Top 10 Foods to Keep In Your Desk

Let’s face it, not everyone eats three square meals a day. We Americans snack, and most of us have boring, sit on your butt all day kind of jobs, and are still too busy to take our lunch breaks. Below are 10 of the best things to stash in your…

Our 5 Favorite Vintage Food Toys

The creator of the Easy Bake Oven, Ronald Howes, passed away today at the age of 83. It seems that he lived a full and happy life, being the inventor of a toy that taught millions of children the joys of baking (and the dangers of touching a heating element,…

Guitar Zero: They’re Making It Up As They Go Along

Oh, you guitar players with your improvising and shit. My musical background is brass. Low brass, which is a section that doesn’t invite a lot of creativity. During marching season, we could usually rely on being the only instruments not required to perform some elaborate footwork, which meant lots of…

Sampler Plate: This Week In Food Blogs

Each week, we put together a sampler plate of the most interesting links from both local and national food blogs. Know a blog we should be paying particular attention to? Leave the address in the comments section below. Zayt and Za’atar: This food blog was just introduced to us last…

Unidentified Man, 29, Bayou Body Count No. 49

No suspects, no motive, one dead body.It’s another typical case for Houston’s boys in blue.Police say that they got a call Monday night concerning gunshots along the 10300 block of Sandpiper, not far from the Brae Burn Country Club in southwest Houston. When officers arrived, they found a dead body…

Minh Dynasty: New Regime at Thiem Hung Bakery

While I wasn’t looking, one of my favorite Vietnamese sandwich shops, Thiem Hung Bakery, was revamped by a new owner. The new guy’s name is Minh, and he worked with the original owners for two years before he took over, so I guess it’s okay. He’s a friendly sort anyway…

Houston Musicians to Record Companies: We Don’t Need You

In the eyes of some Houston musicians, labels are dead. Local bands VerseCity and A dream Asleep seem to think so. Though their musical styles are drastically different – a self-proclaimed rock-soul-pop group and aggressive hardcore-metal band, respectively – the two have a lot in common when it comes to…

Sheriff’s Deputy Arrested For Selling Information

A Harris County Sheriff’s deputy was arrested today and charged with selling criminal information in order to make a little cash.Kurt Douglas Green, 42, of Hockley, worked in the jail and had access to the computers that have National Crime Information Center access. “On Jan. 19, 2010, Green exceeded his…

Chef Chat Part 3: Justin Basye

After visiting Stella Sola and interviewing Chef Justin Basye, we’ve become firm believers in the new Texas-Tuscan joint. There’s definitely a spot for Stella Sola on our list of restaurants to frequent. The kitchen gets the slow-food movement, and the customers are excited about getting fresh, local products from farms…

What About All The Other Missing `80s Sitcom Characters?

As the world desperately waits for word on the whereabouts of missing Growing Pains actor Andrew “Boner” Koenig, Hair Balls asks what about the others?We’re afraid Boner may not be the only casualty of the 1980s sitcom kid character diaspora, and we won’t be able to exhale until all those listed below are…

My Goose Egg Breakfast

A goose egg is quite a bit larger than a chicken egg; it has a much richer flavor, too. British celebrity chef Prue Leith got herself in trouble with the Royal Birdwatchers when she revealed in a magazine interview that she raided a wild Canadian goose nest on her property…

Intercontinental Hotel Houston Gets A Really Wild New Name

News we did not know: The Intercontinental Hotel Houston no longer goes by that name. It is now, officially, the Intercontinental Hotel Houston Near The Galleria.”Our new name better reflects our proximity to the world-class shopping and entertainment found in The Galleria,” general manager Raymond Vermolen told the Hotel Interactive…

Wine of the Week: 2010 Houston Rodeo Wines

The Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo isn’t just about cattle, barbecue and the Jonas Brothers. It’s also about wine. The Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo International Wine Competition started seven years ago with the help of Charles M. Bear Dalton, fine wine buyer for Spec’s. Seventy-five judges, the majority from…

Galveston Smoking Ban Ends Up In Court

They’ve banned smoking in bars and restaurants in Galveston, but the owners of those places aren’t going along quietly.A group of them are suing the city and individual city council members, saying that proper procedure was not followed in passing the ban into law last July.Those who are familiar with…

Serbian Sarma

Last week Robb Walsh wrote about an excellent stuffed cabbage he had at the home of a Bosnian friend, and it led to a semi-lively conversation about the various forms of the dish. While we all know that Houston is a metaphorical mutt — a mixed-breed city — I’m always…

Tales from the Trenches: My Time at The Shack

I worked as a hostess at an unnamed Houston restaurant for several years. The manager was the nicest sociopath I ever met, and the Latino members of the staff called him El Diablo. El Diablo was famous for firing the waiters in fits of rage, then calling them the next…

American Idol: It’s Just the Beginning

It begins: Last night was the first full-on competition episode of American Idol, the one that really looks like American Idol, all blue glitter and crowded stages and live-in-color histrionics. That giant logo on the big screen never stops swirling, and the in-show shout-outs to Coke and AT&T and iTunes…

Stirred and Shaken: The Big Top’s Scorpion Shot

You’d probably have to go somewhere a little more upscale than Shoeshine Charley’s Big Top Lounge (3714 Main, no phone) to get a traditional New Orleans drink like a Sazerac cocktail or a Vieux Carré. But those places don’t have Hustlers Brass Band and free homemade red beans and rice…

Idol Beat: They Shoot Horses, Don’t They?

It begins: Last night was the first full-on competition episode of American Idol, the one that really looks like American Idol, all blue glitter and crowded stages and live-in-color histrionics. That giant logo on the big screen never stops swirling, and the in-show shout-outs to Coke and AT&T and iTunes…

The Subtle Art Of The Baseball Post-Game Show

One of the best things about listening to sports games on the radio is what happens after the game ends. And that’s the post-game talk show that airs on a team’s flagship station. The hosts, for the most part, are knowledgeable about the game and the team they cover. So…

Just When He Thought He Was Out, KIPP Pulls Him Back In

The grand huzzah of Houston school superintendent Terry Grier’s recent reorg announcement — the hiring of a KIPP honcho to over see HISD’s middle schools — seems to have fizzled out.The Houston Chronicle reports that Terence Johnson, a “senior director of leadership” for the charter program KIPP, has reneged on…

Mexican Sandwiches at La Guadalupana

No, it’s not a torta. This is a cemita, a traditional Pueblan sandwich that’s different from the omnipresent torta in several important ways: A cemita traditionally comes with avocado, raw onions, salsa roja, quesillo cheese and your choice of meat – nothing else. A cemita comes on a hamburger-style bun…

Want To Win A “Golden Ticket” For Summerfest?

You know you do. Between today and March 1 (aka Monday), one ticket-buyer per day will be selected at random to have their purchase upgraded to the “Golden Ticket” package, which includes two “Fancy Pants Weekend Passes,” backstage access, food and drink – don’t worry, there will be food and…

Baseball Player Formally Charged With Assaulting Woodlands Man

Two minor-league baseball players charged with assaulting a Woodlands man at a Dallas club on New Year’s Eve turned themselves into authorities February 19, and quickly bonded out.Lance Broadway, a minor-league pitcher in the Toronto Blue Jays organization, and pal Cameron McGuire, of the United League Baseball’s Edinburg Roadrunners, are accused…

The Shameless Chef: Triply Pastafied Cheesplosion

If there’s anyone in the world who should not get up his own ass about what he cooks for lunch, it’s me. And yet I’d been racking my brains for days, trying to think of something to cook for this column, going through old recipes and suggestions from friends, many…

The Street Vendor Blues

One of the best parts of wandering the streets of cities like New York and San Francisco is the jaw-dropping diversity of street food, an industry which has virtually exploded over the past decade. In addition to the regulars, New York now has the popular Schnitzel Truck and Sammy’s Halal,…

While You Weren’t Tweeting: Tigers, Wires and Pairs, Oh My!

What was life like before the Internet? Does anyone really remember, anyway? ‘Cause, you know, some kids’ve been choking the cyberchicken since birth, we hear. Even we fogeys certainly don’t recall much before the Invasion of the Interwebs, but we’ll posit a guess that we were thinner, friendless, ill-informed versions…

A Goose Egg Doesn’t Always Mean Zip

Goose eggs are amazing to look at, interesting to cook with, and very popular just before Easter. (They make quite a canvas for ambitious Easter egg decorators.) When I saw some at the Midtown Farmers’ Market, I had to try them, although at four bucks each, they aren’t likely to…

Inquiring Minds: Henry Rollins Has A Lot To Say. Surprised?

Since his debut in 1981 as Black Flag’s fourth, last and best lead singer, Henry Rollins has been the emissary of intelligent hardcore punk rock and its accompanying ideals. Through his five-year history with the band, from the LPs Damaged to In My Head, he brought an animalistic, poetic spirit…

Local High School Sports Outfitter Getting Bigfooted by Nike

For 17 years B-Bad Sportswear of Houston has been providing uniforms for teams in the Houston school district, employing 22 workers, hustling to replace torn or missing jerseys before games, proud to have made the shirts and shorts worn by state champions.At one time, boss Gerald Taylor tells Hair Balls,…

Snowy Salad Days: My Organic Lettuce Patch

The seeds for these salad greens were planted on November 19 in this raised bed garden in my backyard. The greens were ready to harvest in 90 days, although I gave them a little longer. Last night I clipped the first full-grown leaves from four varieties. I served them with…

Texas Traveler: St. Francis Wolf Sanctuary

North of Houston, outside the small town of Montgomery, there is a house where lobos in limbo live, the St. Francis Wolf Sanctuary. The sanctuary, a non-profit organization staffed entirely by volunteers, aims to provide a permanent home to captive-born wolves and wolf-dog hybrids that are too wild to be…

Bobby Heugel’s Weekly Cocktail: The Vieux Carre

People often ask bartenders what their favorite cocktail is, but a good bartender draw out patrons to find out what they like. Still, if there was ever a time for one cocktail to be noted above others, it would be now – following the Saints’ Super Bowl victory, Mardi Gras,…

Heart Attack Notwithstanding, Tommy Hall Is OK

The mystery of what happened to former Thirteenth Floor Elevators electric-jug player Tommy Hall has been solved. Happily, he seems to be OK, all things considered. George Ripley, who posted that Hall had been hospitalized Wednesday on the Texas ’60s Music Refuge Yahoo! message board, sent Rocks Off an update…

Rid Of Me And Other Great Albums With Truly Hideous Covers

MGMT’s new album, Congratulations, comes out in April! We’re excited. MGMT’s 2008 debut album, Oracular Spectacular, was fantastic, and we can’t wait to hear what they’ve got in store for the follow-up. We’re positive it will be awesome, as those weird-ass kids are only going to get weirder as they…

Chef Chat: Justin Basye Part 2

Yesterday Justin explained the nomination process for the James Beard Awards. Today we discuss changes he has implemented and what he does on his days off from work. Eating Our Words: So four months later, what has changed? Justin Basye: Haha, my responsibilities! Moving from sous to chef de cuisine…

New To DVD Today: The Box and Cirque du Freak

Hitting the shelves today is the DVD version of The Box, starring Cameron Diaz, James Marsden and Frank Langella. The Box is a lesson in reading the fine print. Norma (Diaz) and her husband Arthur (Marsden) seem to have a happy life. They have a nice kid, a nice house…

Where Are We Drinking?

What time is it? Beer thirty. Okay, fine, it’s eight o’clock in the morning. But we’re wishing it was beer thirty. As soon as it is, we’re heading down to the bar with the clock pictured below. Think you know where we’re going? Leave your best guess in the comments…

Pop Rocks: One Of Our Boners Is Missing

Andrew Koenig, who played Mike Seaver’s best friend “Boner” on Growing Pains, went missing last week in Vancouver. His sister, Danielle Koenig, said he was last seen Feb. 14 in Vancouver, where he was visiting friends, Zap2It reports. He was to have flown out Feb. 16 but didn’t make the…

I’m A Salon Inspector, And I Take Cash

The deviousness of the criminal mind is unbounded, as can be seen from the latest alert from the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation.Someone is walking into the hair and nail salons of Houston, announcing himself as a state inspector, and then takes products or demands money for looking the…

Ted Poe Decides He Likes Drunk Drivers After All

Congressman Ted Poe was, for a long time, a Harris County district judge. And he displayed special venom for people convicted of DWI.Once he went to Washington things didn’t change. Here’s part of a floor speech he gave two years ago about a police chief killed by a drunken driver:…

Stopping By La Unica Bakery

We first swung by La Unica Bakery at 4606 N. Main St. on a whim a few weeks ago and were pleased with the springy, buttery choncas we sampled. But there were six other cases of baked goods in the place, and some savory lunch options, so stopped again last…

Hispanics And Texas State Parks, Part Two (The Weird Part)

We asked Texas Parks & Wildlife for more details on the customer survey we wrote about today, and they have come through. And it’s crazy enough to deserve its own post.TPWD provided a power point presentation of the study; scrolling through it we noticed a summary of focus-group research done…

Brown Paper Chocolates and Richard Kaplan

Before Valentine’s Day, I visited some local chocolate makers. Notably absent was Richard Kaplan of Brown Paper Chocolates. Kaplan has been making his rich, high-cocoa chocolate cubes in Houston for some years now. But there weren’t any available in the retail outlets mentioned on the company website. It turns out…

Missouri City’s Z-Ro Facing Another Drug Charge

Joseph Wayne McVey, the rapper the streets know as Z-Ro, is in trouble again. The King of the Ghetto has a trial date next Monday at the Harris County Courthouse for felony drug possession, stemming from a February 2009 Harris County Sheriff’s bust. Police allege that McVey, 33, was in…

Thirteenth Floor Elevators’ Tommy Hall May Be Hospitalized… Or Worse

Earlier this afternoon, Rocks Off’s friend, former colleague and Dirty Honey DJ Brett Koshkin forwarded us a post from the Texas ’60s Music Refuge Yahoo! message board that former Thirteenth Floor Elevators member Tommy Hall, whose warped electric-jug stylings defined the Elevators’ sound as much as front man Roky Erickson’s…

James Earl Wallace, 36, Bayou Body Count No. 48

One gun; two men. Someone was bound to lose. On Sunday afternoon, that was 36-year-old James Earl Wallace. Police say that Wallace showed up at a home along the 7900 block of (possibly appropriately named) Shotwell in northeast Houston, but that the resident told Wallace to shoo. It was not…

Chef Chat: James Beard Nominee Justin Basye

Stella Stola’s opening four months ago in some rough waters. Fast management changes and skeptical critics rocked the grand opening, but then things started to change. Justin Basye came on board as chef de cuisine under Bryan Caswell and brought a positive outlook and solid crew with him. With the…

Game Time: Rockets 2009-10 Season Is Slip-Slidin’ Away

ho·me·o·sta·sis  (hō-‘mē-ō-stā’sĩs) n. The ability or tendency of an organism or cell to maintain internal equilibrium by adjusting its physiological processes.I know some people complain about how long the professional sports regular seasons are. Do we really need 162 Major League Baseball games to decide who goes to the playoffs?…

Fatbutter.com

Despite what you may think, this is not a website warning you about butter. You know about the fat, calories, and clotted arteries. No, this is the website for La Vista Restaurant. And it’s very accurate. Our dining companions had been raving about the dinner they had at the La…

Texas Parks Are Like A Tea Party: White, Old & Cranky

People visiting Texas parks are like a Tea Party convention — they’re white, old and cranky.That’s not quite the spin the Texas Parks & Wildlife Department puts on the results from their latest customer survey, but it seems pretty clear to us.TPWD surveyed 27,000 customers over five years and found…

Midtown Alternatives to Mai’s

Although old Chinatown is a shadow of its former self these days, there are still plenty of good Vietnamese restaurants lurking in shady strip centers, offering the same wonderful bowls of pho and helpings of com dia that they always have. And with Midtown stalwart Mai’s out of commission for…

Meet the Chef Who Made Gordon Ramsay Cry

When chef Albert Roux stopped by our table at his restaurant, Chez Roux in Conroe, I shook his hand. The food was stellar. But it was also a real treat to talk to the legendary chef, since he only visits a few weeks out the year. “I’ve always wanted to…

Debate Over HISD’s Plan To Fire Teachers Goes National

Houston school superintendent Terry Grier’s plan to fire teachers whom he deems unacceptable got some national news time Sunday.ABC News looked at the issue in a piece titled — wait for it — “Houston, We Have A School Problem.” (Fresh!!)It was a pretty straightforward look at things, with Grier and…

A Better Burger

The downtown Spec’s Wine and Spirits (2410 Smith) houses a deli that offers a variety of cold-order sides as well as weekly specials. When we visited, the weekly special was a hamburger. Nadine, my courteous help on the other side of the deli case, began to ask me questions. “What…

The Week in TV: Shatner My Dad Says

I’m confused by curling, ready for spring, and oh yeah: I got engaged. This was the week in TV Land: • There’s a guy out there with a blog called “The Final Season of LOST as Seen by Someone Who Has Never Seen.” I think it’s missing a word at…

Coog Baseball Gets Off To Rough Start

Teams never want to start 0-3 on the season, no matter the sport. And starting 0-3 for the season is definitely not something the Houston Cougars baseball team wanted to do, yet after being swept by Texas State in this season’s opening series, that’s exactly the hole the Cougars find…

Mayday, Mayday: Van Morrison Opens Woodlands’ 2010 Season May 1

This weekend word came from Live Nation that legendary Irish crooner and songwriter Van Morrison will be open the Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion’s 2010 season Thursday, May 1, Van the Man’s first Houston appearance in more than 30 years. According to songkick.com, Morrison first hit Houston in January 1974 for…

Where Are We Eating?

Yes, yes, a thousand times yes. We love the way this pairing is working out already: a jalapeno cheeseburger with Louisiana hot sauce, and a glass of white wine for good measure. This is the way you eat a hamburger, folks — with all caution and rules thrown to the…

Houston Fringe Festival Smackdown

Two of Houston’s alternative performing arts companies are in a bit of struggle – a very quiet struggle, because neither wants to attract attention to a situation they hope can still be handled by lawyers, but a struggle nonetheless. The companies involved are Boo Town and FrenetiCore. At stake? The…

Inside Aggieland with a Corps of Cadets-Inspired Resignation

It’s been about a month since Texas A&M named its new president, following the resignation of Elsa Murano, and some of the heaviest fall out has surrounded the Corps of Cadets. The day after R. Bowen Loftin was given the job in January as the university’s president, Lieutenant General John…

Dave Matthews Band Returns to Houston September 10

Well, there you have it. All Dave’s many fans out there can start counting down to next Friday, when tickets go on sale at 10 a.m. through www.livenation.com, Ticketmaster (apparently that merger is working out) or by phone at 800-745-3000. Everyone else can go about your business. Occasional exceptions like…

This Week in Deliciousness

Welcome back to the weekly roundup here at Eating Our Words, where we’ve finally settled our lawsuit against Beck for heeding his advice to “get crazy with the Cheez Whiz.” Ah, those were crazier, dumber times. We started the week off well enough with the first step on what promises…

Going to Mom 2.0 Summit? Don’t Tweet & Run

For most cities (okay, excluding New Orleans), a whole lot of nothin’ happens during the month of February. The grumpy groundhog usually sees its roly-poly shadow in Pennsylvania, lovers let Hallmark dictate the depth of their affections from Seattle to Sarasota, and impromptu games of hoops sprout up across the…

Openings and Closings

As not only Houston but the entire nation heard earlier this week, Midtown favorite and one of the first Vietnamese restaurants in Houston, Mai’s Restaurant (3403 Milam), burned down on February 15 after a cooking fire started by a wok. We posted photo and video coverage of the fire itself,…

Upcoming Events

Your excuse to indulge in several margaritas in an afternoon is coming — and on a Monday, just when we need it the most. February 22 is National Margarita Day. Who knows why? But, more importantly, who cares? Take the opportunity to try out some of the best margaritas around…

The Top 6 Shittiest PR Moves

In our former life, just about the most obnoxious people that we dealt with on a daily basis were former employees calling and wanting to know why their 401(k) distribution had been taxed even though they were well under 65 years old. Pretty mild, really. And quite boring. In our…

The Top 5 Most Over Used Spices

We bring you our top 5 list of most over used spices to save you from being a victim of over spiced syndrome. We want you to enjoy your food not spit it out. 1. Garlic: Ok, we all love garlic. But, just because the recipe calls for garlic doesn’t…

Felony: It Would Be a Crime Not to Listen

Every Friday, Rocks Off will beam hip-hop artists into our demented, imaginary, incredibly witty, fantasy world of pretend scenarios. We predict it’ll soon be known as a feared interrogation of hip-hop artists, revealing their innermost thoughts and desires. In reality, it’s just a fucking cool Q&A. If you are going…

Late Night Scene: Striking Out

We set out into the night to get some tasty snacks and a few more drinks. We were in the neighborhood of Oporto Cafe and thought a martini and some tapas sounded awesome. The straight-laced waitress informed us the kitchen closed at 10 p.m. It was 10:15 p.m. We even…

Eggs-cellent Tex-Mex Enchiladas

The enchiladas in chile con carne (#46) at Spanish Village on Almeda come in a very meaty chili. I tried an order with two fried eggs on top. Thanks to Kingsley and the many other commenters on the recent post “Dan Jenkin’s Favorite Cheese Enchiladas” for the recommendations. I asked…

Roosevelt Jackson, 23, Bayou Body Count No. 47

A Harris County grand jury will have to decide the fate of a homeowner who claims he killed in order to protect all of his stuff from getting stolen.Police say that Roosevelt Jackson, 23, broke into a home on the 300 block of Blueberry Lane, not far from Independence Heights,…

Growing Tomatoes? Start Eating Bananas!

I went with “Sweet Million” cherry tomatoes this year. I hear these little cluster tomatoes ripen fast and taste like candy. Last time I planted tomatoes, I chose Celebrity, Beefsteak slicing tomatoes and one Brandywine heirloom. And I waited and waited and waited for a tomato to ripen on the…

Pizzeria Taqueria (Por Mis Cazuelas Taqueria)

Pizzeria Taqueria (807 Telephone Road, 713-921-9250) is tucked behind a Jack in the Box, in a nondescript building with a red roof. When we walked in, we felt a little awkward — the only other people there were making out in the middle of the dining area. The menu was…

The Mystery of the 14 Dead Dogs Dumped in North Houston

The American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals is offering to help Houston investigators in the search for whoever dumped 14 dead dogs under a sheet in northeast Houston. KTRK reported Wednesday that the bodies of the dogs, mostly adult shepherd mixes, were found that day near U.S…

Five Spot: Linking Jay-Z To Houston, And Not Through Beyonce

Welcome back to Five Spot. Every Friday, we’ll examine a recent bit of music news and, sometimes awkwardly, tie it to a bit of Houston rap. It’s five videos and occasional cussing. Send tips to introducingliston@gmail.com. Jay-Z is in town Monday. This is huge. Jay is the most commercially, mainstream…

Big Brother Is Watching You Buy Cellophane

Police in the Rio Grande Valley have a new tactic in the war against pot smugglers: staking out office supply stores. In three cases since last November, suspects have been followed after making large purchases of cellophane. Here’s more on the most recent case, from Valleycentral.com. U.S. Immigration & Customs…

iFest Lineup Already Well-Known, Tickets On Sale At 10 a.m.

6:30 p.m. Sunday, April 25, Bud Light World Music Stage In what has become the worst-kept secret since either the end of The Crying Game or last Sunday’s revelation that the Flaming Lips are this year’s Summerfest headliners, the lineup of April’s Houston International Festival has been leaking all over…

Chef Chat, Part 3: Carlos Rodriguez of Vic & Anthony’s

Our interview with Carlos Rodriguez of Vic & Anthony’s revealed how much work has gone into the restaurant’s menu. Rodriguez spent seven months in the test kitchen developing menu items, and a panel of testers including Tilman Fertitta tested each dish. Some recipes we see today on the menu went…

11 Things To Ponder As The Astros Open Spring Training

Pitchers and catchers are reporting to Houston Astros camp today. The first workout is tomorrow. It’s going to be a spring training full of questions for the Astros as management, the media, the players, and the fans try to figure out just what exactly this year’s team is going to…

The Week In Photos

Each week, we take a refreshing dip into the Houston Press Flickr pool to see what our talented photographers have been up to. This past week was a dizzying blur of Mardi Gras, Chinese New Year, Valentine’s Day, the Highland Games, gorgeous weather, crappy weather, cold weather and events galore…

Best. Roommate. Ever.

If we weren’t already comfortably ensconced in a house, with no particular need for a roommate other than the stray cat that comes begging for food every day, we’d have already fired off an e-mail to Chris Smink, the author of what might be the greatest Craigslist roommate posting ever,…

Kiara Martinez, 4, Bayou Body Count No. 46

A little girl is dead. And police say the mother’s boyfriend did it. Jose Herrera-Gomez is in jail, suspected in the death of Kiara Martinez, who died on Valentine’s Day. Martinez was 4-years-old. Police say Martinez had been complaining of stomach pain and then fell unconscious at a home along…

Food Fight: Battle Empanadas

It’s not often that we get so grossed out by a certain food item that we nearly immediately throw it in the garbage, walk away from the entire plate and go off to sulk angrily, our appetites lost for the rest of the day. Unfortunately, that very thing happened during…

Pound Cake From a Box?

True pound cake is a decadent delicacy. A pound each of butter, eggs, sugar and flour — with an underlying hint of citrus, vanilla or even almond, depending on the recipe you use — blended heavily together to create a cake that seems to weigh as much as a small…

Houston’s Latest Mystery Mansion

We’re officially on the brink of obsession. Browsing through the Houston Press Flickr pool this afternoon, we saw that an enigmatically named user called Secret5468 had posted a triptych of photos, all featuring the mystery mansion above. It calls to mind the Winchester Mansion with its rambling and slightly insane…

Health Dept. Roundup: 77021 to 77023

Inspectors had a busy time this past week, particularly in the area we’re headed to next. Normally we try to cover about 10 zip codes, but that would have produced a novel. Instead, if you live, work or eat in zip codes 77021 to 77023, this is your dirty, grimy…

Game Time: Jedi Master Obi Wan Morey Strikes Again

At some point, other NBA general managers are going to just stop taking Daryl Morey’s calls. Nobody enjoys being made a fool of, no one aspires to be the target of an atomic wedgie on the playground, and no one wants to be the Imperial Stormtrooper that gets snowed by…

He Said She Said: Fire In The Earhole!, Part 2

To be honest, She Said can’t really remember the last time she stepped foot inside Mai’s. It was definitely several years ago, before she left Houston and then came back again, and it was probably with this guy, probably after a show. She Said probably had some Thai curry and…

Houston Heavily Honored by James Beard Foundation

If anyone is still under the impression that Houston is trying desperately to play catchup with culinary empires like New York City and Chicago, they only need to look at the 2010 James Beard Award nominations — released today — to see that isn’t the case at all. While most…

The Annual Tomato Crapshoot

No room to grow tomatoes? Buchanan’s Native Plants on 11th St. near Heights Blvd. has this cute tomato kit on sale right now. It will fit on your porch, patio or balcony. They sell you the pot, the dirt, the fertilizer and the cage — then you pick any tomato…

He Said She Said: Fire In The Earhole!

He Said began his week by watching a Houston landmark and one of his favorite restaurants of all-time go up in flames. We covered the Mai’s fire most of Monday morning for Hair Balls, taking pictures of the smoke and flames as they got progressively worse and began engulfing the…

Houston Coffee Scene: Nicholas Lundgaard of Home-Barista.com

Nestled in Houston lies one of the most amazing home coffee-making set-ups in America. Nicholas Lundgaard, a moderator on the ever-famous www.home-barista.com forum, has chosen Houston as his home and brought with him this heavily modified La Marzocco GS3 and a special grinder he imported personally from Italy called an…

More Bakery Case Attractions at Rustika

It took me a long time to notice the jalapeño gefilte fish and the other Mexican-Jewish items on the menu at Rustika Bakery because I was distracted by the bakery display case. I have already written about the amazing dulce de leche-filled alfajores I found here. But wait until you…

Y’all Musta Forgot: Guerilla Maab’s Rise

Houston’s history is dotted with albums that, fairly or not, have been swept aside. We’ll examine them here. Have an album that you think nobody knows about but should? Email sheaserrano@gmail.com. Guerilla Maab Rise (Resurrection Music Group, 1999) Guerilla Maab was a gangsta-rap quartet turned trio turned duo turned trio…

Happy Hour Scene: Mardi Gras Grill

The wheelchair ramp leading to the front door of Mardi Gras Grill was packed with people, waiting to get in the small bar and restaurant on Tuesday evening.The bar was so packed that the options were to wait for a table with the people outside on the ramp, elbow through…

Damien Williams, 19, Bayou Body Count No. 45

Harris County Sheriff’s investigators don’t yet know why it was done or who did it, but they do know the name of the teenager who was shot and killed just north of Kingwood on Tuesday night.Hey, it’s a start.Deputies say that Damien Williams, 19, was in an apartment complex at…

Robb Walsh’s 100 Favorite Houston Dishes: #97

Over the course of the next few months, I’m counting down 100 of my favorite Houston dishes. I chose some because they are such quintessential Houston creations, others for their cultural or historical significance, and others because they are just so damn tasty. Share your own nominations in the comments…

Idol Beat: Houston, We Have a Contestant

Last night’s American Idol was rote even by Idol standards, and it’s because the hour really should have been folded into Tuesday’s episode. Trimming the 46 contestants 24 would have made a solid two-hour ep, but stretched to three it wound up feeling bloated in the first installment and rushed…

Giving up Meat for Lent? Try This

Fat Tuesday is the one of the many days of the year that we use as an excuse to get drunk and party. Sadly, all good things must come to an end, and as we know, Ash Wednesday yesterday marked the beginning of Lent. That’s right folks, put away the…

American Idol: Houston, We Have a Contestant

Last night’s American Idol was rote even by Idol standards, and it’s because the hour really should have been folded into Tuesday’s episode. Trimming the 46 contestants 24 would have made a solid two-hour ep, but stretched to three it wound up feeling bloated in the first installment and rushed…

Catching Up With Tom Franklin, Voice Of the Coogs

Last December, just on the verge of Christmas, the great minds at Clear Channel decided to dump several of the talent and voices heard on 790 KBME and the 740 KTRH sports segments. One of those so unceremoniously dumped was longtime Houston sportscaster Tom Franklin. But Franklin hasn’t entirely left…

How Sinful Are The Vatican’s Favorite Albums?

The Catholic church has released a slightly tongue-in-cheek list of its favorite albums of all time, via the Holy See’s official newspaper L’ Osservatore Romano. When first you hear about it, you might think it would be filled with Christian rock (Hey. Petra. Right?) but no, for whatever reason, the Vatican…

Chef Chat, Part 2: Carlos Rodriguez of Vic & Anthony’s

Yesterday we chatted with Carlos Rodriguez about building Vic & Anthony’s during the past eight years. Today we get personal…and find out about the restaurant’s Vegas location. Eating Our Words: When not at work, where do you take the family? Carlos Rodriguez: I cook a whole lot at home. It…

Pop Rocks: Dear John…Mayer

I’m sorry, but this isn’t working out.I think I speak for bloggers everywhere when I say: we had a great thing going. Every so often you’d tweet something borderline repulsive about farts or Miley Cyrus, and we’d dutifully respond. Usually with some sort of mock indignation about “TMI” and then…

Debutantes Run Wild Gala

Dylan sang about a debutante who just knows what you need, but DiverseWorks knows what you want: a formal-style fund-raiser with a sense of humor. DW’s administrative manager Tracey Morton says Debutantes Run Wild Gala was inspired by the party’s venue, Garden Oaks’s Bell Tower on 34th Street. “Right when…

Romeo and Juliet

Sure, you read it in middle school. Maybe you even saw Claire Danes and Leonardo DiCaprio romp through Baz Luhrmann’s postmodern remake of the greatest love story of all. But according to Christina Keefe, the director of the Theater Program at Rice University, the Romeo and Juliet opening today at…

Ang Lee Retrospective

It’s always fascinating (and informative) to see the early steps of master filmmakers. The great Taiwanese director Ang Lee – Sense and Sensibility (1995), Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (2000) and Brokeback Mountain (2005) – began his career after he studied film at prestigious New York University and labored unemployed for…

Meg Tilly: Gemma

First things first: Do not let the soft-touched, pink-tone picture of a young teen with painted toenails on the cover let you think that Meg Tilly’s Gemma is a novel you should pick up for your 12-year-old. Tilly’s latest book – yes, that Meg Tilly, of The Big Chill -…

Dancing the Dozens

If your mama’s so clumsy she gets tangled up in a cordless telephone, maybe you should bring her to Sandra Organ Dance Company’s 12th annual Black History Month performance, provocatively titled Dancing the Dozens. The endless variety of “your mama” jokes told by African Americans is a source of inspiration…

Connie Willis: Blackout

The past and the future collide in Connie Willis’s adventure novel Blackout. It’s Oxford, 2060, and historians are using time travel to get back to crucial moments in the past, such as the American Civil War, Pearl Harbor and 9/11. A group of university students who have traveled back to…

Musiqa Loft Concert

Jeremy Justeson has chosen five made-for-the-sax ditties – inspired by Barkley L. Hendricks’s portrait exhibition “The Birth of Cool” – to perform at today’s Musiqa Loft Concert at the Contemporary Arts Museum Houston. Justeson, who has appeared with the San Antonio, Dallas and Allentown symphonies, will play songs including Barry…

Ally Carter: Heist Society

Katarina, the teenage protagonist of Ally Carter’s young adult novel Heist Society, has an unusual skill – she’s a master thief. She’s trying to leave her criminal ways behind, but when her father is suspected of stealing an art collection from a mobster, Katarina has just two weeks to discover…

Metropolitan Opera Live in HD: Simon Boccanegra

After 40 years of appearing at the Met, Spanish tenor Placido Domingo makes history performing a role written for a baritone as the lead character in Metropolitan Opera Live in HD: Simon Boccanegra. Broadcast to theaters across the country, this encore screening of the story of a father and his…

Murder on a Sunday Morning

Talk about being in the wrong place at the wrong time. The Academy Award-winning documentary Murder on a Sunday Morning details the story of Brenton Butler, a 15-year-old African American who was accused of murdering an elderly white woman. The evidence against him? He was in the area at the…

“Pennone: The Pole of Soap”

Photographer Paolo Visone’s exhibit “Pennone: The Pole of Soap” documents a rather offbeat competition held annually in Pozzuoli, a small city on the southern coast of Italy. Every August 15, three little flags are attached to the end of a 90-foot-long flagpole that’s been coated in grease and soap. Competitors…

Old Boy

Hitchcock fans will recognize the British director’s influence on Korean filmmaker Chan-wook Park’s Old Boy, a fascinating, twisted tale about an ordinary businessman who is inexplicably captured, drugged and tortured for 15 years. One day, he’s just as inexplicably released, given new clothes and some money. Bent on getting revenge…

Dive!

Here’s the truth: Millions of Americans go hungry every day, and millions of pounds of edible food are thrown away by grocery stores every day. In Dive!, filmmaker Jeremy Seifert tries to reconcile the two. The movie shows Seifert and his friends jumping into supermarket Dumpsters and finding an abundance…

Band of the Irish Guards

So, you’re a trumpet player, and suddenly you find yourself in Kosovo as part of a NATO peacekeeping force. Such is the life of the musician-soldiers in the Band of the Irish Guards. Organized at the turn of the 20th century by command of Queen Victoria, the Guard started out…

Quincy Troupe

Jazz poet and author Quincy Troupe has led a colorful life (translation: there are bits of scandal mixed in with his achievements). The son of Negro League baseball catcher Quincy Trouppe (father and son spell their last names differently), the poet dropped out of Grambling State University as a young…

The Women

If the only version of The Women you’ve seen is the contemporary film starring Meg Ryan, you owe it to yourself to see the Clare Boothe Luce stage version. Set in the 1930s, the play features Crystal, a devious sex kitten bent on snagging herself a husband, even if it’s…

Houston Hispanic Book Festival

You don’t have to read Spanish in order to enjoy the Houston Hispanic Book Festival; organizers promise to have lots of English-language books on hand. Along with Marie Delgado Travis, the featured author for this year’s festival, writers, publishers, printers, bookstore owners and, of course, fans can enjoy an afternoon…

The Sunshine Boys

UpStage Theatre is marking its tenth anniversary with a remounting of its first-ever production, The Sunshine Boys. Actors Robert Lowe and Marc Shellum reprise their roles as Al Lewis and Willy Clark, two warring and aging vaudevillians who, despite their bitter feud, agree to perform their act one last time…

Craig McDonald: Print the Legend

Was it suicide or was it murder? Author Craig McDonald’s mystery Print the Legend takes a look at Ernest Hemingway’s death in 1961. In the book, Hector Lassiter, a crime novelist and friend of Hemingway’s, and Richard Paulson, a professor, confront the famous author’s widow, convinced that she was the…

Aida

Some loves last a lifetime; some last a hundred. In Aida, written by composer Sir Elton John and lyricist Tim Rice, we watch as a statue of Amneris, a female Egyptian pharaoh, comes alive in a modern-day museum and transports us back to ancient times. The Amneris character is about…

Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs

This month’s edition of Movie Under the Moon features the animated film Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs. The story follows inventor Flint Lockwood (voiced by Bill Hader) and weathergirl Sam Sparks (voiced by Anna Faris), who are busy trying to figure out why food is falling from the sky…

Leading Ladies

You’ll have to overlook the hows (which are a bit convoluted) and concentrate on the whats (which are disarmingly funny) in Ken Ludwig’s comedy Leading Ladies. Englishmen Leo and Jack are two Shakespearean actors reduced to performing on the Moose Lodge circuit around the American countryside. By chance they discover…

Lend Me a Tenor

Othello is a big role, but it doesn’t usually require two men to perform it at the same time. In the stage comedy Lend Me a Tenor, Tito, an opera tenor, is set to perform in the role of the mad Moor. But when his wife finds an autograph seeker…

Josie de Guzman

It was Josie de Guzman whom Leonard Bernstein chose to play Maria in the 1980 Broadway revival of West Side Story. Being chosen to sing the lead in a Broadway show is quite an achievement for any young singer; being chosen by the show’s composer is just damn phenomenal. Houston…

Who Is Killing the Great Chefs of Europe?

You can taste the comedy onscreen in Who Is Killing the Great Chefs of Europe? One by one, the best chefs in Europe are being killed. And they’re not just being murdered, mind you, but murdered in a way that represents each one’s most famous dish. (The chef most known…

Camelot

Lyricist Alan Jay Lerner and composer Frederick Loewe, the talents behind the magical musicals Brigadoon and My Fair Lady, also created the romantic Camelot. The story of a love triangle between King Arthur, his beloved Queen Guenevere and the brave knight Sir Lancelot, Camelot features the theater classics “If Ever…

Barry Lynn: Cornered

Author and Financial Times contributor Barry C. Lynn doesn’t have good news in his just released nonfiction book Cornered: The New Monopoly Capitalism and the Economics of Destruction. He says there’s an unprecedented consolidation of power in every sector of the American economy, putting enormous control in the hands of…

Poets and Writers Ball 2010

Inprint’s Poets and Writers Ball 2010 will feature tasty food (care of Elouise “Ouisie” Jones) and bookworm-appropriate entertainment (readings and lectures). The local literary organization is best known for hosting internationally renowned writers, but it also sponsors writers’ workshops, readings for kids and more. The ball brings readings by Alexander…

Cirque Dreams: Illumination

Like the Cirque du Soleil shows they so closely resemble, Neil Goldberg’s Cirque Productions performances are fantastic, multimedia affairs. As Cirque Dreams: Illumination performer David Poznanter tells it, “The company combines European acrobatics with an American Broadway feeling.” Poznanter should know. He spent time in Europe, where he honed his…

Sarahmania Hits Houston

POLITICAL ANIMALS Sarahmania Hits Houston What did we learn? By Richard Connelly Houston was the epicenter of Palinmania recently, as her fans breathlessly awaited her appearances at a Rick Perry rally and some sort of motivational convention. There were many things to take away from the whirlwind visit of the…

Kinky Friedman

In other people’s minds (if not his own), “musician” has slipped a few notches on Kinky Friedman’s résumé in the past few years, beneath “best-selling mystery novelist,” “animal-rights crusader,” “former gubernatorial candidate” and “current Texas Agriculture Commissioner candidate.” After taking a gander at his campaign schedule, stepping off the stump…

You Heard It Here First

You Heard It Here First The Press and Prius: The rest of the world is just getting hip to the Prius and other Toyota issues, yet the Press was reporting it almost a year ago [“Wild Rides,” by Paul Knight, April 23, 2009]. This is why I keep telling folks…

Roky Erickson

He’s baaaaaaaaaack! For the second time in less than a year, one of Texas’s true legends is set to cast his third eye on the Island. When Roky Erickson and his trio of young musicians — including former Butthole Surfer Kyle Ellison on lead guitar — took the Continental Club…

Immigration Costs and Deadly Showers

Dear Mexican, People talk about the costs of illegal immigration on our society. What about the savings? Has there been any research into how much more a meal at a restaurant would cost without Mexicans cooking and washing dishes? What percentage increase would we see with supermarket produce if migrant…

Go Ask Alice

The usual way this column works is Nightfly places a phone call to a bar/nightclub/lounge to find out when the best time to come hang out would be, when it’s most likely there will be a good crowd having a grand time. Saturday nights are almost always best. Friday nights…

Dave Mason

A Rock and Roll Hall of Famer and founding member of fabled English rock band Traffic, Dave Mason has had an amazing career. A widely respected player, songwriter and vocalist, Mason worked with Jimi Hendrix on the Electric Ladyland cut of Bob Dylan’s “All Along the Watchtower.” The years 1967-69…

Texas Sapphires

Nothing validates a honky-tonk band like a packed dance floor, and Austin’s Texas Sapphires absolutely nail the dance-floor thing on sophomore release As He Wanders. Once again the Sapphires deal an Arty Hill song off the bottom of the deck to kick things off in stone-cold honky-tonk style with “Nashville…

Mike Doughty

It’s all too rare to see artists from the ’90s make their way out of that decade with a shred of decorum, let alone alive and working. Former Soul Coughing front man Mike Doughty not only did it breathing, but ended up besting his SC work by using his two…

Dream Girls

In 1991, when Claude-Michel Schönberg and Alain Boublil’s Miss Saigon first wowed Broadway-goers with its epic tale of war-torn Vietnam, the musical won multiple awards. And after almost 20 years, it was a wonderful surprise to discover that Theatre Under the Stars’ revival still feels relevant. The stunning cast, working…

THE VELVET MELVIN’S GRAPEFRUIT DELIGHT

If, for the sake of unholy adventure, you want to check out the Diamond Club — once called the Pink Pussycat, it’s the only “cabaret” in the Greenway area — I recommend warming up across the street at the Velvet Melvin Pub (3303 Richmond, 713-522-6798). Here, the tonic water does…

Lox and Huevos

The gefilte fish appetizer at Rustika Café & Bakery consisted of two of the white fish lumps covered with sautéed tomato and roasted green pepper strips. In the years that I was married to a Jewish woman, I ate quite a few of these, usually at Passover Seders. “Gefilte” is…

Plonk Beer & Wine Bistro

You can hear the passion in Scott Miller’s voice as he describes his new Plonk Beer & Wine Bistro (1214 West 43rd Street, 713-290-1070), which he co-owns with his fiancée Elizabeth Chapman. If he’s passionate about wine, it’s because he was the wine director for Pappas Steakhouse for five years…

Teen Porn 101

Ethan Burnett spent a lot of time alone in his bedroom, and that was before he hit puberty. Being alone for Ethan was okay, because in his room, he was comfortable. At his desk and his chair in the corner of his room, in front of his computer, he was…

Them Bones, Them Bones

: One way to eat bone marrow is with a special marrow spoon, which is long, shallow and thin enough to get inside the bone and scoop out the delectable, juicy and gelatinous marrow. At Haven (2502 Algerian Way, 713-581-6101), a spoon isn’t necessary, since the Akaushi Bone Marrow ($14)…

Get Behind the Mule

If there’s a busier classic-rock guitarist than Warren Haynes, we can’t think of one offhand. Somehow he manages to coordinate his schedule between playing with the Allman Brothers Band, Grateful Dead successors/survivors The Dead, his own blues/jam band Gov’t Mule and scattered solo projects. Haynes reveals the depth of his…

Out of the Past

Martin Scorsese’s Shutter Island, a florid art shocker that Paramount welcomed into the world with the strained enthusiasm of a mutant baby’s parents, begins with U.S. Marshal Teddy Daniels (Leo DiCaprio) seasick, head in the toilet. The film is his prolonged purging, with Daniels coughing up chunks of his backstory…

No Longer Bulletproof

Twelve years and eight albums since moving to Austin from Bend, Oregon, Reckless Kelly front man Willy Braun sounds like he’s had one too many. Interviews, that is. A bit wary in the beginning, after a few minutes Braun warms to the task of promoting the band’s new Yep Roc…

Watching the Detective

Detective stories imply that mysteries can be solved, or at least rationally explained. Even the most debased example is a secular article of faith that also confirms a universe in which guilt is determined and the guilty accorded just deserts. Such are the underpinnings of 34-year-old Romanian filmmaker Corneliu Porumboiu’s…

The Explosives

When they weren’t backing Roky Erickson, the Explosives made their own name as one of Austin’s premier power-pop combos in the late ’70s and early ’80s. La Porte native Freddy “Steady” Krc, Cam King and Waller “Sonny” Collie ran their Texas roots through the Byrds’ chiming psychedelia and the brash…


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