Team Behind Hits Hamsa and Doris Met Brings New Flavor to Montrose

Team Behind Hits Hamsa and Doris Met Brings New Flavor to Montrose

Októ will have a lively bar like the one at Doris Metropolitan, pictured here. (photo by Kirsten Gilliam)

AFTER YEARS OF operating solid, Israeli-influenced concepts — Doris Metropolitan on Shepherd, and Badolina and Hamsa in Rice Village — Sof Hospitality is set to debut its latest concept in Montrose Collective this summer. Surprise, this time it’s Mediterranean cuisine!


Októ will take over the former restaurant space, The Chelsea, and the new concept will feature elevated, Greek-inspired cuisine with a lively bar ambiance; the latter is something unique to all Sof Hospitality’s concepts.

“This is something, of course, we are really excited about,” said co-owner Itai Ben Eli. “As a restaurant group, we have extensive experience traveling around the world. Right now, we’re working on conceptualizing the menu and narrowing it down to our must-haves based on the rich, Mediterranean culture.”

Guests can expect the menu to reflect influences from across the Mediterranean and the Levant. The bar program will be equally as important featuring eclectic spirits that can only be found at Októ.

Itai Ben Eli and Itamar Levy were nominated as “outstanding restaurateurs” by the James Beard Foundation earlier this year. They are proud to call Houston home, and attribute much of their success to their loyal clientele and their hard-working staff. With great success in their fine-dining concept, Doris Metropolitan, and Hamsa, they will certainly be bringing their dynamic energy to Októ.

Yotam Dolev (photo by Kirsten Gilliam)

Hai Avnaim (photo by Shane Dante)

“There's a growing demand for more personal, intimate and exceptionally executed dining experiences,” Ben Eli notes. “Októ is more than a restaurant; it's a culinary destination where quality meets intimacy, and every detail is carefully considered to provide a memorable dining experience in the heart of Houston.”

Collaborating on the menu are Sof chefs Yotam Dolev and Hai Avnaim — both highly skilled and global travelers who view Októ as a creative outlet for the culinary craft. The menu will be innovative and nutritious, featuring approximately a dozen dishes. Offerings will change seasonally and draw inspiration from the culinary traditions of Greece, Italy and Spain. Like other Sof Hospitality concepts, the menu is designed for sharing, fostering a communal dining experience. The bar menu includes both classic and new craft cocktails and a producer-driven, curated wine list.

Lindsay Madrigal of LM Designs designed the 4,200-square-foot space. With a scenic bar, a stunning setting, and a lively atmosphere, the vision is the kind of restaurant you might stumble upon in Mykonos or Barcelona.

A pivotal aspect of the aesthetic composition lies in the incorporation of an expansive kitchen with large windows all seamlessly integrated with a sizable bar. Anticipate dim lighting with moody colorways throughout the space and sliding glass doors that open to an expansive patio.

Operating exclusively for dinner, Októ is designed to be approachable and open later than the typical hours in the area. The group aims to attract not just dinner guests, but also after dinner night owls like industry workers.

Food

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WITH SUMMER FAR from over, DACAMERA continues to roll out some of the hottest musical programming to be enjoyed here — and anywhere else in the South for that matter — with Houston SUMMERJAZZ 2023 (Aug. 17-20). The series highlights the breadth of contemporary jazz, with nods to the music’s Cuban, pan-African, funk, pop, and soul connections. This year’s festival includes performances by the Spanish Harlem Orchestra (Aug. 17), vocalist Gretchen Parlato in her first Houston appearance (Aug. 18), and crowd-pleasing global artists Mwenso & The Shakes (Aug. 19), whose members come from Sierra Leone, London, South Africa, Greenwich Village, Madagascar, France, Jamaica and Hawaii. (Jazz is, indeed, “global” music.) All Houston SUMMERJAZZ concerts take place in the Wortham Center’s Cullen Theater.

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BEGINNING THIS THURSDAY, Aug. 17, DACAMERA’s Houston SUMMERJAZZ festival presents a concise, three-night program of jazz in a myriad of contemporary forms, with the Spanish Harlem Orchestra (Aug. 17) illuminating its historical connections to Cuba and Puerto Rico, and internationalists Mwenso and The Shakes (Aug. 19) extolling the music’s pan-African, funk, and pop potential. In between those two hits, on Friday, Aug. 18, all of these tributaries and more will be explored in a set by two-time Grammy-nominated vocalist Gretchen Parlato, making her first appearance in Houston.

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