South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Cuisines

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followed the 23-year-old restaurant when it moved to Oakland Village Square just before Thanksgivi­ng last year.

When they moved from a location thatwas three times bigger (with a nightclub, bar and restaurant) than the current spot, they had to throwout a lot of cricket trophies because there just wasn’t room. Owner Jasmine Punsamy doesn’t know exactly how many, but therewere 22 years of trophies in the collection. “Itwas a lot, especially if you have to clean them,” she adds.

Still, cricket fans come to watch matches on the flatscreen TVs.

Popular dish: Chicken in de Rufffor $10.20. “It’s vegetable with fried rice with Chinese style chicken,” Punsamy says.

Contact: 954-587-1238, email TheHibiscu­sFlorida@Yahoo.com.

Suzie’s Cuisine

Flavors: Haiti and Caribbean

The glamorous Suzie Ysmera (check out her personal Instragram account) was catering before opening her own brick-and-mortar restaurant just when the pandemic started in the spring. “I wasn’t scared,” she says. “Iwas ready to get it.”

The Creole cuisine includes a lot of seafood such as mixed seafood boil, snapper and other grilled fish dishes aswell as curry dishes. Griot, the citrus-marinated pork that is the national dish of Haiti, is the specialty of the house. “I do have a griot that everyone knows,” Ysmera adds. “When they say ‘Haitian’.... the first thing they heard was griot, and the black rice.”

Popular dish: Seafood Platter. Market prices, but usually starts around $38 to $45 (that can feed two to four people) and goes up to around $85 and higher (20 and more people).

Contact: 954-990-8677, 305-942-5338 (there is a Miami location), email SuziesCuis­ine@gmail.com, Instagram.com/suziescuis­ine, Facebook.com/Suzies-Cuisine241­2826518996­919.

Chef Rose Jamaican Cuisine

Flavor: Jamaica Chef Anthony Rose needed a change after a series of four cafes and a popular catering business in Miami-Dade. So a little over a year ago, he moved to Broward County and opened his own takeout business with amenu that features organic and health-friendly options (also halal-friendly).

“After researchin­g Jamaican restaurant­s I realized that all Jamaican restaurant­s do exactly the same thing,” Rose says. “So we want to ... infuse a little bit more healthier [options]. It’s 2020, everybody wants to eat healthier. Jamaican food traditiona­lly don’t cook to order. This is the first Jamaican restaurant where you have the option of going vegan, vegetarian, pescataria­n and everything is cooked to order ... it’s completely different than any [other] kind of Jamaican cuisine, guarantee it. I guarantee it.”

He’s already a star with Google reviews, the only 5-star Jamaican restaurant in Broward County. “I saywe are the MercedesBe­nz of Jamaican cuisine,” he adds, laughing. “Most Caribbean restaurant­s, we have a bad reputation. I’ve been doing a lot of research and I realized thatwe have a bad reputation of customer service. So, this place is designed [to serve] one person at a time. Iwant when you eat here, that comfort, you feel like you’re at home. So here’s the design where everybody gets that personal service. That’s more important to methan anything else.”

Popular: The jerk salmon and ackee, with plantain, pumpkin and a quinoa waffle for $17. “It’s not necessaril­y a traditiona­l dish ... but for us we like to put a little twist on it,” Rose explains. “Not only that, we serve it with a pumpkin/ sweet plantai n waffle.”

Contact: 954-999-5371, Facebook.com/cheff.rose, Instagram.com/chefrose.jamaicancu­isine.

Kam’s Roti Shop

Flavors: India and Trinidad/Tobago

For the uninitiate­d, roti is a flat bread wrap from India that is widely found in Indo-Caribbean cuisine from Jamaica, Guyana, Trinidad/Tobago and Suriname. “When I was growing up, I looked atmy mom cook, and I learned to cook,” recalls owner Kamla Sookhansin­gh. She turned that avocation into a vocation by doing catering, which became so popular that she expanded to a brick-and-mortar restau-rant at Oakland Village Square eight years ago.

Popular: ”Curry goat is No. 1,” Sookhansin­gh says. “My food sells, like curry chicken, boneless, curry beef. People never have curry beef. Whenthey come here they taste my curry beef, they love it.” Also very popular are the doubles, which are a Trinidadia­n street food made of two baras (flat fried dough) usually filled with curry chickpeas and chutneys.

Contact: 954-741-9212, Facebook.com/KamsRotiSh­op,Kams-roti-shop.poi.place.

Apna Bazaar and BurgeRoom by Chef Nadeem

Flavors: Pakistan, India, United States

Alaa Yousef’s market features Middle Eastern and Indian groceries. “There’s a big Muslim community here,” Yousef says, noting that it’s sometimes tricky to find halal meat for thosewho follow the religious criteria of Islamic laws set out by the Koran. He adds that Caribbean cultures also appreciate his locally sourced lamb and goat.

Three months ago, Pakistani chef Nadeem Qureshi opened a counter near the front door just inside the market for his Pakistan/Indian takeout service— BurgeRoomb y Chef Nadeem— that is “like a halal fast food,” Yousef explains.

Qureshi adds, “We have like our country food, Pakistani food and American food. We’re serving like burgers, wraps, like quesadilla­s. Andwe have some of our country’s specialtie­s like a biryani (a mixed rice dish).” The market also houses his catering company, Essence by Chef Nadeem. Qureshi worked for the Hotel Interconti­nental overseas, specializi­ng in Italian and French cuisine.

Popular: Fresh goat and fresh lamb at market price. “Because of the Jamaicans, Arab, Indian, Pakistani,” Yousef says.

Qureshi says, so far, his burgers (including kebab or Tikka burgers) and wraps/quesadilla­s are the most popular along with some Pakistani favorites (biryani, masala) that all cost $7-$10.

Contact: ApnaBazaar at 954-742-5757 orApna-Bazaar-Sunrise.business.site. Essence by ChefNadeem at 346-252-2600 or ChefNadeem­Concetto.com.

René’s Schnitzelh­aus

Flavor: Germany Longtime Sunrise residents will recognize this location as the former Uncle Lui’s To-Go, a popular Hungarian diner for about 18 years. The spot was taken over in the spring of 2019 by German-born and trained executive chef René Kostoy. Rebranded as his own Schnitzelh­aus, the Bavarian has expanded the menuto reflect German, Austrian and eastern European cuisines.

“I have people they drive up all theway from Delray Beach,” Kostoy says. “I mean that’s the biggest compliment I get, you know? We’re very affordable. We’re nothing fancy, just good affordable food.”

After a career across Europe resort towns, Kostoy was recruited to South Florida’s Beachcombe­r Hotel in Miami Beach, then the former Mozart Stube in Coral Gables, Bierbrunne­n in Fort Lauderdale and then The Deck on Fort Lauderdale beach.

Popular: “Schnitzels. We got the chicken schnitzel, we got the pork schnitzel and we’ve got the original veal wiener schnitzel,” Kostoy says. “They are the most popular things. Then come the sausages.” Schnitzel prices range from $13.75-$25. Sausage platters are $17.50-$22.75.

Contact: 954-7491908, email info@renes-schnitzelh­aus.com,Renes-Schnitzelh­aus.com.

Wetz Pub

Flavor: American bar bites Onthe end of the strip mall, the spot now called Wetz Pub has actually been a bar with various names for 40 years, changing hands a few times over the decades and three generation­s of clientele. For the last 20 years, as Wetz Pub, Michael Krakower has been the owner.

“We are the true hidden gem in Sunrise,” Krakower says. “Pool tables, darts, music and sometimes parties that nobody wants to miss out on.” They also serve White Castle burgers and personal pizzas for $3 and hot dogs for $2.

Popular: Domestic beer buckets for $12. “Our happy hour is 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Saturday and all day Sunday,” Krakower adds.

Contact: 954-749-1829, WetzPub.com, Facebook. com/WETZPUB.

 ?? MICHAELLAU­GHLIN/ SUNSENTINE­LPHOTOS ?? Kevin Baqai and CaimanJafr­i, wholead a teamofpriv­ate investorsw­hoboughtOa­kland Village Square two years ago, have plans to spruce it up to the tune of $1.5 million with landscapin­g, a prominent sign and spiffy fixtures. Shingles fromthe ’70s, when the plazawas a SupeRXDrug Store, will be replaced with the more fashionabl­emetallic and the fascia and overhang will get fresh stucco and paint.
MICHAELLAU­GHLIN/ SUNSENTINE­LPHOTOS Kevin Baqai and CaimanJafr­i, wholead a teamofpriv­ate investorsw­hoboughtOa­kland Village Square two years ago, have plans to spruce it up to the tune of $1.5 million with landscapin­g, a prominent sign and spiffy fixtures. Shingles fromthe ’70s, when the plazawas a SupeRXDrug Store, will be replaced with the more fashionabl­emetallic and the fascia and overhang will get fresh stucco and paint.
 ??  ?? AlaaYousef, the ownerof theApna Bazaar, displays a 25-pound goat inside his store at the shopping center.
AlaaYousef, the ownerof theApna Bazaar, displays a 25-pound goat inside his store at the shopping center.
 ??  ?? ReneKostoy, ownerofRen­e’s Schnitzelh­aus, with schnitzel and pretzel bread at his restaurant in the shopping center.
ReneKostoy, ownerofRen­e’s Schnitzelh­aus, with schnitzel and pretzel bread at his restaurant in the shopping center.
 ??  ?? SuzieYsmer­ia, owner at Suzie’sCuisine and Seafood, displays some of her dishes at her restaurant in the shopping center.
SuzieYsmer­ia, owner at Suzie’sCuisine and Seafood, displays some of her dishes at her restaurant in the shopping center.
 ??  ?? ChefAnthon­yRose features his ackee and jerk salmon dish at his restaurant in the shopping center.
ChefAnthon­yRose features his ackee and jerk salmon dish at his restaurant in the shopping center.

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