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Meet the Tastemakers

Meet the 9 chefs shaping San Antonio's booming culinary scene

Brandon Watson
Apr 8, 2019 | 12:44 pm

Conventional wisdom goes that Alamo City is on the cusp of being one of the nation’s greatest food cities, but we respectfully disagree. How can a town be at the cusp when the work of the nine nominees for the CultureMap Tastemaker Awards Chef of the Year prove it has long since arrived?

Don't just take our word for it; read on to find out about their innovative contributions to the culinary scene. Or better yet, visit their restaurants to taste for yourself before we crown the winner at our annual awards show and party held April 10 at the Bullock Texas State History Museum in Austin.

Jeff Balfour, Southerleigh Fine Food & Brewery
The affable chef behind one of the most popular Pearl eateries knows his way around Texas cuisine. Raised in Galveston, Jeff Balfour is a whiz with seafood, whether it's oysters served at the outdoor raw bar or the restaurant’s signature fried snapper throats. He’s just adept at dishes from more landlocked areas. A soaring wood-fired quail dish pays homage to the state’s Mexican heritage with queso fresco and pepita mole. Elsewhere, German traditions are honored in a crispy pork schnitzel, made his own with the addition of a wild mushroom spaetzel and luscious brown butter made with famously sweet Lone Star onions.

John Brand, Supper
John Brand’s stylish Hotel Emma restaurant may be named after an evening meal, but its brilliance starts hours ahead. Arguably, the nationally recognized chef has created the best breakfast in San Antonio, keyed to satisfy almost any morning craving. The pancakes are practically weightless, the scrambled eggs a work of sorcery, and the French omelet — a test of any chef’s mettle — is almost impossibly luxuriant with a mantle of mature cheddar cheese. Then, there’s the beignets, stuffed with cheesecake mousse and dabbed with caramelized and sage chutney. There’s no better way to say good morning to Alamo City.

Jason Dady, Range
It’s no easy task to reinvent the chophouse, a type of restaurant concept more known for embracing French stodginess than the vibrant flavors of contemporary global cuisine. Leave it to one of San Antonio’s most cosmopolitan chefs to blow the dust off for good. Instead of waterboarding limp steamed asparagus with hollandaise, Jason Dady serves it charred with a jaunty lemon aioli. Fatty foie gras is held up with a thrill of pickled blueberry. Most impressively, none of that is done while losing sight of the meat. Born and raised in corn-fed Nebraska, Dady knows a good steak when he sees one.

Diego Galicia and Rico Torres, Mixtli
Every 45 days, the dynamic pair behind Mixtli rotates the menu, usually exploring a vast array of Mexican regions and states. In 2019, Diego Galicia and Rico Torres seem to be in celebratory moods. On January 8, the restaurant launched Festivales, a prix fixe devoted to the way indigenous groups ritualize food. What could have been a gimmick is instead a heartfelt homage. Using pre-Hispanic techniques, the chefs arrive at cuisine that’s startlingly contemporary, proving that history doesn’t belong in a museum.

Steve McHugh, Cured
The name of Steve McHugh’s Pearl restaurant certainly references the chef’s obsession with food preservation techniques, ranging from charcuterie like smoked duck ham and porchetta di Testa to pickled goods like cauliflower and chow chow. It also has another meaning. Three years after McHugh was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, the eatery's opening was a way of marking the start of a next chapter. No wonder the cooking inside feels like such a celebration.

Alex Paredes, Carnitas Lonja
Carnitas Lonja isn’t Alex Paredes’ first culinary project — he launched pop-up Gallo/Toro during his stint as Lüke’s sous chef — but it is perhaps his most personal. Drawing from his upbringing in Morelia, Michoacán, he brings the Mexican state’s best-known dish to San Antonio in its purest form. Scandalously marbled pork is confited in lard, wanting nothing but the sweetness of a corn tortilla and perhaps a squeeze of lime. Yes, it can be gilded with a plop of guacamole or a squiggle of green and red sauce, but it astounds when it’s unadorned.

Brooke Smith, The Esquire Tavern
Downtown’s Esquire may be best known as a top cocktail mecca, but under the direction of Brooke Smith, the humblest of bar foods become paeans to the gustatory arts. Take the latchkey kid staple bologna melt. Starting with thickly cut meat, the sandwich amps up the flavor with dijon mustard, pickles, and a creamy aioli. Like the comfort dishes, it’s awash in nostalgia while making sure guests eat like adults.

Andrew Weissman, Signature
Countless trend articles may argue that fine dining is dead, replaced by the jeans and flip-flops insouciance of counter service spots. Signature offers a sharp rebuke. With this “culinary love letter” to San Antonio, Andrew Weissman has created one of the most seductive menus in Texas. The forms are classically European — think black cod in papillote or a salade Lyonnaise reworked as a wedge — invigorated with unexpected ingredients like za’atar labneh, earthy truffles, and Jerusalem artichokes.

Rico Torres and Diego Galicia

Mixtli chefs Diego Galicia and Rico Torres
Photo by Josh Zapata at Design Film Firm
Rico Torres and Diego Galicia
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Healthy grocery chain sprouts new San Antonio location, plus more top stories

Hannah J. Frías
Nov 12, 2022 | 12:00 pm
sprouts market
Photo courtesy of Sprouts Farmers Market

Sprouts Farmers Market has opened a third San Antonio store.

Editor’s note: It’s that time again — time to check in with our top stories. Here are five articles that captured our collective attention over the past seven days.

1. Healthy grocery chain sprouts new location for San Antonio's Far West Side. Sprouts Farmers Market has opened a third San Antonio store, and it's celebrating this weekend with several days of events and promotions.

2. Here are the top 5 things to do in San Antonio this weekend. Magic, live music, and merrymaking are on the Alamo City agenda this weekend.

3. Beat the crowds for a weekday jaunt through Wurstfest. Wurstfest is in full swing again, running from November 4-13.

4. Texas will host CMT Music Awards for the first time ever in 2023. Airing April 2, 2023, the awards ceremony will be hosted in Texas for the first time ever.

5. San Antonio Auto & Truck Show cruises back bigger than ever. The show is only in town this weekend at the Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center.

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Big Bend named 2023 must-see destination, plus more popular San Antonio stories

6 unique ways to savor the arts in San Antonio this November

6 things to know in San Antonio food right now: Fusion sushi spot rolls out new location

Fancy cars

San Antonio Auto & Truck Show cruises back bigger than ever

Katherine Stinson
Nov 11, 2022 | 10:53 am
San Antonio Auto & Truck Show
Photo by Mikie Farias
The San Antonio Auto & Truck Show is the largest showroom in South Texas.

Live your best Top Gear life with the return of the San Antonio Auto & Truck Show, only in town this weekend at the Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center.

The largest showroom in South Texas is back and bigger than ever. Not only will the 2022 San Antonio Auto & Truck Show have a larger assortment of electric vehicles than the show has ever had, but guests can also enjoy a wide array of classic cars, pet adoption opportunities, food trucks, and so much more.

Not a car enthusiast? There's a good chance you'll change your mind after attending the San Antonio Auto & Truck Show, and veterans get in for free on November 11 (which is Veterans Day).

The San Antonio Auto & Truck Show is in town for one weekend only, so don't miss out if you need inspiration on a car-shopping journey. Other nice discounts for the weekend include $6 tickets for kids 6-10 years old and free admission for children 0-5 years old. If military vets can't actually make it on Veterans Day, they can still get a discount ($8 for a day pass) on Saturday and Sunday. Senior citizens also get discounted $8 day passes for whatever day they choose to attend.

If you're wondering what could possibly be more fun than getting a discounted ticket to wander a whole day gazing at a showroom full of luxury automobiles, the show has a surprise for gear-heads and casual car lovers alike. Featuring a drawing every hour during the show, some lucky guests will have the pleasure of taking home one $100 gift card. It may not be a Lamborghini, but hey, it's something, right?

The official San Antonio Auto & Truck Show has been teasing upcoming attractions for this weekend's show experience on their social media channels, previewing the return of old and brand new auto-themed exhibits. One returning kid-friendly exhibit is the History In Motion tour bus. Another familiar weekend event is the Battle of the Bands, in addition to a full slate of incredible cars on display to admire from afar (there will also be opportunities to test drive select cars).

For more information on show hours and tickets, visit saautoshow.com

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Election News

Texas voters re-elect Abbott, Patrick, and more of the same in mid-term election

Teresa Gubbins
Nov 9, 2022 | 10:54 am
greg abbott
Greg Abbott/Instagram

The results of the mid-term election are in.

Texans maintained the status quo in the November 8 mid-term election, re-electing Gov. Greg Abbott, Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, and Attorney General Ken Paxton by similar majorities.

Results of all elections can be found at results.texas-election.com/races.

  • Abbott won by 55.11 percent, with a tally of 4,335,425 votes, while runner-up Beto O'Rourke earned 43.52 percent or 3,424,074 votes.
  • Patrick garnered 54.08 percent or 4,216,864 votes, against Democratic challenger Mike Collier, who earned 43.18 percent with 3,367,033 votes.
  • Paxton trailed with 53.75 percent or 4,178,494 votes, against runner-up Rochelle Mercedes Garza, who got 43.36 percent or 3,371,361 votes.
  • Sid Miller was re-elected Commissioner of Agriculture with 46.63 percent or 4,372,741 votes, versus opponent Susan Hays who earned 43.37 percent or 3,349,247 votes.
  • Wayne Christian was re-elected Railroad Commissioner with 55.7 percent or 4,296,565 votes, beating top contender Luke Warford who scored 40.24 percent or 3,104,474 votes.
In San Antonio, U.S. Representative Henry Cuellar was re-elected, besting Republican challenger Cassy Garcia by 56.6 percent to 43.4 percent.

Austin's race for Mayor will go to a run-off. None of the six candidates earned more than 50 percent, so voters will choose from the two top candidates — former Austin mayor and state senator Kirk Watson and State Rep. Celia Israel — in a runoff election on December 13.

In Dallas, County Judge Clay Jenkins was re-elected, as was District Attorney John Cruezot, who earned 59.36 percent of the vote against challenger Faith Johnson's 40.64 percent. The city also passed Proposition A, which will raise hotel occupancy taxes from 13 to 15 percent, with the funds to be used to renovate Fair Park and the Kay Bailey Hutchison Convention Center.

In Fort Worth, the new Tarrant County Judge replacing Glen Whitley will be Tim O’Hare, a former mayor of Farmers Branch who had the support of Donald Trump; he defeated Democratic candidate Deborah Peoples, who has run for Fort Worth mayor twice.

Houston experienced issues with polling places that did not open on time, or malfunctions that caused delays and temporary closures. A group called Texas Organizing Project successfully petitioned Harris County to extend the voting hours until 8 pm, but the Texas Supreme Court ordered Harris County election officials to separate out any ballots that were cast after hours.

A location at Texas State University in San Marcos also suffered malfunctions with five out of eight machines, causing wait times of four hours or more.

Five cities — Denton, San Marcos, Killeen, Elgin, and Harker Heights — approved propositions to decriminalize low-level possession of marijuana, following the example of Austin, which passed a similar proposition in May.

For the first time, voters were given "no straight ticket" option to vote quickly for all one party or another requiring a click on each individual race — the result of HB25, a law pushed through by Republicans in the Texas Legislature in 2017, which killed the straight ticket option.

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Big Bend named 2023 must-see destination, plus more popular San Antonio stories

6 unique ways to savor the arts in San Antonio this November

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