Soul Food in South Florida | Broward Palm Beach New Times | The Leading Independent News Source in Broward-Palm Beach, Florida

Soul Food in South Florida

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  • El Camino

    15 NE Second Ave. Delray Beach

    561-265-5093

    Delray Beach wasn't complete until it received its new taqueria-ish El Camino. Here, owners Brandon Belluscio, Brian Albe, and Anthony Pizzo -- also of Cut 432 and Park Tavern -- deliver Mexican soul food and a topnotch tequila bar just a few steps from the city's Atlantic Avenue restaurant row, at the entrance to Pineapple Grove. The building is adorned with colorful street-style graffiti from artist Ruben Ubiera, including a custom portrait of Emiliano Zapata Salazar, leader of the Mexican Revolution -- along with Day of the Dead skulls and an El Camino car. Inside, bright lime-green booth seating and a handmade, rustic wood-beam bar run the length of the space where bartenders sling craft-style margaritas and customers put them back like they're nothing more than water on a hot summer day. The establishment offers patrons a taste of Mexico through the lens of executive chef Victor Meneses, originally from Juarez. Like the drinks, the food is a little more craft than you'd expect, including hand-formed blue corn tortillas, homemade chorizo, and more than a dozen sauces, including Meneses' secret recipe for hot sauce. In addition to tacos, speciality items adorn the appetizer and entree menu, with highlights like smoked brisket nachos and charred octopus or chili relleno pan-fried with egg -- no breading -- to keep with Meneses' family recipe. A favorite starter: the crispy fried pork skins, or chicharron. Crunchy strips of fried pig's ear let off a muffled pop in your mouth with every bite, like some sort of edible fire cracker, served with a cactus slaw and sour cream. Read our full review.
    17 articles
  • Betty's Soul Food

    601 NW 22nd Rd. Lauderdale Lakes

    954-583-9121

    Few places offer a taste of Black Southern cuisine as complete and inexpensive as this place, tucked between Sistrunk Boulevard and 22nd Road. The menu boasts pig tails, catfish, fried chicken, and of course chitterlings. Try the oxtail with collard greens, pillow-soft cornbread, and candied yams.
    15 articles
  • Carl's Seafood & Jamaican Kitchen

    7551 W. Oakland Park Blvd. Lauderhill

    954-748-9992

    1 article
  • Food Heaven Soul Food Cafe

    6025 Kimberly Blvd North Lauderdale

    954-590-0605

    1 article
  • Hope's Restaurant

    2806 J.A. Ely Blvd. Hollywood

    954-920-6696

    Hope's is all about perseverance -- yours and the owner's. Chef Audrey Hope, who has created one of South Florida's best Caribbean/American spots (with a heavy accent on Bahamian cooking), serves all the best fried fish, fish stews, lobster tail, red beans and rice, and guava duff you could hope for. The entire Hope clan helps keep the restaurant hopping, as does the steady takeout business at the beer/wine/alcohol bar/counter. Stick with the tilapia stew or the fried snapper, and go with the red beans and rice as a side order. End your meal with guava duff, a Bahamian shortcake dessert covered with a sauce made from guava. Delicious eating and a unique dining experience. Let's hope the restaurant springs eternal.
    2 articles
  • Hot and Soul

    3045 N. Federal Highway, #608, Fort Lauderdale Wilton Manors

    754-206-2155

    Christy Samoy and Mike Hampton's first restaurant, Hot and Soul on Oakland Park Boulevard, has been a long time coming. The pair have dreamed of opening their own place since attending culinary school together in New Orleans. Life took them to Boston and San Diego, but in the end, they came to South Florida. At their pocket-sized restaurant, The Daily Show With Jon Stewart plays on television and local artists' work hangs on the walls. Samoy and Hampton serve what they call a Best Of menu. There's chicken adobo, a classic Filipino dish that comes from Samoy, a full-blooded Filipino who grew up in Central Florida. From their days in New Orleans comes Gumbo Yumbo, a spicy, filling stew with plenty of andouille sausage and salty ham hock. Most dishes are available in half portions, allowing diners to taste large parts of the menu in one sitting. Hot and Soul is worth a visit and thanks. Had Mike Hampton not stumbled in local beer bar Laser Wolf and found a place where he felt like home, they might have taken their grand plan elsewhere.
    13 articles
  • Kelsie's Place

    1395 W. Sunrise Blvd., Lauderdale Lakes Fort Lauderdale

    954-727-2891

    Kelsie's Place offers Jamaican and Caribbean dishes on the extremely cheap, everything from braised oxtail in thick-as-molasses brown gravy to spicy curry chicken with loads of thyme. Daily $4.25 lunch specials pack a big styrofoam container with moist rice and peas, tangy stewed cabbage, and a heap of chicken either jerk, fried, curried, or in brown stew. The family-owned joint does daily soups too, whole steamed fish, and some sweet and spicy breaded chicken wings reminiscent of Hooters, only more wholesome. For prices this reasonable, Kelsie's sure isn't stingy: they'll load you up with so much food, you'll barely be able to finish it.
  • Soul Food 2 Go

    5102 S. State Road 7 Davie/West Hollywood

    954-587-1616

    5 articles
  • Soulfully Good

    6320 Miramar Parkway Miramar

    954-894-7694

  • Sweet Dewey's BBQ

    9181 Glades Rd. Boca Raton

    561-488-9688

    Slow-smoked BBQ Beef Brisket, Pork, St Louis Ribs, Babyback Ribs, Spatchcock Smoked Whole Chicken, homemade soups, sauces, fresh salads, Fried Catfish, Shrimp, Beer & Wine. We offer southern style homemade soul food, true bbq style.