
More Great Brunch Options in Greater Katy Whiskey flights, craft brews, and inspired elixirs round out the menu. Just be sure to save room for the main event, hangover brisket burgers, pulled pork eggs benny, farmer’s breakfast hash with thick-cut cherry wood bacon, and lemon poppyseed pancakes.
/cdn.vox-cdn.com/uploads/chorus_image/image/53347133/snooze-fb.0.jpg)

There are also things like chicken and waffles, croissant egg sandwiches, migas, baja chicken wraps, gyro plates, and farmers market salads. Three-egg omelets come stuffed with spinach and feta, imported ham and cheese, garden veggies, and Tex-Mex beef and peppers, while Benedicts run the gamut from classic and crab cake to veggie quinoa. Get the juices flowing with mimosa flights and sangria carafes before moving on to the big guns. Local Table – Eat, drink, and gather with family and friends at this fresh-faced spot from the team behind Hungry’s Café and Bistro.Saturday 7am to 3:30pm Sunday 8am to 3pm. Tack on some revitalizing juices, mint lemonade, and virgin mojitos or go boozy with wines, cocktails or the “bromosa,” a bubbly and Karbach Weisse Versa cocktail with orange and lemon. The casual spot is counter-service during brunch hours, with offerings including brisket n’ eggs, a house-favorite rocking brisket, open range sunny-side eggs, smoked gouda grits, tomatillo relish and a house buttermilk biscuit buttermilk pancakes with fruit, powdered sugar, and toppings like candied pecans and white chocolate chips and lunchier items like chimichurri steak tacos, quinoa-stuffed avocado and shrimp & grits. Dish Society – Farm-to-table eats are the name of the game at this Katy outpost of the all-day, seasonally-inspired diner.Note: For the purposes of this list, Greater Katy includes the suburbs that surround the Katy city limits west to Pederson Road, east to Fry Road, north to FM 529, and south to FM 1093/Westpark Tollway Parkway. You’ll still find the MKT Depot along with the Katy Heritage Society Railroad Museum in Katy today, and while the old suburb may not have been known as a great eats neighborhood in the past, times have certainly changed…even when it comes to brunch.

In 1893, the Missouri–Kansas-Texas (or MKT Railroad) began laying rails throughout the prairie land, and after railroad officials started calling it “the Katy,” a new name was born. This historic neighborhood was known as Cane Island in the mid-1800s, named for an area creek which was thought to have been filled with cane by early settlers for fur trapping.

Originally published in 2017, we are now refreshing, updating, and adding to this series, including new neighborhoods and destinations. In our Where to Brunch series, we search Houston ’s vast array of neighborhoods for the very best brunch offerings.
