Florida restaurants briefly closed by state inspectors

Florida restaurant inspectors decided to flex some muscle recently and temporarily closed a bunch of restaurants across the state.

Vermin infestations and other critical violations of state sanitation and safety laws found by inspectors at three South Florida restaurants last week prompted the Florida Department of Business & Professional Regulation to temporarily close them.

Omar Seafoods, 2111 N.W. 10th Ave., Miami was temporarily closed Aug. 11 for 5 critical violations. A health and safety inspector observed ready-to-eat, potentially hazardous food prepared on site and held more than 24 hours that was not properly date-marked; there was no conspicuously located thermometer in a holding unit; a required consumer advisory for raw/undercooked animal food was not provided and was corrected on site and potentially hazardous food in the pastry hot box that contained beef and cheese was not held at 135 degrees Fahrenheit or above. Also, more than 50 live roaches were found in the kitchen: more than 40 were on a wire shelf, underneath prep tables, inside the oven and on the floor, and more than 10 roaches were seen in a storage room, 15-feet away from the kitchen.

L’Express Sandwisherie at SBS Tower, 2601 S. Bayshore Drive, Miami was closed Aug. 8 for operating without a license and 11 other critical violations that included no hand-washing sign, cleanser or drying provisions at an employee hand-washing sink; improper temperatures of hot and cold, potentially hazardous foods; an employee was observed preparing food, handling clean equipment or touching single-service items without washing hands; the food manager lacked proof of certification; sanitizer was not used in accordance with the manufacturer’s recommendations; a hand-wash sink was used for other purposes; no 3-compartment sink was provided and the men’s room was closed.

El Tio Coin Laundry & Cafeteria, 1664 N.W. 17th Ave., Miami was briefly closed Aug. 9 with 11 critical violations that included a rodent infestation. Other citations were for ready-to-eat, potentially hazardous food that was prepared on site and held more than 24-hours that was not properly date-marked; raw animal food stored over ready-to-eat food in a reach-in cooler; hand-washing sinks in rest rooms lacked drying provisions; no proof of required employee training provided; slime was built up in the ice machine; food was stored in ice used for drinks; a food preparation employee wore jewelry other than a plain ring on his or her hands/arms; there were no hand-washing signs at sinks used by employees; no conspicuously located thermometer in a holding unit; no chemical test kit for sanitizer at the 3-compartment sink or ware-washing machine and more than 63 fresh rodent droppings were found on kitchen shelves above the 3-compartment sink, underneath the microwave and grill table and on the floor.

Four Jacksonville-area restaurants — including three at River City Marketplace — were forced to temporarily close last week after a state inspector found excessive roach activity during routine, unannounced visits.

Wasabi Japanese Restaurant, A & D Buffalos and Salsarita’s Fresh Cantina each closed briefly to address conditions that posed "an elevated risk to the health, safety or welfare of the public."

A fourth restaurant, Pasta Market Italian Restaurant in Orange Park, also briefly closed to correct problems noted in an inspector’s report.
 

This entry was posted in Restaurant Inspection and tagged , , by Douglas Powell. Bookmark the permalink.

About Douglas Powell

A former professor of food safety and the publisher of barfblog.com, Powell is passionate about food, has five daughters, and is an OK goaltender in pickup hockey. Download Doug’s CV here. Dr. Douglas Powell editor, barfblog.com retired professor, food safety 3/289 Annerley Rd Annerley, Queensland 4103 dpowell29@gmail.com 61478222221 I am based in Brisbane, Australia, 15 hours ahead of Eastern Standard Time