Most Popular
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A Prison Cover-up During Hurricane Rita
For days after the storm, inmates in Beaumont lived without A/C, electricity or hot meals. Press releases kept saying everything inside was fine. Guards and prisoners agree — that was nothing but B.S.
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Movie Pirates
That couple in the back row — they're making out big time, but not in the way you think
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It's Hip to Be Square at Masraff's
Continental cuisine is over, so why would anybody want to eat at this retirees' hang-out on South Post Oak Lane?
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Former Death-Row Inmate Sent Back to Prison
Martin Draughon returns to the clink after becoming a test case for alleged flaws in GPS monitoring devices
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Barack Obama and Me (259)
It was the year 2000 and I was a young hungry reporter in Chicago covering a young hungry state legislator
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A Prison Cover-up During Hurricane Rita (27)
For days after the storm, inmates in Beaumont lived without A/C, electricity or hot meals. Press releases kept saying everything inside was fine. Guards and prisoners agree — that was nothing but B.S.
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What's the Problem Houston? (6)
The city's skuzzy alt-rock scene thinks it is dying
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"The Big Show, 2007" (29)
The curator of "The Big Show" does the job right
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Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, Amtgard, Howard Stern and Infernal Bridgroom (4)
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It's Hip to Be Square at Masraff's
Continental cuisine is over, so why would anybody want to eat at this retirees' hang-out on South Post Oak Lane?
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Breakfast Enchiladas at Mi Sombrero
At this old-fashioned Tex-Mex joint on North Shepherd, the huevos are served all day on weekends
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Great Gado Gado at Noodle House 88
A nondescript noodle shop on Bellaire is serving some of the best Indonesian food in the U.S.A.
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La Nouvelle Recession Cuisine at Au Petit Paris
Your dollar buys a little less at this new French restaurant on Colquitt
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Tiny Boxwood's Cafe, Voice at Hotel Icon and Cafe Zol
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What I’m Thinking About When I Think About Films From the 1980s
06:06AM 03/28/08 -
Get Lit: Instamatic Karma: Photographs of John Lennon, by May Pang
06:06AM 03/29/08 -
Steroids and Roger Clemens, or Why Jose Canseco Is Kind of Like a Republican
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High Price of Crawfish
11:57AM 03/27/08
What we are writing about
- Altar Boyz
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94 Percent Dogma-Free
At Ziggy's, health food includes burgers and fries
By Margaret L. Briggs
Published: May 20, 1999On my lifetime list of No-Place-But-Houston cafe concepts, Ziggy's Healthy Grill leads with a bullet. Ziggy's may cater to vegetarians and health food fans, but it also cooks up the most comprehensive menu of exotic meats I've seen anywhere. That's right, a whole Disney cartoon's worth of fuzzy animals with cute furry faces gets grilled: not just lumpish buffalo and surly, scaly-legged ostriches, but also on occasion caribou and deer and even kangaroo. As a rule, I'm fairly comfortable with my place in the food chain, but even I felt a twinge at the prospect of dining on Winnie's good friend Roo.
"Just remember, a kangaroo patty has only one gram of fat," says Wayne Croft, Ziggy's owner.
I suppose Ziggy's enduring popularity, second only to nearby A Moveable Feast in a recent on-line poll of vegetarian restaurants, proves that there's more than one reason to eat healthy and more than one sort of person who attempts it, particularly in Houston. As we slouch toward the millennium, I am no longer surprised to see urban cowboys spurning chicken-fried steaks for vegetarian chili or pierced and tattooed youngsters munching grilled garden patties. During weekend lulls at Ziggy's Healthy Grill, you're liable to catch half the waitstaff out on the front sidewalk sneaking a smoke.
"Our customers like to have a choice," explains Croft. "About half are vegetarians, but the other half are not, and even meat-eaters want healthy options nowadays. That's why we're so interested in the exotic meats." I started going to Ziggy's during my obsessive fat-gram-counting phase in the early '90s, back when low-fat dining meant dreary confinement to the home kitchen. Ziggy's was one of the first places in town I could find a 94 percent fat-free burger with low-fat cheese and low-fat or even fat-free mayonnaise. At this reductionist vanishing point, I realize, it's debatable whether what I'm eating is really a burger at all, but it comforts me nonetheless. Besides, I like buffalo. I like the less greasy, springy texture of the patties. The argument for replacing beef with buffalo meat is impressive, as Croft is quick to point out: Buffalo is lower in fat and higher in protein, doesn't provoke allergic reactions and is free from all those nasty chemicals -- steroids and hormones and antibiotics, oh, my! -- that cattle are said to be stuffed with. (Just ask Oprah.)
Bodybuilders like Ziggy's too. Glossy photos of buff bods adorn the wall by the cash register, and not a few posers fill the seats, managing to flex magnificently while lifting a 12-ounce fresh fruit smoothie to their lips. Athletes and personal trainers flock to Ziggy's from as far away as Sugar Land, says Croft, drawn by the tell-all nutritional analysis computed by a University of Houston specialist for every item on Ziggy's menu. The resulting book is displayed right out on the counter for handy reference while ordering.
Since Croft acquired the restaurant almost four years ago, he has worked hard designing new street-legal items for the menu. On a recent visit I skipped my old faithful buffalo burger ($4.65) to sample one of his latest creations, the caribou burger ($5.95). Caribou, I discovered, has the same faintly wild flavor I associate with venison, but with a richer, spicier tang I quite like. Too bad this particular patty was so woefully overcooked, blackened and so dry that even a thorough swabbing with low-fat mayo couldn't fix it. (I suspect Ziggy's kitchen suffers from undersupervision at times.) I also indulged in the Trio basket of fries, a fixture on Ziggy's menu since day one: a heaping, shareable pile of slender fry-cut Idaho whites, sweet yams and thinly sliced onion rings (only $1.70 with a sandwich, $2.45 solo).
"I warn people that french fries are still fries," says Croft with a laugh. "They're the only thing we fry and probably the highest-fat item we offer, even though we use canola oil, which is cholesterol-free and zero saturated fat. But some people just can't picture a burger without fries."
I can't picture fries without salt, so I ground a generous load of low-sodium sea salt over the top. ("Low-sodium" means "use twice as much," doesn't it?) As much as I want to like the dark orange strips of yam, they're unfortunately mushy, and I'd forgotten that they pretty much always have been. I prefer the sturdy white Idahos with their crispy brown skins. On previous visits, the skinny little onion rings have been delicately crunchy and appealing, but on this most recent expedition I was disappointed to find them limp; I suppose they'd absorbed a bit too much of that good-for-you canola. Next time I think I'll skip the onion rings in favor of grilled onions on the burger.
Salads are always a good pick at Ziggy's, with a fun array of fat-free dressings: Italian, ranch, raspberry vinaigrette, honey mustard and French, at last count. My current favorite is the Greek salad ($5.50), although I'm aware that the pleasantly light red-wine vinaigrette made with olive oil technically constitutes cheating. The generous bowl of mixed greens includes dark, briny Greek olives (prepitted, thank you), ripe tomato wedges and slices of sweet Spanish onions, sparked with deep red beet slices that festively dye the feta cheese sprinkles pink.










