10 Black-Owned Restaurants To Visit In Houston, Texas
Houston’s Black dining scene covers far more than one style of cooking. Restaurants across the city serve West African rice dishes, Gulf Coast seafood, Acadian-inspired pasta, breakfast classics, barbecue, soul food, and Southern desserts. Some have fed Houston for decades, while others represent a newer generation of chefs and hospitality entrepreneurs building restaurants around their own cultural influences.
Visitors can begin the day with catfish and grits, stop for jollof rice at lunch, order fried chicken and chargrilled oysters for dinner, and finish with a slice of peach cobbler or butter cake. The city has neighborhood institutions, full-service dining rooms, bakery counters, late-night lounges, and social restaurants where food shares the spotlight with music and hookah.
Dandelion Cafe
Breakfast is served all day at Dandelion Cafe, a Black- and woman-owned Houston restaurant that opened as a coffee shop in 2016. The cafe has since expanded its menu and now operates counter-service locations in Bellaire and The Heights, as well as a weekday location at Rice University.
Chef JC’s Chicken and Waffles pairs 24-hour-marinated fried chicken with a cornbread-buttermilk waffle and spicy maple butter. The menu also includes chicken chilaquiles, lemon-blueberry French toast, breakfast tacos, omelets, sandwiches, salads, house-made pastries, coffee, and mimosas.
Location: 5405 Bellaire Boulevard, Bellaire, with additional locations in The Heights and at Rice University
Owners: Sarah Lieberman and J.C. Ricks
Type of Cuisine: Breakfast, Brunch, and American Cafe Fare
Menu Spotlight: Chef JC’s Chicken and Waffles
Before You Go: Hours vary by location. The Bellaire and Heights cafes serve breakfast and lunch throughout the week, while the Rice University location operates Monday through Friday.
ChòpnBlọk
West African food takes center stage at ChòpnBlọk, where chef and founder Ope Amosu connects dishes from Nigeria and other parts of the region with Houston’s wider Black culinary history. The menu includes jollof jambalaya, suya-seasoned meats, Nigerian honey beans, Liberian-style greens, plantains, and West African-inspired drinks.
The Montrose restaurant at 507 Westheimer Road has an extended menu and more space for a sit-down meal. The original counter inside POST Houston at 401 Franklin Street remains open for diners looking for a quicker experience. Both locations currently serve Jollof Jambalaya, described on the Montrose ordering menu as a tomato-based West African rice dish with Creole inspiration.
Location: Montrose, with a second location inside POST Houston
Owner and Chef: Ope Amosu
Type of Cuisine: West African
Menu Spotlight: Jollof Jambalaya
Before You Go: Visit the Montrose location for the extended menu. The POST Houston counter is suited to a faster meal.
Ms. Myrtle’s Bakery
A Third Ward fixture since 2000, Ms. Myrtle’s Bakery began as Not Jus’ Donuts before adopting its current name in honor of founder Myrtle Zachary Jackson. Her daughters launched the original bakery with her, and the family says second- and third-generation relatives are continuing the business.
The current menu covers pound cakes, mini Bundt cakes, pies, tea cakes, cobblers, banana pudding, cheesecakes, cupcakes, and custom celebration cakes. Heavenly Butter remains one of the bakery’s signature flavors and is available in several formats, including Bundt cakes and mini Bundt cakes.
Location: 2020 Emancipation Avenue, Third Ward
Type of Cuisine: Bakery and Southern desserts
Menu Spotlight: Heavenly Butter Bundt Cake
Before You Go: The bakery is open Tuesday through Saturday and closed Sunday and Monday. Some whole cakes and specialty desserts require advance ordering.
Lucille’s
Nearly a century of family culinary history informs the menu at Lucille’s. Brothers Chris and Ben Williams opened the Museum District restaurant in 2012 as a tribute to their great-grandmother, Lucille B. Smith, a chef, educator, inventor, and entrepreneur. Chef Chris Williams carries that history forward through Southern cooking shaped by international techniques and flavors.
Current dinner selections include the restaurant’s famous chili biscuits, oxtail tamales, shrimp and grits, braised oxtails, catfish and grits, and Yardbird, a plate of buttermilk-brined slow-fried chicken with smoked mashed potatoes, collard greens, and peppercorn gravy.
Location: 5512 La Branch Street, Museum District
Owners: Chris and Ben Williams
Type of Cuisine: Southern cuisine with international influences
Menu Spotlight: Yardbird
Before You Go: Reservations are available and are worth considering for weekend brunch or dinner.
The Breakfast Klub
Lines outside this Midtown institution have remained a familiar sight in Houston since owner Marcus Davis opened The Breakfast Klub in 2001. Its two signature plates, Wings & Waffle and Katfish & Grits, continue to anchor a menu that also includes pancakes, French toast, omelets, breakfast sandwiches, and weekday lunch dishes. The restaurant remains open daily, serving from 7 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday through Friday and from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. on weekends. Recent Houston Chronicle coverage from June 2026 confirms that the line still regularly extends down the block and that the wings and waffles remain a defining order.
Location: 3711 Travis Street, Midtown
Owner: Marcus Davis
Type of Cuisine: American breakfast and Southern comfort food
Menu Spotlight: Wings & Waffle
Before You Go: Weekend mornings are particularly busy, so arriving early can reduce the wait.
Zaza Lounge
A night at Zaza Lounge brings together food, hookah, music, and a BYOB policy. The North Houston lounge currently promotes African-Mexican, or “MexiGhana,” fusion through its social channels, while its official website highlights lounge bites such as chicken egg rolls, boudin-and-cheese egg rolls, mozzarella sticks, and loaded fries.
Zaza works primarily as a social and late-night destination, with reservations available for birthdays and group outings. Its current house policies state that a BYOB fee applies to outside drinks, minimum spending requirements vary by party or table size, and a 15% gratuity is added.
Location: 6920 Farm to Market 1960 Road West, North Houston
Type of Cuisine: African-Mexican fusion and lounge fare
Menu Spotlight: Boudin Cheesy Egg Roll
Before You Go: Review the latest BYOB fees, minimum-spend rules, hours, and reservation policies before visiting.
Gatlin’s Fins & Feathers
Fried chicken and Gulf seafood share the menu at this Independence Heights restaurant from chef-owner Greg Gatlin and his family. Gatlin’s Fins & Feathers extends the family’s Houston restaurant legacy beyond barbecue, with a menu built around Gulf Coast and Southern comfort food.
Current offerings include F&F Chargrilled Oysters topped with garlic-herb butter and Parmesan; Everything Gumbo with chicken, shrimp, crab, sausage, and okra; Not My Momma’s Biscuits; and fried catfish and chicken dishes. Sunday brunch brings a separate selection, while the restaurant’s regular lunch service runs Tuesday through Saturday.
Location: 302 West Crosstimbers Street, Independence Heights
Owner and Chef: Greg Gatlin
Type of Cuisine: Gulf Coast and Southern comfort food
Menu Spotlight: F&F Chargrilled Oysters
Before You Go: Sunday brunch follows a separate schedule from the regular lunch and dinner service.
Triple J’s Smokehouse
Texas barbecue has kept customers coming to this Northeast Houston smokehouse since 1994. Rhonda and the late Jarrett Scales founded Triple J’s Smokehouse in the Houston Gardens neighborhood, where the restaurant continues to smoke its meats over post oak wood and serve them from its longtime Homestead Road location.
Brisket, ribs, sausage, chicken, burgers, and stuffed baked potatoes fill the menu, but the Big J potato brings several house favorites together. It comes loaded with chopped brisket, sausage, and rib meat, along with butter, cheese, sour cream, and chives. Diners can also build a plate with one or more smoked meats and sides such as baked beans, potato salad, and green beans.
Location: 6715 Homestead Road, Northeast Houston
Founders: Rhonda and the late Jarrett Scales
Type of Cuisine: Texas Barbecue
Menu Spotlight: Big J Baked Potato
Before You Go: Triple J’s is open Wednesday through Saturday from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. and closed Sunday through Tuesday.
Mikki’s Soul Food Cafe
Cafeteria-style service gives diners a full view of the Southern dishes waiting behind the counter at Mikki’s Soul Food Cafe. The family-run restaurant has served Houston for more than two decades and now operates locations in Southwest Houston, Pearland, and the Third Ward.
Oxtails, smothered chicken, turkey wings, fried pork chops, catfish, collard greens, candied yams, macaroni and cheese, and cornbread dressing fill the serving line. The signature Soul Food Bowl layers macaroni and cheese, candied yams, and collard greens over a cornbread crust before adding smothered beef tips on top.
Location: 2712 Blodgett Street, Third Ward, with additional locations in Southwest Houston and Pearland
Owners: Craig Joseph Jr. and Jeanelle Williams
Type of Cuisine: Southern Soul Food
Menu Spotlight: Soul Food Bowl
Before You Go: Mikki’s operates three locations, so confirm the address and hours for the one you plan to visit.
Kamp Houston
Brunch can stretch into a day party at Kamp Houston, an indoor-outdoor restaurant and nightlife destination on Westheimer Road. The menu moves among seafood, barbecue, Cajun food, burgers, oxtail, fried chicken, and late-night plates.
Oxtail empanadas, blackened catfish with dirty rice, gumbo with boudin balls, fried chicken and biscuits, seafood platters, and oxtail pasta appear on the current food menu. Brunch includes sweet potato waffles with hot honey chicken, smoked oxtail hash, shrimp and grits, and French toast.
Location: 6025 Westheimer Road, Galleria Area
Type of Cuisine: Seafood, barbecue, Cajun food, and American comfort food
Menu Spotlight: Oxtail Empanadas
Before You Go: Kamp offers separate menus for food, brunch, seafood, and late night. Its current menu states that a 20% service charge is automatically added to all tabs.
The post 10 Black-Owned Restaurants To Visit In Houston, Texas appeared first on Travel Noire.
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