Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Estação do Pão Bakery & Restaurant, Boca Raton

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23269 State Road 7, Suites 105-107

Ordered shut: Sept. 26-27; reopened Sept. 27

Why: 17 violations (11 high-priority), including four flies “in front bar flying around,” “landing on sugarcane machine” and hovering around “in bakery area,” along with six cockroache­s “crawling on freezer” in kitchen area,” on the kitchen floor near the walk-in cooler, and “on stove in bakery area.” (The operator managed to kill two roaches.)

One employee was seen touching “hat and hair while handling produce and slicing,” and was asked to wash hands and change gloves. Finally, the restaurant was ordered

to stop selling and toss its cooked sausage, beef and potatoes, as well as chicken salad and two 5-gallon containers of dulce de leche “due to temperatur­e abuse.” The next day, a second inspection found live roaches and flies again. The state cleared the eatery’s reopening after a third inspection the same day found zero new issues. The restaurant was last ordered shut July 25 for similar fly woes.

Excell Restaurant, Delray Beach

1041 S. Congress Ave., Suite 119

Ordered shut: Sept. 26; reopened Sept. 27

Why: Six violations (two high-priority), including six cockroache­s crawling inside of pest-control devices “located around water heater in prep room behind kitchen,” and into the “wall around water heater” in the same room. The inspection also revealed dead flies “in UV light control device in prep room” behind kitchen and “10+ (unable to count) dead roaches” inside the same pest-control devices and “on expo shelf from kitchen to front counter.” The restaurant reopened the next day after a clean reinspecti­on.

Rancho Nando Steak House, Lauderhill

5200 N. University Drive

Ordered shut: Sept. 26; reopened Sept. 27

Why: 21 violations (four high-priority), led by “75 or more” dead cockroache­s including three “in ice bin machine with ice being served to guest in kitchen area,” and six live cockroache­s found crawling “on can opener blade at prep area,” on a container filled with pastry flour, on a “cutting board on prep table,” “on door next to prep shelf” and “inside to-go cups stored on top of standing reach-in freezer.” The inspection noted kitchen fryers and floors “with grease build-up,” hoods “soiled with accumulate­d food debris, grease, dust or mold-like substance.” Also spotted: 31 dead flies and roaches “in light shields” near the kitchen’s storage and reach-in cooler. Finally, the restaurant was ordered to stop selling and toss its roach-tainted ice, as well as its shredded and raw chicken, hot sauce with garlic and oil, pre-cooked ribs, meat seasoning with garlic and oil, seafood cream mix, beans, pork sausage, and raw pork, beef and steak “due to temperatur­e abuse.” The steakhouse reopened the next day despite inspectors finding six issues — one of them a “high priority violation.”

Little Caesars, Delray Beach

1449 S. Congress Ave., No. 26

Ordered shut: Sept. 26-27; reopened Sept. 27

Why: 12 violations (four high-priority), such as a trapped snake in a pest-control device in the equipment storage room.

The state also found 15 live flies “at floor drain under triple sink” and around 300 rodent droppings “at computer/office station next to” the kitchen’s front counter, in racks holding beverages, “on ground under racks holding flour, pizza sauce and pizza boxes,” “on shelving under registers at front counter,” and “inside storage room holding boxes of unused pizza pans and equipment.” An employee was seen “eating on prep table in kitchen,” and despite discussing the issue, the “employee continued” eating. More live flies and rodent droppings kept the restaurant closed after its second inspection on Sept. 27, but another inspection later that day revealed zero issues, and the state green-lit the pizzeria’s reopening.

Two Drunken Goats, Singer Island

2509 N. Ocean Drive

Ordered shut: Sept. 29-Oct. 1 and Oct. 3; not yet reopened

Why: 11 violations (four high-priority), including 14 flies “on cook line landing on plates and to-go containers,’ “landing on knife handle stored in between cracks of equipment” and “flying at server station landing on server check booklets.” (The operator was “instructed” to clean and sanitize the dishes.)

The state found at least 18 live cockroache­s crawling on the ground behind a cooler, “on wheel of drawers under grill on cook line” and “under flip top coolers on cook line,” as well as five dead roaches “under flip top coolers on cook line.” The live roach and fly issues were not resolved by the reinspecti­on on Sept. 30, and live and dead roaches kept the cantina closed during its third and fourth inspection­s on Oct. 1 and Oct. 3, respective­ly. The restaurant remains shut pending its fifth inspection.

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