Five New Miami Restaurants to Try This Weekend

Miami’s restaurant scene is better than ever, with many new eateries opening this mast month.This weekend, why not find a new favorite place to eat? Here are stories on five new restaurants to give you a delicious head start.

Sugarcane Launches Bottomless Brunch on Saturdays

Brunch is still one of Sugarcane’s staples. But the restaurant has made a few changes. As of May, brunch is now bottomless and offered only Saturday. Find unlimited mojitos and sangrias from 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. for $25 per person. Drinks are accompanied by live music from Los Clasicos de Cuba, a four-piece band specializing in Cuban-inspired tunes, from noon to 4 p.m.

Sherwood’s Bistro & Bar Begins the Transformation of Little Haiti’s North End

Sherwood’s Bistro & Bar, a new place on Northeast Second Avenue and 83rd Street, gets its name from Sherwood Forest. That is not only Robin Hood’s merry hangout, but also a subdivision of the Village of El Portal. And like the nearby community that bears its name, Sherwood’s is charming, slightly idiosyncratic, and steeped in the area where it’s located.

The Five Best South Florida Doughnuts to Devour for National Doughnut Day

This week’s National Doughnut Day isn’t just another silly, made-up food holiday. It’s actually a 78-year-old day of remembrance established by the Salvation Army in 1938 to commemorate “doughnut lassies,” women volunteers who were sent to France during World War I to help distribute the fried-dough treats in an effort to make soldiers feel more at home. That translates to specials on plenty of doughnuts when the annual holiday rolls around, this year Friday, June 2.

May 2017 Miami Restaurant Openings and Closings

May in Miami saw both the weather and the city’s restaurant scene heat up. Once again, significantly more restaurants opened than closed. A host of local concepts continue to expand, including Tap 42, Harry’s Pizzeria, Raw Juce, and Angelo Elia.

Dizengoff and Federal Donuts Will Make Wynwood the Capital of Affordable Artisan Food

In September 2016, New Times food critic Zachary Fagenson visited Philadelphia and was enamored with Dizengoff, James Beard winner Michael Solomonov’s hummus restaurant. The Philly-based chef had already announced his award-winning Federal Donuts would open in Wynwood, but Fagenson lamented the fact that Dizengoff would not be a sister to the fried-chicken-and-doughnut eatery. Whether fate, the culinary gods, or Solomonov himself heard Fagenson’s plea remains unknown, but Dizengoff is coming to Miami.

Antico Pizza Napoletana Offers Lemon Chicken and Late-Night Pizza in South Beach

Antico Pizza Napoletana, housed where David’s Café used to be (1058 Collins Ave., Miami Beach), opened with the goal of incorporating owner Giovanni Di Palma’s several Atlanta-based restaurants into one eatery. The South Beach location serves menu highlights from his Antico Pizza Napoletana, Gio’s Chicken Bar Amalfi, and Caffè Antico under one roof in what Di Palma calls the “centro storico.”

Edukos Brings Adventurous Dining to Little Havana

On the corner of West Flagler Street in Little Havana, Edukos serves arepitas, hot ceviche, and alligator sliders. About a block from Marlins Park, this cozy, industrially designed tavern isn’t the place for a postgame burger and beer. Categorized as a Venezuelan-American gastropub, Edukos, which opened in early May, is…

Miami Tattoo King Javier Betancourt Brings Better Coffee to West Miami

Before it was filled with the aroma of espresso and the spray-painted canvases of Atomik’s grinning oranges, Javier Betancourt’s White Rose Coffee (6426 SW Eighth St., Miami) was a coke-and-wine den. “When we started building out the bathrooms and pulled down the towel holders, there were stacks and stacks of cocaine baggies behind them”…

Artisan Beach House Serves Rustic Brunch With a Waterfront View

Sunday brunch at Artisan Beach House is special. Maybe it’s because the restaurant’s bright outdoor patio faces a serene, unobstructed view of the Haulover Cut, with the waves just loud enough to hear as you nosh. Or, maybe it’s the thick slices of fresh bread, toasted to just the right crunch and smeared with creamy avocado or light basil and burrata, that do the trick.

Shake Shack Celebrates Expansion With Salty Donut Concrete Collab

There’s more than just burgers and shakes to be had at Lincoln Road’s Shake Shack today. The Miami Beach Shack is ready to debut its newly renovated space with a beats and treats party tonight starting at 6:30. To celebrate, the Shack partnered with the Salty Donut to create an exclusive concrete custard topped with a rainbow sprinkle mini doughnut.

National Food Distributors Are Gobbling Up Florida Purveyors

In recent years vast swaths of Florida and South Florida’s most successful food distributors, including many that sell to the city’s best restaurants, have been bought up by national firms whose representatives refused to discuss their plans and operations following several New Times inquiries.

Estefan Kitchen: The Design District Goes Cuban

At Estefan Kitchen in the Design District, a trio of musicians kicks things up a notch as soon as the clock strikes 9. A young woman in barely there shorts and her father dance salsa beautifully, while next to them a gentleman in his late 80s starts doing the twist. He gets down so low that for a moment it’s unclear whether he’ll make it back up — but sure enough he does, which earns him a round of applause. Here, it’s business as usual when waiters and bartenders periodically break out in song. The real treat arrives when an elderly man stands and begins belting out opera, and, naturally, the room goes wild.