Low-Key-Luxe Tavern Bar Bludorn Brings Star-Chef Power Outside the Loop

Low-Key-Luxe Tavern Bar Bludorn Brings Star-Chef Power Outside the Loop

Alexandra Pena and Aaron Bludorn (photo by Lauren Holub)

A WELCOME ADDITION to the outer Loop, restaurateur Aaron Bludorn’s new Hedwig Village tavern is packed nightly with coworkers, couples and families, all eager to dine on his fancy-yet-unfussy take on pub food.


With Bar Bludorn, the unstoppable chef — who has successfully opened three restaurants in Houston in the last three years, and has his sights set on a fourth, at the Bunkhouse Group’s forthcoming Saint Augustine Hotel in Montrose — put the cooking in the hands of the beautiful and capable Alexandra Peña, who is easy to spot in the shiny open kitchen.

A visit to Bar Bludorn ushers in punchy flavors of mostly classics with some twists — like carrot-ginger soup with fresh and candied ginger, and a Wagyu short rib Rueben sandwich on housemade bread we would gladly eat daily. The surprise of green-pea hummus sings with fresh garlic (order extra pita bread — it’s that good!).

Expect a wide range of entrees, including a lovely Ora King salmon filet with yogurt-dill sauce; tender steak frites draped in au poivre vert; and roasted duck with mango and yam. Fried chicken gussied up with peanut-butter gravy, mashed potatoes and collard greens is a popular option, and of course there’s a towering tavern burger, served with a single slice of tomato as thick and juicy and indispensible as the patty itself.

But one of the best dishes is homemade tortellini: so perfectly al dente with a unique artichoke stuffing and garnish of bright tomato confit and lemon zest. Addictive.

As for dessert, the Lime in the Coconut is a textural dream. It’s like a deconstructed key-lime pie but better, and topped with crunchy clusters of coconut flakes.

The handsome, softly lit and intimate restaurant has a timeless clubby look, while still being everyday-comfy. It’s located in the nondescript, red-brick rectangular building previously home to Jonathan’s the Rub. Walls between the adjacent tenants were all knocked down, and Bar Bludorn is one giant open-concept space, flanked on either end by a bustling kitchen and a classic, tavern-style bar. One long wall is lined with half-circle-shaped booths that give a prime view of the whole room.

Planning to pop in without a reservation? The bar area typically fills up daily by 5:30pm, so advanced planning is recommended to snag a coveted dining-room table. Cheers!

Country Ham Beignets (photo by Caroline Fontenot)

Lemon Ricotta Ice Cream Sandwich (photo by Caroline Fontenot)

Dining Room_ (photo by Claudia Casbarian)

Spaghetti Carbonara (photo by Lauren Holub)

Food

Ming Smith's 'Grace Jones at Cinandre,' 1974, courtesy Ming Smith Studio

“I DON’T TALK about my years,” laughs New York-based photographer Ming Smith, whose “years” are celebrated in Feeling the Future, a survey of her work from the early 1970s to the present at the Contemporary Arts Museum Houston. The exhibit opens May 26.

Keep Reading Show less
Art + Entertainment

Candice D'Meza (photo by Mikala Gibson)

HOUSTON PLAYWRIGHT CANDICE D’Meza’s new, wildly ambitious multi-media theatrical extravaganza A Maroon’s Guide to Time and Space premieres May 26 at MATCH. In contrast to D’Meza’s 2021 one-woman show Fatherland, which explored grief and the perilous nature ancestral veneration, A Maroon’s Guide to Time and Space is a little crazier, interweaving outlandish sci-fi scenarios with the history of Harriet Tubman’s escape from slavery.

Keep Reading Show less
Art + Entertainment