Celebrate NYE at Down House!

Last year was the beginning of a new tradition: Celebrating the new year at Down House! We’re doing it again, and I’d love to have you with us. Stay off the highways, stay in the neighborhood, and have a blast!

This year here’s what we’re doing:

- Amazing four-course paired dinner (menu coming soon!)

- Champagne toast at midnight

- Live DJ playing your favorite songs

- Dancing after dinner!

Tickets are $100 including tax and gratuity, and they’re available HERE and in the restaurant. Fair warning, this will sell out, so get yours as soon as possible!

11/14 – Down House, Eatsie Boys, & 8th Wonder Brewery Beer Dinner

Down House will be hosting Houston’s newest craft brewery 8th Wonder for their first-ever beer dinner!  8th Wonder will be bringing 3-5 beers including previews of their productions brews and special limited release beers brewed for this dinner.

The food will be a collaboration between Chef Matt Marcus of the Eatsie Boys and Chef Benjy Mason of Down House.

Beers included in the dinner:
- Altbier
- Rauchbier
- Vietnamese Coffee Porter
- Pale ale

Menu to be released soon!

Date: Wednesday, Nov 14th
Time: 7:00 pm – 9:30 pm
Location: Down House, 1801 Yale Street, 77008
Brewery: 8th Wonder
Menu: TBA collaboration menu between Matt Marcus of the Eatsie Boys and Benjy Mason of Down House – Featuring New and Never Before Seen Beers from Houston’s Newest Brewery!
Price: $55 including tip and tax
Buy your tickets here!

A Visit to Black Hill Ranch

Felix getting to know a Red Wattle

One of my favorite parts of my job as Chef at Down House is getting to know all of the people who supply us with food. Lots of people like the idea of buying local and want to support it; our producers are people who have actually committed their lives to making that possible. The chance to work with people like this – people who see what they do as a passion first and a job second – is as important to me as the environmental benefits of buying local.

Felix Florez, owner of Black Hill Ranch, is one of these people. Four years ago he saw a need for locally produced meat and changed his whole career path to make that happen. We have been buying his incredible pork since we opened, and he has been an invaluable resource to us as we have grown. Last Monday we snuck out of the kitchen and took a trip out to Katy to visit his farm and find out more about what he is doing, why he is doing it, and what the future holds for Black Hill Ranch.

How it all Began

Felix has been in the service industry his whole life, starting with his first restaurant job at 15, but his move to swine is more recent. “I started raising pigs while I was a sommelier at Brennan’s. I got tired of watching chef’s order shit from out of state, you know? Seriously, I really couldn’t believe it, every time someone was opening something it was from Sonoma, or New Zealand, or Colorado. It was really irritating, there was no reason why it should be that way,” he explained when we arrived at his ranch.

Piglet drinking water

He started with two acres in Cypress and a handful of pigs just under four years ago. Now he has what may be the largest collection of heritage breeds anywhere in the US on a ten-acre farm and a network of small independent growers who raise pigs to his strict all-natural protocols. He processes between 20 to 30 pigs a week for delivery to restaurants in Houston, Austin, New Orleans, and Miami, and is bringing on new accounts constantly.

As if that wasn’t enough to keep one person busy Felix is also launching a new venture – a butchering and distribution company. “Its going to be called TRN, Texas Rancher’s Network, because its just that – it’s going to be a network of all my ranchers. I’m buying their stuff and it’s filtering through me and into the restaurants. You have a lot of guys out there who really want to be using the local stuff, but they can’t because of space or because of butchering know-how. [Through TRN] I’ll do it all and then I’ll sell it to them cryovacced and cut the way they want.” He has already secured a lease on a butcher shop and expects to be selling locally grown pork, lamb, goat, beef, rabbits, and more to restaurants across Texas very soon.

The Heritage Breeds

Heritage Breeds fattening up.

“What you see here right now to you may look like just a bunch of little pigs running around,” says Felix as he gestures to the feeding pens, “but to me what I see is — you won’t see this anywhere else in the entire United States. Nobody has the amount of breeds we have and it’s for a reason. It’s very difficult to keep up with all of it.” He’s referring to the heritage breeds he is raising, which currently include Hereford, Red Wattle, Berkshire, Meishan, Ossabaw, Large Black, Swabian, and Mulefoot pigs, in addition to the more common breeds including Duroc, Iron Age, Blue Butt, Poland China, Yorkshire, and Hampshire. He is also working on his own cross breed, a new pig he is calling Black Hill Swabian.

These are old breeds that have dwindled over time as farmers have focused on pigs that grow quickly and are disease resistant, although these conventional pigs are not necessarily the pigs that taste the best. “Those common breeds, the reason they are common is because they are genetically bred to grow fast and they are also bred to not hold a lot of intramuscular fat. The reason for that is because people decided years ago that fat is bad, you shouldn’t eat fat. So that’s what they did, they bred them in such a way that they were lean,” Felix tells us as we look over his heritage pigs in the final holding pen. The end result of this conventional breeding process is the pork we are all familiar with, the dry, tough and flavorless chops in the shrink wrap at the grocery store.

Many of the heritage breeds only have one or two genetic lines left and raising them presents a host of challenges. These pigs have not been bred for rapid growth or disease resistance, but rather for fat and flavor. When you add in the fact that Black Hill doesn’t automatically medicate all of their pigs like a commercial producer the situation gets even harder. Says Felix, “There’s a reason why the big producers heavily medicate their pigs, because they lose a shit-load of money to mortality rates. The guys in suits say ‘why lose so much money, we’ll just drug the hell out of them so they can’t die. Who cares if that’s what people eat? We’re making money!’” Black Hill takes a much different approach; the pigs are not given medicated feed, growth hormones, or antibiotics.

All of this adds up to more work, more costs, and smaller margins for Felix, “You gotta understand, everything we do costs money. I mean everything, every possible thing costs; labor, materials, gas, all of that, and as you know I don’t charge a lot, so there’s only so much money,” he explains. Other farmers don’t even understand what he is trying to do.  “If other pig farmers were to come out here and look at all these pigs,” laughs Felix, “they would say ‘what the hell is that? What’s that one with them big ole ears? Why the hell would you want a pig that takes two years to grow?’”

But for Felix there is a larger goal, he is a man with a mission. He is dedicated to keeping these rare breeds alive and growing, “If there aren’t enough people doing this, then it’s going to stop. We won’t have these breeds anymore,”

The Black Hill Difference

As anyone who has ever had our pork hash or one of our steaks knows, Felix’s pork is not the like the pork you get at the grocery store. It is succulent, well-marbled, and deliciously… porky. This is partly due to the heritage breeds, but also due to Felix’s all natural diet and free range set up. “In a commercial setting they get [a pig] ready in three months. And that’s from a baby. That’s all growth hormones and antibiotics,” Felix explains as we tour the outdoor breeding pens. Black Hill pigs take anywhere from 10 months for the common varieties to up to 2 years for some of the heritage varieties. The pigs are fed a healthy and non-medicated diet of grains, fruits, and vegetables and they have space to roam around outdoors. The pens are already spacious with grass and shrubs to eat, shelter, and mud to wallow in and Felix is actively building more fences over the 10 acres so the pigs have more room to roam freely.

That difference means more money and less profit, but for Felix it’s worth it. “You obviously aren’t doing this because you make tons of money. You do it because you have a love of doing it and you want to preserve the animals and do things the right way. It should bother people what they feed their kids, the amount of hormones and antibiotics and shit that they are feeding their kids. That’s the main reason for doing all of this.”

Happy as a pig in…

A visit to Augustus Ranch

When we first had the idea for Down House, we had a simple goal to “do everything we do as well as we can.” That manifests itself in a number of ways, and for us one of those ways was sourcing the best products available. Being huge fans of hamburgers, sourcing all-natural Texas beef was one of our first priorities. I never knew how difficult it would be to find it. A little over a year after opening, we had been through several ranchers who offered varying levels of quality, consistency, and price. Finally we found a new company, Augustus Ranch, owned by Dennis and Deedee Kaspar. Located in Yoakum, Texas (about 130 miles west of Houston), they have been a perfect fit for us. After using their products for a few months, Benjy and I decided to take a visit to the ranch itself.

“Lavaca, Dewitt, Jackson, and Gonzalez–these are four of the top twelve counties in cow-calf production in the nation. We’ve got more mama cows in these four counties than most of the United States,” says Dennis.

“Truly all-natural”

The cows raised by Dennis and Deedee are very different than most of the beef produced in the United States. They use a truly all-natural approach that uses absolutely no hormones and no antibiotics. “All-natural” is a phrase you’ll see on packages of beef all over the country, but it’s an unregulated phrase (unlike “organic”), so it can mean a lot of things to a lot of people.

“[A competing rancher’s]  beef, he touts his as being all-natural, and I know for a fact that means no antibiotics in the last 100 days before slaughter. It doesn’t mean never-ever, it just means literally the last 100 days. These cattle [at Augustus Ranch] have never been exposed to any antibiotics.”

Dennis goes on to tell us how a cow of his developed an illness and needed antibiotics. That cow nursed its calf, and because of his strict guidelines for raising an all-natural animal, he had to sell both animals to the commodities market instead of selling them as his own. It’s a process that can work for smaller producers, but one that can be challenging on a larger scale.

“That’s the integrity and the protocol that we’re trying to have here. I’m not so sure that can be done on a large corporate level,” Dennis says.

Dennis tells us that when he and Deedee decided to do truly all-natural beef protocol, they approached fellow ranchers in the area about joining. As a fifth-generation rancher, these were people that Dennis had known all his life. No one jumped on board. These were experienced ranchers that knew the work and the costs associated with raising beef. So I had to ask, is the Augustus Ranch model sustainable, from a business standpoint?

“As far as a sustainable model, just get your fixed costs down. Eventually I might have some friends and producers who can get in on it . . . . The truth is ranchers are very independent-minded people . . . . I have buddies who have no idea how to comprehend or understand what we’re doing here, but I have other guys who are interested. We’ll have to hand-pick and go through that. It’s sustainable with enough cattle on your land over time.”

What’s the difference?

So if this is a model that can work, why don’t other producers get on board? What makes hormones and antibiotics so attractive to other producers, corporate and otherwise?

The answer seems to be, simply, time. “They have steers that are finished in 18 months. It’ll take me closer to 24-26 months,” says Dennis. When you stop and think about what a 25% increase in efficiency can do for a giant beef producer, you start to understand the challenges corporate producers face.

“[Corporate producers] are looking for a quick, easy and efficient solution to an age old problem. To me the problem is stress. Eliminate the stress and you don’t have to deal with any of that. It takes me longer. We all know that time costs money. The all-natural protocol is affected by time more than anything else.

“I’m not going to say that everything in the commercial world is bad. I’m not going to say that. That’s the thing–I still have friends who are taking those trailers and backing them up at the sale barn. I have to be careful what I say, I don’t want to offend them. At the same time, that’s not going to be me. Let’s do something a little different, create our own trend.”

The Agrarian Lifestyle

What impresses me most about what Dennis and Deedee are doing with Augustus Ranch is that they have no illusions about their goals and their integrity. They have a very focused sense of what, why, and how they raise cattle. And they genuinely believe that it’s a better alternative than buying meat the conventional way.

When I ask Dennis why it is they decided to go with the all-natural approach, he doesn’t answer right away. But our conversation travels back and forth, and the more we talk the more I start to understand what really moves him.

Dennis is clearly a savvy businessman, and I pick up a subtle sense that he sees a market that is going unappreciated by his fellow ranchers. But far more importantly, you can also see that there is a genuine care and concern for the agrarian lifestyle and having a genuine respect for the land. These are things I just pick up in snippets of conversation when he refers to the need to keep the agrarian lifestyle alive due to the average age of the Texas rancher–“about 66 or 67 years old,”–or the way they keep their land: “If you notice, it looks a little wild. When you [create a monoculture] you’re not helping your wildlife population, your songbirds.” Or how he works his cattle, “on horseback.”

After our ride around (in Dennis’s truck, not horseback this time), we head to the house for some lunch–brisket, potatoes, salad, lemonade. Delicious. And then it’s time to go home. On the way back to Houston, and in the days since, I have thought a lot about Dennis and Deedee and their goals for Augustus Ranch. It’s good to work with people who love what they do.

Chris Cusack, September 2012

Opening at 9 a.m. beginning 9/24

It’s true. We will be opening at 9 a.m. daily starting this Monday, September 24!

It wasn’t an easy decision for us to make, because we see our long hours as a service to the community. But when we balanced the strain on our little restaurant’s resources, the affect on our employees, and the addition of new (and awesome!) coffee shops in the neighborhood, we felt it was time for us to focus on what we could do best.

We hope this change will allow us to focus more on the things that we really care about. And we hope you’ll see the benefit of our focus in your experience moving forward.

It’s hard to make changes. There’s a fear of disappointing our guests and a a fear of being seen as “inconsistent” to begin with. But we really believe this is a change that will ultimately result in an improved experience for all our guests–and that will always be our goal.

As always, we welcome your feedback. Please e-mail chris (at) downhousehouston.com with any thoughts. Thanks!

Join us for our tequila dinner on September 9!

Join Down House for a very special Tequila Tasting Dinner featuring  the artisanal small batch tequila Siembra Azul.  The brand’s founder David Suro-Pinero, agave advocate and founder of the Tequila Interchange Project, will talk about each tequila being served and the traditional methods employed to grow, harvest and distill the spirit.

SUNDAY, SEPT. 9, 7pm – 9:30pm

FORMAT:  3-course Dinner with Cocktails made with Siembra Azul Tequila, with ½ ounce tasting of each base spirit – blanco, reposado, anejo.  Plus a surprise tasting.

Siembra Azul owner David Suro-Pinera will intro each tequila with tasting notes and talk about his Tequila Interchange Project.

FOOD: 3 courses from Chef Benjy Mason featuring Gulf Shrimp and Pork Belly

PRICE: $55 inclusive; reservations required [BUY TICKETS HERE!]

ABOUT Siembra Azul & owner David Suro 

Siembra Azul (Blue Harvest) is a small-batch, artisanally crafted, premium tequila made from 100% of the finest blue agave, grown and produced in the town of Aran  in the Highlands of Jalisco, Mexico. A double distilled spirit of unparalleled quality, Siembra Azul is the meticulous result of an extremely well-monitored production process supervised by a  team of expert tequila connoisseurs. Leading this team is founder David Suro-Piñera,  whose lifelong quest for the highest quality tequila propelled him to create the brand.

Siembra Azul’s trademark, “The Future of Tradition,” is Suro-Piñera’s mission:  he travels throughout the U.S. conducting educational seminars on the history, traditions, terroir distinctions and varying flavor profiles of tequila for consumers, the spirits trade, and the hospitality industry. His intent is to educate the U.S marketplace about tequila and its wonderful attributes as one of the most complex spirits in the world.  David is the founder of the Tequila Interchange Project.

ABOUT THE TEQUILA INTERCHANGE PROJECT

A non-profit organization and consumer advocacy group for tequila, TIP is comprised of bartenders, consultants, educators, academics, consumers and tequila enthusiasts. The organization advocates the preservation of sustainable, traditional, and quality practices in the tequila industry amid concerning trends currently becoming mainstays in the industry. Through its efforts and increased consumer education, their goal is  to see continued growth in the industry paired with a renewed emphasis on the importance of preserving tequila’s great heritage.

Some Bars I Went to in New Orleans

You may or may not know, but last week marked the tenth annual Tales of the Cocktail event in New Orleans. It’s a week-long event, largely for those in the bar, cocktail, and spirits industries. There are seminars, awards, pub crawls, and plenty of other things to do, but being a late arrival this year I missed most of it. The trip was amazing though; if you don’t have a good time in New Orleans you’re probably dead.

On our first evening we visited Twelve Mile Limit, described to me as “a bartender’s bar.” Comfortable and a little out of the way for tourists, they make great cocktails and have a wide selection of beer (including Southern Star, which was cool to see). We met a handful of New Orleans industry folks there, and they were really helpful with recommendations. Speaking of recommendations, there’s an art to getting them. Our hotel gave terrible recommendations, as did guidebooks. Yelp didn’t do a whole lot for what we were looking for either. By far the best thing we found was starting with one bar recommendation that we enjoyed, talking to the bartender (or the locals at the bar) and going from there. We got awesome recommendations from everyone at TML. A few of them are below.

Tonique. Good lord, this may be the best bar I’ve ever been to. You know that feeling you get after you find something so amazing that you feel like you just entered a whole new world of awareness? How did I miss this before? There has been line drawn in my life: a life before Tonique, and a life after Tonique. I can’t say enough about it. The reasons why are simple: They make great freakin’ cocktails, and the whole culture of the place is unpretentious and genuinely warm. Simple. No fancy decor, but not a dive atmosphere either. An important point–most cocktail bars are decorated in a particular style. There’s obviously nothing wrong with conscious decor (we spent quite a bit of time on ours at DH), but there was just something inviting and homey about it. They make their own non-alcoholic sodas (we had an Angostura soda and a milk soda) which were awesome, but the drinks were the highlight.

The cocktail list when we visited trended toward classic and New Orleans-centered cocktails: Sazerac, Vieux Carre, Ramos Gin Fizz, Mint Julep, Old Fashioned–but everything I tasted was made so expertly that you could just imagine the number of times they went over the recipe to get it so exactly right. Just shockingly well-balanced and full. And not only that, the tone of the conversation across the bar led me to believe that obviously this was a place that could make any drink you name. The bartenders spoke about cocktails and spirits with intimacy. Wonderful.

Cochon Butcher is not a bar–well, on second thought they did have a cocktail bar. (At a certain point, I began to wonder if the Walgreens was going to have a cocktail bar.) Cochon Butcher is a deli and cafe that focuses on charcuterie. We ate duck sliders, bacon melt, the Cubano, and the Muffaletta with mac and cheese. All were unbelievably good. We also bought our chef Benjy a “Pig Slayer” shirt, which was awesome. Fun place, great food and cocktails.

Bellocq was one of the early recommendations we got from Twelve Mile Limit. I don’t know much about the ownership or history of Bellocq (related to famous cocktail bar Cure, I believe), but the place was beautiful, and they obviously spent some cash on the buildout. Their menu has a focus on Cobblers, a type of cocktail generally made with a base spirit, some sort of wine, sugar, and fresh fruit. Tons of them. We tried the Whiskey Cobbler among others, and it was delicious. They also have a “Baller Menu”–which is pretty much what it sounds like. Really awesome expensive drinks. It was on the baller menu that I had one of the best cocktails I’ve ever had in my life. The Mezcal Cobbler. Made with the Del Maguey Santo Domingo Albarradas, Punt e Mes, Creme de Fraise, orange juice, and some sort of magic potion apparently. This drink tastes like being sucked deep into the ocean by some sort of beautiful sea goddess. The layers in this drink. The balance. Unbelievable. Would this drink have worked with any other Mezcal? I’d be happy to investigate, but the Albarradas is so subtle, so delicate that I can’t imagine a better spirit for this drink.

There are so many more to talk about–maybe for another post–but these were some of my favorite. One thing I found in common with every place we went to is a great attitude from bartenders, a genuine desire to show us their city, and a mature bar and cocktail scene with a wide range of bars. I think about driving back to Tonique pretty much every day. Hopefully I’ll be back soon.

Closed 7/17 for maintenance

We will be closed all day on Tuesday, July 17 for installation of our fantastic new insulation! It’ll help mute loud noises, insulate from the heat/cold, and make DH and overall more pleasant place to be.

We will be open at 9 AM on Wednesday, July 18 instead of our normal time at 7 a.m. to finish the installation. Please e-mail any comments or questions to chris@downhousehouston.com

Thanks, and we look forward to serving you in our new and improved dining area!

One-year anniversary!

One-year anniversary!

I can hardly believe it, but one year is upon us. That’s right, one year of being in the Heights!

We’re celebrating our first year with a party in true DH fashion:

- We have all-you-can-eat BBQ, sides, and dessert for $15

- A special keg of dry-hopped Walloon from Southern Star Brewing Co.

- Frozen “Might as Well” cocktails

- OUR NEW PATIO! (We’re finishing things up now, can’t wait to share it with everyone!)

- Music from the attractive and talented Brent Nettles!

Things get started at 3 p.m. and will go until about 7. Buy your plate ahead of time at dhturnsone.eventbrite.com or on the day of the event.

This is a family-friendly event! We look forward to seeing you here!

Scotch Tasting!

Laphroaig tasting with global brand ambassador Simon Brooking!

It’s happening on April 24th from 1:30 to 3:00p.m. and it’s absolutely FREE. We’ll be talking and tasting some awesome scotches,  PLUS a scotch cocktail created by DH bartenders. Light fare is provided.

Spaces are limited, so RSVP to hailey.delarosa@beamglobal.com today!