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Shelly's Heart and Soul Food relocates to downtown Hutto

Shelly's Heart and Soul Food is relocating to downtown Hutto, the business confirmed in a Facebook post. 

The gist: Shelly's opened in February and was located within The Shoppes at Affordable Storage in Hutto. The spot serves a variety of soul food with the menu featuring hand-breaded catfish fillets and wings, with sides such as collard greens, rice and beans, macaroni and cheese, corn bread muffins, fries and grits.

The food truck also serves breakfast options, including the Messiah's Mess, which comes with eggs, bacon and cheese on Texas toast.

The truck will now operate in The Hippo Escape at 209 Farley St.

  • Relocated in July
  • 209 Farley St., Hutto

 
coming soon
LongHorn Steakhouse planned for Hutto

A LongHorn Steakhouse is coming to Hutto, Mayor Mike Snyder confirmed in a Facebook post.

The details: The location will be situated in the Sprouts development off Hwy. 79 and SH 130.

Part of the Darden Restaurants group, which also owns brands like Olive Garden and Cheddar's, LongHorn Steakhouse serves a variety of fresh-cut steaks, seafood, chicken, lamb and more.

  • Opening TBD
  • Corner of Hwy. 79 and SH 130

 
Latest News
UT Dell Medical Center aims to transform health care access, training in Central Texas

North Austin will soon be home to a major expansion of The University of Texas’ medical, academic and research systems with the planned opening of the UT Dell Medical Center in 2030. 

The 27-acre medical complex, a collaboration with the UT MD Anderson Cancer Center, will break ground this fall. The center is expected to initially include a hospital tower, outpatient facilities and emergency department, with new facilities to be added in phases through 2032. The medical complex is one piece of the recently announced 300-acre UT Dell Campus for Advanced Research off MoPac.

The facility was initially expected to rise downtown near Dell Seton Medical Center, and state lawmakers removed building restrictions on a university-owned property for the UT-MD Anderson project. However, the project’s scope led officials to select Northwest Austin instead. The university confirmed the medical center will feature 300-500 patient beds for specialized care, including potential cutting-edge clinical trials and therapies, to ensure patients won’t have to navigate multiple facilities or search outside Central Texas to address their needs.

 
Metro News Monday
Gas station project filed, Robinson Ranch development: Check out top trending Austin area news

Check out Austin area stories trending June 29-July 2.

1. Plans filed for proposed gas station, retail center near Hutto-Georgetown-Round Rock border

2. Developer of The Domain partners with legacy family on 1,200-acres

3. Dirty soda drink shop to open in San Marcos

4. Lagoon-anchored Leander Springs development advances to Leander City Council

5. Hopdoddy Burger Bar acquired by New York-based restaurant group

6. Closer to care: Bastrop explores path to full-service hospital

 
CI Texas
Texas is heating up. Here are the systems involved in keeping the lights on.

The Electric Reliability Council of Texas operates the state power grid, overseeing the flow of electricity to over 27 million customers. Yet ERCOT does not directly participate in Texas’ electric market or own any of the facilities that deliver power across the state.

The big picture: Power generation plants, transmission facilities and distribution lines are owned by outside companies, meaning that local power outages are typically isolated and handled by individual companies, rather than ERCOT.

How it works: In 1999, Texas legislators passed a law deregulating the state’s retail electric market. The law was designed to “introduce competition in Texas’ electric market by allowing consumers to choose their retail electric provider,” according to ERCOT.

Previously, most Texas utility companies owned all aspects of the electric supply chain, including generation, transmission and the delivery of power to customers.

Today, approximately 85% of electric customers in Texas can choose their retail electric provider, including those across the Houston and Dallas-Fort Worth regions. Customers in Austin and San Antonio get their electricity from municipally owned utilities.

 

Your local team

Darcy Sprague
Managing Editor

Amy Leonard Bryant
General Manager

Email [email protected] for story ideas, tips or questions.

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