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Modern Japanese Omakase

Google: 4.7 · 2,875 reviews

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Houston, United States

Uchi Houston

CuisineSushi - Japanese
Executive ChefStephen Conklin
Price≈$200
Dress CodeSmart Casual
ServiceUpscale Casual
NoiseConversational
CapacityMedium
Opinionated About Dining
Wine Spectator

On Westheimer Road in Montrose, Uchi Houston is the Texas transplant of Austin's influential Japanese kitchen, ranked among Opinionated About Dining's top North American restaurants in 2025. Chef Stephen Conklin leads a menu rooted in Japanese technique with a Southern creative accent, backed by a wine program of around 3,500 bottles under Wine Director Sachin George.

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Uchi Houston restaurant in Houston, United States
About

The Room on Westheimer

Houston's Montrose corridor has a way of absorbing national restaurant concepts and making them feel native. The stretch of Westheimer Road that runs through the neighborhood carries a density of serious cooking that few American streets outside Manhattan or the Mission can match, and the physical spaces that anchor it tend to communicate ambition before a single plate arrives. Uchi Houston, at 904 Westheimer, reads in that register. The building signals restraint: clean lines, controlled lighting, the kind of interior that uses negative space as deliberately as a Japanese printmaker uses white paper. In a dining corridor where volume and spectacle compete for attention, that quietude functions as a form of confidence.

The spatial arrangement at Uchi Houston follows a principle common to serious Japanese-inflected dining rooms: the counter and the table occupy different registers of the experience, and the room is designed so neither feels like a compromise. The sightlines are managed, the acoustic envelope is tighter than the space's footprint might suggest, and the material palette — wood, stone, controlled warmth — reinforces a tonal consistency between the food and the container it arrives in. This is not accidental. The original Uchi in Austin, which preceded the Houston location, set a template in the early 2000s for how Japanese technique could live in a Southern American dining room without importing Japanese restaurant aesthetics wholesale. Houston inherits that logic.

Where This Kitchen Sits in the Houston Scene

Houston's fine dining tier in 2025 is broader and more varied than its national reputation has historically suggested. The city now holds serious arguments in multiple registers: March operates at the haute Venetian end of the spectrum at the leading price point; Musaafer has placed progressive Indian cooking firmly in the premium tier; BCN Taste & Tradition holds the Spanish anchor; and Le Jardinier Houston represents the French-accented modern end. Uchi Houston occupies a distinct lane inside this map: Japanese technique as the structural grammar, with a creative vocabulary that draws from broader American and Southern pantry logic.

That positioning matters because Houston's Japanese dining options split across a wide range. At one end sit traditional omakase formats, including the intensely private experience at Hidden Omakase, which operates at the highest price point in the city's sushi tier. Uchi Houston sits in a different place on that axis: more accessible in format, but not entry-level in ambition or execution. The Opinionated About Dining ranking of #569 among North American restaurants in 2025 places it in a peer set that includes some of the continent's most recognized addresses, including Le Bernardin in New York City, Alinea in Chicago, and The French Laundry in Napa. Within Texas, the closest comparable is the Austin original: Uchi Austin shares the same ownership lineage but operates as a distinct expression of the same culinary framework.

The Kitchen and What It Produces

Chef Stephen Conklin runs the kitchen at 904 Westheimer. In the context of Uchi's wider operation, now owned by Landry's Inc., the Houston location's kitchen reflects the brand's consistent commitment to Japanese technique as a foundation rather than a theme. The approach here is not Japanese food filtered through American nostalgia; it is Japanese precision applied to ingredients that include American sourcing, Southern seasonal logic, and a creative range that moves well beyond traditional sushi boundaries.

The cuisine pricing at $$$ puts a typical two-course meal at $66 or above, which places Uchi Houston in the mid-upper tier of Houston dining spend, below the $$$$ ceiling of places like March or Musaafer, but decisively above the casual end of the Westheimer corridor. For that price point, the kitchen operates at a creative range that draws comparisons with other American restaurants working at the intersection of Japanese and contemporary American cooking, including Nobu in London at the commercial end of that genre and operations like Lazy Bear in San Francisco or Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg at the more bespoke end.

Lunch and dinner service runs through the week, giving the restaurant more table-time flexibility than many of Houston's tighter fine dining formats. General Manager Brian Slawson oversees the floor operation, which at this tier means managing the gap between the kitchen's technical ambition and the room's accessibility to guests who may be dining at this level for the first time.

The Wine Program

Wine Director Sachin George oversees a list that reaches approximately 3,500 bottles in inventory across roughly 200 selections. The program sits at $$ pricing, meaning it carries a range from accessible to premium without committing exclusively to the high end. California features with particular strength , logical both geographically and in terms of the kitchen's American-Japanese orientation, where California wines have long served as the native pairing language for this style of cooking. The list's breadth at 3,500 bottles suggests depth by producer and vintage rather than simply width by region, which positions it closer to the kind of serious wine operation found at Emeril's in New Orleans than to a restaurant program assembled primarily for commercial throughput.

Planning a Visit

Uchi Houston serves lunch and dinner at 904 Westheimer Rd in Montrose, Houston. The cuisine pricing at $$$ means budgeting for $66 or more per person for a two-course meal before wine, tip, or additional plates. Given the restaurant's Opinionated About Dining ranking and its sustained presence in the Houston fine dining conversation, tables at peak dinner service book ahead , reservations made a week or more in advance are a reasonable precaution, particularly for weekend evenings or larger groups. The wine program at $$ pricing means there is range on the list for most budgets, with California selections representing a particular strength. For broader context on where Uchi Houston sits within the city's restaurant and hospitality options, the EP Club guides to Houston restaurants, Houston bars, Houston hotels, Houston wineries, and Houston experiences map the wider terrain. Montrose's density also makes Tatemó and Theodore Rex viable bookends for an evening in the neighborhood.

Signature Dishes
Bluefin FlightWalu WaluHama Chili
Frequently asked questions

Cuisine and Credentials

A quick look at comparable venues, using the data we have on file.

At a Glance
Vibe
  • Modern
  • Elegant
  • Sophisticated
  • Intimate
Best For
  • Date Night
  • Special Occasion
  • Celebration
Experience
  • Chefs Counter
  • Open Kitchen
Drink Program
  • Sake Program
  • Craft Cocktails
Dress CodeSmart Casual
Noise LevelConversational
CapacityMedium
Service StyleUpscale Casual
Meal PacingLeisurely

Modern upscale with soothing, grotto-esque atmosphere, moderate noise, and warm, inviting service.

Signature Dishes
Bluefin FlightWalu WaluHama Chili