Los Angeles nod to a casual French eatery. The room is light and bright and airy, lots of windows, a bit homey, with clientele an eclectic mix of the well dressed and casual; Joan Didion is sitting next to you hiding behind dark glasses, sipping a champagne cocktail, all the while eyeing the room. The décor, all cool shades of blue putting you in mind of the seaside; a few tastefully selected film posters remind you that it is, indeed, the coast of France. That is the vibe of Chef Sidney Degaine’s recently opened, not-quite-sceney take on French Mediterranean cuisine, Café Azur.

Keep Reading Show less
Uncategorized

The Godfather

In a beautiful new memoir/cookbook, one of the city’s standard-bearers of Italian cuisine — and family tradition — tells all.

Debora Smail
feature-image

A descendant of Sicilians and a member of the city’s largest and most storied intermingling of food families, restaurateur Johnny Carrabba’s culinary journey began in Corleone — yes, that Corleone — and wound its way through his famous uncles’ kitchens and to the heights of Houston’s food scene. His empire grew to more than 250 eateries worldwide, before he came “back home” to his two original Carrabba’s Italian restaurants on Kirby and Voss, plus Grace’s and Mia’s Table, named after his grandmother and daughter respectively — and Common Bond Café and Bakery, which he co-owns. Now, with help from editors Roni Atnipp and Doug Williams, he’s sharing his best stories and recipes in a new book, With Gratitude, Johnny Carrabba, hitting shelves now. The following is an excerpt.

Keep Reading Show less
Business+Innovation