Behind the celebrated star at San Antonio’s hottest new restaurant, Isidore, are three amigos in Michelin jackets: one chef who began as a dishwasher, one who started as a busboy and a 3rd who graduated from Central Catholic Excessive Faculty, half a mile from Pullman Market.
In two months, Ian Lanphear (dishwasher), Danny Parada (busboy) and Jorge Hernandez (Central Catholic) have accomplished a culinary trifecta.
In September, their craft within the kitchen led the New York Occasions to call Isidore one among America’s 50 Greatest Eating places.
In October, the Isidore cooks celebrated a Michelin star and a Inexperienced star on the Michelin Information ceremony in Houston.
The popularity prompted a sudden spike in enterprise. Inside three hours after the Michelin announcement, Isidore acquired greater than 200 new reservations, mentioned Alicynn Fink, companion with Emmer & Rye Hospitality.
A Halloween go to from visitors three days later crystallized the impression.
“These two gents got here in and mentioned, ‘We’re so proud to be right here,’” mentioned Parada, a company chef who additionally works at Michelin-starred Nicosi Dessert Bar subsequent door.
“They grew up in San Antonio. They mentioned, ‘That is superior. First there was Mixtli. Now we’ve got three Michelin star eating places. It’s good to see San Antonio acknowledged as a culinary vacation spot.’”
These are heady instances at Isidore, a high-end chophouse that opened in August 2024. Need a desk for 2 at 7 p.m.? Nothing is accessible earlier than Nov. 23. Strive an earlier or later time as a substitute. However do it rapidly. Demand is booming for a trendy spot that options Blackjack Level oysters, a dry-aged Berkshire pork chop and a 12-ounce, Wagyu steak butcher’s reduce.

“However the true prize,” the New York Occasions wrote, “is a sublime dish of yuba manufactured from milk from a close-by farm that’s full of contemporary cheese and cooked in cream — it appears like ethereal ravioli and tastes like heaven.”
It’s been an other-worldly ascent for Parada and Lanphear, the chef de delicacies. Parada began as a busboy at age 14 in Kemah and labored his means up. “I fell in love with the velocity and tempo of the kitchen and went to culinary faculty in Austin,” he mentioned.
Lanphear grew up in Pittsburgh with a love for portray the outside. He moved to San Antonio, deliberate to attend artwork faculty and took a job as a dishwasher at Fig Tree. The superb eating kitchen modified his ambition.
“I made a decision that was going to be my trajectory as a substitute of artwork faculty,” Lanphear mentioned.
Hernandez aspired for world-class coaching in his youth. He studied on the Culinary Institute of America in Hyde Park, New York, the place he met famend chef José Andrés. The connection led to work at minibar by José Andrés, a Michelin two-star restaurant in Washington, D.C.
He returned to Texas throughout the COVID-19 pandemic and have become company chef for creativity for Emmer & Rye Hospitality Group. Hernandez got here residence as a company chef final yr when Emmer and Rye opened Pullman Market. “Isidore and Nicosi have been the 2 large tasks we tackled collectively,” he mentioned.
In San Antonio, Hernandez divides his time between Isidore and Nicosi, collaborating with cooks and creating new menu gadgets. He spends roughly half his time in Austin, working with Emmer & Rye Hospitality, a powerhouse collective that features three Michelin one-star, two Inexperienced stars and three Bib Gourmand eating places.
“Hardly a day goes by that cooks from totally different eating places don’t spend time collectively, bouncing concepts off each other,” Hernandez mentioned. “It’s loads of enjoyable.”
Hernandez, Parada and Lanphear convey distinct experience to Isidore’s vibrant menu. Hernandez has CIA coaching and Michelin two-star expertise. Parada realized in kitchens from Chicago to Sydney, Australia. Lanphear’s fine-dining pedigree contains work at Fig Tree and Restaurant Gwendolyn in San Antonio. As Lanphear places it, “I received paid for my expertise moderately than paying for my expertise.”
The trio’s collaboration earned a Michelin Inexperienced star for sustainable and eco-friendly practices. Fourteen months after opening, their work at Isidore earned a coveted Michelin star for “top quality cooking.”

From the Michelin Information: “Named for the patron saint of farmers and laborers, there’s a clear concentrate on Texas components and native traditions, even incorporating Native American parts into the bread service. The menu is massive, with gadgets meant for sharing and a bit devoted to steak. Narrowing down your snack choice isn’t straightforward, however the popcorn hen, crispy fried with popcorn aioli and velouté, is an efficient guess.”
Isidore additionally provides a curated beverage program that focuses on Texas wines and up to date takes on traditional cocktails, such because the Bread & Butter Outdated-Long-established and a Maravilla Margarita.
How does it really feel to have a Michelin star?
In Houston, a one-time busboy and a former dishwasher slipped into white Michelin jackets and soaked within the second of a Tremendous Bowl-like triumph. “To get the popularity from a model as large as Michelin,” Parada mentioned, “was tremendous rewarding.”
Hernandez stood close by, clad in his personal Michelin jacket, coronary heart pounding, reminiscences swirling. He’d left residence to get an elite schooling and labored at a Michelin two-star on the East Coast. However he’d at all times deliberate to return and share his reward again residence.
Hernandez by no means imagined he’d break up time between two kitchens separated by a single wall. Or that each kitchens would win a Michelin star on the identical day.
One week later, the hometown chef remained on a culinary excessive.
“It’s,” he mentioned, “completely wonderful.”
