South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Fat Tap Beer Bar and Eatery abruptly closes after 6 months

- South Florida Sun Sentinel

A scant six months after opening on Oakland Park’s downtown Dixie Highway drag, Fat Tap Beer Bar and Eatery has poured its final pint.

The neighborho­od gastropub and brewery, which debuted in late June, has permanentl­y shut down, unable to draw a strong beer-drinking audience as COVID continues raging across the state, owners Robert and Yvette Robayna posted this week on Fat Tap’s social media.

“Yvette and I had high hopes for our new location but those hopes never became a reality in the 6 months we were open for various reasons,” Robayna posted on Facebook. “We needed to make a decision on our next move.”

Fat Tap Beer Bar and Eatery, at 3553-3555 N. Dixie Highway, occupied a pair of squat, side-by-side warehouses along the western spine of North Dixie Highway. One building, at 3555, housed a craftbeer taproom and kitchen serving charcuteri­e, sandwiches and flatbreads. The other building, at 3553, housed the brewing tanks, while a 2,000-square-foot beer garden behind the warehouses connected both sides.

Foot traffic declined at their new taproom and kitchen practicall­y from the outset, unable to lure the same regulars who frequented Fat Tap’s original location on Oakland Park Boulevard a half-mile southwest. Along with COVID, Robayna also blamed for city of Oakland Park for not supporting his business.

“When you own a business across the street from City Hall, and no one from City Hall visits you, what are you going to do?” Robayna says. “I don’t mind saying this because I have nothing to lose anymore. We had one good month, which was the first month, when everyone came out to see it, and every month since has been less and less and less.”

Admittedly, Robayna missed his regular customers more. When Fat Tap debuted on Oakland Park Boulevard in 2018, customers praised the gastropub for its hardto-find beers on draft. Robayna reckons that COVID, in part, messed up his business model, as U.S. breweries hustled to sell the same beer over the internet directly to consumers.

“Suddenly, the beers that I had were not so exclusive anymore,” he says. “And people changed the way they were going out, changed their routines.”

As his audience waned, so did his enthusiasm to brew at Fat Tap’s recently installed nanobrewer­y, a one-barrel system capable of producing 31 gallons of beer per batch. With growing resentment over having lost his old customers, Robayna stopped brewing beer, including a hazy pale ale with tropical grapefruit and melon notes he called “1941.”

As sales declined, he saw little benefit to putting up a Fat Tap Beer Bar sign on the front of his Dixie Highway-facing storefront — so Robayna never did.

“Putting a sign up would attract new people, but I was upset my regulars weren’t coming back,” he says.

He says Funky Buddha Brewery, across the street, continued to gain customers, but “no one wanted to cross the train tracks to our side of the street for some reason,” he says.

After missing a year due to the pandemic, the Fort Lauderdale Orchid Society’s “Orchid Rocks” event is coming back.

Recognized as one of the largest orchid shows in the nation, the annual event will take place from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Jan. 21 to 23 at the Greater Fort Lauderdale Broward County Convention Center, 1950 Eisenhower Blvd.

From a variety of vendors to some of the top growers, the “Orchids Rocks” event offers orchid enthusiast­s and hobbyists the opportunit­y to browse through the collection of exhibits. Tickets are $15 at flos.org.

“It’s a very beautiful event,” Fort Lauderdale Orchid Society President Joan Conners said. “There [are] orchids all over. Besides the vendors, there [are] these exhibits that are done by orchid growers locally and around the United States.

“This is our 70th event,” she said. “It’s one of the biggest orchids show in the entire United States. New York was a big competitio­n for us but now that they’re no longer doing a show, we’re one of the biggest now. The Philadelph­ia Flower Show trumps us in size but not in orchids.”

Growers will be exhibiting and selling thousands of orchids of every variety. They also will offer orchid gift items, books, educationa­l materials and supplies.

In addition, judges from the American Orchid Society will be in attendance, critiquing and awarding ribbons and cash prizes for individual plant entrants.

All funds raised will support the Fort Lauderdale Orchid Society and promote interest in orchids and education.

 ?? ?? Fat Tap Beer Bar and Eatery owners Yvette and Robert Robayna stand outside their new building on North Dixie Highway in May. Six months later, the brewery and kitchen have abruptly shut down.
Fat Tap Beer Bar and Eatery owners Yvette and Robert Robayna stand outside their new building on North Dixie Highway in May. Six months later, the brewery and kitchen have abruptly shut down.

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