Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

‘Insects flying over short ribs’

Anthony’s Coal Fired Pizza in Boca, five other South Florida restaurant­s ordered shut

- By Phillip Valys

The tireless state employees who inspect South Florida restaurant­s every day must be literary types, because this week’s dining inspection­s read like poetry.

Reports from six restaurant­s ordered shut last week contain vivid, whimsical lines such as “interior of microwave soiled with encrusted food debris” and “packaged raw pork stored above tamales” and “4 flying insects flying over short ribs.” These words focus on a common theme: the constant tug-of-war between nature (pests) and civilizati­on (clean restaurant­s).

Of course, one inspector’s poetry is another restaurant’s bad news. Eateries temporaril­y shut this week included DLC Caribbean Restaurant in Lake Worth, Anthony’s Coal Fired Pizza in Boca Raton, New Wong’s Hollywood in Hollywood, Excell Restaurant in Delray Beach, Mole Cantina Mexicana in Wellington and Agave Bandito in Pembroke Pines.

The South Florida Sun

Sentinel highlights restaurant inspection­s in Broward and Palm Beach counties from the Florida Department of Business and Profession­al Regulation. We cull through hundreds of restaurant and bar inspection­s that happen weekly and spotlight places ordered shut for “high-priority violations,” like improper food temperatur­es or dead cockroache­s.

Sun Sentinel readers can browse full Broward, Palm Beach and Miami-Dade county reports on our state inspection map, updated weekly (usually Monday) with fresh data pulled from the Florida DBPR website.

Any restaurant that fails inspection­s must stay closed until it passes a follow-up state inspection. If you spotted a possible violation and wish to file a complaint, contact Florida DBPR here. (But don’t contact us: The Sun Sentinel doesn’t inspect restaurant­s.)

DLC Caribbean Restaurant, Lake Worth

Ordered shut: Aug. 26, Aug. 27 and Aug. 28, remains closed

Why: 12 violations (two high-priority), including an infestatio­n of 12 live cockroache­s crawling on “vegetables on cook line,” inside the oven and on the wall behind the sink and prep tables. Inspectors also noticed examples of a “soiled” kitchen in disrepair, and spotted “missing ceiling tiles,” a dirty kitchen hood and reach-in cooler, and food improperly stored inside “nonfoodgra­de” to-go bags. The state’s Aug. 27 reinspecti­on found five more live and dead roaches, keeping the restaurant shut. The state kept the restaurant closed after its third inspection on Aug. 28 found four more live roaches and an unclean kitchen.

Anthony’s Coal Fired Pizza, Boca Raton

Ordered shut: Aug. 26, reopened Aug. 27

Why: Inspectors spotted four violations (two high-priority), such as 44 live flies “inside of a food storage pan” above the sink, landing on to-go containers “on shelf over prep table” and on top of napkins “stored on rack” over the sink, as well as swarming around the kitchen salad station and “on storage shelf for pots and pans.” Anthony’s was allowed to reopen Aug. 27 after the state’s reinspecti­on found zero issues.

New Wong’s Hollywood, Hollywood

Ordered shut: Aug. 25, reopened Aug. 26

Why: Nine violations (three high-priority), including 20 live cockroache­s “crawling on shelf where cans of ketchup and sauces are stored” in a storage room, beneath a prep table where “containers of flour and salt are stored,” and underneath a reach-in cooler. One inspector found a “dead roach under wok station” in the kitchen. The state allowed the restaurant to reopen Aug. 26 when a follow-up inspection discovered a pair of basic issues.

Excell Restaurant, Delray Beach

Ordered shut: Aug. 24, reopened Aug. 25

Why: Where to start, folks? A diverse collection of vermin visited Excell last week, leading to 10 violations (five high-priority), including 30 live flies “landing on bag of raw onions” in the walk-in cooler. The state also spotted a pair of “live rodents” trapped inside pest-control devices in the walk-in-cooler, and four dead cockroache­s in another pest-control device beneath “the cash register at front counter/bar area.” Of course, inspectors ordered the restaurant to stop selling and trash its onions “due to adulterati­on of food product.” Inspectors let Excell reopen Aug. 25 after discoverin­g a minor issue. (Excell, a repeat offender, was last ordered shut June 23 for similar roach, fly and rodent problems.)

Mole Cantina Mexicana, Wellington

Ordered shut: Aug. 24, reopened Aug. 25

Why: 11 violations (four high-priority), including 13 live flies landing “on a covered container of pico de gallo” in the kitchen, “on the tomato slicer” and “on a clean plate on the prep table located in the kitchen.” (Inspectors ordered the restaurant to wash, rinse and sanitize the slicer and plate immediatel­y.) One state inspector saw an employee “eating in the cook line, put on new gloves and engage in food preparatio­n without hand-washing first.” Mole was allowed to reopen Aug. 25 after inspectors spotted one issue.

Agave Bandito, Pembroke Pines

Ordered shut: Aug. 24, reopened same day

Why: Five violations (two high-priority), including seven “flying insects flying over short ribs and cut peppers,” landing on the kitchen expo line, and “landing on grated Parmesan cheese and chopped parsley.” Inspectors, naturally, ordered Agave to stop selling and throw away its Parmesan cheese and parsley “due to adulterati­on of food.” Inspectors let the restaurant reopen the same day after discoverin­g one basic issue. (Agave, a repeat offender, was last ordered shut June 23 for similar fly woes.)

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