Coming to the Heights: Chivos Touts ‘Current’ Mexican Food, Spirits Beyond Tequila and Mezcal

Coming to the Heights: Chivos Touts ‘Current’ Mexican Food, Spirits Beyond Tequila and Mezcal

Chef Thomas Bille; photo by Dylan McEwan

THE HEIGHTS AREA is getting another cool new bar-restaurant. Greg Perez and his Night Moves Hospitality, the force behind the buzzy Space Cowboy in the Heights House Hotel, will open Chivos next month.


Chivos — Spanish for goats, a play on the "greatest of all time" acronym — will replace Calle Onze on West 11th Street, where Perez was formerly beverage director. Chivos will highlight Thomas Bille, an alum of Hugo Ortega's Xochi and the popular Belly of the Best in Old Town Spring, as executive chef; his style is often called "unpretentious."

A rep for the new concept says it will be neither Tex-Mex nor traditional Mexican, "but a more current representation of the Mexican-American experience" with items like pozole dumplings and duck with fig molé. Tortillas will be made using the indigenous nixtamal process, in which corn is soaked in limewater to remove impurities and heighten both flavor and nutritional value.

Bille, a Los Angeles native, also previously worked as executive sous chef at "Final Table" winner Timothy Hollingsworth's Otium restaurant in Tinseltown.

Chivos' cocktail program will focus on Mexican spirits with flavors from foods and candies they grew up on. "We're excited to introduce a wide variety of Mexican spirits, from rum to gin to sotol and liqueurs," Perez says. "We want to expose people to other Mexican alcoholic products besides tequila and mezcal."

Calle Onze owner Chris Manriquez will remain a partner with Perez in the new enterprise, at which the entire leadership team is of Mexican American descent, notes a Chivos rep.

Besides Space Cowboy, Perez and Night Moves have also recently opened Trash Panda Drinking Club nearby. As previously reported in CityBook, the new raccoon-themed bar is home to an irreverent menu of highly creative cocktails like the Bubblegum Martini, a cheeky concoction made from Brooklyn gin, "bubblegum broth," hibiscus, lime and Green Chartreuse. The food menu is equally whimsical and features Southern comfort food but with a spicy twist, like a DLT sandwich with thick-cut bacon, iceberg lettuce and tomato slices with deviled egg aioli, as well as a Southern-fried Cornish hen served with buttermilk biscuits.

Greg Perez, Leesly Valdez, Thomas Bille, Celi Perez, Chris Manriquez; photo by Dylan McEwan

The Wedge Salad at Trash Panda; photo by Dylan Scardino

Cream Fotress at Space Cowboy

Food
‘Embrace Changes,’ Says Valobra, Whose Namesake Jewelry Store Has Become a Houston Institution
How did you get to where you are today? I had little choice in the matter; I grew up being trained to become the fourth-generation jewelry designer behind my great grandfather, grandfather, and father. It was my duty to carry on the family business and continue the hard work and success they built from nothing, beginning in Torino, Italy in 1905. I was surrounded by jewelry and its craftmanship as a young child and was taught the business from a very young age.
Keep Reading Show less

HOW DO YOU get more than a million streams, two singles in the Top 40 on the Texas Regional Radio Report Chart, and Grammy-winning Country music superstar Brad Paisley to play on your album? Practice! Just ask Katy native and up-and-coming singer and guitar slinger Hayden Baker.

Keep Reading Show less
Art + Entertainment

Surf lessons are taught by handsome Australian instructors

THE PERSONAL SERVICE starts as soon as guests clear customs at the Maldives’ Malé Velana international airport. Visitors are whisked away in a speedboat to the Gili Lankanfushi resort, reminiscent of the opening scene of a new White Lotus season. While sipping a ginger juice, guests’ shoes are taken off and feet are cleaned. Then they’re handed back their belongings, in a bag labeled “No news, no shoes” — Gili’s mantra.

Keep Reading Show less
People + Places