Adios Café Adobe
Another fiesta is over. Café Adobe at Westheimer and
Shepherd is now closed. Like the Montrose Fiesta store a few blocks to the
East, the property will see redevelopment as multi-story residential project
following demolition. The way things go in Houston.
The architecture of the
double-decker patio venue was rather unique; not to mention the coloring scheme
and illumination at night. It even offered rain-or-shine patio brunching or
dining in a courtyard with a water fountain in the middle and glass roof aloft; winding staircase to the cantina on the second floor.
Worthy of land-mark status, and no doubt the object of many fond and cheery
memories for at least two generations of innerloopers.
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Moving truck at back entrance to Adobe Cafe |
It’s not the only Mexican restaurant fading into
Margarita-infused memories of good times had.
Aztecas on the corner of Richmond and
Greenbriar has folded too, following the earlier demise of Maggie Ritas, whose
effort
to spice things up at Ninfa’s on
Richmond at Kirby were all too lamentably to no avail. Iconic patio restaurant Bocados
on West Alabama near The Menil just went out with a bang too; in a fitting
gesture on Cinco de Mayo. Taco Milagro on the corner of Westheimer and Kirby is
next. It’s days are numbered.
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Aztecas Restaurant on corner of Richmond and Greenbriar closed |
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Maggie Rita's was short-lived in former Ninfa's location on Kirby Drive |
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Bocados on West Alabama (before closing) |
Not that the neighborhood is on the way downhill. Much
rather, it looks like rising land values and rents are squeezing the
moderately-priced Tex-Mexes out of the market. There are big construction
projects under way all around.
So what’s still there on the Mex and Tex-Mex culinary front?
A Lupe Tortillas on the SW Freeway feeder
between Greenbriar and Kirby; Little Pappasitos on Richmond next Indian Restaurant Khyber; Ruchis
on the SW corner of Shepherd and West Alabama; La Tapatia and Selma Maria on
Richmond. And then there is Chuy’s near where Taco Milagro is calling it quits;
although its display of Elvis-paraphernalia and other such stuff put its
Tex-Mex credential somewhat in doubt. And then there are a couple of burrito
joints: Mission Burritos on West Alabama and FreeBirds on Greenbriar across
from the Post Office.
Seems like there is room in the market for a new Tex-Mex
startup; to cater to those loath to navigate down Lower Westheimer to the El Real
to crunch chips loaded with salsa in a former movie theater, not to mention driving
all the way to EaDo to honor the memory of Mama Ninfa’s in her original
establishment, which now features a large patio with outdoor bar, or the new
El Tiempo Cantina next to it, which was opened earlier this year by a descendant
of the iconic Mexican matron that got Houstonians of all ancestries – Hispanic
or otherwise -- hooked on fajitas.