Super Bowl Blast!
Want to party with Michael Phelps, James Brolin and Common? Here’s your VIP ticket inside one of Super Bowl 51’s best bashes, the CityBook-sponsored Big Game Big Give blowout!
Feb. 6, 2017
WHILE TRAVELERS NEAR and far have heard of the Texas Hill Country, there’s another region that offers beauty and seclusion: the Pineywoods, a rolling, rural section of East Texas where visitors simultaneously feel tucked-in and cozy, and also enjoy the great outdoors.
About 20 minutes outside of Tyler, Texas, Jason and Sharon Romano have established a “laid-back luxury” resort calledHigh Hill Farm, complete with bungalows and barn-style accommodations.
Trampolines and bocce ball and a (stupendous) fine-dining restaurant and a picturesque pool make it easy to find something to do without the paralysis of choice that often comes from a family-oriented resort. The overwhelming quiet is comforting; an occasional hum of golf carts can be heard, along with a chorus of cicadas, but there’s no backdrop of highway traffic like in Houston, or in the Romanos’ home base of Dallas.
“Our motto is ages 3 to 93,” says Jason, who knows all the guests by name, and when you spot him blowing leaves or cleaning the pool, it feels like you’re running into an old friend.
He and Sharon have high hopes for High Hill, having recently completed the first phase of the resort’s adjacent master-planned development, with dozens of homes available for rent and purchase. They’re all designed and built by Jason, who has a 30-year career building out restaurants and hospitality projects in Dallas that range from historic restorations to the popular Blue Mesa Grill.
Modeled after the 30A and Seaside communities in Florida, the walkable community has an amphitheater with “beachside” concerts overlooking a spring-fed lake, and a chapel situated on the highest point of the property, where weddings take place.
The residences are all completely custom, with commissioned art and one-of-a-kind furnishings. The pines have grown up and over a Mediterranean-style courtyard with a dipping pool and giant outdoor shower, instantly creating a sense that you could be anywhere in the world — and certainly not just in East Texas.
Future plans include a dream of a sangria and tapas bar using the juices from the fruits grown onsite at the High Hill Resort farm. Cheers to that!
ONE OF HOUSTON'S favorite spa getaways has for decades been the lakeside paradise of Lake Austin Spa Resort. Its magic has lied both in its commitment to core values of quiet peace, ATX-style outdoor exercise, and un-preachy environmentalism — its perch by deep still water opposite wooded hills is its most impressive luxury — and in its eagerness to evolve.
Per the latter, the resort has just unveiled a partnership with Italian wellness brand Comfort Zone. The otherwise richly traditional spa — the fireside Blue Room will be the most opulent and relaxing waiting room in which you’ve ever sipped tea before a lavish treatment such as the $1,050 Valmont facial — has created a new, first-in-the-U.S. place for trendy new treatments done in what’s called an “open, inclusive” environment.
At the new “FACE SPAce” setup, expect interactional, efficient, semi-public, non-nude (obvi) treatments utilizing blue-light gizmos, stainless steel roller thingies, intensive facial massage and mineral-rich, proudly sustainable products galore. The new Body Strategist Experience straddles the old and the new, beginning in the FACE SPAce area’s foot cleansing station before moving to its (very) bracing cold-plunge patio and ending in a traditional treatment room for a massage and full-body mud mask.
Other innovations at the resort — as famous for its water sports such as paddleboarding, and yoga sessions by lake, as its lovely dining room with pretty views — include an effort to highlight the considerable talents of handsome culinary director Stephane Beaucamp. The cooking class with the paella isn’t just a fun experience; it yields some damn good paella!
Honestly, that’s just scratching the surface of what can be undertaken here. There’s a booze cruise, a sound bath in the indoor pool, even tarot card readings. But, for one recent guest, the simplest activity may have been the loveliest. Truly, can you beat finishing up a great session on the gym’s elliptical, watching a lone turtle play in gentle, sun-dappled lake waters?
Elsewhere in Austin, considerably more urbane thrills await. For those who haven’t yet checked out Hotel Magdalena, the newest Texas outpost from the storied Bunkhouse group (which is readying its first two Houston properties, in Montrose and the Heights) is ideally located in the spiffy Music Lane development, just off bustling South Congress. This is a sunny setup, with spare, earthy rooms, and a bright, mod sensibility; one can chill with the off-duty hipsters and entertainment execs by the pool or tiered, verdant grounds, or stumble over to some amazing people-watching and shopping. LoveShackFancy and Rag & Bone are steps away; venerable but still very cool men’s shop Stag is just a couple blocks.
The emergence of Music Lane has also brought about a bit of dining renaissance on the strip. Joining the beloved old Tex-Mex and pizza haunts are the likes of Aba, a vibey Medit-savvy place with both be-seen breezeway seating out front and a huge deck wrapped around a towering oak out back. The pretty people are all here — both posted up to the bar, and taking your order as staff! Careful falling leaves don’t wind up in your hummus topped with charred bits of tamarind-braised, pomegranate-molasses-kissed short ribs. The heirloom chicken dish is terrific, with crispy-skin chicken thigh and bits of butternut squash meddling in a bit of warmly seasoned jus.
Although it’s arguably unnecessary to venture too far from homebase, a detour over to the East Side’s Uptown Sports Club is recommended. What a fun, feel-good spot! Aaron Franklin of Franklin’s Barbecue fame has beautifully restored a circa-1890s corner building and filled it with Big Easy energy — from the Mardi Gras beads in the houseplants to the menu’s vegan-friendly red beans and rice. The brunch-time Bloody Mary is a little spicy and a little sweet, and, for the fancy people, the caviar starter comes with Zapp’s potato chips. Billy Joel and Steve Winwood are on the stereo, and there’s fresh whipped cream on the bananas-Foster-fabulous bread pudding.
Lake Austin Spa Resort
Aba’s mushroom hummus
Uptown Sports Club
Lake Austin
Frozen Greek Yogurt at Abu
Hotel Magdalena
Hotel Magdalena