If it wasn't the most eagerly anticipated restaurant opening in Miami,
The Bazaar was certainly the most long-awaited. Speculation that Chef José Andrés might be opening a Bazaar in Miami started
all the way back in early 2009, shortly after the original
Bazaar Los Angeles opened, when the
SLS hotel chain started work on the Ritz Plaza hotel on South Beach.
[1] The patter
continued in 2010. And then we waited. And waited. And waited, as is the customary Miami style.
Finally last month, Bazaar South Beach opened. It was worth the wait.
[2]
I've not been to The Bazaar in L.A., but I've been to several other of Chef Andrés' establishments - Washington DC's
Jaleo several times,
minibar back
in 2008, the now-closed Café Atlantico, plus more recent visits to
é and
China Poblano in Las Vegas. (For more background on Chef Andrés, read
my post on é.) The Bazaar borrows bits and pieces from each of them. There are traditional Spanish tapas, many of which are mainstays on the Jaleo menu. There are more contemporary dishes, often derived from items that started as part of the minibar and é multi-course extravaganzas. And there's even a section of the menu described as "Miami Meets the World," an unusual conglomeration of Singapore street foods, ceviches and "nigiri," and several more items with Latin American flavors, similar to the Asian / Mexican mash-up he does at China Poblano.
[3] It is a sprawling, ambitious menu - perhaps even more so than the original Bazaar in L.A.
The venue itself is not quite as grand as I might have anticipated, though it's growing on me. The Ritz Plaza is one of Miami Beach's old Art Deco hotels, built in 1939, and like many of the Art Deco properties, it doesn't really have a separate space set aside for a restaurant. What this means is that as soon as you pass through the hotel doors, you've stumbled into the "Rojo" room, the first of two dining rooms of The Bazaar, with the hotel's check-in desk off to the other side of the entrance.
(You can see all my pictures in this
Bazaar - South Beach flickr set).
Done up in traditionally Spanish red and black colors but with a contemporary feel, this is the more casual of the dining rooms. Two- and four-tops line the near wall, while larger tables, some bar-height, occupy the middle of the room, flanked on the far wall by a bar and open kitchen.
[4] A taxidermied bull's head wearing a lucha libre mask, by artist Mikel Urmeneta,
[5] looks out from one wall, while above the bar is a mural by local artist
Claudio Picasso that hearkens back to the hotel's original Art Deco style.
On the other side of the bar and kitchen is the "Blanca" dining room, simultaneously a little more posh and a little more cozy. Much of the seating is on well-cushioned sofas; knick-knacks and antique photos adorn ledges on the walls; a massive shell-encrusted chandelier hangs from the ceiling. It looks like it could be your abuela's living room, if your abuela hired Phillippe Starck as a decorator.
[6]
A good way to start a meal is with a LN2 frozen caipirinha, a fun bit of tableside cryotechnics by which the traditional Brazilian concoction of cachaca, lime and sugar is mixed with super-cold liquid nitrogen in a dramatic billow of steam to a perfect slushy consistency.
At $5 each, it's also the "Joe's Fried Chicken"
[7] of the Bazaar menu, even if the portion size has been tapered back a bit since my first round.
You could alternatively start with "The Ultimate Gin & Tonic," which at $18 is no bargain at all, but is still a very fine drink. Spaniards are obsessed with the "gintonic," and this version plays up that obsession by reintroducing the botanicals typically used in the spirit:
Fever Tree tonic, juniper berries, fresh herbs and flowers, and lime mingle in the glass along with your choice of gins.
[8]
This will also give you some extra time to peruse the menu, which you're going to need. With over sixty items - even more if you count the selections of Spanish hams and cheeses - it's a fairly daunting prospect, even for an avid menu decoder like myself.
[9] Almost exclusively tapas-style small plates, the choices divide into two main themes - "Miami Meets the World" and "Spain Yesterday and Today" - which each get further broken down into several subdivisions. The "Miami" section includes a "Singapore Connection," "Yogurts and Cones," "New Generation Nigiri and Ceviche," "Seafood," "Fruits and Vegetables," "Meats," and "Some Little Sandwiches." "Spain" includes "Latas y Conservas," "Jamones y Embutidos," "Quesos," "Verduras Tradicional," "Pescado y Marisco," and "Carnes."
Ready? Let's dive in.
(continued ...)