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  #41  
Old Posted Jul 25, 2022, 8:12 PM
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Brazilian-style pizza chain brings unlimited slices to first Austin location

https://austin.culturemap.com/news/r...pening-austin/

What if we told you you never have to face that last-piece-of-pizza feeling again? At Dallas-born Delucca Gaucho Pizza & Wine, servers operate in a Brazilian rodízo style, bringing slices to anyone who waves them down. (And don’t rush to gatekeep “authentic” pizza; Brazil’s Italian consulate claims 11 percent of Italians outside of Italy.) This Dallas treasure is opening an outpost in Austin on Monday, July 25, in the space that used to belong to Provision Dining House.

Delucca has been open since 2018, now with locations in Southlake, Dallas, Forth Worth, Plano, and, starting today, Austin. Brazilian owners Vanderleia "Dede" Mallmann and Evandro Caregnato have worked to make sure Delucca pizza is made with “traditional Italian processes” even within the Brazilian steakhouse model (the dough is fermented for 36 hours), resulting in some interesting flavor combinations.

“We have always wanted to create a pizzeria that captures the essence of our Brazilian roots while incorporating a high-end and sexy experience," said Mallmann in a press release. "We are grateful for the success we have had within the DFW area and are ecstatic to bring the same experience to the Austin community."

On the five-course prix fixe menu ($24.50 per person, including non-pizza items such as house-made fior di latte mozzarella and Kobe beef meatballs), diners have 18 choices of pizza — served in small slices even though it would still be a herculean effort to try all of them in one sitting. A Mexican elote slice comes with crema and cilantro, and a Turkish lamb slice is topped with sumac onions. A more classic hot sopressata slice is sweetened with honey, and a small selection of dessert pizzas rounds out the bunch (see: the “Romeo and Juliet” with sweet mascarpone and Brazilian guava).

The restaurant also boasts a hefty wine list of all the usual-suspect provenances, plus a few from Argentina. Like the pizzas, the cocktail list spans several cultures while remaining relatively traditional (the Brazilian caipirinha, not uncommon to see at bars in Italy, and the more Canadian maple old fashioned). And again, like the pizzas, there’s always room for boozy desserts.

The 200-person dining room and patio is open from 4:30 pm to 9 pm Sundays through Thursdays, and until 10 pm Fridays and Saturdays, starting July 25, at 4200 W. Braker Ln., Ste. B. Delucca strongly recommends reservations, which can be made at delucca.com.
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  #42  
Old Posted Jul 25, 2022, 8:14 PM
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6 things to know in Austin food right now: Seafood truck hosts splashy grand opening

https://austin.culturemap.com/news/r...grand-opening/

Openings

As promised in June, Austin’s top seafood truck Huckleberry is kicking off its permanent stay at Still Austin Whiskey Co. with a grand opening and two-year anniversary soiree Saturday, July 23. It will be serving regular favorites and “specially curated eats,” plus cocktails from the distillery folks, from 6 pm to 8 pm (so hopefully, the sun will be merciful). There will be live music, giveaways, “and more.” RSVP for the free event on Eventbrite.

Lush rooftop bar Wax Myrtle’s refreshed its summer programming after early season plans charmed diners into asking for more. Passport Vintage will visit the next two Sundays (July 24 and 31) from noon to 4 pm with a vintage and upcycled clothing market. Later on Sundays, sunset yoga classes from 7 pm to 9 pm through August 7 ($30) are sure to give phenomenal views, and come with two green juice cocktails. Reserve on Resy.

Other news

Keep your comfort ice cream close for this less favorable study. Yelp discovered in its data that due to staffing shortages, consumers are waiting 14 percent longer than last year for restaurant reservations, and 40 percent longer than before the pandemic. Austin was one of the cities with the most change, along with other rapidly growing cities such as Birmingham, Alabama; Jacksonville, Florida; Grand Rapids, Michigan; and Lancaster, Pennsylvania.

Austin has been named the No. 8 ice cream city in the United States; a surprise, perhaps, to beachy ice cream shop devotees, but not to anyone who tries to keep up with all the flavors at Amy’s. In fact, of the metrics used in this study by real estate website Home Bay, Austin had the highest variety score. Oddly enough, Austin “ranked No. 1 in Google Trends for banana ice cream.” (Okay, seriously? Just go to Bananarchy). Dallas and Houston made the list of 10 worst cities for ice cream.

Perhaps not the place you’d expect to celebrate National Tequila Day, but Cork & Barrel is hosting a tequila tasting on Sunday, July 24 from 4 pm to 7 pm. With help from Atanasio Tequila, they’re leading visitors through a tasting, including a special Atanasio cocktail made for the holiday. The beautiful Round Rock pub and microbrewery is no stranger to holiday events and brings a Texas twist to whatever it does. Details are snuck into this Instagram story highlight.

Beerburg loves Texas, and uses foraged ingredients from the Lone Star State for its brews. So to quote Lizzo, it’s about damn time the taproom kicks off its own honky tonk nights ($7 for individuals, $10 for couples). The brewery will stay open late on Thursdays for live music and “light snacks” for purchase. Plus, Burg Light beer is now back. Beerburg is a bit of a drive from most of Austin, heading toward Dripping Springs. See a complete event calendar at beerburgbrewing.com.
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  #43  
Old Posted Jul 27, 2022, 12:27 PM
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Pioneering Austin Indian restaurant reopening after year-long closure
https://austin.culturemap.com/news/r...ng-graj-mahal/

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More than a year after announcing its closure, Rainey Street’s impeccably draped Indian restaurant G’raj Mahal has risen. Led by Ben Runkle — founder of high-end butcher shop Salt & Time — under the umbrella of the Present Tense Hospitality brand, a new G’raj Mahal will open in East Austin in late 2022.
It's good to see some of these once popular restaurants reopening. My biggest reopening ask now is for someone to help bring Holy Roller back (hopefully in a bigger space than they had before).
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  #44  
Old Posted Jul 27, 2022, 1:23 PM
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North Austin's 4th Tap Brewing Co-Op files for Chapter 7 bankruptcy

It's a tough time to own a brewery.

Seems like it might be well positioned for someone to pick it up out of bankruptcy. Still have rising rents in that area, but you've got to think traffic will pick up once the rail station/pedestrian crossing goes in there.
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  #45  
Old Posted Jul 27, 2022, 2:28 PM
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I don't know what 4th Tap's space was like -- or their finances -- but generally speaking I'm sure all those breweries are going to have to make a higher-rent transition. They've been some pretty shaggy dogs up till now -- charmingly so, but still. It's probably tme for a universal upping of games. Maybe time for them to have formal dining rooms, bigger operations, maybe some retail, etc.
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  #46  
Old Posted Jul 27, 2022, 2:45 PM
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Originally Posted by We vs us View Post
I don't know what 4th Tap's space was like -- or their finances -- but generally speaking I'm sure all those breweries are going to have to make a higher-rent transition. They've been some pretty shaggy dogs up till now -- charmingly so, but still. It's probably tme for a universal upping of games. Maybe time for them to have formal dining rooms, bigger operations, maybe some retail, etc.
Meanwhile is the blueprint. They did everything right there. What an amazing space and brewery!
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  #47  
Old Posted Jul 27, 2022, 2:47 PM
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Originally Posted by We vs us View Post
I don't know what 4th Tap's space was like -- or their finances -- but generally speaking I'm sure all those breweries are going to have to make a higher-rent transition. They've been some pretty shaggy dogs up till now -- charmingly so, but still. It's probably tme for a universal upping of games. Maybe time for them to have formal dining rooms, bigger operations, maybe some retail, etc.
A lot of breweries have been opening coffee shops in parallel and/or small snacks or food trucks on rotation. It definitely requires some creativity. I make sure to visit the two in Georgetown (Rentsch & Barking Armadillo) as well as the couple by my work on a regular basis to help them out. And get good brews, of course.
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  #48  
Old Posted Jul 27, 2022, 4:37 PM
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One of Austin's top sushi restaurants reopens dining room for first time since pandemic began

https://www.statesman.com/story/ente...d/65382758007/

Popular Japanese restaurant Kome has owned a unique space among Austin’s top restaurants during the pandemic.

The sushi specialists on Airport Boulevard have remained open, but they served guests exclusively via curbside takeout. That model came to an end this week after almost 30 months.

The restaurant that opened in 2011 and moved a few blocks down Airport Boulevard in 2017 is once again welcoming guests into its dining room.

Kome is now open from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Wednesday-Sunday (to 9 p.m. on Friday and Saturday). Staffing challenges have kept the restaurant from being open daily, but a representative for the restaurant said they hope that Kome can move to daily service in August.

A lunch menu is served from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., with a midday menu that does not offer nigiri or sashimi, bridging lunch and dinner service that starts at 5 p.m. Kome is operating as walk-in only, as in the past, though the restaurant plans to soon offer reservations for six or more.

Technology will continue to play a role in Kome’s operations. In addition to optional QR code menus, Kome is also using QR codes for guests to use for signing into the waitlist. For those waiting for that text that their table is ready, a note: Cocktail service is not back up and running yet.
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  #49  
Old Posted Jul 27, 2022, 4:40 PM
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You can now get good sushi at the Austin airport thanks to Sushi-A-Go-Go

https://www.statesman.com/story/ente...o/65383703007/

I'm that dude who usually leaves his house for the airport about 75 minutes before my flight. Dropped off at the airport an hour before flight, and through security about 15 minutes before boarding. Barely time for coffee; no time to eat, and usually no interest.

But with the craziness that has hit air travel in recent months, I've decided to get a little more disciplined. No more taking chances. I recently got through security 90 minutes before my flight. (Turns out it was a breeze, thanks in part to TSA pre-check, but I digress.) I had a lunchtime flight and had skipped breakfast, so I was hungry.

That's when I remembered that ABIA now has a quality sushi option. Yep, sushi at a Texas airport. Sushi-A-Go-Go opened recently in between gates 12 and 13. Longtime Austinites will remember the name of the business, which operated trailers in North and South Austin for several years before the owners opened Kome on Airport Boulevard.

Even though I know and trust the Kome and Sushi-A-Go-Go brands, I harbored the slightest bit of skepticism when placing my order. No need. The Roll Go-Go, with its bbq eel, avocado and cream cheese, was a nice mix of sweet and fatty ($10.99), and the hamachi nigiri was even more of a revelation. For just $8.49, I got a half dozen thick pieces of buttery yellowtail perched atop vinegared rice. Better than any grocery store sushi you'll find around town. Paired with the bright fruit of a Juiceland smoothie, the meal from Sushi-A-Go-Go was the perfect pre-flight lunch (don't be the person who takes fish onto an airplane), and made me think that maybe I could get used to this responsible-airport-arrival-time thing.
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Old Posted Jul 27, 2022, 7:37 PM
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Busy Austin taco bar continues expansion with 2 new locations

https://austin.culturemap.com/news/r...riata-lakeway/

Taco Flats isn’t a place, it’s a state of mind. Here’s proof: On July 25, the Austin taco purveyors announced plans for two new locations, having purchased Riata Bar and Grill in Northwest Austin and Castro’s Bar & BBQ in Lakeway.

The Northwest Austin location will open first on August 5, followed by the Lakeway location in mid-September.

“This Northwest section of the city has dense neighborhoods, tech, fintech and general offices etc. making the area a perfect fit for our neighborhood bar concept,” said Taco Flats founder and owner Simon Madera of the Riata location, in a press release.

The Riata Bar and Grill, located off of 183 near near McNeil Drive, had been in the area since the early 2000s, one of many neighborhood strip mall bars with pool tables and drop ceilings.

Madera continues, “I never thought Lakeway would be an option for future expansion, but the rapid city growth made the decision to go west possible. I feel like the families moving to Lakeway are getting younger, which is a customer demographic that over the last years has embraced the Taco Flats brand.”

Of course, Taco Flats will keep serving tacos, 17 of which are advertised in a long list online. The “original” pairs a somewhat unusual choice of picadillo and American cheese, and even the more standard offerings come with leveled-up ingredients; El Hippie comes with ​house escabeche, and the barbacoa is sprinkled with fried garlic.

The local chain is also expanding the brunch menu for weekends, and full bars at both new locations will make spicy margaritas — and beer and wine on tap — an important part of daily operations. The Riata location expects to serve “routine” customers going about their daily lives where they live and work; in Lakeway, the restaurant will also entertain lake-goers and golfers.
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  #51  
Old Posted Jul 27, 2022, 7:45 PM
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Red River Cultural District looks to book its next leader and expand business

https://www.kut.org/business/2022-07...xpand-business

The nonprofit formed to support music venues around Red River Street is looking for a new executive director after Cody Cowan announced he will leave the job next month.

Nicole Klepadlo has been named interim executive director of the Red River Cultural District during the search for a permanent replacement.

During his seven years at the helm of the RRCD, Cowan helped to extend weekend noise curfews for outdoor venues and ensure a portion of Austin's hotel occupancy tax went to support live music.

Chad Swiatecki covered Cowan's pending departure and reactions from venue owners for the Austin Monitor. Along with hiring a replacement, he says, the RRCD would like to see events like the upcoming Hot Summer Nights and Free Week festivals, which showcase the district during the slower times, become quarterly celebrations.

This conversation has been edited lightly for clarity.

KUT: In your latest article you laid out some of the achievements that have come under Cowan's leadership. Can you remind us of some of that work?

Swiatecki: I think the earliest and biggest one was successfully working with neighborhood groups in the area around the Red River Cultural District to get some later noise curfews on the weekends for the outdoor music venues such as Mohawk, Stubb's, Cheer Up Charlies. That allowed them to have their shows go a little bit later, get some more money in the cash register from drink revenue, that sort of thing. That took a couple of years behind the scenes trying to get that done.

He was also part of the far-reaching group that helped free up some of the city's hotel occupancy tax revenue to direct toward live music efforts. That effort is still kind of getting toward the finish line — or the starting line, however you look at it. But again, another important thing that takes quite a bit of time.

Also, there have been some infrastructure and public works projects that have gone on throughout the district. You know, nothing ever moves quickly in city government, but those have been some things that he and others involved in that group, music venue owners, have helped have managed to get done.

This news broke on Monday and you've spoken to Cowan since then. What is his next move? And what does he see as some big issues facing the cultural district?

He is departing to become the chief operating officer for the National Independent Venue Association, which is a lobbying and trade group for small music and comedy clubs around the country. It was formed shortly after the start of the pandemic, primarily to start lobbying the federal government for aid that led to the Save Our Stages Act and several billion dollars of aid distributed across the country.

Now he's coming in to take over as their first COO and leading the group into what they call the 2.0 version of what comes next. So he'll still be in Austin, but will have some important work nationally.

With regard to what's still on the table to be done, biggies are moving ahead with the Live Music Fund, continuing to work on the hospitality and comfort issues in the Red River Cultural District, public safety, things like that. And there's the ARCH resource center for the homeless right there that creates issues and worries for some people, if not direct issues. But then there's also the larger issue of working around what happens with rising property values and rents for these music venues and trying to keep them stable.

And you know, one person, one organization can't necessarily fight larger macroeconomic forces but you work within the confines and the resources of City Hall and state government to carve out some footholds to keep everything stable.

The group has selected an interim leader to take the reins next month. Can you tell us about who they chose?

Nicole Klepadlo previously worked for the city's economic development department and was in charge of, among other things, what was called Soul-y Austin, which was an effort that kind of rallied and helped organize merchant associations in neighborhoods and communities around the city. So those little pockets where you have kind of a very similar kind of simpatico businesses that can gain more by working together.

During this time of transition, what are you hearing from Red River venue owners?

Obviously, there's praise for what's been accomplished. The fact that the cultural district organization was first formed in 2015, so it's not even 10 years old. But they're going to have to think a little bit bigger and continue to work on lobbying and rallying people together, but also having some business development and thinking larger about business opportunities. The indie music venues that are generally DIY operations may have to become a little bit more sophisticated in terms of how they raise revenue and build their businesses.
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  #52  
Old Posted Jul 28, 2022, 12:13 AM
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Looks like Foxtrot Market may be who is renovating the old building at 1800 S 1st. They're also supposed to be taking over the old cafe in city hall.

https://abc.austintexas.gov/public-s...ertyrsn=219290

"Beyond the first two Austin locations at 1804 S. 1st St. and 2270 Guadalupe St., several more stores are in the pipeline in the next 12 to 18 months, co-founder and CEO Mike LaVitola said."

https://www.bizjournals.com/austin/n...expansion.html
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  #53  
Old Posted Jul 30, 2022, 5:15 AM
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Ramen Tatsu-Ya opening locations in far South Austin and Cedar Park

https://www.statesman.com/story/ente...k/65385563007/

Surprise, far South Austin, you're getting a Ramen Tatsu-Ya.

Signage recently went up in the Oaks at Slaughter development for a location of Austin's most popular ramen brand. The previously unannounced location at 8601 S. Congress Ave., Suite 200, will be the fifth for the brand that started off of Research Boulevard in 2012.

“Hiring has already started and we will be hosting an onsite job fair Monday from 4 to 7 p.m.," Tristan Pearman, Tatsu-Ya vice president of brand and development, told the American-Statesman of the restaurant expected to open later this summer.

Lest those in the northern reaches of the Austin area feel left out on the great noodle brand expansion, Ramen Tatsu-Ya also intends to open a location at Cedar Park's Lakeline Market "before the holiday season," according to a representative for the company.

In addition to the two Ramen Tatsu-Ya locations, the company headed by Ramen Tatsu-Ya co-founder Tatsu Aikawa also plans to open a barbecue-ramen hybrid restaurant in the former Contigo space later this summer in East Austin. The company opened Tiki Tatsu-Ya, a Tiki bar in South Austin, last year.
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  #54  
Old Posted Jul 30, 2022, 5:23 AM
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South Austin neighborhood bistro boasts all-new look, name, chef, and menu

https://austin.culturemap.com/news/r...-look/#slide=0

One of South Austin’s newest neighborhood staples has refreshed, rebranded, and revealed both new leadership and new menus. Goodbye, 1417 Bistro; hello, 1417 French Bistro — because who doesn’t love a bit of added French flare?

Opened by Allison Welsh in July 2021, the Bouldin Creek bistro is an exploration of French-inspired cuisine. Launching the rebranded concept and new menu items on August 1, Welsh welcomes new executive chef Kyle Mulligan (formerly of Salty Sow, Trio at Four Seasons Hotel, Cipollina, and Kemuri Tatsu hya) to the team.

While refocusing to reflect traditional French bistro fare, Mulligan’s new menu will still feature 1417 favorites like the duck confit crepes, with added items such as a hearty jambon sandwich, escargot, French onion soup, and many more starting on August 1. He is particularly excited about the chilled scallop salad, where preserved lemon vinaigrette pairs with the sweetness of the scallops and carrot while bright and slightly bitter greens add a delightful crunch.

The restaurant works with local urban farms Hausbar and Joe’s Organics for microgreens and edible flowers.

Also refreshed on the menu are the pastries, with new items by Amy Moore and a bread program led by Maggie Fleuger. Classic French cocktails also join the already well-curated beverage menu, which will now include a French 75, Sidecar, and Vieux Carre.

But the bistro’s glow-up is not confined to the kitchen: Welsh also updated the interior décor, curating an equal parts elevated and inviting feel for diners with modern artwork, midcentury furniture, and plenty of greenery.

Open weekdays from 4 pm to 10 pm, happy hour is available Monday through Thursday from 4 pm to 6:30 pm. On weekends, the bistro serves brunch between 10 am and 3 pm and reopens for dinner from 5 pm to 11 pm (Saturdays) or 10 pm (Sundays).
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Old Posted Jul 30, 2022, 4:01 PM
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Radio Coffee and Beer opening second location on Montopolis Drive

https://www.statesman.com/story/ente...g/65385987007/

South Austin's Radio Coffee and Beer is one of the town's hottest hangouts. Killer food trucks like taco champ Veracruz All Natural and Thai star Dee Dee and live music like a popular Bluegrass Night series keep folks coming to the cozy spot with the large patio.

The one thing the shop doesn't have is plentiful parking, which owner Jack Wilson hopes won't be a problem when a new spinoff location opens. Radio/East is set to debut some time in 2023, Wilson tells the American-Statesman. It will be located at 3504 Montopolis Drive, an area that's already growing via boozeries like Meanwhile Brewing Co. and Fierce Whiskers Distillery.

The new coffee shop will set up shop in an old house, similar to the original Radio, Wilson says. There will be "endless parking," more outdoor space and an expanded music program, he adds. Partner Trey Hudson will serve as general manager, and the team's adding Nine Mile Records partner Rick Pierik as operating partner.

Wilson, a musician, opened the original Radio Coffee and Beer with his father, Greg Wilson, in 2014 at 4204 Menchaca Road. Radio took cues from Wilson's experience in the coffee and beer scenes of Seattle, serving Pacific Northwest favorite Stumptown Coffee's nitro cold brew on tap. Their beer menu is heavy on local brews from places like St. Elmo and Blue Owl, and Radio serves a full cocktail menu, too.
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Old Posted Jul 30, 2022, 4:09 PM
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New Austin-based service brings city's top chefs into your kitchen

https://austin.culturemap.com/news/r...ervice-tivity/

Life in the restaurant industry is complicated, but Austin does love its chefs.

Zach Knight, an Austin restaurant industry vet of 12 years, was on a gondola in Aspen with his friend Emmie Nostitz when the idea for Tivity was born in 2020. Knight received a call from a client, if he could call them that, asking to be connected with an Austin chef for a private at-home dinner. He had been making those personal connections to keep the restaurant spirit alive during the pandemic, but it wasn’t a business yet.

Nostitz, a creative director in advertising living in New York, saw that call as the signal it was: there was a market for this kind of connection. For the next six months, Knight and Nostitz traded calls and texts full of incidental ideas for an informal product slowly unfolding.

One of Knight's calls included an acknowledgment (that Tivity had to be real) and an invitation (that Nostitz should join, no pressure). Like many New Yorkers ready for a change, Nostitz found herself in Austin for a visit two weeks later, and for a home in 2021.

Tivity has branched out since then — with markets in Austin, Aspen, Denver, San Francisco, Los Angeles, San Diego, and Chicago — but the service is still in a sweet spot between having an established community, and enjoying total freedom within its own system. Most questions about how the service works are met with a question back: “How do you need it to work?”

As of July 2022, there’s a Google form to get things started. It asks about the necessary logistics, and opens up to “vibe.” The text boxes solicit information on the purpose of the event, the desired feel, and the type of guests, but notably, not the name of any chef or restaurant. But pulling from a wide pool of talent that goes beyond catering — former Uchiko sous chef Ben Savage and former Licha’s Cantina chef de cuisine Justin Delgado, to name just two — it’s hard to choose wrong.

“I think one of the best representations of what we do is a dating app. We are a matchmaker for chefs and clients,” says Knight. “We know what the chefs do, we know what the clients want, and we are matchmaking those experiences.”

Like a consultant, Tivity offers an opinion, or at least an idea. The team has noticed patterns early in conversations — clients choosing the same chefs and the same types of plates, again and again — that keep the service unnecessarily restricted.

“They say we want the chicken or the steak, and they don't know how to think outside the box,” says Nostitz, putting that paralysis of choice in sharp focus. “We end up talking to them and offering a Peruvian meal that they never, ever would have thought about.”

One of Tivity’s earliest, most defining meals took place during a more restrictive phase of the pandemic, for a client organizing her husband’s birthday. She requested steak. When she and Knight started planning over the phone, she mentioned that they would usually be in Spain, but couldn’t travel for birthday festivities. Tivity connected the couple with a chef to recreate “the dinner they would have had [in Spain],” who made a Spanish cake that caused the birthday celebrant to shed a tear over dessert.

“Before Uber, having a black car pick you up was getting a chauffeur,” says Knight, “and having a chef in your home was only stuff you saw on TV. We're really trying to bring that down so that it's a common idea.”

They’re succeeding. Tivity can get things started for a custom meal 24 hours after receiving a form, with about a month recommended in advance. Taking into account the huge variability Tivity offers (and the flexibility of pricing necessary to sustain that), a simple buffet-style spread could run a client roughly the same bill per person as most of the lower priced prix fixe menus around Austin on holidays. Meal preps are priced even lower, but for bigger budgets, a plated course dinner is comparable to one at Austin’s top restaurants.

It’s as ready for an exclusive corporate celebration as it is for girls’ night. And hopefully, the duo says, it can make life easier on chefs, too, who suddenly have the chance to get creative and build a brand outside of the kitchen, to make some cash on the side, or even to offset a leisure trip near a far-away client.

Both Knight and Nostitz talk about the life-changing potential of food, for chefs and for everyone else at the table. Why should we be picky about whose table it is?

More information about Tivity, including an in-depth inquiry form and transparent pricing, is available at thetivity.com.
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  #57  
Old Posted Jul 30, 2022, 4:21 PM
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Chi’Lantro Expands, Taco Flats Expands, G’Raj Mahal Preps a Return, Delucca Opens, Épicerie Spotlights Kallas-Lee, Central Market Celebrates Hatch, and More, More, More

https://www.austinchronicle.com/dail...ore-more-more/

Here's some of what's happening in Austin's culinary scene, as wrangled from numerous PR releases, words on the digital street, and even the occasional (verified) IRL eavesdroppings.
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  #58  
Old Posted Aug 3, 2022, 10:35 PM
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Willie's Grill & Icehouse adding a new $2.5M Central Texas restaurant

https://www.mysanantonio.com/food/ar...-Editors-Picks

A Houston-based ice house and restaurant is bringing ice cold beers and burgers to Central Texas this fall. Starting in October, Willie's Grill & Icehouse will begin construction on a new 6,014-square-foot building, according to a Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation department filing.

The new Willie's Grill & Icehouse location will cost and estimated $2.5 million, according to the filing. The restaurant construction will include a new building at an existing shopping center. The building will have an indoor and outdoor eating area and a parking lot with main road access that will have landscape in irrigation, according to the filing.

According to the listing, the restaurant and bar will begin construction on October 15 and is expected to be completed by February 28, 2023. The restaurant will be at 19220 I-35, Kyle, TX 78640.

Willie's Grill & Icehouse opened in Houston back in 1993. The menu is focused on southern Cajun classics, Tex-Mex favorites, and "big old-fashioned burgers." The company also holds fundraisers and different events for the community, according to its website.

There are currently five Willie's Grill & Icehouse locations in the San Antonio area. The closest one to Kyle is currently in New Braunfels. The Kyle location will be the second in the Hill Country area.

MySA reached out to Willie's Grill and Icehouse for a comment on the new location.
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  #59  
Old Posted Aug 4, 2022, 12:30 AM
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There is a Willie's under construction in Pflugerville and an existing one in Georgetown.
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  #60  
Old Posted Aug 4, 2022, 6:07 PM
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Eastside Trailer's Giant Spud Creations Are a Force to Be Reckoned With

The southern fusion cuisine of Anything’s Baked Potato has earned its cult following

https://www.austinchronicle.com/food...reckoned-with/

In the shadows of the Carver Museum and Cultural Center, a building that was originally Austin's first library, the intersection of Angelina and Rosewood has become a veritable cornucopia for Texas restaurateurs, from homegrown mainstays like the Soup Peddler and East Side Pies to the critically acclaimed Discada taco truck and the quickly growing San Antonio vegan chicken sandwich brand Project Pollo. But, without a doubt, the building that sees the most foot traffic from longtime Eastside locals is Anything's Baked Potato. The food truck's decadent Southern fusion cuisine has earned rave reviews and consistent clientele; its owners are now eager to expand after having proven themselves in the food truck and restaurant business.

While Anything's launched in 2019, the concept emerged a few years prior. Daniel "Skip" Thomas had been on his mother's porch, at the house off Rosewood and Salina where he was born and raised, brainstorming business ideas with Anything's co-founder Charles Lee.
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