Showing posts with label Miami. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Miami. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Miami restaurants

Big-deal hotel openings, new star chef outpost and much more - all in time for the South Beach wine &-Food Festival.

Miami RestaurantsPoolside at the Redbury South Beach.

"I love Miami and I love Chinese food," says Richard Hale, founder of the Dim Ssam À GoGo food truck and Sakaya kitchen restaurant. In his new place he does everything from the ground up, including Chinese charcuterie and even fortune cookies. midtownchinese.com

This retro spot by local hero Michael Schwartz of Michael's genuine food & drink. He says he "wanted to conquer back glamour in restaurants: ironed tablecloths, chandeliers and choreographed service, but without that pretentious and stuffy." thecypressroom.com

Miami Restaurants: The District Miami

A protégé of Originator Nuevo Latino Douglas Rodriguez, Horacio Rivadero opened his own Pan American place in a small wood beamed the 1950s years House. Menu highlights: local cobia ceviche and lobster tacos. thedistrictmiami.com

Miami Restaurants: Lippi

Suitable French-American chef Philippe Ruiz used the restaurant located in the Brickell world Plaza, global flavors in its 80 small plates like Octopus Carpaccio with potato confit menu. Also the cocktails, like the Hibiscus Fizz are secular. lippirestaurants.com

Miami Restaurants: Lucali

This spin-off which nods Mark Iaconos legendary Lucali in Brooklyn can these New York roots. Muscular Pizzaioli roles are flexible and deliciously tangy dough with wine bottles, what thin crusted cakes, and burned. 305-695-4441

This New-York-City-raw bar import at Loews Miami Beach Hotel, has a swanky yacht-inspired design. The Burger with caramelized onions and Bacon jam and American cheese seems out of place in the seafood-heavy menu, but it is a four times winner of the New York City wine & Food Festival Burger Bash. lurefishbar.com

The Fontainebleau Miami Beach, is home to this new outpost of San Francisco Chef Michael Mina, recently purchased a 43 foot Torres commercial fishing there. Drag the three-man crew daily in more than 800 pound fish and seafood, then transfer catch their live on "Water world" - a series of saltwater tanks under the 20-acre resort. Mina used super fresh shellfish spooned Stone Crab and lobster on his car. Fontainebleau.com

Miami Restaurants: The Redbury South Beach

Redbury South Beach feels like her sister advice pack-inspired Hollywood. Formerly, the Fairfax hotel, built in 1951, the two three-storey buildings gutted, were completely renovated. The new mood: Velvet sofas, vinyl records. Chicago chef Tony Mantuano's Italian restaurant, Lorenzo, running his famous gnocchi Florida wild boar add to. Double rooms from $299; SBE.com

This carefully restored 1930s showpiece, originally the Traymore, is home to America's first hotel como - an international group, well known for fabulous design. The 74-room property, which opened a range of grays and sea foam green in a nod to the construction history of the Art Déco set Italian designer Paola Navone this year. Double room from $350; comohotels.com

Miami Restaurants: JugoFresh

El with Apple, celery, spinach, parsley, and lemon connects here, such as the Green-go, people line up for the cold-pressed juice. jugofresh.com

Swiss company Herzog & de Meuron designed the stunning 120,000-square-foot building on Biscayne Bay; the collection focuses on contemporary artists such as Olafur Eliasson. PAMM.org

Works by neighborhood buskers Krave and Trek6 cover the walls; the tap handles (shaped like spray cans) pour la Rubia blond ALE. wynwoodbrewing.com

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Wednesday, August 1, 2012

Best Restaurants in Miami

Michelle Bernstein of Miami’s Michy’s and Sra. Martinez shares her restaurant picks. Best Restaurants in Miami Chef Michelle Bernstein shares her picks for the best restaurants in Miami. Miami Restaurants: Joe’s Stone Crab Photo courtesy of Joe’s Stone Crab.

“It has some of the best fried chicken in Florida, but everybody goes for the stone crab.” 11 Washington Ave.; joesstonecrab.com; 305-673-4611.

Miami Restaurants: Hy Vong

“A Vietnamese place in the middle of Calle Ocho, the Cuban area; I’ve been going there since I was little.” 3458 SW Eighth St.; hyvong.com; 305-446-3674.

Miami Restaurants: La Camaronera Restaurant & Fish Marke Photo courtesy of La Camaronera.

“Also in Calle Ocho, it’s a shack with no chairs, no tables. You stand at a counter and eat the best fried shrimp you’ve ever had.” 1952 W. Flagler St.; lacamaronera.com; 305-642-3322.

“My favorite Japanese market also has the best sushi in town.” 1412 79th St. Causeway; japanesemarketmiami.com; 305-861-0143.

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Monday, May 14, 2012

Best Food Trucks in Miami


Like everyone else in the U.S., I love food trucks. One cup gourmet food, half a cup of you-have-to-be in-the-know, food trucks provide scrumptious food at a competitive price with a dash of cool. What better way to sample Miami´s diverse cultural palette and warm weather than stopping by one of the best food trucks in Miami.

Gastropod

The crème de la crème, Gastropod is a gastronome's dream. One of the most well established food trucks in Miami, Chef Jeremiah serves his tasty dishes out of a Silver 1960s Airstream motor home. While his food is not the cheapest in town (you can expect to pay around $10 per plate) it is the most 'gourmet' option as Gastropod has a reputation for exciting and unique Caribbean fusions. Favorites include Banh Mi Pork Tacos, Red Curry Duck Tacos and the famous Old Dirt Dog Short Ribs with Stupid Slaw. Is you hungry yet?

Ms. Cheezious

Mmmmm, grilled cheese. Everyone's favorite comfort food has now gone mobile with Ms. Cheezious. With over seven different types of cheese (American, Blue, Brie, Cheddar, Gruyere, Havarti, Provolone and Swiss) it´s hard to go wrong. And while some food trucks go overboard trying to be swanky, Ms. Cheezious gets it right by keeping it simple and oh-so-good. Order a side of fries (I recommend the sweet potato variety) with your sandwich order and you are all set to go. For those looking to spice it up, try Ms. Cheezious's savory Grilled Harvest, a grilled Havarti cheese sandwich with spiced apples. Simply mouth-watering. It is important to note that this is one of the few food trucks that offer vegetarian options.

Dim Ssam a Gogo

How could you not love a food truck whose motto is "No Frills Just Good F'n Food"? Serving Asian fusion inspirations from a truck suggesting you munch and move on, Sakaya Kitchen has a loyal following with Dim Ssam a Gogo. Feeling like Korean delicacies? Then try the critically acclaimed Banh-mi Bun made with Kurobuta Pork Belly with a side of chili sauce. If you're still hungry then try the Short Rib Chunk'd Cheesy Spicy Tater Tots or the Kalbi tacos and wash it down to with a glass of watermelon juice. With plates ranging from $1-$6, this chow won't break the bank.

Dim Ssam a Gogo also deserves a shout out for its eco-friendly practices of buying organic meats and produce from local markets as well as using biodegradable and recycled cups, plates and utensils. How many Miami attractions can boast about that?




Want to try them all?
Consider taking your own personal food truck tour in Miami. Reserve your Tuesday evening for the Biscayne Triangle Truck Round-Up (or as the locals call it, BTTR). Located 1700-1846 NE 127th St, North Miami, this weekly food truck fiesta starts at 5:30pm and lasts until the last meal is served, usually around 10:00pm. There is plenty of green space to have a picnic and bring a blanket or lawn chairs for a relaxing dinning experience. Of course, remember to bring cash.




Sunday, February 26, 2012

Ben Sargent is Hooked on Miami

Ben Sargent, host of TV’s Hook, Line & Dinner, visits Miami in pursuit of the elusive snakehead fish, and shares insights about urban angling and sustainable species while eating at the city’s great seafood restaurants.

It’s just past dawn, and I’m standing, sopping wet and freezing cold, on a small bass-fishing boat in Plantation, Florida, a suburb about 30 minutes north of Miami. I’m with Ben Sargent, expert urban fisherman and host of the Cooking Channel’s Hook, Line & Dinner series. I’m utterly miserable, but Ben is unfazed. He keeps casting his line, hell-bent on landing a snakehead, the troublesome fish he has been after, unsuccessfully, for the past five years. “One just struck,” he shouts when the canal waters stir around his lure—but, upon reeling in an empty hook, he lets out an exasperated, guttural, “Oh, come on!”

After more than a hundred rain-soaked casts, Sargent finally pulls in a teensy snakehead, maybe eight inches long. He holds it up, full of pride: “I don’t care how small it is,” he says, “I finally got one.” Looking for a photo op, he continues to cast his line, aiming at driftwood and weeds. Then, suddenly, entirely by accident, he hooks a three-foot-long snakehead—one of the biggest he’s ever seen.

Ben Sargent fishes in Biscayne Bay Ben Sargent angling for needlefish in Biscayne Bay. Photo © Graciela Cattarossi.

We aren’t even supposed to be on a boat, or in a suburb. Sargent and I have traveled to Miami to check out the many bridges and piers where you can drop a line and catch a fish within city limits. Our goal: to learn what it means to serve local, sustainable fish in a seafood capital like Miami, and then taste that fish at the restaurants that cook it best. But we’ve been sidetracked by what Sargent calls “the damned snakehead.” He had already dragged a New York Times reporter to a dank marsh near LaGuardia Airport in search of one (no luck!) and had gotten so frustrated chasing them in Maryland that he jumped into the water with a snorkeling mask and spear.

Originally from Asia, the snakehead fish has rapidly spread through US freshwater systems over the past 10 years and has the potential to destroy almost everything in its path. It is enough of a threat to local ecosystems that many states have made possession of the fish illegal. “I first became obsessed with the snakehead when one literally jumped into my boat. I dove on top of it with all my weight—I’ve never battled a fish with my bare hands like that,” Sargent says. “Hours later, on dry land, the thing started thrashing again, scaring me to death.”

Dressed in a plaid shirt and jeans, Sargent, 34, looks like he’s prepared for a fish skirmish at any moment. A serious outdoorsman, he somehow made a name for himself on the streets of New York as Doktor Klaw, an alter ego who wore a gold lobster-claw necklace and sold lobster rolls illegally, without a license. Now he’s hosting the second season of his TV show, for which he travels around the country, fishing for the local catch and cooking it up in local restaurants.

A native New Englander, Sargent is the most public face of a family of fishing and oceanography experts. “I’m almost the black sheep of the family,” he says. “I feel like they look at me and think, Why does Ben get to do all this stuff? We’re the ones who study it.” He’s not kidding: His stepsister, Leah Feinberg, is one of the world’s leading authorities on copepods, a type of minuscule crustacean; his brother, David, runs the Gloucester, Massachusetts, Shellfish Department; his grandfather, a former Massachusetts governor, was also the state’s head of fisheries; and his father, an environmentalist and author, wrote a book about the sea life of Cape Cod’s shallow waters. “My father can walk down the beach and tell you a story about every little thing he picks up, from shells to horseshoe crabs,” says Sargent. “The first time you hear it, it’s mind-blowing. The second time, you think, This man is amazing. The third time, you’re like, Does he know how to talk about anything else? And the answer is no.”

Ben Sargent: Yellow Jack Ceviche at Miami’s Tuyo Ben Sargent tastes yellow jack ceviche with caviar and papaya at Miami’s Tuyo. Photo © Graciela Cattarossi.

Once we arrive in Miami, Sargent and I head straight to Garcia’s, a restaurant that has served local seafood for 46 years, much of it from its own fleet of fishing boats. We sit on the back patio, overlooking the Miami River, as commercial fishing vessels and party boats idle by. Sargent recalls the last time he was here, when the Garcia brothers taught him how to harvest spiny lobsters responsibly. “Their trap will rot out if it ever gets lost at sea, so the lobsters can escape,” he informs me, stabbing a hunk of grilled lobster tail with his fork and dunking it in drawn butter.

While the Garcias’ menu includes local catches like conch and grouper, there’s one clearly nonlocal fish: wild salmon, from Chile. “Why is salmon on a menu that focuses on Miami seafood?” Sargent wonders aloud. “I think we’ve developed a bad habit, where seafood restaurants think they have to serve salmon to make customers happy.”

It’s a sentiment echoed by chef Andrew Carmellini, who recently opened a branch of his New York City restaurant The Dutch in the sleek, breezy W South Beach hotel. It can be a struggle, Carmellini says, to balance his desire to promote lesser-known sustainable fish with pressure to serve the standbys. “It would be easy to put tuna on our menu, but I don’t want to,” he tells me. “Instead, I offer wahoo, which is tuna-like. People ask why we don’t just sell tuna instead of this funny fish that sounds like yahoo.” Some local specialties are also, happily, total crowd-pleasers, none more so than sweet stone-crab claws, on Carmellini’s menu through May. “Fishermen are required to throw the crab back after removing one or both claws,” Sargent tells me. “The crab ends up regenerating even bigger, stronger claws, so it’s more than sustainable.” I’m happy to be doing the crab a favor as I dig into the claw on my plate.

Ben Sargent and chef Norman Van Aken Ben Sargent and chef Norman Van Aken in the kitchen. Photo © Graciela Cattarossi.

Stone crabs aside, sustainable seafood issues are tricky, both for out-of-towners like Carmellini and for local chefs. Horacio Rivadero, the seafood-obsessed chef of Latin-inspired favorite OLA and the stylish new Dining Room, admits he’s often forced to make difficult decisions. “When a fisherman tells me he has lobster from Maine that’s sustainable, and Key West snapper that’s local but not sustainable, I have to choose,” Rivadero explains. “I think sustainable is more important.” But he has found seafood that fits into both categories, such as cobia, a tender, white-fleshed fish that’s farmed in the Caribbean. At the Dining Room, he serves it as a ceviche topped with grapefruit sorbet.

It’s nearly midnight by the time we leave. Before seeing us off, Rivadero’s staff gives us a tip: The best place to fish is Key Biscayne, an island off the southernmost point of the city.

The next day, we park under the Rickenbacker Causeway, the sweeping bridge that connects the mainland to Key Biscayne, and find a spot with a view of downtown Miami’s aqua-and-white high-rises. Next to us, several men are standing with rods and plastic buckets. Sargent unloads a camouflage rod bag loaded with five poles and a dangerous-looking spear gun. It feels a little like arriving at a duck hunt with a machine gun, but he explains that fishing methods vary so much from one location to the next that it’s best to come over-prepared.

Casting his line into the clear blue bay water, Sargent soon gets the attention of some slender, silvery needlefish. Hooking them, though, proves to be a bigger challenge. We can see their tweezer-like beaks chasing the lures, but they seem wise to the subterfuge, darting away without taking a bite. “These are the moments I love. When you think, I’m sure I can’t catch anything here. And the next minute, you have a 20-pound fish on your line,” Sargent says. Today, though, won’t prove so fruitful. We catch not a single needlefish.

Ben Sargent joins chef Norman Van Aken for a snakehead tasting. Chef Norman Van Aken serves up Ben Sargent’s snakehead catch. Photo © Graciela Cattarossi.

Sargent is not deflated: He still feels the rush from reeling in the snakeheads. We bring them as a gift to Florida’s original celebrity chef, Norman Van Aken, whose new restaurant, Tuyo, comprises the top floor of the year-old Miami Culinary Institute. Van Aken has prepared us a stunning seafood lunch, and he has graciously agreed to cook up our catch. He and Sargent team up to clean the bigger snakehead, and after the flurry of scales settles, two pristine white fillets sit atop a cutting board.

Van Aken serves us custardy corn pudding studded with sweet Gulf shrimp, a Key West yellowtail-snapper fillet with spinach and silky mashed potatoes, and then the snakehead, cooked simply and served with lime wedges. It tastes amazing, like a cross between monkfish and swordfish, with none of the muddy flavor that’s common with freshwater fish. Seeing it on a plate, finally, gets Sargent thinking. “Can we call a snakehead local if it’s not native? Is it a sustainable fish? I don’t know—these terms don’t work for everything,” he says, then shakes his head and digs in, forgetting the complex argument for the moment. “It really tastes great.”

Ben Sargent: Tuyo Restaurant Tuyo, one of Ben Sargent’s Miami seafood restaurant picks. Photo © Graciela Cattarossi.

Open since 1966, Garcia’s is a Miami institution. Most of its seafood, including yellowtail snapper, spiny lobster and stone-crab claws, comes from its own fleet of fishing boats. 398 NW North River Dr.; 305-375-0765 or garciasseafoodgrill.com.

Last November, chef Andrew Carmellini—who grew up vacationing in Miami—opened this sister restaurant to his New York City location. Its menu features local seafood, such as the tuna-like wahoo. 2201 Collins Ave.; 305-938-3111 or thedutchmiami.com.

This warm and unassuming Miami Beach restaurant from Horacio Rivadero (also executive chef at OLA) feels like a true neighborhood spot; try the cobia ceviche with yuzu juice and grapefruit sorbet. 413 Washington Ave.; 305-397-8444 or diningroommiami.com.

Star chef Norman Van Aken prepares dishes like corn pudding with Gulf shrimp at his latest restaurant. It’s located on the top floor of the new Miami Culinary Institute, with sweeping views of downtown. Miami Dade College, 415 NE Second Ave.; 305-237-3200 or tuyomiami.com.

Star chefs reveal their favorite fishing spots. Ben Sargent is Hooked on Miami

Ben Sargent fishes in Biscayne Bay before joining chef Norman Van Aken for a snakehead tasting. Photo © Graciela Cattarossi.


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