Showing posts with label midtown. Show all posts
Showing posts with label midtown. Show all posts

Oporto Fooding House & Wine

Thursday, March 17, 2016
On a scale of "Contender to be in Oprah's Book Club" to "I would use this as kindling for a campfire"  -- if I wrote a book about Houston restaurants/bars that have cocktail onions, how do you think it would stack up?

Oporto Fooding House & Wine - a restaurant in Houston, Texas

Never mind.

But speaking of:

martini at Oporto Fooding House & Wine - a restaurant in Houston, Texas

A couple of weeks ago, I got together with my #yogidinnerclub gals Kate, Danielle, Francis, Jill, and Val for some drinks and bites at Oporto Fooding House & Wine, a restaurant located in Houston's midtown area. Oporto Fooding House was created by the same geniuses who brought us the original Oporto Wine Cafe, as well as Queen Vic. Needless to say, I was pretty pumped to try this Houston restaurant out.

This was my first experience dining out in Houston as a vegan, so I called ahead to give them a heads up, and also to make sure I'd be eating more than just a few lettuce leaves that night. The kind woman I spoke with on the phone assured me I was in good hands, and said I absolutely had to order the feijao con fideos, without cheese.

Before ordering a carafe of wine from their WINE ON TAP (don't ever wake me from this dream), I nervously asked if they had cocktail onions.

(I think you know how this story turns out).

(!!!!!!)

SO I was able to enjoy a dry, delicious, blissful, onion-y martini/gimlet at a Houston restaurant!

Oporto's menu is made up of food items that are meant to be shared, so we started off with an order of the daily bread.

bread at Oporto Fooding House & Wine - a restaurant in Houston, Texas

The assorted bread (focaccia, I believe, and another kind of loaf) was fresh and fluffy. The herbed olive oil served with it was silky and fragrant. It was a nice way to start everything off!

Our next order of food was the batatas.

potatoes at Oporto Fooding House & Wine - a restaurant in Houston, Texas

Beautifully golden fingerling potatoes were lightly coated in fresh herbs and course salt, and served with a side of tomato chutney and garlic aioli. The chutney added a nice, bright, contrasting acidity to the potatoes. This was a hearty, tasty, and comforting dish.

If I see shishito peppers on a menu, I have to order them.

shishito peppers at Oporto Fooding House & Wine - a restaurant in Houston, Texas

So shishito peppers it was for our next round of food! Listed as "pimentas" on the menu, the wood-grilled peppers were served with a side of garlic aioli and seasoned with course salt. A squirt of lemon perked them up a little more, and all in all this was a standard, good offering of shishito peppers.

Speaking of things I have to order if they're on the menu....

brussels sprouts at Oporto Fooding House & Wine - a restaurant in Houston, Texas

The restaurant's brussels sprouts were slightly vinegar-y and beautifully caramalized. Once again, this was a standard, delicious offering of a dish, and once again, we weren't disappointed!

The final two food items I indulged in (my friends also ordered some additional meat- and fish- based dishes that they loved) were my favorites of the evening. First up: the charred veggies.

charred vegetables at Oporto Fooding House & Wine - a restaurant in Houston, Texas

Wood-grilled vegetables were tossed in a pistachio romesco sauce and chili oil, and topped off with basil seeds and potato crisps. The dish normally comes with aged goat cheese, but I requested it without, to make it vegan. And it was wonderful. The root vegetables were so meaty and mouthy, I was convinced an oyster mushroom was meat! (it was, in fact, a mushroom). This was another great winter dish, and I was very pleased with the different flavors from the filling, earthy, smokey vegetables in front of me.

The final food item that I tried was what the woman on the phone recommended - the restaurant's feijao con fideos, aka bean stew, without feta.

bean stew at Oporto Fooding House & Wine - a restaurant in Houston, Texas

This piping hot dish was intricate, varied, and FASCINATING. Hearty gigante beans swirled in a mixter of wilted kale, delicate fideo pasta, green olives, garden fresh oregano, and a light almond romesco sauce. The textural contrast of the bursting beans and subtle (and on occasion slightly crisped) noodles was a force to be reckoned with. The sauce was ripe and citrus-y, and it balanced SO well with the base ingredients. I adored this dish!

Oporto Fooding House is a wonderful compliment to Oporto Wine Cafe. And - as evidenced by yours truly - the menu offers a wide variety of different food items that can accommodate even the most tricky of diets. This Portuguese-inspired restaurant and bar is a fantastic spot for great food, great drinks, and a fun night out with friends!

dinner at Oporto Fooding House & Wine - a restaurant in Houston, Texas

Stay tuned to hear more about the future New York Times Best Seller, A Girl and a Cocktail Onion: One Woman's Journey to Finding Pickled Love in Houston.

****(And don't forget! There's still time to enter my contest to win 2 ticket's to this year's Houston Press Menu of Menus® Extravaganza. Details here!)****

Oporto Fooding House & Wine Menu, Reviews, Photos, Location and Info - Zomato

Izakaya

Wednesday, December 9, 2015
I've been grappling back and forth on whether or not I should write this post.

izakaya houston restaurants food japanese 01

Like, lost sleep over it the other night? Is that even normal?

(don't answer that.)

Because you know me, I want to absolutely adore EVERYTHING I eat in Houston, and I like to think that I'm a positive and agreeable person, so generally I do adore everything I eat in Houston. And I really REALLY want to adore new Houston restaurants that everyone else seems to adore, like the recently opened Izakaya in midtown. And while my experience as a whole at Izakaya was not bad, it was a mixed bag. And as a Houston food and restaurant blogger, I suppose I need to take the good with the bad, as well as the inconsistent, so here we go!

One night Jon and I joined our friends Blake, Katie, Ashley, and Mike for dinner at Izakaya. Jon and I got to the restaurant about 30 minutes before our reservation. They asked if we wanted to sit at the bar, and we said if they didn't mind we'd sit at our table and order some drinks and appetizers while we waited inside the restaurant's dimly lit, funky, fun, edgy interior. They said they didn't mind at all.

izakaya houston restaurants food japanese 02

Twenty minutes went by before anyone (with the exception of the super attentive employee who was on his game filling our water) even blinked at us.

Listen, I worked in food service for years so I'm incredibly forgiving. I get that you have off nights, and things can get crazy. But from what we could see, the restaurant wasn't even busy yet, and not one of the several people who walked by our table asked us if we had been helped. Needless to say, it was off to a rough start. Our server finally came over, and Jon and I ordered drinks and food to start with. Jon received his drink, but about 10 minutes went by before someone else came back to tell me the drink I ordered was not in stock.

By that time our friends had all arrived at the restaurant, and our appetizers came shortly after. We did our best to shake off our shaky start. Service can really make or break a restaurant experience. I had heard so many good things that I wanted to have an awesome time though.

izakaya houston restaurants food japanese fish 03
izakaya houston restaurants food japanese edamame 04Fortunately, things did go uphill from there. Izakaya describes its food as "Japanese pub fare," and they encourage sharing small plates between your party. We started off with the fried fish nuggets and Izakaya edamame.

I didn't try the fish nuggets, but my friends weren't over the moon about them. However, the edamame really was something special. Slathered in ginger, green onions, garlic, red pepper flakes, rayu, and ponzu sauce, the edamame was sweet, savory, and incredibly spicy. The dish is certainly not one for the faint of heart, and certainly one that I loved! The many flavored levels made this the most unique and enjoyable edamame dish I've ever had and one of the restaurant's all-stars.

izakaya houston restaurants food japanese seafood 05
izakaya houston restaurants food japanese mushrooms 06

After our first round of food, our server came by and explained the menu to us very extensively. My friends ordered an item from the "raw stuff" menu, while I opted for the king trumpet mushrooms. These came on skewers and were cooked in roasted garlic soy butter and togarashi. The mushrooms were chewy and borderline meaty, and the flavor was light, smokey, and aided by the squirt of some lemon. I did enjoy these 'shrooms, though they did not stand out to me like the edamame did.

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izakaya houston restaurants food japanese beet salad 08

For the next course of food, my friends ordered the Izakaya fries, and I ordered the roasted beets and arugula salad. I tried to eat some of the fries, but I had difficulty getting around the bonito flakes, so I sat that plate out.

The roasted beets and arugula salad was completely innovative because of one standout ingredient. It was composed of chopped beets, fresh arugula, walnuts, toasted pieces of ciabatta, drizzled honey, and - get this - drunken goat cheese ice cream. The cold, icy, goat cheese ice cream was an absolute delight and mixed in beautifully with the salad. I could have used more beets however, and their lack of a substantial presence left me wanting more. Major creativity points for the goat cheese ice cream, but the overall execution of the dish didn't quite come together for me.

izakaya houston restaurants food japanese lamb heart 10

izakaya houston restaurants food japanese mac and cheese 11

The rest of our main course of food consisted of yakisoba, lamb heart tradito, mushroom mac and cheese, and some other non-veg items not pictured. The only vegetarian option from this group was the mushroom mac and cheese, and I absolutely loved it. The creamy Houston Dairy Maids cheese swirled beautifully with the macaroni, crunchy panko bread crumbs, and wonderfully textured seasonal mushrooms. My friends didn't go crazy over the rest of their food, but they tried my mac and also loved the comforting, indulgent, and wonderful dish. I would go back to this Houston spot again and again just for their mac.

izakaya houston restaurants food japanese dessert 12

For dessert we ordered the Elvis in Tokyo and the churros. The Elvis in Tokyo was a bit of a deconstructed dessert consisting of banana almond bread, caramel-peanut butter, berry compote, toasted marshmallow ice cream, and candied bacon. Since I didn't try the bacon or the marshmallow ice cream (not knowing whether or not it was vegetarian), my assessment of the dessert is incomplete. I did think the banana bread was a little on the dry side, but again, it might have come together better if I had eaten all of the components.

I preferred the cinnamon sugar churros served with a side of caramely duce de leche sauce, though I did not think they were anything revolutionary. They were warm, lightly toasted on the outside, and fluffy on the inside. Standard, tasty churros.

izakaya houston restaurants food japanese churros 13

So all in all, my experience at Houston's Izakaya was not a bad one. I just wish I had walked away loving it. The restaurant really hit it out of the park with some of the food, such as the edamame and the mushroom mac and cheese - two dishes worth visiting for. But then other dishes sort of fell flat, or did not meet the expectations I had based on recent rave reviews throughout Houston. While I was very disappointed with the service in the beginning, once we were finally acknowledged, it did improve. So really it was just a bit inconsistent, though I did leave feeling a bit underwhlemed. The good aspects were SO good that I would be willing to give it another run. I just expect highly acclaimed Houston restaurants to be on their game and consistent. Though of course we do all have our off-nights, and I totally get that.

Izakaya Menu, Reviews, Photos, Location and Info - Zomato
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