Calle Dragones, a Dinner Cabaret with Asian-Influenced Cuban Fare, Opens on Calle Ocho

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Calle Dragones, a Dinner Cabaret with Asian-Influenced Cuban Fare, Opens on Calle Ocho



“When people come in, I want them to be proud and to feel the elegance of what Cuba once was,” Luis Pous says whereas holding again tears.

Calle Dragones, the chef’s new Calle Ocho restaurant, means the world to him. A local Cuban, he moved to Miami in 1999 after successful a visa lottery.

Pous made essentially the most of his leap of religion. The chef has risen the culinary ranks, serving as a visitor chef at James Beard House in New York City and dealing in prestigious spots like George V Hotel in Paris and Little Palm Island within the Keys. Still, Pous had a special aim in thoughts: to open a restaurant that celebrates Havana’s heyday.

“My dream was always to do a Cuban restaurant and now it’s here,” he says. “My idea was to focus on the glamourous times of Havana. When people think of Cuban food, they think of rice and beans. But there are remnants of such a beautiful Cuba from before the revolution with beautiful buildings, cabarets, and places to really wine and dine. This place captures it all.”

Pous says building on the house, in a partnership with the creators of Salvaje Hospitality Group, began roughly 18 months earlier than the pandemic. He has since opened places in Bogotá and Cartagena, Colombia.

The Miami location was designed by Spanish architect and inside designer García de Vinuesa. Design highlights embody purple velvet curtains, black crystal chandeliers, terrazzo flooring, Fifties velvet furnishings, and a classic white grand piano.

On the leisure entrance, nightly programming consists of Spanish Fiesta Thursdays, Havana Tropical Nights Fridays, Salsa Disco Fever on Saturdays, and World Carnaval Day on Sundays. The performances and stay music are curated by musical director Dayhan Días, who has labored alongside the likes of Andrés Cepeda, Rey Ruiz, and Amaury Gutiérrez.

The eating menu pays homage to Pous’ heritage with an Asian aptitude – the restaurant, in any case, is known as after a road in Havana’s predominantly Chinese neighborhood. Among its standout gadgets, in accordance with Pous, are a mojo-roasted duck with guava hoisin and Chinese pancakes; a crab fricasé with Thai sofrito; and a risotto with quick rib vaca frita.

“I have a lot of talented people around me to bring this idea that was in my head to life,” says Pous. “The attention and detail have been like nothing else.”

Calle Dragones. 1036 SW eighth Street, Miami; 786-722-8370; calledragones.com. 5 p.m. to midnight Monday to Wednesday, 5 p.m. to three a.m. Thursday to Saturday. Sunday brunch from midday to five p.m.



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