Bradenton area restaurants that aced health inspections

BurgerFi, a craft burger chain, opened a location in Lakewood Ranch earlier this year.

BurgerFi, a craft burger chain, opened a location in Lakewood Ranch earlier this year.

The Bradenton Herald regularly reports on local restaurants that don’t pass inspection by the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation or otherwise raise concern due to food safety and cleanliness issues.

But over the past several years, readers have frequently asked which restaurants have done well during inspectors’ visits, too.

Passing inspection without flaw is no easy feat. Florida bases its inspection standards on the US Food and Drug Administration’s Food Code, which contains many, many possible violations. These Bradenton-area restaurants did more than pass their regular state inspection — they aced it.

Here are the restaurants and other food businesses that recently got perfect marks (no violations) or near-perfect marks (only a few minor violations) in Manatee County. These inspections were conducted between November 7-22, 2022.

AMC Bradenton 20, 2507 53rd Ave. E., Bradenton

Bigg Dogg BBQ LLC, 2910 63rd Ave. E., Bradenton

Buffalo Wild Wings, 4120 14th St. W., Bradenton

BurgerFi11563 SR 70 E., Bradenton (No violations)

Chipotle Mexican Grill11715 SR 70 E., Lakewood Ranch (No violations)

Culver’s4714 SR 64 E., Bradenton

Froggy’s Caribbean BBQ, 2525 27th St. E., Bradenton (Mobile food business) (No violations)

J&J Barbecue, 2505 Manatee Ave. E., Bradenton (Catering services)

Main Street Trattoria8131 Lakewood Main St., Lakewood Ranch

Super 8, 5218 17th St. E., Ellenton (No violations)

El Taco Loco, 6103 28th St. E., Bradenton (Mobile food business) (No violations)

Tacos Bertha, 2608 Ninth St. W., Bradenton (Food truck) (No violations)

Tandoor Fine Indian Cuisine8453 Cooper Creek Blvd., Bradenton

La Tentacion del Sabor, 639 10th St. E., Palmetto (Mobile food business) (No violations)

Wendy’s11727 Sr. 70 E., Bradenton

Restaurants in Florida are licensed and routinely inspected by the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation. Diners can report health and cleanliness issues at a restaurant anywhere in the state by filing a complaint with the agency.

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Ryan Ballogg is a news reporter and features writer at the Bradenton Herald. Since joining the paper in 2018, he has received awards for features, art and environmental writing in the Florida Press Club’s Excellence in Journalism Competition. Ryan is a Florida native and graduated from the University of South Florida St. Petersburg.
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Twin Cities restaurant roundup for November 2022

Illustration of forks, knives, plates, money and abstract shapes.

Illustration: Shoshana Gordon/Axios

🍴 The owners of Mediterranean Cruise Cafe in Burnsville have applied to open a new cafe and food manufacturing facility in Minneapolis called Baba’s, according to city documents.

  • Baba’s owners did not respond to Axios’ requests for comment.

💸 Vann, the Spring Park fine dining restaurant by James Beard-nominated chef Erik Skaar, is in danger of closing. It’s raising funds to help stay open through the winter.

🍕 OG ZAZA, a “New-Haven”-style pizza place, opened in Potluck Food Hall in Roseville last week. Its other location is inside Ties Rooftop and Lounge in downtown Minneapolis.

🧑‍🍳 Borough and Parlor Bar in North Loop have a new chef. William Karon — who previously worked at St. Genevieve, Kado no Mise and Burch Steak — will switch up the Borough menu by adding South American-inspired dishes.

🍨 After closing its scoop shops in 2020, Izzy’s Ice Cream has gone out of business. The Minneapolis-based brand shut down production of its packaged pints last month.

⛔ Pay-what-you-can cafe Provision Community Restaurant is permanently closed. It’s now focusing efforts on supporting neighborhood shelters, it announced last week.

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Michelin-starred LA restaurant Somni sets reopen date

After garnering two Michelin stars, glowing reviews and a “discovery” nod from the World’s 50 Best Restaurants, one of LA’s most lauded tasting-menu restaurants closed two years ago with little notice. Next year, it’s set to return.

Somni, from chefs Aitor Zabala and José Andrés, sprouted passion fruit tulips from chocolate dirt; arranged tuna katsu into the shape of a battle ax before it could be coated in saffron and caviar; and injected strawberry-shaped cocoa butter nubs with vermouth, strawberry purée and Aperol until its closure in August 2020, creating some of the most whimsical dishes available in LA during its brief run. In late summer 2023, Zabala will reprise the concept in West Hollywood, with additional seating and new items.

The restaurant’s cuisine, sometimes experienced in upwards of 20 courses — seasonal ingredients depending — was by Times food critic Bill Addison as one that “blurs the line between whimsy and academia, between applied theory and cheeky cleverness”: difficult to pinpoint, harder still to categorize under any nationality.

“The circle was never closed with Somni; he was interrupted,” Zabala said by phone. “Everyone is closed in the pandemic, but it’s not natural, you know? [There was] something is missing, and I was feeling that it’s not the right ending for a dream — and I am the person always looking for the next dream, but this dream, I was feeling there was no ending.”

The closure was credited in part to the COVID-19 pandemic, even though it also occurred amid a lawsuit filed by the SLS Hotel’s ownership that would shutter both Somni and Andrés’ the Bazaar, which was also housed on the ground floor of the property. The ending felt abrupt to the restaurants’ fans and staff alike. When they closed, Zabala said, they’d recently hit their stride with staffing and training and accolades. Even though he could have launched a new project after the closure, he felt there was still more of Somni to explore.

A smiling man in a white chef's coat and black pants looks off camera with his hands clasped.

Chef Aitor Zabala, in 2019, had a dream of opening his own restaurant since he was 19 or 20. In 2023, he plans to reprise Somni, which translates to “dream” in Catalan.

(Mariah Tauger / Los Angeles Times)

The chef, who had dreamed of opening his own restaurant since he was 19 or 20, first moved to the US in 2007, persuaded by Andrés to leave El Bulli during its seasonal closure and help him develop LA’s Bazaar. He returned to Spain and the kitchen of El Bulli, then in 2010 gave Los Angeles another chance, returning to Andrés and, with him in 2018, debuting Somni.

Zabala opened the restaurant under José Andrés’ ThinkFoodGroup hospitality firm (now called José Andrés Group). When the doors closed, Andrés gave Zabala permission to continue the restaurant without him, should he wish to revive it. What followed were two years of recipe experimentation in Zabala’s test kitchen in Silver Lake, aided by a staff member he was able to retain from the restaurant. Together, they’ve been experimenting with new ingredients and formats and jotting down their recipes and findings in a large folder full of old and new Somni recipes. The trick, Zabala says, will be transitioning from testing one or two dishes at a time to preparing food for up to 20 for a seating of diners.

“It’s been really hard work in the last two years,” he said, “but hopefully, it’s paying off now.”

He searched for investors during this time too and worked some private events, but what proved most difficult was locating a bricks-and-mortar spot. Zabala estimates he visited more than 60 sites. This year, he settled on 9045 Nemo St. in West Hollywood, the former home of a Donna Karan retail storefront and a flower shop.

The space featured a kitchen, but it was nowhere near what Somni needed; that required a custom build-out of a new, open kitchen and dining room (with much the same layout of the original). The original counter — 10 seats in a horseshoe around an open kitchen — will be expanded to 14 in the West Hollywood location. The property is nearly double the size of Somni’s original dining room and includes a patio, which will be used to welcome guests with bites and sips before the meal begins. That additional space is also set to accommodate a six-seater private dining room.

The chef is hoping the more private locale will prove more tranquil for diners, as opposed to the buzz of the Bazaar’s multiple concepts humming just beyond the original Somni’s doors.

“We had a really small space inside the Bazaar, and I felt sometimes it was really aggressive seating with all the noises,” Zabala said. “That experience is great, but you come in for another type of experience [at Somni]. Here what we

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