Sri Lankan food is one of the most underrepresented cuisines in the United States, which makes Rice N’ Spice in Anaheim a genuinely rare find. It has been the only Sri Lankan restaurant open in all of Orange County since it opened in 2016, and it is one we keep coming back to whenever we are in Southern California. If you have never tried Sri Lankan food before, this is where to start.
Best for: Families, food adventurers, Sri Lankan diaspora, anyone near Disneyland looking for something completely different
Order this: Kottu, Lamprais
Price range: Main dishes $17.99; short eats from $2.49
What Makes Rice N’ Spice Worth Knowing About
The restaurant sits in a modest strip mall in Anaheim, not far from Disneyland, and the setting does not hint at what is inside. Walk in and you are met with bright green chairs, large food murals on dark walls, and a long digital menu board above the counter displaying the full Sri Lankan repertoire — kottu, lamprais, biryani, hoppers, godamba roti, and an array of short eats.
One of the first things we noticed on the awards wall is a framed sign that reads “Don’t ask for Tikka or Korma at Rice N’ Spice.” It is a clear and confident statement: this is not a generic South Asian restaurant serving the usual Indian restaurant staples. The kitchen makes Sri Lankan food, and it makes it well. The restaurant has received Assembly recognition and multiple Awards of Excellence, which are displayed on the wall alongside press coverage.
For us, this is the most reliable place we have found for Sri Lankan food in Southern California, and we have been back multiple times across different visits to the area.
What to Order
Kottu — The Must-Order
Kottu is the dish we always start with and the one we recommend to anyone visiting for the first time. It is Sri Lanka’s most iconic street food — roti chopped and stir-fried on a hot griddle with eggs, onions, green chili, and your choice of chicken, beef, or seafood. The rhythmic metal-on-metal chopping sound it makes while cooking is part of the experience.
The version here arrives as a dome-shaped mound on a white plate with a small cup of gravy on the side. The texture is unlike anything else — shredded and slightly chewy from the chopped roti, fragrant from the spices, with just enough heat to be interesting without being overwhelming. We have ordered chicken and beef versions across multiple visits and both are excellent. The beef adds a richness that pairs particularly well with the sauce.
Spice level matters here. If you are not accustomed to Sri Lankan spice, ask for mild or medium. The full heat level is genuine.
Lamprais — The Signature Experience
Lamprais is the restaurant’s most celebrated dish and the one most food writers highlight. It is rice simmered in broth, combined with eggplant moju, a boiled fried egg, fried shrimp sambal, and pineapple curry, all wrapped and baked in a banana leaf. The banana leaf does two things — it imparts a subtle earthy flavor to everything inside and it creates a genuinely fun presentation when you unwrap it at the table.
We want to be straightforward: a truly traditional lamprais from Sri Lanka is a specific colonial-era dish with specific ingredients and proportions, and this version takes some liberties. But taken on its own terms it is very good — the pineapple curry brings a sweetness that balances the savory rice, and the whole package is deeply satisfying. It is one of the best things on the menu.
Other Highlights
Godamba Roti: A Sri Lankan flatbread served with coconut sambol and curry. Simple and excellent. The $3.49 a la carte price makes it an easy add to any order.
Hoppers: Bowl-shaped crepes made from fermented rice flour and coconut milk. Egg hoppers at $3.49 each are a great entry point. Crispy at the edges, soft in the center, and unlike anything most American diners have encountered.
Biryani: Fragrant basmati rice cooked with spices and your choice of protein. Solid and generously portioned.
Short eats: The glass case near the counter holds fish rolls, patties, and other Sri Lankan snacks. Good for trying a variety of smaller bites alongside a main.
A Note on Food Allergies
We need to be transparent here: we did not inquire about allergy accommodations during our visits. Sri Lankan cooking uses a complex layering of spices, coconut, and curry preparations that makes ingredient tracking genuinely difficult, and our son is not keen on spicy food so we kept it simple. If you are managing specific food allergies, especially to tree nuts (cashews appear in some dishes), shellfish, or gluten, we would strongly recommend calling ahead and speaking directly with the kitchen before visiting. The staff have been friendly and accessible on all our visits, so this is a conversation worth having rather than skipping.
Practical Tips
Check hours before you go. Rice N’ Spice is closed Tuesday and Wednesday. Hours on other days vary and the restaurant does close when it sells out, particularly on weekends.
Call ahead for large orders or groups. Reviews note that phone orders can occasionally get lost on busy weekend days, so confirm before arriving if you are ordering for more than two or three people.
Takeout is popular. A significant portion of the business is the local Sri Lankan community picking up takeout. Do not be surprised if you place a dine-in order and the kitchen prioritizes a queue of pickup orders — the food is worth the wait.
No alcohol is served. The restaurant offers signature drinks including faluda and iced coconut-based options listed on the menu board.
Parking is easy. The strip mall lot has ample space with no charge.
Proximity to Disneyland: If you are staying near Disneyland for a park visit, Rice N’ Spice is close enough to be a genuinely good dinner option on a non-park evening — a completely different experience from the resort area restaurants nearby.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Rice N’ Spice the only Sri Lankan restaurant in Orange County?
As of our most recent visit, yes. It has held that distinction since opening and remains the go-to option for Sri Lankan cuisine in the entire Orange County area.
Is Rice N’ Spice good for kids?
Yes, with caveats around spice. The restaurant is family-friendly and the portions are generous. Spice levels can be requested when ordering kottu and some other dishes, so a mild version is viable for younger diners. Lamprais and godamba roti are naturally milder options.
Is there vegetarian food at Rice N’ Spice?
Yes. The menu includes vegetarian kottu, vegetable curry combinations, pol roti, and several short eat options that do not involve meat. Sri Lankan cuisine has a strong vegetarian tradition and the restaurant reflects that.
Do you need a reservation at Rice N’ Spice?
The restaurant accepts walk-ins and reservations. For weekend visits, especially Friday and Saturday evenings when they stay open until 9pm, calling ahead or arriving early is advisable as they can sell out of certain items.
Final Thoughts
Rice N’ Spice fills a genuine gap in Southern California’s dining landscape and does it well. The kottu alone is worth seeking out — it is one of the more distinctive dishes available anywhere in the region. The lamprais, hoppers, and godamba roti round out a menu that consistently rewards repeat visits.
For families in the Orange County area who want to try something genuinely different from the usual options, this is the place. And for anyone planning a trip to Sri Lanka — as we are — eating here first is an excellent way to get a taste of what is coming.
Houston is a city that rewards families willing to plan their day well. We had one full day to work with during our Texas road trip, and we came away with a clear sense of what the city does well and how to structure a day that works for everyone. We started with Space Center Houston in the morning, rolled into The Pit Room for lunch, spent the afternoon at Cidercade, and wound down the evening at Hermann Park. Here is how all of it came together and where we stayed.
Where We Stayed: Hyatt Place Houston Medical Center
We stayed at the Hyatt Place Houston Medical Center at 7329 Fannin St, which sits on the edge of the Texas Medical Center and within easy reach of Hermann Park and the Museum District. We used World of Hyatt points for our stay, which made it an especially strong value play for a two-night visit.
The room was a two-queen setup with a separate sitting area divided by a partial slatted screen, hardwood-style floors, and a large window with views of the Medical Center district. It is well designed for a family of three — each adult gets a bed and there is a sofa area for the kid to sprawl on. The rooftop pool is an unexpected bonus: a proper outdoor pool with lounge chairs and city views from a high floor, which our 10-year-old used both evenings we were there.
The honest note on location: the immediate area around the hotel is the Texas Medical Center campus, which is not a restaurant or shopping neighborhood. You will drive to essentially everything except Hermann Park, which is steps away. That said, the hotel’s position relative to the Museum District and the short 15-minute drive to Houston Hobby Airport made it a logical base for our trip.
Best for: Families using World of Hyatt points; anyone prioritizing proximity to Hermann Park and Museum District
Parking: On-site garage included
Free breakfast: Yes, included daily
Rooftop pool: Yes, outdoor with city views
Free shuttle: Within 2 miles of the property
Walkability: Limited outside of Hermann Park; a car is needed for most activities
Morning: Space Center Houston
We spent our morning at Space Center Houston, the official visitor center of NASA Johnson Space Center. It is a full half-day commitment and genuinely one of the best family attractions in the country. Our full review with ticket tips, tram tour details, and what not to miss is covered separately — read our complete Space Center Houston guide here.
Lunch: The Pit Room
After Space Center we drove to The Pit Room at 1201 Richmond Ave in the Museum District, and it was one of the best BBQ meals we had on the entire Texas trip. The Pit Room is widely considered one of Houston’s top BBQ spots, and the food delivered completely on that reputation.
The format is counter service — you walk up, order by the pound or as a dinner plate, grab your tray, and find a seat. We ordered a combination plate with brisket, smoked chicken, and sausage alongside mac and cheese. The brisket had a strong smoke ring and a proper bark, the chicken was juicy without being greasy, and the house sausage had a good snap. The BBQ sauce on the side was rich and not overly sweet.
The interior has an industrial-meets-Texas vibe — exposed timber ceiling, reclaimed wood, a long chalkboard menu across the wall showing daily cuts and specials. On weekends, look out for the Butcher’s Cut board listing special proteins like Wagyu beef ribs, which appear on select days and sell out fast.
The place was busy when we arrived on a Saturday afternoon, with a short queue at the counter that moved quickly. No reservations, no fuss. Shorts and t-shirt absolutely fine.
Best for: Families who want serious Texas BBQ in a casual, no-frills setting
Price range: Meats from $10.50 to $34 per pound; dinner plates from $21
Hours: Check thepitroombbq.com for current hours — they close when they sell out
Tip: Go before 1pm on weekends if you want the full menu. They sell out of certain cuts as the day goes on.
Food Allergy Note
Texas BBQ is one of the more allergy-friendly cuisine formats because the proteins are typically dry-rubbed and smoked without hidden ingredients. Verify each sauce and side separately at the counter — the staff can tell you what goes into each item. The chalkboard menu format means you can see everything clearly before ordering rather than navigating a printed menu with missing information.
Afternoon: Cidercade Houston
After lunch we headed to Cidercade Houston, a massive warehouse-style arcade with hundreds of classic and modern games, all set to free play after you pay admission. The concept is simple: pay to get in, play everything as much as you want with no additional tokens or credits required.
For a 10-year-old, this place hits perfectly. The cabinet selection runs deep — we saw Rastan, NBA Jam, Bad Dudes, Street Fighter, and a full section of newer racing and fighting games. The pinball section was impressive with machines including Led Zeppelin, AC/DC, and Black Knight, which kept the adults busy while our son worked through the classic cabinets. The space is large enough that it never felt crowded even on a Saturday afternoon.
The name comes from the cider bar integrated into the space — there is a full adult beverage setup for parents who want a drink while the kids play, which is a thoughtful touch. The energy in the building is relaxed and fun rather than chaotic.
Admission: Check cidercade.com for current pricing — varies by day and time
Best for: Kids and adults equally; the mix of classic and modern games spans generations
Format: Free play after admission — no tokens, no credits, play everything included
Tip: Weekday afternoons are noticeably less crowded than weekend afternoons if you have flexibility
Evening: Hermann Park
We ended the day at Hermann Park, a 445-acre public park right next to the hotel that is free to enter and open until 11pm. After a full day that started with Space Center and included a proper BBQ lunch and a couple of hours in an arcade, the park was exactly the right way to decompress.
The Jesse H. Jones Reflection Pool is the centerpiece — a long, still canal lined with trees that stretches into the distance, flanked by paths and benches. At golden hour and into dusk it is genuinely beautiful. The Sam Houston equestrian statue stands at the park entrance at the end of a brick promenade with ice cream trucks parked nearby most evenings. The fountain plaza near the McGovern Centennial Gardens has a stone obelisk surrounded by ground-level jets and benches where families sit and kids run through the water.
Our son spent most of this time playing Pokémon GO, which turns out to be a good reason to visit — the park is loaded with PokéStops and gyms concentrated around the Museum of Natural Science, the Japanese Garden, and the reflection pool path. If your kid plays, bring a portable battery pack.
Best for: All ages; especially good for a low-key evening wind-down
Don’t miss: The Jones Reflection Pool at sunset, the Sam Houston statue at the entrance, and the fountain plaza near the Centennial Gardens
Pokémon GO: Very strong area with multiple gyms and PokéStops — bring a portable battery
How to Structure Your Houston Day
If you are working from a similar setup to ours — one full day in Houston with a 10-year-old — here is the pacing that worked for us:
Morning: Space Center Houston (depart by 8:30am to arrive at opening; plan 3 to 3.5 hours)
Lunch: The Pit Room (arrive before 1pm for the best meat selection)
Afternoon: Cidercade (2 to 3 hours easily fills itself)
Evening: Hermann Park (golden hour through dusk is the best window)
This covers a lot of ground but the activities are spread across different parts of the city, so factor in 15 to 20 minutes of driving between each stop. Staying near Hermann Park and the Museum District as we did at the Hyatt Place makes the evening portion very easy since you can walk or drive two minutes to the park.
Traveling with Food Allergies in Houston
Houston is a genuinely food-forward city with diverse dining options, which generally means allergy awareness varies a lot by restaurant. The Pit Room is one of the safer picks because the format makes ingredients transparent and staff are accessible at the counter. For other meals not covered in this post, the Montrose and Museum District neighborhoods have independent restaurants with more attentive kitchen staff than tourist-heavy areas.
The Hyatt Place Medical Center has a complimentary hot breakfast that is standard buffet format. For allergy-specific needs, speak with the breakfast attendant about which items are safe rather than navigating the buffet independently. The hotel also has a small market in the lobby for packaged snacks with full ingredient labels.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Houston worth visiting with kids for just one day?
Yes, if you anchor the day around Space Center Houston. The combination of Space Center in the morning and a few well-chosen afternoon activities gives you a genuinely full and memorable day. One day is not enough to see everything Houston offers, but it is enough for a strong first visit.
Is the Hyatt Place Houston Medical Center good for families?
Yes. The two-queen room configuration is practical for a family of three, the rooftop pool keeps kids happy, free breakfast is included, and Hermann Park is right next door. The main limitation is that you will need a car for most activities — the surrounding area is a medical campus, not a walkable neighborhood.
Is Cidercade appropriate for a 10-year-old?
Absolutely. The classic arcade cabinet selection is ideal for a 10-year-old, and the free-play format means no nagging about spending limits. The cider bar aspect is for adults and does not change the family-friendly tone of the venue.
What is the best time to visit Hermann Park?
Late afternoon through early evening is the best window — the light is beautiful and the temperature drops to something comfortable, especially in spring and fall. It gets busy on weekends but the park is large enough that it never feels crowded.
How far is The Pit Room from Space Center Houston?
About 25 minutes by car, heading back toward central Houston along the 45 freeway. It is a natural and logical stop on the route from Space Center back to the Museum District area.
Final Thoughts
Houston surprised us with how much it packed into a single day. Space Center set a high bar in the morning and the afternoon held up well. The Pit Room was genuinely one of the best meals of the entire Texas road trip. Cidercade filled the gap between lunch and evening in a way that kept everyone engaged rather than tired. And Hermann Park gave the day a calm, beautiful close that none of us were expecting to enjoy as much as we did.
Space Center Houston is the official visitor center of NASA Johnson Space Center and one of the most impressive family attractions in the country. We visited with our 10-year-old on a busy spring weekend and spent just over three hours there — which felt like the right amount of time for that age, though you could easily fill four or five hours if your kids want to go deeper. Here is everything we learned, including the ticket tips that make a real difference.
Quick Summary
Best for: Families with kids ages 7 and up; especially strong for kids 9 to 14
Time needed: 3 hours minimum; 4 to 5 hours if you want to do everything at a relaxed pace
Do not miss: NASA Tram Tour, Saturn V rocket, Independence Plaza
First thing to do on arrival: Book your tram tour slot — before you see anything else
This is the most important section of this post. How you buy your tickets has a direct impact on how much you pay and whether you get access to the tram tour on your preferred day.
Buy tickets online at spacecenter.org at least a few days before your visit, ideally a week or more in advance if you are visiting on a weekend or during school holidays. Online tickets are cheaper than the walk-up window rate, and buying in advance lets you select a timed entry slot that guarantees your entry time.
The standard general admission ticket covers all exhibits plus the NASA Tram Tour, which takes you out onto the actual Johnson Space Center campus. The Mission Control add-on is a separate upgrade that requires advance reservation — this sells out fast on weekends, sometimes by mid-morning on the day of your visit. If Mission Control is on your list, buy and reserve that slot when you purchase your tickets online, not as an afterthought at the gate.
Ticket Tips That Actually Help
Buy online, not at the door. The price difference is real and the door queues can be long on busy days.
Book Mission Control in advance. It cannot be added on the day once slots are gone. If you care about seeing it, lock it in when you buy your main tickets.
Download the Space Center Houston app before you arrive. It has a “Join tram virtual line” feature that lets you reserve your tram boarding slot from your phone the moment you enter. This is faster than finding the Guest Services desk on a busy day.
Check for discount codes before buying. Educator discount codes are sometimes available and apply to the whole party. Search current codes before checkout — they appear and expire regularly.
Consider the Houston CityPASS if you plan to visit multiple Houston attractions. It bundles Space Center Houston with several others and saves meaningfully if you hit three or more included spots.
Tram tours can be canceled in rain. The trams are open-air vehicles. Check the Houston weather forecast before your visit — morning slots are safer if afternoon thunderstorms are possible, which is common in summer.
The Most Important Rule: Book Your Tram Tour First
The moment you walk through the entrance, go directly to the tram boarding area or open the Space Center Houston app and join the virtual queue. Do not stop to look at exhibits, do not browse the gift shop, do not get food. Tram tour slots are the scarcest resource at Space Center Houston on a busy day and they sell out.
The NASA Tram Tour takes you outside the visitor center and onto the Johnson Space Center campus itself, which is an active federal facility. You pass working NASA buildings, see the astronaut training areas from the tram, and are dropped at the Saturn V rocket building and Rocket Park before returning. This is the piece of the visit that separates Space Center Houston from any other science museum — you are actually at NASA, not just looking at displays about it.
Trams depart every 15 to 20 minutes depending on the day. The Guest Services desk near the entrance can book your slot, or the app handles it from your phone.
What to See on the NASA Tram Tour
The tram takes you through the Johnson Space Center grounds with narration explaining what each building is used for. Buildings you pass include Mission Control (if included in your ticket), astronaut training facilities, and the neutral buoyancy laboratory where astronauts train for spacewalks underwater. You cannot enter most of these from the outside, but seeing the actual working campus puts everything else in context.
One detail that caught us completely off guard: there is a Texas longhorn living on the NASA campus, visible from the tram as it passes. Our 10-year-old was equal parts confused and delighted. It is a genuine NASA mascot and has been a campus fixture for years. Worth knowing so you have your camera ready.
The tram stops at the Saturn V building and Rocket Park before returning to the main visitor center. Plan to spend significant time at both stops rather than rushing back.
Saturn V: The Most Jaw-Dropping Thing at Space Center Houston
Nothing at Space Center Houston prepares you for the Saturn V until you are standing next to it. The rocket is 363 feet long — taller than the Statue of Liberty — and lies horizontal inside a dedicated building on the NASA campus. You walk the length of it along a raised walkway, passing the five massive F-1 engines at the base, up through the body stages, to the Apollo capsule at the tip.
The scale is genuinely difficult to process. The F-1 engine bells are each about 12 feet in diameter. You can stand directly next to them and look up into the combustion chambers. Above the rocket, the building is hung with mission banners from Apollo 1 through Apollo 17. The combination of the physical rocket and that historical context makes this one of the most affecting exhibits we have encountered at any attraction.
Budget 20 to 30 minutes here. Kids tend to walk slowly through it because there is so much to take in at every step.
Rocket Park: Upright Rockets Outside
Adjacent to the Saturn V building is Rocket Park, an outdoor area where several rockets stand upright as they would have on a launch pad. The Mercury-Redstone and Little Joe II are the main display pieces here — actual rockets from the early American space program, weathered and real. Standing at the base of a rocket pointing at the sky with the NASA campus stretching out behind it is one of those moments that photographs well and feels even better in person.
Independence Plaza: The Shuttle on the 747
Independence Plaza is the other unmissable section and is located back at the main visitor center. It is a full-scale space shuttle replica (Independence) mounted on top of a real NASA 747 Shuttle Carrier Aircraft — the actual plane that ferried space shuttles across the country. You can walk through both the shuttle and the aircraft on multiple levels via an elevator tower.
Being inside the 747 while a shuttle sits on top of it is a strange and impressive experience. The view from the upper level, looking out over the NASA campus from the shuttle’s wing height, is one of the better photo opportunities at the park. The SpaceX Falcon 9 booster on display nearby tends to go unnoticed by many visitors — it is worth a few minutes if your family follows the current space program.
Main Exhibits Inside the Visitor Center
The main building holds a substantial collection of exhibits across multiple areas. Highlights include:
Lunar surface diorama — a detailed recreation of the Apollo lunar landing environment with full-scale astronaut figures, American flag, lunar rover, and lunar module. The lighting and staging make this genuinely impressive for all ages.
Mercury and Gemini capsule displays — actual capsules suspended against starfield backdrops. Seeing how small these vehicles were gives immediate context for how much the astronauts took on.
International Space Station exhibit — a large-scale ISS model suspended above a curved Earth backdrop, with live ISS telemetry showing the station’s current position, altitude, and orbital speed.
Alan Bean mural — a striking floor-to-ceiling painting by astronaut Alan Bean, who walked on the Moon during Apollo 12 and later became a painter. Seeing work by someone who was actually there is worth pausing for.
Mission Briefing Center — regular presentations covering current NASA programs including Artemis. The schedule is posted on the main board near the tram area when you enter.
Food at Space Center Houston
The on-site restaurant is called the Food Lab Market and Eatery, located in the main visitor center. It offers burgers, sandwiches, Tex-Mex items, and grab-and-go options. The food is standard theme park fare — functional and convenient but not a dining destination. Prices are in line with what you would expect at a major attraction.
If your visit timing is flexible, eating before you arrive or after you leave is a better option for food quality. The Museum District, where many families stay when visiting Houston, has much better dining options within a short drive.
Traveling with Food Allergies
The Food Lab has standard quick-service ordering, which means ingredient transparency depends on which staff member you reach. For families managing food allergies, the safest approach is to ask a manager directly about specific items before ordering rather than relying on posted menus alone. Grab-and-go packaged items typically have full ingredient labels and are the lower-risk option for snacks.
If your child has multiple or severe allergies, eating a meal before you arrive and packing safe snacks is the most reliable approach. The visitor center allows outside snacks and you will not go hungry between exhibits.
Practical Tips for Visiting with Kids
Arrive at opening time. The tram queue and Mission Control slots fill quickly on weekends. Being at the gate before the park opens is the best way to have the most flexibility with your day.
Wear comfortable shoes. The Saturn V building and Rocket Park involve significant walking. The Independence Plaza elevator and walkways add more. You will cover more ground than you expect.
Best age range: Kids from about 7 to 14 get the most from this visit. Younger children will enjoy the scale and visuals but may not engage with the historical content. Teens who have any interest in science or engineering will find it genuinely impressive.
The gift shop is at the exit. Set expectations with your kids before you go in — the Gift Station is well-stocked with NASA merchandise, models, and freeze-dried astronaut ice cream. Budget a few minutes and a few dollars if your kids are likely to want something.
Spring and early morning visits are the most comfortable weather-wise. Houston summers are hot and humid, and the Rocket Park and tram sections are exposed. Sunscreen and water bottles are recommended any time of year.
Check for special events. Space Center Houston runs themed weekends and educational events throughout the year. The main hall stage area is used for presentations and live programming that adds value on top of the standard exhibits.
How Long Does Space Center Houston Take?
We spent just over three hours and covered everything on this list at a comfortable pace with a 10-year-old. That included the full tram tour, walking the Saturn V, Independence Plaza, and the main indoor exhibits. Three hours felt right for that age — engaged without becoming overwhelming.
If you have older kids or adults who want to read every exhibit panel, attend a Mission Briefing Center presentation, and spend more time in the capsule gallery, four to five hours is realistic. If you are visiting with younger children who have shorter attention spans, two to two and a half hours covers the headline stops without pushing it.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the NASA Tram Tour included in general admission?
Yes, the tram tour to the Johnson Space Center campus is included with a standard general admission ticket. The Mission Control experience is a separate paid add-on that requires advance reservation and sells out on busy days.
How far in advance should you buy Space Center Houston tickets?
At minimum, buy a few days in advance for weekday visits. For weekend visits during spring break, summer, or school holidays, one to two weeks ahead is safer. This ensures you get your preferred entry time and can add Mission Control before it sells out.
Is Space Center Houston worth it for a 10-year-old?
Yes, without hesitation. The combination of actual NASA hardware, the working campus tram tour, and the scale of the Saturn V makes it unlike any science museum. A 10-year-old with any interest in science, history, or space will find it genuinely engaging rather than just educational.
Is there parking at Space Center Houston?
Yes. On-site parking is available and costs $10 per vehicle. It is well-organized and easy to navigate. The lot is large enough that finding a spot is not typically an issue even on busy days.
Can you eat at Space Center Houston?
Yes. The Food Lab Market and Eatery is the main on-site restaurant with quick-service food. For better food quality, eat before or after your visit — the surrounding Clear Lake area has more options nearby.
Is Space Center Houston stroller-friendly?
The main visitor center and most indoor exhibits are accessible. The NASA campus tram portion involves boarding and exiting the tram, and the Rocket Park outdoor area is paved. Strollers are manageable throughout the visit.
Final Verdict
Space Center Houston is one of the few attractions we would describe as genuinely unmissable when you are in Houston with kids. The Saturn V alone justifies the trip. The tram tour, the shuttle on the 747, and the depth of the exhibits add up to a full day that our family talked about long after leaving.
The single most important thing to take from this post: buy your tickets online in advance and book your tram tour slot the moment you walk in. Those two actions determine the quality of your visit more than anything else.
If you are building a Houston itinerary, Space Center Houston works well as a morning anchor. The drive from the Museum District takes about 35 minutes, making it an easy day trip from there.
San Antonio is one of the most family-friendly cities in Texas and an easy day trip from wherever you are staying in the region. We spent two days exploring downtown during our April 2026 visit, covering the Alamo, the River Walk, a Go Rio boat tour, and three very different restaurants. Here is what worked, what did not, and what we would do again.
Quick Summary: San Antonio with Kids
Best for: Families with kids ages 6 and up, history enthusiasts, food lovers
Time needed: One full day covers the highlights; two days lets you slow down and eat well
Best meal: Curry Boys BBQ — one of the most unique dining experiences we have had in any city
The Alamo: Worth It, But Keep Expectations Realistic
The Alamo is one of the most recognized buildings in the United States and it deserves a visit, but go in knowing what it is: a compact historical site in the middle of a busy downtown, not a sprawling open-air monument. The main chapel facade is immediately recognizable and genuinely impressive up close. The grounds include a large live oak tree wrapped in fairy lights, reconstructed adobe walls with bilingual historical displays, and cannons that kids gravitate toward immediately.
Entry is free. The Alamo opens at 9am and we recommend arriving as early as possible before tour groups fill the grounds. Plan for 45 to 90 minutes depending on how much history your group wants to absorb. For a 10-year-old with some awareness of Texas history, it held attention well without needing to rush.
One practical note: the surrounding Alamo Plaza is mid-renovation as of our April 2026 visit, so construction barriers are visible around some of the entrance signage and adjacent areas. The site itself is unaffected but the photo opportunities immediately outside are a bit cluttered. This will improve as the renovation work progresses.
Cost: Free general admission; guided tours available for a fee
Best for: Kids ages 8 and up; younger children will enjoy the outdoor grounds but may find the indoor exhibits less engaging
The San Antonio River Walk: The Heart of the City
From the Alamo it is a short five-minute walk down to the River Walk, and this is where San Antonio genuinely comes alive for families. The path winds along the San Antonio River below street level, lined with restaurants, bridges, palm trees, and the famous row of colorful umbrellas outside Casa Rio. It is one of those places that looks exactly like the photos and somehow still manages to feel special in person.
The stone arch bridges, the sounds of the water, and the mix of tourists and locals make it a great spot to slow down and wander without a fixed agenda. Our 10-year-old was engaged the entire time, partly because of the boats moving along the river and partly because there is always something to look at around the next bend.
Go Rio Boat Tour: Do Not Skip This
The Go Rio narrated boat tour was one of the genuine highlights of our San Antonio visit and one we would push every family toward. The open red boats depart regularly from multiple points along the River Walk and take you on a 35-minute narrated loop that covers the history of the city, the architecture along the river, and the story behind the River Walk itself.
Seeing the city from water level gives you a completely different perspective than walking the path above. The bridges, the buildings rising up from the banks, and the way downtown San Antonio frames itself from the river is genuinely impressive. Our 10-year-old stayed engaged throughout. The narrator on our tour was entertaining and kept things moving at a good pace.
Tickets: Book online at gorio.com or purchase at the dock
Duration: Approximately 35 to 40 minutes
Best for: All ages — this works as well for adults as it does for kids
Tip: Pick a morning departure to avoid the midday heat and the larger tourist crowds that build up by afternoon
Where We Ate: Three Very Different San Antonio Restaurants
We had three restaurant experiences during our San Antonio days, ranging from a genuine disappointment to one of the most memorable meals of the entire trip. Here is the honest breakdown.
Maria Bonita Mexican Restaurant and Cantina: Great Ambiance, Uneven Food
Maria Bonita is a San Antonio institution with a reputation that draws long waits on weekend evenings. The setting delivers on that reputation. The interior is festive and layered — colorful decorative arches, warm brick walls, string lights, and a live mariachi band that circulates through the dining room. It is the kind of place that feels like a proper night out rather than just dinner, and the atmosphere alone justifies the wait.
The food, unfortunately, did not live up to the setting during our visit. One of us ordered a beef dish with rice and beans that was solid and satisfying. The other ordered the bacon-wrapped shrimp, which arrived visibly undercooked. We sent it back, which is the right call, but the replacement plate came out with the same problem. Two rounds of undercooked shrimp is hard to overlook regardless of how good the margaritas are.
We would give Maria Bonita another chance on a future visit, because the atmosphere is genuinely fun and the place was clearly having an off night rather than a systemic issue. But go in knowing that food consistency can vary, and avoid the shrimp unless you can confirm the kitchen is on form that evening.
Best for: Groups and couples looking for a festive night out with live music
Tip: Arrive early or put your name in before you explore the area — waits can run 45 minutes or more on weekends
Casa Rio: Classic River Walk Dining Done Right
Casa Rio has been on the River Walk since 1946 and those colorful rainbow umbrellas lining the riverbank are its signature. We stopped here for lunch and it was exactly what a River Walk lunch should be: a table right by the water, good Tex-Mex food, quick seating, and an easy, relaxed atmosphere.
The food was genuinely good. The menu runs classic Tex-Mex with enchiladas, fajitas, tamales, and combination plates. Our combination plate hit all the marks — solid enchiladas, good rice and beans, and a tamale that was worth ordering again. Everything arrived quickly and the portions were generous without being overwhelming at lunch.
Casa Rio is not the most adventurous meal you will have in San Antonio, but it does not try to be. It is a well-run, well-located restaurant that has lasted 80 years for a reason. For a family lunch with a view of the river and boats passing by, it is hard to beat the combination of location and reliability.
Best for: Lunch with a river view; families with kids who want a classic Tex-Mex meal in a memorable setting
Curry Boys BBQ: The Most Unique Restaurant We Have Found in Any Texas City
Curry Boys BBQ is housed in a pink house and lit up at night with a neon sign. That alone tells you something about the personality of this place. What is inside is harder to describe briefly: it is Texas BBQ fused with Southeast Asian curry in a combination that sounds like it should not work and absolutely does.
The concept is simple. You pick a smoked meat and a curry, and they serve it together in a bowl over jasmine rice, topped with cilantro and fried shallots. We ordered the Brisket Smoke Show, which pairs post oak-smoked prime brisket with green curry, and the Tony Porker, which is pulled pork with Penang curry. Both bowls were outstanding. The brisket had the smoke and bark you expect from serious Texas BBQ, and the green curry brought a depth and warmth that made it feel like a completely different meal than a standard BBQ plate. It was a combination we had genuinely never experienced before and one that lingered as a topic of conversation for the rest of the trip.
The outdoor seating area under string lights and shade sails has a relaxed, neighborhood feel that is completely unlike a typical tourist restaurant. This is clearly a place the locals know about.
Hours: Check current hours at curryboysbbq.com — hours vary by day and they sell out
Price range: Bowls from $12.95 to $15.95; starters and sandos also available
Best for: Anyone willing to try something completely different; adventurous kids will enjoy the novelty
Tip: Go early. They sell out of certain proteins as the evening goes on.
Traveling with Food Allergies in San Antonio
San Antonio is a food-forward city with a wide range of dining options, which generally means allergy awareness varies significantly by restaurant.
At Casa Rio, the menu notes that they serve corn chips rather than flour tortillas for their dip starters, which is worth knowing if you are managing gluten sensitivities. For other allergens, ask to speak directly with a manager when seated rather than relying on server knowledge alone.
At Curry Boys BBQ, the bowl format makes it easier to identify ingredients since each component is distinct. Ask about the curry sauces specifically if you are managing tree nut or shellfish allergies, as some Southeast Asian curries include these. The staff were approachable and the kitchen is small enough that you can get direct answers.
Maria Bonita has the more complex menu from an allergy standpoint due to the sauces, marinades, and shared preparation areas typical of a high-volume Mexican restaurant. Ask to speak with a manager before ordering and be specific about your allergens.
Practical Tips for San Antonio with Kids
Parking: Use Rivercenter Parking Garage at 849 E Commerce St. It covers both the Alamo (5-minute walk north) and the River Walk (5-minute walk south) from a single spot. Expect around $25 for a half day.
Best time to visit the Alamo: First thing in the morning, before 10am, when crowds are lightest
River Walk access: Take any of the stairways down from street level along Commerce St or near the Rivercenter Mall to reach the walkway
Weather in April: Warm and pleasant, typically low 80s. Light clothing and comfortable shoes are all you need.
How much time: The Alamo plus River Walk plus a boat tour fills a comfortable morning. Add lunch at Casa Rio and you have a full day without rushing.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the San Antonio River Walk free?
Yes, walking the River Walk is completely free. The Go Rio boat tour is the only paid component and runs approximately $15 to $16 per adult with discounts for children.
How long should you spend at the Alamo with kids?
Plan for 45 to 90 minutes. Younger children will be satisfied with 45 minutes exploring the grounds and main chapel. Older kids and adults interested in the history can easily spend 90 minutes with the exhibits and the full grounds.
Is the River Walk stroller-friendly?
Yes, the main River Walk path is paved and accessible. The stairs connecting street level to the river level are the main challenge with strollers, but there are ramp access points at several locations including near the Rivercenter Mall.
Do you need to book the Go Rio boat tour in advance?
On weekdays and during off-peak hours you can often buy at the dock. On weekends and during spring break season, booking online in advance is worth the few minutes it takes to avoid waiting for the next available boat.
Is Curry Boys BBQ family-friendly?
Yes. The outdoor seating, casual ordering format, and approachable menu make it genuinely good for families. Kids who have had Thai or Indian curry before will take to it easily. For more cautious eaters, the sides and the milder yellow curry options are a gentler starting point.
Final Thoughts
San Antonio consistently delivers as a family destination, and two days gives you enough time to do it properly without feeling rushed. The Alamo and River Walk are the obvious anchors, but Curry Boys BBQ is the thing we talk about when we describe this trip. It is the kind of meal that comes up in conversation months later because it was genuinely unlike anything we had eaten before.
If you are a Hyatt Vacation Club member looking for a San Antonio base, Wild Oak Ranch is one of the most talked-about properties in the HVC portfolio. We used our HVC points for a two-night stay in April 2026 and came away with a clear picture of what this resort delivers and where it falls a bit short. Here is everything you need to know before you book.
Quick Summary
Property: Hyatt Vacation Club at Wild Oak Ranch, 9700 West Military Dr, San Antonio, TX 78251
Best for: HVC members, families with kids, couples looking for a resort-style stay near San Antonio
Unit type: Studio with king bed, separate sitting area, and kitchenette
Pools: Heated outdoor pool with water slides, 800-foot lazy river (unheated), beach entry area, indoor pool
Resort fee: $35 per night plus tax
Distance to San Antonio River Walk: About 11 miles, roughly 20 minutes
Would we book again: Yes
The Room: Studio Layout with More Space Than Expected
We stayed in a studio unit, which at Wild Oak Ranch is more spacious than the word “studio” might suggest. The layout has a king bed on one side and a defined sitting area on the other, complete with a sofa, coffee table, and a large piece of Texas bluebonnet artwork on the wall. The two areas share one open space but feel distinct enough that the room never felt cramped.
The kitchenette includes a mini fridge, microwave, and basic cookware. It is not a full kitchen, so do not expect to cook full meals here. What it does allow is storing snacks, breakfast items, and leftovers, which we found genuinely useful.
The balcony was one of the highlights of the unit. Two chairs and a small table overlook a sweeping view of Texas Hill Country tree canopy. We had coffee out there each morning and it was a great way to start the day. The decor throughout leans into Texas ranch style with warm tones, wood accents, and artwork that actually fits the surroundings rather than feeling generic.
Our one honest note: we expected the property to feel a bit larger overall, and the studio unit reflects that. It is well-designed and comfortable but not sprawling. For two adults and one child it worked perfectly.
The Pool Complex: The Real Reason to Stay Here
The pool area is genuinely impressive and was the highlight of our stay. The main outdoor pool is heated, the temperature was perfect when we visited in late April, and it was not crowded at all. The water slide is a proper tube slide that winds down from a good height. Our 10-year-old rode it repeatedly without any prompting to stop.
The 800-foot lazy river winds through a canopy of mature oak trees and has a calm, natural feel to it. Fair warning: the lazy river is not heated. We found it noticeably cooler than the main pool, so it works well on a warm day but might be too cold in cooler weather. Floats are available on-site.
One feature that surprised us was the sandy beach entry area. It is a zero-entry pool with real sand surrounding it, which gives it a beach-like feel that you do not typically see at a resort in the Texas Hill Country. Our kid loved it and it is worth knowing about if you are traveling with younger children who prefer shallow water.
The resort also has an indoor pool, two hot tubs, and a kids’ splash area, which means pool options regardless of weather.
Resort Grounds and Amenities
Wild Oak Ranch sits on 39 acres and the grounds are well maintained. Beyond the pools, the resort offers:
Putting green
Wildflower Pavilion with a communal fire pit
Nature trails throughout the property
Outdoor games including giant Connect Four, Jenga, chess, and checkers
Volleyball and ping pong
Arcade and game room
24-hour fitness center
Access to the 27-hole Hyatt Hill Country Golf Club nearby
Guests at Wild Oak Ranch also have access to the adjacent Hyatt Regency Hill Country Resort and Spa, which adds another pool complex and expanded amenities to your stay. This is a meaningful bonus if you want more variety across your visit.
Dining at Wild Oak Ranch
The resort has an on-site restaurant and JB’s Poolside Restaurant for casual lunch and snacks by the pool. We grabbed breakfast and coffee at the on-site Starbucks market on our checkout morning. It was basic but exactly what we needed before a long drive day. The market carries grab-and-go items, pastries, and standard Starbucks beverages.
We chose to eat off-property for our main meals during this stay, which meant we cannot give a full review of the on-site dinner restaurant. What we can say is that the Starbucks market was convenient and well-stocked, and the poolside grill is a solid option for a quick lunch without leaving the resort. San Antonio itself has excellent dining options within a short drive, and we would encourage most families to venture out for at least one meal.
Traveling with Food Allergies
For families managing food allergies, the studio kitchenette is a practical advantage. Having a mini fridge and microwave allowed us to store safe snacks and items from a grocery run rather than depending entirely on restaurant meals. For families with more severe allergies, we would recommend stocking up at a nearby grocery store on arrival day.
We did not dine at the main restaurant during our stay, so we cannot speak to how kitchen staff handle allergy requests there. Before booking any resort dining, we recommend calling ahead to speak directly with the restaurant about specific allergens. The resort fee covers a range of amenities but allergy protocols are worth confirming independently.
HVC Owner Notes: The Presentation Experience
If you are booking this property as an HVC member, you will likely be invited to attend an owner update presentation during your stay. We attended a 90-minute session and found it more informative than high-pressure. As relatively newer HVC members, the session actually helped us understand the portfolio program better and clarified several benefits we were not fully using. There was a mild upsell component, as there always is, but it was not aggressive and the experience felt worth our time.
For HVC members who have already attended multiple presentations, know that you can decline or keep the session short. For newer owners, it is worth attending at least once at a property like Wild Oak Ranch, where the staff are experienced with the portfolio program and can answer specific questions about points usage and reservations.
On the booking side, this property is bookable through the Hyatt Vacation Club owner portal using Portfolio ORP points. Cash rates at the property run around $106 to $180 per night before the resort fee, so using points here is a strong redemption if availability lines up with your dates.
Location: Good for San Antonio, Not for Downtown Walks
Wild Oak Ranch is on the far west side of San Antonio, which means you are not walking to the River Walk from your room. The River Walk and the Alamo are both about 11 miles away, roughly a 20-minute drive. Get directions to Wild Oak Ranch.
The Hyatt Hill Country Golf Club, directly adjacent
Shopping at the nearby Rim and La Cantera areas
For the River Walk and Alamo, plan for a dedicated day trip rather than expecting to pop in and out. It is completely doable and the drive is straightforward, but factor in the travel time when planning your days.
Is Wild Oak Ranch Worth Booking on HVC Points?
Yes, for the right kind of stay. Wild Oak Ranch works best if your plan is to use the resort as the activity itself for at least one full day. The pool complex, lazy river, and grounds give families enough to do that a full afternoon at the resort is genuinely enjoyable rather than just a place to sleep. If your entire trip is built around San Antonio sightseeing and you plan to be out from morning to night, a closer downtown hotel might serve you better logistically.
For families who want a mix of resort time and city exploration, two nights here is the right balance. We spent one afternoon fully at the resort, did a full day in San Antonio, and the pacing worked well.
Frequently Asked Questions
How far is Wild Oak Ranch from the San Antonio River Walk?
About 11 miles, which is roughly a 20-minute drive depending on traffic. It is not walkable but the drive is easy and well-signposted.
Is the Wild Oak Ranch lazy river heated?
No. The main outdoor pool is heated, but the lazy river is not. In late April it was noticeably cooler. On a hot Texas summer day this would actually be refreshing, but plan accordingly if you are visiting in spring or fall.
Can you book Wild Oak Ranch without being an HVC member?
Yes. The resort is bookable through standard hotel booking platforms at standard nightly rates. HVC members can access the property through the owner portal using points, which is typically the better value.
Is there parking at Wild Oak Ranch?
Yes, free self-parking is available on-site. This is a straightforward process with no additional parking fee beyond the resort fee.
What is the resort fee at Wild Oak Ranch?
$35 per night plus tax as of our April 2026 stay. This covers access to all resort amenities including the pools, lazy river, fitness center, and outdoor activities.
Is Wild Oak Ranch good for families with young kids?
Yes. The beach entry zero-entry pool area, the splash zone, and the lazy river are all well-suited to younger children. The water slide has a minimum height requirement so check with the resort if you have very young kids. The grounds are spacious and the overall atmosphere is relaxed and family-oriented.
Final Verdict
Wild Oak Ranch delivered on the things that matter most: a comfortable, well-designed unit, an excellent pool complex, and a genuine resort feel that made it easy to decompress. The lazy river through the oak trees, the sandy beach entry, and the heated main pool kept our 10-year-old occupied for hours without any negotiation required.
The property is not perfect. The studio unit is on the smaller side compared to some HVC properties, the lazy river temperature surprised us, and the location requires a drive to most San Antonio attractions. But for a two-night HVC points redemption, it is a solid choice and one we would book again without hesitation.
If you are planning a San Antonio trip and have HVC points available, check availability at the Hyatt Vacation Club owner portal and consider pairing it with a day trip to the River Walk and Alamo for a well-rounded Texas stay.