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7960862887?profile=originalSean Duhaney looks at the brain and spine exhibit that is part of  Journey Through the Human Brain.  Photo provided

By Janis Fontaine

The South Florida Science Center’s new permanent exhibition Journey Through the Human Brain is a 2,500- square-foot playground where children and adults can learn about their most mysterious organ.

It’s taken four years and more than a few great minds to plan and execute this one-of-a-kind exhibition at a cost of about $2.5 million.

This technological, fully interactive experience features about 30 exhibits designed to reveal the mysteries of our most vital organ. 

The exhibition also celebrates an important collaboration. The Science Center secured support from FAU’s Brain Institute, Scripps Research Florida and the Max Planck Florida Institute for Neuroscience, as well as the University of Minnesota and CareerSource. But this masterful, multilayered, mind-expanding media also received generous support from the community.

Science Center President Lew Crampton has used every opportunity to move the center forward and that includes forging relationship with academics and entrepreneurs who share his love of science.

One of those academics is Dr. Randy Blakely, director of the Brain Institute at FAU Jupiter, who serves as a technical expert, one of several scientists behind the project.

“I love that there’s something for a broad spectrum of ages,” Blakely said. “For little kids, we brought the pizazz and for older kids we provided deeper information.”

The exhibit was designed to be accessible to everyone regardless of age, and that’s what brings families back to the center year after year.

Jack Price was visiting the museum on an afternoon in April. He and his 7-year-old son, Oliver, were visiting Price’s parents in Palm Beach while Oliver was on spring break from school in Alexandria, Va.

Price said going to the museum is a family tradition. He started visiting 15 years ago when Oliver’s older brother and sister, now 18 and 20 years old, were small. “They grew up coming here. Every year when we visited, the museum was always on the list of things to do,” Price said.

For most families, a highlight of the exhibition was the “lie detector” experience. One person is the criminal and the other is the detective. The criminal is recorded on video as he answers three questions, intentionally lying about one of them. The detective has to use behavioral cues to figure out which question the criminal lied about.

The science says because your brain works harder to lie, there are signs in your body language and facial expressions that give you away.

Another exhibit tests your reaction time and has you jumping up and down. Think you’re as fast as a major league batter? Try it and see.

There’s also a graphic display of what happens when you don’t wear a helmet and have a bike-riding accident — and what happens when playing football even if you do.

What sets Journey apart is its authenticity. These aren’t renderings, what the scientist/artist thinks a structure looks like; these are cutting-edge and incredibly beautiful exhibits of our gray matter’s minutiae.

The slides of brain tissue and the MRIs are real. In a plexiglass box, lit up like it’s still alive, is a vibrant red 3-D exhibit of a person’s arterial blood vessels that looks so real it almost pulses. This is not an artist’s rendering, but a scientifically preserved dissection of someone’s vascular system.

The Science Center’s supporters hope that something in the exhibit will light a fire under a child. Its ultimate goal is to inspire children to pursue careers in science and technology (especially more girls). The job market needs highly educated thinkers to solve the complex problems of our global collective.

If you ask any of the scientists — even the non-scientists — involved with the exhibit, they’ll say this project, this work, was fun.

Melinda Grenz, the Science Center’s director of marketing, says, “We bring a lot of fabulous exhibits to the center, but this one is really outstanding. I think it’s because we are all so passionate about it. We started planning four years ago and now it’s here and we’re excited to share it.” 

If You Go

What: Journey Through the Human Brain 

Where: The South Florida Science Center & Aquarium, 4801 Dreher Trail N., West Palm Beach

Hours: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-Friday; 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday and Sunday

Cost: The exhibition is included with general admission, $17.95 adults, $15.95 seniors ages 60 and older, $13.95 ages 3-12, free for children younger than 3.

Contact: 832-1988; sfsciencecenter.org.

Video: The Palm Beach County School District posted a video that captured some students’ opinions. Check it out: youtube.com/watch?v=ML9foh70BU8

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7960865279?profile=originalBill Nye, the ‘Science Guy,’ helped American Heritage School dedicate a new $8 million building for its scholastic programs that promote science research, engineering and robotics.  During the festivities, the science educator, television presenter, author and inventor met with students (l-r) Blake Schwartz of Boca Raton, Jake Field of Riviera Beach and Kyle Tanner of Boca Raton, who demonstrated their robot Barnard 33.  The team advanced through regional competitions to compete in the national championship this year in Houston. Jerry Lower/The Coastal Star

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7960873286?profile=originalChildren’s book author and poet Kwame Alexander made his second appearance at Gulf Stream School in the past three years to celebrate reading and to inspire children to write. The award-winning author has more than 30 titles to his credit.

ABOVE: Alexander puts second- and third-grade students Celeste Schmier, Joslyn Klein, Nolan Galloway and Penton Cooper though a game like the TV show Jeopardy! 

BELOW: First-graders Julie Peterson and Cali Greenhalgh react to the program. Photos by Jerry Lower/The Coastal Star

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ABOVE: Capt. Carl Torresson of the Slob City fishing team holds aloft the 47.2-pound kingfish that won biggest fish  honors and $14,200 in the Boynton Beach event. Angler Chris Bradshaw of Kings Park, N.Y. (second from left) caught the big kingfish on live bait near St. Lucie Inlet. Photo provided

BELOW: Sherri Beswick of Lake Worth won top lady angler in the April 6 Boynton Beach Firefighters Fishing Tournament with this 35.4-pound kingfish caught near The Breakers hotel while fishing on Spiced Rum III with Capt. Billy Wummer (holding fish) and teammates Mike Lomastro (second from left) and Christian Long. Willie Howard/The Coastal Star

 

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By Willie Howard

Fishing tournament season officially begins in May with the arrival of longer days, warmer weather and schools of bait fish.

One of the first kingfish-dolphin-wahoo tournaments of the season — the 25th annual Lantana Fishing Derby — is set for May 4, with the weigh-in at the Old Key Lime House docks that afternoon. All boats must be at the docks by 3:30 p.m. to weigh fish. (Details at Lantanafishingderby.com.)

The following weekend, May 11, tournament anglers will target dolphin, kingfish, wahoo, blackfin tuna and cobia in the Saltwater Shootout, based in Pompano Beach. (Details at  saltwatercircuit.com.)

Also scheduled for May 11: the 24th annual Grand Slam KDW tournament based in Jupiter. Teams will weigh their fish at Sailfish Marina in Palm Beach Shores and the Square Grouper Tiki Bar in Jupiter. (Details at fishgrandslamkdw.com.)

The Sail Inn KDW Charity Fishing Tournament, organized by the Sail Inn Tavern in Delray Beach, is set for June 1, with the weigh-in scheduled for 1 to 3:30 p.m. at Palm Beach Yacht Center in Hypoluxo. (For more details, call 703-1907.)

Also set for June 1: The Palm Beach County KDW Classic, organized by the West Palm Beach Fishing Club, which often attracts well over 200 boats. 

The KDW Classic weigh-in is scheduled for noon to 4 p.m. at Riviera Beach Municipal Marina. (Details at kdwclassic.com.)

Another large summer tournament, the Big Dog Fat Cat KDW Shootout, is set for July 13 and based at Sailfish Marina in Palm Beach Shores. The weigh-in is scheduled for 1 to 4 p.m. at Sailfish Marina. (Details at bigdogfatcat.org.)

For those who prefer a longer, more flexible, less expensive tournament, there’s the Lake Worth Lagoon Fishing Challenge.

The fourth annual Fishing Challenge begins May 24 and runs through July 4. There’s no entry fee, and participating anglers can win prizes such as Mang T-shirts, Engel coolers and Penn rod-and-reel combinations.

Open to anglers ages 5 and older, the Fishing Challenge is a citizen science tournament that gives biologists information on the size, types and whereabouts of fish in the county’s largest estuary, which stretches 20 miles from North Palm Beach to Ocean Ridge.

During last year’s Fishing Challenge, 49 anglers caught 57 species of fish. Many were caught around areas that have been restored to improve habitat, such as the Snook Islands Natural Area and the man-made mangrove islands off Lake Worth’s Bryant Park (where three redfish and a permit were caught last year).

Anglers catch, photograph and submit their catches via cellphone using the iAngler Tournament app. Fish can be kept, if they’re in season and of legal size, or released.

Find details on the Lake Worth Lagoon Fishing Challenge at www.lwli.org or call 233-2448.

Another long-running tournament is CCA/Florida’s STAR tournament, which runs from May 25 to Labor Day.

Registered anglers who catch a STAR-tagged redfish could win a new boat or pickup truck.

CCA/Florida also will release 20 tagged dolphin (mahi mahi). The first registered angler to report catching a tagged dolphin wins $10,000.

Catches can be reported using the CCA/Florida STAR tournament smartphone app.

The STAR entry fee is $40 for CCA members ($75 including a one-year CCA membership).

For details, go to ccaflstar.com or call 352-665-4868.

Wahoo anyone? Anglers who enjoy fishing for the striped ocean speedsters can enter one or more of the West Palm Beach Fishing Club’s Full Moon Wahoo tournaments.

These are relaxed, low-entry-fee tournaments held on the Saturdays closest to the full moons of June, July and August.

This year’s dates are June 15, July 20 and Aug. 17. The entry fee is $60 per tournament or $150 for all three.

At least one member of the fishing team must be a West Palm Beach Fishing Club member in good standing to register. For details, call 832-6780 or visit westpalmbeachfishingclub.org.

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Ed Ducar of Lakeland holds a blackfin tuna he caught on a live pilchard near Boynton Inlet in May 2017. The Florida Fish & Wildlife Conservation Commission is holding workshops to discuss management options for largely unregulated blackfins. Willie Howard/The Coastal Star

FWC seeks public input on blackfin tuna

The Florida Fish & Wildlife Conservation Commission will gather public input on the management of blackfin tuna.

Blackfin tuna are regulated in state waters only by the state’s default recreational bag limit of 100 pounds. 

There are no regulations on blackfin tuna in federal waters (more than 3 miles off Florida’s east coast).

A meeting to discuss management options for blackfin tuna is set for 6 p.m. May 6 at Keiser University, Room 402-B, 1500 NW 49th St., Fort Lauderdale.

To view the blackfin tuna presentation online and submit comments to the FWC, visit myfwc.com/SaltwaterComments.

   

Coming events

May 1: Grouper fishing season opens and remains open through Dec. 31 in state waters of the Atlantic. Minimum sizes: 20 inches for red grouper, 24 inches for black and gag grouper. Three-fish aggregate daily grouper bag limit can include only one black and one gag grouper. For details, go to myfwc.com and look under saltwater fishing regulations.

May 4: Basic boating safety class offered by Coast Guard Auxiliary, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the headquarters building at Spanish River Park, 3939 N. Ocean Blvd., Boca Raton. Fee $35 ($5 for youths ages 12-19). Register at the door. Bring lunch. Call 391-3600.

May 7: Boynton Beach Fishing Club meets, 7 p.m. in the clubhouse by the boat ramps, Harvey E. Oyer Jr. Park, 2010 N. Federal Highway, Boynton Beach. bifc.org.

May 18: “Suddenly in Command” three-hour boating safety course offered by Coast Guard Auxiliary, 9 a.m. in the classroom building next to the boat ramps, Harvey E. Oyer Jr. Park, 2010 N. Federal Highway, Boynton Beach. Free. 331-2429.

May 25: Basic boating safety class offered by Coast Guard Auxiliary, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the classroom building next to the boat ramps, Harvey E. Oyer Jr. Park, 2010 N. Federal Highway, Boynton Beach. Fee $20. Register at the door. 331-2429.

Tip of the month

Planning to take your boat to the Bahamas this summer?

Consider cruising over in a group boating “fling” led by the Bahamas Tourist Office. This year’s fling schedule begins June 12-16 with a trip to Grand Bahama Island, followed by trips to Bimini June 19-23 and June 26-30. An extended fling to the Exuma islands is set for July 10-21.

Trips leave from Bahia Mar Yachting Center in Fort Lauderdale. The registration fee is $75. Go to Bahamas.com or call 954-236-9212.

Willie Howard is a freelance writer and licensed boat captain. Reach him at tiowillie@bellsouth.net.

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Brandon Canute, development manager for Friends of Gumbo Limbo, had the idea to raise money without planning a big event. Canute works with Emily Mirowski, a sea turtle rehabilitation technician at Gumbo Limbo. Photo provided

By Mary Thurwachter

This year, Friends of Gumbo Limbo are trying something different with their annual fundraiser the Sea Coast Toast. They’ve gone virtual.

The invitations make it clear: “Don’t dress up. Don’t hire a babysitter. Don’t show up on May 8. Enjoy the evening however you choose.”

The idea lets people support the un-event from anywhere.

“We still need money but we’re very lean on staff and don’t have time to pull together an event,” says Brandon Canute, development manager for Friends of Gumbo Limbo. It was Canute’s idea to go virtual with the fundraiser. In fact, Canute and his team are calling it the Un-Sea Coast Toast.

“You can help us from your couch or the beach or even while cheering at your child’s soccer game,” he says.

How? Buy virtual tickets (they’re tax deductible and help Gumbo Limbo care for sea turtles, feed fish and support its programs, research and exhibits). Another way to help is to bid on auction items through May 8 (www.gumbolimbo.org/auction). Some items are a regional wine tasting for 20 at Total Wine & More, cultural art and food experiences and staycations at local resorts.

You could also post a photo to Facebook or Instagram on how you spent the night instead of being at a gala (tag @gumbolimbonaturecenter and use #unseacoasttoast #gumbolimbo and #supportathome).

“So far, response has been pretty good, largely positive,” Canute says. “People are thanking us for not having to go to another gala.”
The fundraising goal for the un-event is $10,000.   

How to help

What: Un-Sea Coast Toast 2019

When: Through May 8 Where: Wherever you are

Tickets: Start at $50

Details: 544-8608 or gumbolimbo.org/un-sea-coast-toast-2019

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7960869065?profile=originalSupporters of the Raymond F. Kravis Center for the Performing Arts gathered in the Center’s Gimelstob Ballroom in the Cohen Pavilion for a special luncheon honoring members of the Helen K. Persson Society. The event celebrated supporters of the Endowment Fund for their confidence, trust and investment in the Kravis Center’s long-term future. 

ABOVE: Helen K. Persson Society members Stephen and Janet Barr of Delray Beach. Photo provided

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7960859897?profile=originalUNICO’s Highland Beach Chapter hosted its annual

Brian Piccolo Awards dinner and honored two outstanding high school seniors. The

awards were presented by UNICO chapters throughout

the United States.

ABOVE: (l-r) Event Chairwoman Ann Matarazzo with Giuliana Gamero-Faggiano of Cardinal Newman High School, Logan Fenimore of American Heritage High and Chairwoman Lisa Marie Conte Browne. Photo provided

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7960872079?profile=originalAward winners gather following the grand awards celebration presented by Impact 100 of Palm Beach County. Each of the five winning nonprofit organizations received a $100,000 grant at the April 17 event held at Lynn University's Wold Theater in Boca Raton. Outgoing President Kirsten Stanley and President-elect Kathy Adkins are center front. Photo provided

Impact 100 of Palm Beach County awarded $543,000 in grants at its eighth annual awards celebration at Lynn University’s Wold Theater in Boca Raton on April 17.

Ten member-vetted non-profits made presentations in five award categories and were voted on by the members.

The $100,000 award winners were: Palm Beach Dramaworks for One Humanity Tour, a seventh-grade human trafficking project; Streetwaves Corp. for maritime education after-school program at Village Academy; the Institute for Regional Conservation for restoring the Gold Coast; Autism After 21 for SOAR — Summer Opportunity for Adult Readiness, and the Center for Child Counseling for school-based mental health. The five other presenting groups were each awarded $8,600.

Through the power of women giving as one, Impact 100 Palm Beach County has awarded more than $3.3 million to the local community since its inception in 2011.

Junior League awarded $10,000 from Plastridge

In honor of the 100th anniversary of Plastridge Insurance, the company donated a total of $100,000 to 10 nonprofit clients chosen by the company’s employees. One of the nonprofits to receive a $10,000 gift is the Junior League of Boca Raton. The donation will support the Junior League’s mission of promoting voluntarism, developing the potential of women, and improving the community through effective action of trained volunteers.

7960872852?profile=originalAnthony Escobar, 15, works on a laptop at PROPEL, which won a $10,000 grant from Capital One. In back: Androff Cesar, 15, and Clifny Cherisma, 15. Photo from Shot by Simone

Grant will help youths learn computer technology

PROPEL (People Reaching Out to Provide Education & Leadership) was the recipient of a $10,000 grant from Capital One, which will be used to help youths master computer technology. The grant, awarded in April, is an extension of an initial investment made by Capital One for PROPEL programs.

PROPEL chief executive Gregg Francis said the second grant was given after regional bank representatives reviewed the progression and results of the after-school curriculum during a visit March 22.

Last year, the first $10,000 grant funded a program called Elite Techies, which introduces high school students to Microsoft Word, Excel and PowerPoint software.

The program was especially important because the majority of PROPEL students do not have their own personal computers, but need them for homework, research and job applications.

  The second award will be used to improve the aptitude of students’ computer skills.

PROPEL was founded in 2004 and is headquartered in Boca Raton. It is a nonprofit that serves the youths of south Palm Beach County.

Milagro opens center for middle schoolers

Milagro Center hosted a grand opening and ribbon-cutting ceremony of its new Virginia and Harvey Kimmel Milagro Junior Teen Center on April 15 at 346 SW Sixth Ave., Delray Beach. The middle school center has long been a dream at Milagro, which provides after-school cultural arts and academic programs for underserved, academically at-risk youth. The new center will provide a vital bridge between Milagro’s S.T.A.R.S. (K through fifth) and Teen Leadership (ninth through 12th) programs. It will offer a full after-school program, including academic support and tutoring, one-on-one mentoring and cultural arts enrichment.

The Kimmels have supported programs benefiting children and the arts in Florida, Philadelphia and Michigan for 30-plus years, and they played a central role in making the middle school center a reality by making a major challenge grant.

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The Delray Beach Initiative has a library fundraiser on May 11.  ABOVE: Chairwoman Carol Eaton (l-r), Delray Beach library Executive Director Karen Ronald, children’s librarian Ilene Glickman and DBI founder Chuck Halberg. Photo provided

Library fundraiser will be fun test of trivia skills

Trivia nuts and libraries go hand-in-hand. So, it comes as no surprise that the Delray Beach Initiative will raise money for the Delray Beach Public Library’s summer programs for children during its Trivia Night, 7-10 p.m. May 11 at the Delray Beach Elks Lodge. Trivia contests led by a professional trivia host are the main event, but there will also be a silent auction, a cash bar and a dinner buffet. Tickets, including dinner, are $25. The Delray Beach Initiative, led by business and community leaders, receives donations of funds, food and services, making it possible to keep costs low for two events each year benefiting nonprofits. For event details, see delraylibrary.org/trivia-night.

Arts grant proposals due

The PNC Foundation has announced that it will award $300,000 over three years to arts organizations in Broward and Palm Beach counties, and is now accepting grant proposals for $10,000 and above. Proposals are due by 5 p.m. May 31. To apply, visit pnc.com/artsalive.

Send news and notes to Amy Woods at flamywoods@bellsouth.net

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7960865070?profile=originalSupporters of Boca Helping Hands passed go at the 13th annual Monopoly event in Boca Raton. The party, co-chaired by LouAnn Such and Dale Workman, attracted more than 250 guests, with Connor Jimenez crowned Monopoly champion. The evening included hors d’oeuvres and dinner, silent and live auctions, casino gaming and a DJ. Two-time national Monopoly champion Gary Peters served as tournament mediator. Boca Helping Hands provides food, medical and other services to people in need.

ABOVE: Mary Anna Fowler and Isabelle Paul.

BELOW: Richard and Pattie Damron.  Photos provided

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7960863100?profile=originalHeld for the first time at the Delray Beach Elks Lodge, Real Men Bake included sweet and savory delights from close to 20 celebrity chefs, including police officers, community leaders and students from Atlantic High School. The 1960s-themed event benefited the Woman’s Club of Delray Beach and included music, dancing and a silent and live auction. About 150 guests voted on their favorite culinary creations, with top prize going to Atlantic High School Culinary Arts Academy students. ‘Everyone had a great time again this year,’ said Mary Reis, president of the GFWC Woman’s Club of Delray Beach. ‘We are grateful to all our sponsors and our chefs who make Real Men Bake a great success.’ ABOVE: Bob and Ellie Smela from Ellie's Diner.

Photo provided

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7960861074?profile=originalThe Plate: Chicken kebab

The Place: Sofra, 821 Lake Ave., downtown Lake Worth; 557-2917.

The Price: $15

The Skinny: Mediterranean cuisine is gaining popularity across South Florida.

Chris’ Taverna has been packing customers into its two locations for years.

And Sofra, at the corner of Dixie Highway and Lake Avenue in downtown Lake Worth, is gaining a steady base of diners hungry for lemon chicken soup, fresh, creamy tzatziki and earthy falafel.

The restaurant opened a few months ago in a space that once was home to The French House.

This order of chicken kebabs was marinated, then grilled until fork-tender. It came with a starter of soup (I chose the excellent lemon chicken soup), a small, crisp salad and bulgur wheat and some grilled peppers. Next time, I want to try the octopus.

— Scott Simmons

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7960863500?profile=originalThe 28th annual luncheon raised more than $200,000 for the Literacy Coalition of Palm Beach County's child, adult and family literacy programs. Bestselling author Jacquelyn Mitchard headlined the event. Mitchard has written dozens of novels, including The Deep End of the Ocean. ABOVE: Caron Dockerty, Mitchard and Brenda Medore.  Photo provided

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7960862261?profile=originalSt. Lucy Catholic Church’s annual luncheon for the Council of Catholic Women met to honor Woman of the Year award winner Pat Piller and to review its fundraising efforts for Birthline, food and clothing drives for migrant workers and laborers, and more throughout the year. The event also featured a Sleeves 2 Go fashion show and raffle prizes. ABOVE: (l-r) board members Lee Russo, Piller, Ellen Ryan, Ann Mongon and Michelle DeGennaro.

Photo provided by Peggy Gossett-Seidman

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ABOVE: Suzanne Perrotto envisions her new restaurant as a gathering place with communal seating and food sharing. Photo provided by LibbyVision

By Jan Norris

Chef Suzanne Perrotto has tapped into her mother, Linda Rose, throughout the new restaurant she’s creating just down the block from her signature Brulé.

“She was my inspiration. I can’t imagine cooking with anyone more than my mother,” she said.

Hence the name, Rose’s Daughter, American Trattoria, set to open sometime in June in Pineapple Grove.

The new restaurant will be Italian, based largely on her family’s recipes. It takes the space of the former Max’s Harvest.

Unlike Brulé, which was started with a partner, this one is all on Perrotto, 55. She first said no to the idea when the landlord approached her.

“I’m all about an open kitchen. But this had walls, and the kitchen was tiny and kind of cut up,” she said. “The layout was something I couldn’t see being happy in.

“I walked away and said ‘no thanks.’

“But I kept thinking about it. I couldn’t sleep for a day. I pictured an open kitchen, and people sitting at the wrap-around bar, with chefs, smiling, giving out food, communal tables, everyone sharing food and laughing. I saw the back patio with music, and a bar and people just sort of hanging out and enjoying themselves.

“Seriously: I saw all this as though it were real. It was like I was looking at ghosts.

“So, I went back to the owner and told him, ‘I changed my mind. I want to do it.’”

She sold both of them by describing her vision that day, she said.

“I really did. I told him how amazing it would be. We were going to open up some of the walls, but we found some problems and decided to blow all the walls out. So, it’s all open to the kitchen. It’s a total build-out.”

Perrotto envisions the communal experience starting with a happy hour.

“On the south wall, there’s a drink bar, and there will be a food bar on the north wall, which will have more seats and wrap around to the kitchen. I want the chefs giving away foods between 5 and 6, handing out amuse-bouche to everyone and giving everyone a fun moment.”

Mismatched chairs in the main dining area are reminiscent of the Sunday dinners at the New York homes she grew up in.

“We went to whoever’s house made the sauce on Sunday. Sometimes you had to bring a chair. So, none of the chairs are going to match,” she said.

White subway tiles and herb boxes that separate parts of the dining room will be part of the design by Michelle Mendez, of Delray Beach’s Rustic Rooster.

The center of the room will be a semi-private area that can be reserved for up to 28 people, Perrotto said. “It’s like a wine-tasting room in a winery. More antiquey than the rest of the space.”

The open back patio will include her herb garden — “anything that I can grow, I will grow” — citrus trees and a fence decorated by a local tattoo artist. A separate bar that will serve Negronis on tap from Delray Beach’s SaltWater Brewery will be here; other local breweries also will be involved in the beers offered.

Don’t expect infused spirits, however. “We’ll add flavor through our infused mixes,” she said; no fake flavors.

Rose’s Daughter will not be open for lunch; that will be left to Brulé, while the new restaurant will be the after-hours spot.

Perrotto said that “we’ll have a breakfast grab-and-go at Rose’s. When I go to Italy, it’s just wonderful. The Arancia with an espresso, a roll or pastry. And some fresh-squeezed orange juice.”

She wants to re-create that fresh continental style in Delray Beach and lays out the vision.

“The day starts with an egg sandwich: a fresh baked brioche, with some meat — we’ll smoke the pig jowl. It will be a farm-fresh egg on a buttered roll. Healthy, if slightly decadent.”

Illy coffee, her favorite, and fresh-squeezed orange juice are must haves.

“Then the restaurant closes, and after 11:30, you’ll see nothing but chefs in the restaurant from 11:30 to 5. It will be all-day prep.

“We’ll open the doors at 5 p.m. for an hour. We’ll have amazing foods for happy hour. You’ll see people sitting, talking to the chefs with their wine and a bite or charcuterie plate. Then we open the doors for dinner.”

Perrotto is putting in a special charcoal oven made by Mibrasa for the pizza. She got her Neopolitan pizza certification in New York from master pizza maker Roberto Caporuscio — the U.S. ambassador for the 300-year-old art of the specialty pizza.

“It will have a 48-hour-fermented dough,” she said. It’s might not be to everyone’s liking, she said. “It’s a little crispy, but it’s a little chewy, too.”

Gluten-free pizzas also will be offered, and a dedicated oven will separate them from all other pizzas.

“Everything will be made from scratch,” Perrotto said.

That includes cheeses, as much as possible, all the pastas and charcuterie when she can do it herself. Gelatos and ice creams, too. A ricotta cheesecake is going to be a seasonal dessert.

“We’ll have our own burrata and ricotta — my mother taught me to make that when I was 14 years old.”

The limited menu will not be static except for a few items — and when they’re sold out, there’s no more until the next day, she said. “We’re going to try to keep the pizza on the menu, but I won’t serve it without the 48-ferment for the dough. Some people will understand it. When it’s over, it’s over.”

Another example of this is the porchetta — a pork loin wrapped in pork belly. It must be brined properly for two days.

“Then you slow cook it, and the skin is crispy almost like chicharrones, and the meat is juicy,” Perrotto said. “When it’s done, we’re out. A few people may be disappointed, but we’ll have other items to steer them to.”

Dinner goes to 11, then afterward on certain nights, the back patio will open to become a casual eatery, Bastardo’s, with its own identity. It’s envisioned as a gathering place for the after-dinner or late movie crowd with a DJ and bar, she said.

“It will be open after Brulé closes, so we’ll send people here for a drink and a pizza or a bite. They can just hang out and listen to the music, talk.”

A neon sign in the front window will indicate when Bastardo’s is open.

Sundays, expect an Italian family-style service with traditional Sunday dinner recipes, including her mother’s meatballs.

“They’re not a traditional meatball. They’re lamb meatballs with a good amount of fat. A little veal, and lamb fat, and herbaceous. Served with house-made mozzarella and San Marzano sauce,” Perrotto said.

She’s hoping there’s something that everyone will find approachable here.

“I want it to be inclusive — not exclusive to anyone. Blue-collar, white-collar — we have such a diverse demographic here. Delray Beach is a mecca — a condensed mecca of people.

“When we came to Pineapple Grove 12 years ago, no one else was up here. We saw 32 East, and we love him. Butch is brilliant. We were like, ‘Yeah! If people are eating that type of food, and making it, we can try to live up to that.’ We said let’s do this.”

She wanted to create a place that served tourists, snowbirds and residents — an all-season restaurant.

Brulé first opened as a market and bistro during the recession, she said. Growth was slow; few other restaurants ventured onto Second Avenue.

But it eventually evolved into the restaurant she first planned. The market space with bread baskets and bottles of oils were gone, replaced with tables and chairs. A bar and second bathroom were added. It drew more diners, and gradually earned the solid reputation it has now.

“The menu was interesting and people really liked it,” Perrotto said.

She and her partner split, however, and she was left to choose: Close, or run it on her own.

Perrotto has been guiding it alone, with a steady staff helping out ever since. Now, she mentors others; chefs have gone on to bigger kitchens in New York, Chicago or out west.

Perrotto began cooking as a teen in her family’s restaurant in New York, Sonny’s Trattoria near the Hudson River. Her mother was a self-taught cook who was inspired by her Italian-Jewish husband’s recipes.

Perrotto remembers “incredible farms” nearby in New York that provided the produce, cheeses and other fresh foods for the restaurant. Only the finest ingredients went into the foods; this standard was passed along to the daughter from the start.

Perrotto moved around early in her career, to country clubs, hotels and restaurants, picking up culinary skills all along from top names at the time.

She eventually made her way to Florida to help her father, and began at the Ibis country club.

During her career, she said she has faced the largely unspoken bias against female executive chefs, though she has held that job seven times.

“There was always the guy there that was supposed to get the job,” Perrotto said. “I always had to prove myself. But it’s made me a better chef throughout the years. I’ve definitely had some interesting moments.”

She recalled a first day at the Jupiter Beach Resort some years ago: “I was thrown into a 1,200-seat Easter brunch.”

She had created a number of house-made sauces for the foods the night before. The day of service, she was given a new cook to help out.

When he was told to reheat the sauces, he promptly dumped all of them into one soup vat.

A chef friend from a nearby restaurant showed up to help her out; the two hastily made “mocks” — sauces from soup bases and other shortcut ingredients. “We did what we had to do,” she said; guests were served on time.

Unbeknownst to her, the regional director for resorts showed up to check out the new chef and taste the foods that afternoon.

Perrotto said she passed with high praise. “He said it was the best l’orange sauce he’d ever had.” It was made simply with orange marmalade.

“We adapt — that’s what chefs do,” she said. “There are so many situations that would make us so strong.”

Her staff at Brulé now is solidly behind her, and many say they’re glad to come to work. She has nothing but admiration for them as well.

“If the chef and staff are happy, the servers are going to get that vibe and it’s passed down to the diner. I’ve seen my servers turn people’s frowns into smiles over and over. It’s a happy environment. We have a sign on the kitchen, ‘Leave it outside.’”

Several will join her at Rose’s Daughter, including James O’Neill, her sous chef.

Her restaurants’ close proximity is something she wanted. They will share  some products. “Brulé will be doing brioche. Rose’s Daughter will be doing the ciabatta. Some of the stocks will be made at the new restaurant,” she said.

She bought a golf cart to go back and forth, she said, and she’s planning on getting an apartment with a bed next door to Rose’s to have a break spot in between prep and dinner service. “It’s what my mother did. She had an apartment over the restaurant and would take her breaks there.”

Dishes will follow the seasons and availability of products. She’ll shop locally whenever possible, but realizes South Florida’s summer food production is limited.
“Let’s face it: If you are limiting yourself to South Florida in summer, you’re going to be eating coconuts, avocados and mangoes,” Perrotto said.

Right now, she’s focused on the physical aspect; she gets to make her vision a reality in an area where every American restaurant has Italian foods on the menu.

But there’s a difference, she said, given all the experience she has gained.

“The experience for the chef is on the plate. The bone broths — the knowing how to make them. The season of the vegetable: How much sugar is in that vegetable this time of year? Should the meat be age-dried? Is it a potato gnocchi that’s from a russet potato, and will it be more starchy?

“My experience behind the food is 30 years, 40 if you count my mother’s restaurant. It’s really understanding a recipe, not just throwing it out.”

She knows she has big shoes to fill in this location, but is up for it.

“When Dennis Max came in, he created a lot of recognition for this area. Allen Susser, before him, had a vision for Taste.

“Now I get to put my vision in there.”

Rose’s Daughter, American Trattoria will be at 162 NE Second Ave. Brulé Bistro is at 200 NE Second Ave.; phone 274-2046; brulebistro.com.

7960870091?profile=originalABOVE: Pizza Neopolitano is on the menu at Rose’s Daughter, which is set for a June opening. Photo provided by Montana Pritchard

Craft beer fest

The eighth annual Delray Beach Craft Beer Fest gets the party going at The Pavilion at Old School Square on May 10.

More than 100 craft brews and ciders will be poured along with a select group of wines.

A DJ and live band provide entertainment for this signature fundraiser for Old School Square Center for the Arts programs.

Tickets are $55 for VIP access, which allows a one-hour early entry and a commemorative glass. General admission is $40. You must be 21 for entry.

The festival general admission is from 7:30-10:30 p.m. Information and tickets are at oldschoolsquare.org. Click on events.

Briefly

The Delray Beach Historical Society plans a fundraiser 6-10 p.m. May 11, “Twilight in the Garden.” It’s a party with food and drink to raise money for a campus-wide Educational Heritage Garden. A number of area restaurants and mixologists are participating in the dine-around on the grounds at 3 NE First St. Tickets are $125; visit delraybeachhistory.org for more info.

Thirty of Boynton’s best restaurants will showcase their cuisines at the annual Boynton Beach Food, Wine and Brew Fest on May 16. Local breweries will pour their beers as well, and wines paired to the foods will be served. The event is at Benvenuto Restaurant, 1730 N. Federal Highway, Boynton Beach, 6-9:30 p.m. Tickets are $35. Visit bocaratonchamber.com/events/ for more information and tickets. The Boca Chamber is a partner to Boynton Beach.

Racks Downtown Eatery +Tavern closed abruptly last month after nine-plus years in Mizner Park. Rack’s Farmhouse Kitchen in nearby Royal Palm Place, and Rack’s Fishhouse & Oyster Bar on Atlantic Avenue in Delray remain open. The focus for Gary Rack’s Restaurant Group is to expand the Farmhouse Kitchen concept, though restaurant turnover at Mizner Park might be a tell that the location/landlord had a hand in this one.

All Meats Brazilian Steak House opened out west at 21065 Powerline Road, Boca Raton. It’s a rodizio-style churrascaria. Ribs, steaks, seafood are cooked open-flame over mesquite charcoal. A certified Angus beef prime tomahawk ribeye is their signature dish. 617-1815; allmeats.com.

Jan Norris is a food writer who can be reached at nativefla@gmail.com. 

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7960859472?profile=originalDay Pitney was a proud sponsor of the 13th annual Festival of the Arts Boca, which ran Feb. 28 through March 10. The festival kicked off with an exclusive reception at the Boca Raton Museum of Art prior to the evening’s featured event: The Symphonia gave a live performance of the Academy Award-winning score of Star Wars:  Episode IV — A New Hope during a showing of the film.  ABOVE: Day Pitney partners Scott Beach, Scott Goodman, Stan Twardy, Gary Betensky and Jim Ballerano. Photo provided

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By Mary Hladky

Attorneys are still aiming for suspended Boca Raton Mayor Susan Haynie to go to trial in October on public corruption charges, but no date was set at an April 15 court hearing.

Palm Beach Circuit Judge Jeffrey Gillen will be taking over the case from Judge Glenn Kelley, and both Assistant State Attorney Brian Fernandes and Haynie’s criminal defense attorney Bruce Zimet asked to allow Gillen to set the trial date.

The next status check on Haynie’s case will be on July 15.

“We are shooting for an October trial date,” Zimet said after the brief hearing.

He also reiterated that no plea deal is in the works.

“Innocent people don’t have plea bargains,” he said,

Haynie, 63, a fixture in Boca Raton politics for 18 years, did not appear at the hearing. She has pleaded not guilty to the charges.

Haynie was arrested on April 24 on charges of official misconduct, perjury, misuse of public office and failure to disclose voting conflicts. She faces more than 20 years in prison.

Former Gov. Rick Scott suspended her from office, but she has not resigned. Scott Singer was elected mayor on Aug. 28 for the remainder of Haynie's term, which expires next March.

Prosecutors contend that Haynie used her position on the City Council to vote on four matters that financially benefited James Batmasian, the city’s largest downtown commercial landowner, and failed to disclose income she received from him.

The investigation by the Palm Beach County State Attorney’s Office found that Haynie failed to report $335,000 in income on financial disclosure forms required by the state, including $84,000 from Batmasian or his company Investments Limited, from 2014 through 2017.

Before her arrest, the Palm Beach County Commission on Ethics, which also investigated Haynie for voting on matters that financially benefited Batmasian, reached a settlement with her in which they reprimanded and fined her for failing to disclose a conflict of interest, but dismissed a second allegation that Haynie misused her public office.

The Florida Commission on Ethics in October found probable cause that Haynie violated state ethics laws in eight instances, but that case is pending resolution of the criminal case.

The state commission, which also probed Haynie’s financial links to Batmasian and Investments Limited, found that she failed to disclose income, acted to financially benefit herself and her husband, and improperly voted on matters that benefited Batmasian and his wife, Marta, without disclosing a conflict of interest.

The evidence gathered against Haynie by the three agencies is similar. One key difference is that while state prosecutors determined Haynie voted on four matters that financially benefited Batmasian from 2014 through 2017, state ethics investigators found 17 votes between 2012 and 2016.

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As a business owner on George Bush Boulevard in Delray Beach, I would like to share my concerns about St. Vincent’s Church festival that takes place each spring.

To the best of my knowledge this event is a family outing. I don’t feel that the serving of alcoholic beverages (not just beer) is appropriate at an event such as this.

I’m sure you are aware of all the drug and alcoholic treatment centers here in Delray. This event made it very easy for anyone to get a drink.

Considering that this was a church-sponsored event to raise money, it could have been done without alcoholic beverages, especially considering these people driving with their children after a few drinks.

Susan McTighe 

Delray Beach

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During the March municipal elections, our coastal residents’ voices were heard, not only in candidate selection, but on significant issues that affected their town. Sometimes, we need to allow our residents to directly express their opinions on specific impactful issues and not just rely on commissions that are narrowly split over divisive issues.

Both Ocean Ridge and Highland Beach had referendums on their ballots allowing the residents to have that voice, and the answers may have surprised some. Ocean Ridge residents came out supporting all the changes to their town charter, with the most controversial one being the desire to have term limits for elected commissioners.

Highland Beach residents came out overwhelmingly rejecting all of theirs. The three bonds, to improve stormwater drainage, to improve roadways and parks, and to finance underground utilities, were all defeated.

The bottom line is that when important choices must be made, give the residents a voice. Trust them. They will speak and we all win.

Zoanne Hennigan

Ocean Ridge  

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7960850454?profile=originalAbout 100 dog fans attended a fundraising event that included vendors, animal rescue organizations, a live DJ and an auction with prizes valued at more than $3,000. Costumed dogs competed in multiple categories on the red-carpet runway. Pups on the Plaza was conceived and coordinated by Sally Ott and Stacy Beck of Illustrated Properties, with help from Plaza del Mar, DogzBag and Extraordinary Photography by Tina Valant. Proceeds benefited Lantana beautification and local pet rescues. ABOVE: Artist Colleen Thompson adds the finishing touches to a portrait of her dog, Roger. BELOW: Kelcey Roberts and her maltese, Lily, dressed in Tiffany-inspired ensembles. Photos provided by Tina Valant

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