Steaking Their Claim

Here’s how a Tex-Mex-y neighborhood joint founded by two twentysomethings on VHS movie nights and flaming cocktails became one of the world’s great steakhouses — the Taste of Texas.

Debora Smail

The Hendee family’s 40-year-old Taste of Texas, now in its second location on the Katy Freeway, is beloved not only for its high-quality, wet-aged steaks, but also for its preoccupation with state history. Over the years, some 400,000 fourth-graders have taken field trips to the restaurant’s in-house Texas heritage museum, a Houston tradition. But things weren’t always so grand. Here, in an excerpt from their expansive and wonderfully written new cookbook/autobiography, Perfectly Aged, available for purchase at tasteoftexascookbook.com, Nina Hendee recounts Taste’s humble — and colorful — beginning.

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Star Man

While astronaut Scott Kelly’s new book chronicles his record-setting stint in space, it also celebrates the importance of keeping your feet on the ground.

Retired astronaut Scott Kelly shares a Downtown address at One Park Place overlooking Discovery Green with several Houston celebrities. “I hear James Harden lives here, but I’ve never seen him,” says Kelly one Saturday afternoon in mid-summer, sitting at the dining table in his modest apartment. If they were to bump into each other, it would be an odd sight of two very different heroes to Houstonians: “The Beard,” who stands a lanky, towering six-foot-five, and Kelly, famously bald and a stout five-feet-seven. “Contrary to news reports, I did not grow two inches during my year in space,” he says, referring to his most notable mission, a record-setting 340-day tenure aboard the International Space Station in 2015 and 2016.

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Feminism is Fun

Novelist Jennifer Mathieu’s new book, whose movie rights Amy Poehler has already snapped up, joyfully empowers high-schoolers to shake up gender roles.

Daniel Ortiz

Stashed away in a crowded bookcase in young-adult author Jennifer Mathieu’s Westbury-area home, near the book-and-paper-strewn dining table she uses as her writing station for a couple of hours every evening after putting her 7-year-old son Elliott to sleep and spending some quality time with her musician and printshop worker husband Kevin, is a copy of the first book the D.C. native and Bellaire High School English teacher ever wrote. It’s a slender, time-worn novella titled Mystery at Grandma’s that Mathieu, now 40, dreamed up as a fifth grader for a school writing competition.

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