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

Tapas in South Florida

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  • 13 Even

    2037 Wilton Dr. Wilton Manors

    954-565-8550

    13|Even, owned by the same couple that runs landmark lesbian bar New Moon just up Wilton Drive, is more a place to meet friends for drinks and fun than it is a dinner destination. If you get hungry, there is an array of globally inspired, fair-priced small plates such as a bruschetta, three-cheese-stuffed portabella mushrooms and an amped-up macaroni and cheese. Really, though, you come for the more than two dozen craft beers from local and national brewers and for the extensive wine list. On weekends, prepare to wade through two or three rows of people to get to the weathered wood bar, but don't worry. While you wait, you can scope out the cool chairs made of recycled palettes, the black-and-white photos shot by owner Carol Moran, and the foot-tall Elvis figurine striking a pose near some suds.
    3 articles
  • Angelo Elia Pizza Bar Tapas

    16950 Jog Rd. Delray Beach

    561-381-0037

    This restaurant in a former home is cozy and warm, and you can't go wrong with pretty much any order. Expect richness and decadence from menu items including veal bone marrow served with pane casareccio, homemade bucatini with wild boar ragout or carbonara.
    1 article
  • Angelo Elia Pizza Bar Tapas

    4215 N. Federal Highway Fort Lauderdale

    954-561-7300

    The menu here is full of tapas, pizzas, salads, calzones, and other traditional Italian eats. More than a dozen varieties of pizza with red or white sauce dominate the menu and arrive perfectly crisp from a wood-fired oven that anchors an open kitchen.
    10 articles
  • Beauty and the Feast

    601 N. Fort Lauderdale Beach Blvd. Fort Lauderdale

    954-567-8070

    Reclaimed wood and brick, Edison bulbs, tufted leather booths, small plates, and an emphasis on craft seem to be the main ingredients for a trendy restaurant these days. Beauty and the Feast Bar | Kitchen on Fort Lauderdale Beach has all of the above. Set in the ground floor of the boutique Atlantic Resort & Spa, the restaurant boasts that rustic vibe that has been sprouting up all around South Florida. And the fare is just as hip. The restaurant offers a range of global comfort dishes intended for sharing. Sea scallops are served over sweet basil oil with porcini mushroom sauce and microgreens. Crispy chicken sliders are slathered with honey sriracha and mango slaw, then sandwiched between Hawaiian buns. Pizzas range from old-school meatball to white clam. The dishes are interesting, the decor is nice, and the place offers great views of the beach.
    44 articles
  • Bull Market

    210 SW 2nd St. Fort Lauderdale

    954-523-1213

    Inspired by the ups and downs of the stock market, this downtown Fort Lauderdale bar is all about offering deals on drinks — that is, if you stick to the ticker. Every seven minutes, prices on the screen adjust to reflect demand on drinks. While the selection is mostly of beer (with a nice selection of craft) on the "market," one specific type of liquor is offered each night. To counteract the booze, the restaurant offers a wide range of small plates intended for sharing. Slanted toward the New American side of cuisine, the menu includes options like Captain Crunch chicken fingers, Dr. Pepper pulled pork sliders, Angry Orchard sloppy joes, and a variety of tacos. It's just one part of three separate concepts that occupy the building.
    48 articles
  • Cafeina

    297 NW 23rd St., Miami Central Dade

    305-438-0792

    One day, 23rd Street might resemble Ocean Drive, but for now, it's a dark street on a dark block on a dark side of town. This bar and lounge, the Wynwood Café District's first, is an oasis. The venue includes a spacious outdoor area with couches under glowstick-lit tree branches, a goth-like candlelit interior, an art gallery, and a kitchen helmed by chef Guily Booth, who makes a killer crab cake, according to Martha Stewart. Hoping to lure in pre-party groups, Cafeina offers an ample drink and tapas menu. Dishes come out in no particular order; they include items such as mini Kobe burgers, Moroccan quesadillas ($10), Chicken and chorizo burgers ($9), and mini Cuban sandwiches with lamb ($12). Service is friendly, but later hours are busy. Entertainment includes DJs. Valet parking is available.
    1 article
  • Candela Restaurant

    2909 NE Sixth Ave. Wilton Manors

    954-563-8088

    In South Florida, where the recent small-plate obsession has tainted our palates (and pockets) with pricey, upmarket concept foods, we have no understanding of the Spanish art of celebrating food and drink. But at Candela Restaurant in Wilton Manors, you can get an idea of what it's all about. Just one block south of Oakland Park Boulevard and over a canal that hems the northern edge of the Island City, you'll find one of the area's best-kept secrets. You may be familiar with a restaurant where the chef knows your name and delivers your dish as if you were family. This is the type of experience you'll get from chef-owner Armando Vega and his wife Yudaris, a Cuban-born couple that dishes out authentic Latin and Mediterranean cuisine. What makes Candela so endearing is Vega's knowledge of his painstakingly sourced ingredients. A medium-grain rice from Murcia, Spain; Mahon, a soft cow's-milk cheese from the island of Minorca; smoky pimenton, a type of Spanish paprika; and olive oil from Jaen, a city in the south of Spain. The rustic, red-walled hideaway is accented with handmade wooden wine racks; Vega's family china and art made with the corks of emptied wine bottles are evidence of the gastronomic merriment that's taken place over the years. Vega is most proud of his paella, prepared in the style of Valencia. The recipe calls for Spanish Calasparra rice, a pearl-shaped variety that won't stick and allows for the complete absorption of the savory calamari-, clam-, mussel-, and shrimp-based broth. The dish is served from a piping-hot paella pan, blackened rice scraped from the steel and onto your plate. Another house specialty is the fideua negra, a noodle dish with an unctuous sauce of squid ink that's filled with fat chunks of tender squid and octopus. Or try the credo asado, confit pork finished in a hot paella pan with olive oil and sofrito. The technique renders the meat into crispy fried tendrils of pulled pork that are served over a bed of rice and black beans seasoned with a pepper-based vinegar sauce Vega gets from his family in Cuba. Read our full review.
    2 articles
  • Here and Now

    433 NW 1st Ave Fort Lauderdale

    954-766-4651

    Try the modern tapas and craft cocktails Here and Now is known for in the FAT Village Arts District.
  • Hotsy-Totsy Bar & Grill and the sidecar speakeasy

    2032 Harrison St. Hollywood

    954-544-2383

    Stop by Hotsy-Totsy for tapas style bites and cocktails from the attached speakeasy.
  • Jimmie's Chocolates and Cafe 47

    148 N. Federal Highway Dania Beach

    954-921-0688

    In 1946, Jimmie Vonglis and his family escaped war-torn Europe for a new life in the States. A year later, he opened the doors to Jimmie's Chocolates in Dania Beach. Vonglis is long gone, and the shop has changed hands several times since then, but his legacy lives on at his original storefront, which is hailed as the longest-running chocolate shop in the state. Owners Rodney Harrison and Ken Smith took over the property in the late '90s, transforming the business from solely a chocolatier to an iconic homey Caribbean-inspired tapas cafe. Executive chef/managing partner Rob Granado has fused his Puerto Rican background into the regional eatery, reinterpreting Latin flavors with local ingredients. The menu changes seasonally, but keep an eye out for mainstays, like the pernil (slow-roasted pork shoulder), burger of the day (with creative toppings like feta with basil or manchego, crumbled bacon, and sliced pickles), and the line-caught catch of the day (served on Caribbean-style rice topped with fresh avocado, tomato, and red-onion relish with a house-made ground caper tartar sauce).
    1 article
  • Las Olas Wine & Food Festival

    S.E. 6th Ave. Fort Lauderdale

    305-255-3500

    The 21st Annual Las Olas Wine & Food festival on April 29th will feature hundreds of nationally recognized wines and 50+ of Fort Lauderdale most acclaimed restaurants. Sample and savor as you stroll down iconic Las Olas Blvd on one of only three nights a year the street is closed to traffic! #LOWFF is more than just wine, enjoy live Chef Cook-offs, ‘Experience Coves’ on every block like the Woodford Reserve 1920’s Speak Easy, a craft beer garden and much, much more. Get your tickets at www.lasolaswff.com.
  • Whiskey Neat

    1035 SE 17th St Fort Lauderdale

    954-524-6163

    This cocktail lounge features a selection of rare whiskey & fine wine served alongside complimentary tapas.