Move Over, Mary

Moby didn’t show. But a six-foot Dorothy in gingham dress and ruby slippers did. And then there was a shirtless hunk on a bicycle, an aging queen with a toupee and a walker, and Mayor Jim Naugle and his wife. There were also several hundred gay men in varying states…

Bone Appétit

Much like Dubya’s mandate, the popularity of Bonefish Grill has reached the degree that no self-protecting member of Food World can ignore it. On weekends, the lines of people waiting out front at either the Coral Springs or the Plantation locations are long enough to make the faint-hearted turn tail…

In Search of the Elusive Boba

“Originally seen on the streets of Hong Kong, boba is not dangerous to man, though its appearance can seem threatening to the uninitiated. It’s not difficult to spot the boba, as its brownish tone makes it stand out when it swims in the pools of Easter egg-colored, milkshake-like fluids it…

Girls’ Guide to Hunting and Fishing

Pissed off at Publix? Think you just can’t choke down one more slice of gummy, supermarket-nuked bread? Tired of settling for choice beef when your adventurous, poetic soul yearns for prime? Fed up with fish that smells like… well, you know what it smells like. A girl’s gotta take matters…

Saigon Dreaming

Opening a Vietnamese restaurant in Boynton Beach is the second-hardest thing Tom Nguyen has ever done. The most difficult was exiting his homeland 24 years ago. Back in 1980, Nguyen was standing on a beach at Nha Trang in Central Vietnam, waiting to board a rickety fishing boat with 82…

SoBe Up North

True or false? You know you’ve arrived at an Ocean Drive dining destination if: (1) a leggy hostess with a mocha tan and sunglasses on her head greets you on the sidewalk, (2) even though you thought you were going for a quiet dinner, you hear techno music thumping behind…

The Mideast Moves West

Could there be a more inviting place in town than al-Salam? Maybe, but you’d probably have to hop a plane to Jeddah to compete with the hospitality at this Saudi restaurant/grocery located on the northeast corner of University Drive and Sunrise Boulevard. The hostess, who doubled as a waitress on…

Green Party

In West Palm’s posh Flamingo Park neighborhood, a young couple plants their backyard with rows of basil, rosemary, thyme, and Italian parsley. In Lake Worth, a Finnish grandfather bakes bread from old Scandinavian recipes — he’s been doing it every day in the same location for 50 years. Down the…

Cicada Song

From the moment La Cigale opened in May 2001, foodists have had their tongues out for whatever drips from Executive Chef Jean Pierre Blouin’s brandished spoon. Only city ordinances have prevented some lifeguards of the larder from setting up tents under the canopy of this 185-seat jewel box in the…

A Fruity Inebriate

In January, 2000, the Florida Citrus Commission made the historic move of approving the use of one of its licensing logos on a beverage other than orange juice. The logo? The Florida “Sunshine” tree. The beverage? Wine. No sooner than you could say grapefruit champagne, eight distributors of taste-twisting Florida-fruit-based…

A Star Turn

Banana splits. Original Motown recordings. Diners. The Mickey Mouse Club. The martini. Perry Mason. The Thin Man series. The Hope/Crosby road movies. Did any of these American cultural benchmarks beg for reinterpretation? Nope. But they got it anyway. And now, the Red Star Tavern, the latest addition to the expanding…

Passion of the Fruit

Jamaican folks sing the praises of Devon House, a Kingston landmark and popular purveyor of island-style ice cream. But instead of booking the next flight on Air Jamaica to the island, head for the Highway 441 strip mall that offers a remarkable facsimile. At York Castle Tropical Ice Cream (61…

No Catches, Just Fish

South Floridians will do almost anything, forgive almost anything, to eat on the water. They’ll suffer through mildew, service more inept than the Scott Peterson prosecution, and food no better than Denny’s to gaze in rapture at the Intracoastal Waterway or the ocean. Boynton Beach’s Prime Catch, the four-month-old venture…

Shuck’s, No Jive

Shuck’s on the Water is not on the water. It’s close, though — across a small parking lot from one of the more significant bends in the Middle River off Federal Highway south of Sunrise. What used to be Durty Nellie’s reopened three months ago as a bar-cum-fresh seafood spot…

Luxuriant Lunch

Lunch can really hang you up the most. Especially when the outside air is the texture of angora. When you’re hungry and have a 30-minute lunch “hour.” When you can’t stand the thought of another desk-side scoop of chicken salad. Cheer up. Chin up. In downtown Fort Lauderdale, we now…

A Sonata in Davie Major

Around the time of Martin Luther, Germany — the land of Bach and von Braun — seems to have pretty much developed a cuisine and stuck with it. But the Teutons’ neighbor to the south, the Austrians, even at the height of their empire, had enough humility and good sense…

October Pours In

Calling all lederhosen lovers, stein swillers, felt cap flourishers, and cowbell crazies. It’s Oktoberfest time again, you cuckoo clocks, and South Florida’s German restaurants won’t let you forget it. Actually, some of these eateries start early — like in mid-September. At Old Heidelberg Restaurant & Deli (900 State Rd. 84,…

A Savior Out West

Hondurans have mondongo soup, Guatemalans their chicken in pineapple. Belizeans cherish pawpaw bread, Nicaraguans their meat tortitas. But for top-of-the-line Central American comfort food, you can’t help feeling the world’s your ostra when you take a bite of the Salvadoran pupusa. Pupusas are to El Salvador what tortillas are to…

In-Town Salvadoran

La Molienda’s pupusas come in the same three varieties as Atlakat’s (loroco, queso, and reveultas, $2.25 each). But Atlakat’s version — plump, juicy, with a finessed touch of the griddle — bears little comparison to the less generously filled and more seriously grilled pupusas served at this 5-year-old, freestanding building…

Colorful Repast

Finding an edgy restaurant in Fort Lauderdale takes the determination of Stanley tracking Livingston. Creating such an eatery requires a little more: perfect timing, patience, belief in a higher power, and a few hundred thousand dollars. So a tip of the hat to four-month-old Colors Urban Bar, working hard to…

Tambourine’s Too Tired

How long should a new restaurant be open before it can be reviewed fairly? If the Gypsy’s Tambourine is any sort of yardstick, two months is way too soon. Much like Colors, the Tambourine promises uniqueness. To bolster this claim, the restaurant offers live entertainment, jewelry and boutique items for…

Hope Springs on Ely

Don’t expect a sign when you go looking for Hope’s Restaurant. And don’t expect linen and lanky waiters in bow ties either. And if you’re searching for that romantic evening you once found in a booth at Yesterday’s, you’d be better off splitting a bologna sandwich on the number 11…