A FORK ON THE ROAD

Linda Bladholm is a well-traveled writer, photographer and cook with a deep understanding of global food and culture. In addition to taking Miami Herald readers along on her weekly explorations of South Florida, she is a contributor to Gourmet and Saveur magazines and the Atlanta Journal Constitution. She has written three critically acclaimed guides, The Asian Grocery Store Demystified, The Indian Grocery Store Demystified and Latin & Caribbean Markets Demystified (Renaissance Books), and is at work on a definitive Indian cookbook for W.W. Norton.
Write to her at lbladholm@miamiherald.com.
Top Story
A Fork on the Road
Pinkberry adds Greek yogurt to fro-yo line
As summer heats up, a swirled frozen yogurt cup or waffle cone hits the spot at Pinkberry. Two months ago, the company added thick, unfrozen Greek yogurt plus two savory toppings perfect for those who crave salty over sweet.
-
A Fork on the Road
It’s all Greek to us at Midtown neighborhood’s new Kouzina Bistro
Thick, Greek-style yogurt hit the supermarkets in flavors like fig and lemon a few years ago, spawning a renewed interest in Greek food. The latest Greek restaurant to open in Miami is Kouzina Greek Bistro in the Midtown neighborhood.
-
A Fork on the Road
Fresh takes on Peruvian favorites at North Miami Beach’s Ají Carbon
Peruvian food is a melting pot of ancient Incan, European, African and Asian influences that come together in South America’s most sophisticated cuisine. In North Miami Beach, Ají Carbon Peruvian caters to the city’s sizeable Peruvian community with fresh take on favorite dishes.
-
A Fork on the Road
With One Clive’s closed, another thrives in Little Haiti
Pearline “Miss Pearl” Murray is the queen bee at her nephew Norman’s Jamaican café in Little Haiti. She helps in the kitchen, waits tables and is head of operations.
-
A Fork on the Road
Hot & Soul serves up global comfort food in a Lauderdale strip mall
Mike Hampton and his wife, Christy Samoy, meld New Orleans and Filipino favorites at Hot & Soul, a funky spot with a tiled bar and communal table in a Fort Lauderdale strip mall.
-
A Fork on the Road
New Campo in Miami Beach offers Argentine grill and more
A Uruguayan family runs New Campo Argentino in the Little Buenos Aries neighborhood of Miami Beach offering grilled meats, pastas, pizza, salads and sandwiches.
-
A Fork on the Road
Channel the south of France at South Beach’s WD 555
WD 555 might sound like the name of a Star Wars robot, but it’s actually a welcoming wine shop and bistro off the beaten track on South Beach.
-
A Fork on the Road
Sustainable seafood stars at Wild Sea on Las Olas
The Riverside Hotel in Fort Lauderdale turned 75 this year, and as part of the celebration debuted Wild Sea Oyster Bar & Grill in an elegant space that retains Old Florida charm. All the seafood is wild caught except the oysters and Sunburst trout, and much of the produce is locally grown.
-
A Fork on the Road
Have a (sushi) ball at Brickell’s Temaris
Temaris or ball sushi — warm mounds of rice with thin-sliced toppings drizzled in spicy sauces — was almost impossible to find in South Florida until Temaris opened on Brickell.
-
A Fork on the Road
N-O-A Café in Wynwood is just for lunch
The small café N-O-A has a few tables out front flanked by bougainvillea and is only open for lunch during the week. Inside there’s a white leather couch to wait for a pickup order, several tables and a L-shaped counter with stools where diners can watch the kitchen action. The cuisine changes with the seasons, offering Mediterranean dishes and specials ranging from grilled grouper with lemon and oregano to sweet potato soup with ginger and orange peel.
-
A Fork on the Road
Colombian hotdog joint caters to late-night Brickell crowd
What you put on a hot dog reflects where you come from, and for Colombians, it is lots of sauces and potato chips.
-
A Fork on the Road
The exotic flavors of Uzbekistan await in Sunny Isles
The cuisine of Uzbekistan reflects the cultures that passed through Central Asia in caravans on the transcontinental Silk Road, and you can sample it at Chayhana Oasis in Sunny Isles Beach.
-
A Fork on the Road
A Peruvian-Italian taste sensation on South Beach
The logo at Cecci Italian Peruvian Kitchen is a fish eating a slice of pizza, symbolizing the union of sea and land here. There are pies, pastas and tiraditos, ceviches and saltados (stir-fries) plus creations like pizza a lo macho topped with seafood cream, octopus, shrimp and calamari, and fettuccine in ají amarillo-spiked huancaina cheese sauce served with steak.
-
A Fork on the Road
Brickell breakfast and lunch spot a hit with workers on the go
There is no sign for Sacha’s Café, but financial district fans are finding it for morning coffee and quick lunches.
-
A Fork on the Road
Small Miami Beach cafe serves big kosher-dairy portions
A French ice skater and an Israeli developer joined forces to open Montefiore Café & Restaurant in a former Miami Beach bakery. There are still cakes and croissants, but the place is now a kosher-dairy restaurant offering breakfast, lunch, and dinner for locals. The menu includes omelets, salads, panini, fish, pastas, pizza with a chewy crust and crisp bottom and both savory and sweet crepes set in a cozy space with sidewalk dining under an awning.
-
A Fork on the Road
A spice bazaar in South Miami
Spice Galore is new boutique spice shop that carries everything from black truffle sea salt to wasabi powder in a homey space with a counter built from recycled wood. Whole and ground spices, house blends, sea salts, infused sugars and teas are sold by the ounce in glass jars organized on wood shelves. Each big jar has a small one next to it for tasting or sniffing.
-
A Fork on the Road
Eat your way around Indonesia at Pines’ Indo Quest
Indonesian and Thai cuisines are served at Pembroke Pines’ Indo Quest. They use many of the same ingredients, but Indonesian is less hot with sweet, spicy and salty flavors infused with coconut. The restaurant’s rice table is a great way to sample broadly on the Indonesian side of the menu.
-
A Fork on the Road
Fresh, small-batch gelato on Ocean Drive
Three Italian buddies opened Gelato-Go on South Beach last month, making their own base daily with fresh ingredients and selling it in cones, cups and takeout tubs. Their dairy flavors use low-fat milk with cream and nut butters, while their sorbetto is made with seasonal fruit.
-
A Fork on the Road
Maoz Vegetarian brings fresh, fast falafel to South Beach
Maoz Vegetarian has upped the fast-casual falafel game. The bright, clean, eatery opposite Miami Beach’s New World Symphony Park is certified kosher and vegan friendly.
-
A Fork on the Road
Pig out with a Spanish specialty at Jamon Iberico Pata Negra
Cured Spanish ham is edible alchemy developed over the centuries. Whole hams in sacks are found dangling in the front window of Jamon Iberico Pata Negra. The small restaurant in a condo is named after the purebred Iberian pigs with black hooves used to make jamon. Wood racks hold bottles of wine and there is a small counter where one can enjoy a few tapas with a glass of vino. Sit at a table to share a big pan of paella, roast suckling pig with garlic aioli or sea bass in lemon caper sauce.
-
Pasta
Mushrooms replace meat in this stroganoff
This healthful version updates the classic beef stroganoff by reducing the amount of sour cream and ditching the meat. Its mix of mushrooms and herbs tossed with linguine (instead of heavier egg noodles) creates a main course that seems indulgent.
-
Top Sesame Orange Salmon with warm bok choy salad
Fun, flavorful and appealing: Those three words pretty much sum up this dish. A quick marinade of orange and sesame lightly flavors the fish. The bok choy and orange salad (a play on the traditional Italian orange and fennel salad) provides a bright base on the plate.
-
A Fork on the Road
There’s a Greek love story behind Nicaraguan baker’s cake business
Zandra Zampieri’s Real Almond Cake is a Valentine that makes a delicious gift all year long.
-
A Fork on the Road
The art of the brew at Jojo Tea
Miami may be a coffee town but if Michael “Jojo” Ortiz has his way, we will soon be drinking a lot more tea. The tea enthusiast started his company Jojo Tea a year ago, mostly selling to area restaurants after teaching staff how to correctly brew the tea blends he buys from importers who visit the tea estates of China, Taiwan, Japan and India.
-
A Fork on the Road
Chinese-Peruvian chifa in Westchester
Chifa Du Kang restaurant is decorated with Chinese good luck symbols and paintings of Incan ruins. The modest, family-run spot has two menus, both with Chinese food, but the one offering Peruvian-Chinese dishes is the main attraction.
-
A Fork on the Road
Japanese-style pub at Midtown
Machiya is a sleek, Japanese-style izakaya (pub) offering ramen, rolls, sushi, sashimi, shui mai, buns, lettuce wraps and seafood. It is named for townhouses in urban centers of Japan with street-level stores, not unlike Midtown.































My Yahoo