
A Michelin-approved steakhouse is opening in Coral Gables this week
Located at 1500 San Ignacio Avenue, in the former Fiola Miami space (featuring the same team behind that restaurant), Daniel's Miami will offer a menu that includes a sourced steak program, local seafood, and house-made pastas in an elegant, comfortable European-style setting.
'We've been fortunate to build a loyal following in Fort Lauderdale, including many Miami guests who have asked for a Daniel's experience closer to home,' Fiola Miami founder Thomas Angelo said in a press release. 'Daniel's Miami will answer that call in a fresh, yet familiar space, with an exceptional menu, and the same incredible team our guests have come to know.'
Unsurprisingly, Daniel's Miami's menu is heavy on steak. This includes premium cuts like Australian-sourced Stone Axe Wagyu and a tableside Wagyu prime rib from Strube Ranch in Texas. In addition to the beef-based options, the menu also features fresh seafood, including whole Dover sole, branzino, and the restaurant's signature lobster Fra Diavolo. Pasta dishes include rigatoni alla vodka and spaghetti alla chittara with truffles.
The Bar at Daniel's Miami will feature an all-day menu, including a double-patty smashburger and cacio e pepe pasta. Drinks include rotating, curated craft cocktails, including soon-to-be favorites like the Canyon Margarita and Daniel's Martini, as well as an extensive wine list. It will be open for lunch, dinner, and even Sunday Brunch.
Wagyu beef aficionados should circle the end of August on their calendars because Daniel's Miami has a special wagyu beef-centric event during Miami Spice (running from August 1 through September 30). It will offer a five-course Wagyu tasting as part of their Signature Miami Spice Experience.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mirror
an hour ago
- Daily Mirror
BBC Destination X viewers call out 'fake' blunder minutes into show
Destination X kicked off on Wednesday night with Rob Brydon as the host, however, not all viewers were impressed with the first episode of the BBC reality show. BBC viewers were united in their reaction on Wednesday evening as Rob Brydon's fresh series Destination X made its debut. The new reality competition show has 13 contestants embarking on an epic European adventure, but there's a twist – not everything is as straightforward as it appears. Aboard the mysterious X-bus with its blacked-out windows, the participants' only task is to deduce their location on the continent by deciphering a trail of clues. Each episode culminates with the contestants marking an X on a map; the one whose guess is furthest from their true location faces elimination. Yet, as the programme began, it seemed that the initial scenes, featuring hopefuls at an airport ready for their enigmatic journey, didn't quite win over all the viewers, reports Wales Online. One viewer expressed disinterest: "No, can't be bothered with this. They all seem annoying." Another was sceptical, posting: "Blatantly a fake airport lounge #DestinationX". A third shared their disbelief, commenting: "Straight away I call shenanigans. No way British people will talk so quickly to strangers in an airport lounge. #DestinationX" One unimpressed comment read: "#DestinationX is a bit s**t so far." However, some viewers were instantly captivated by the show, with one saying: "Giving #DestinationX ago enjoying it so far." Another added praise for the host: "Rob Brydon steals the show in everything he's in. Love him #DestinationX" Throughout the programme, participants were whisked away by helicopter whilst sporting distinctive goggles that obscured their view from the aircraft windows. Nevertheless, there were brief instances when the eyewear permitted glimpses of the outside world, offering contestants fleeting opportunities to work out their destination. All they could make out were rolling fields and rural landscapes, with some speculating whether they'd been deceived and simply flown in circles back to where they started. In an ingenious move, audiences at home were also invited to participate as the programme deliberately withheld the contestants' actual location, encouraging viewers to make their own educated guesses. Fans would need to remain patient until the episode's conclusion to learn whether their predictions had hit the mark. In a brutal development, three participants faced immediate removal from the contest before even departing the airport, as Rob set them a challenge to locate items bearing specific names with limited tickets up for grabs. Those who failed to secure the required names found themselves heading home empty-handed, losing their shot at the £100,000 prize. Discussing the fresh format, presenter Rob Brydon revealed: "I've never done a TV show on this scale before. I loved the idea of it, the combination of having to work out clues as to where you are and having to get on with each other. "It struck me as the best bits of The Traitors with the best bits of Race Across the World."

Rhyl Journal
4 hours ago
- Rhyl Journal
European champions England given a hero's welcome outside Buckingham Palace
Less than 48 hours on from the nerve-shredding penalty shootout in Basel that saw Sarina Wiegman's side retain their European crown, throngs of supporters took over the approach to Buckingham Palace as the team paraded the trophy along the famous route from an open-top bus and revelled in an achievement unique in English football. For the first time since England teams began competing at major international tournaments in 1950, a side bearing the three lions returned home victorious as Chloe Kelly's winning kick capped a stunning fightback against the world champions, making Wiegman's players the first to win a tournament outside of England. Proud 🥹 — Lionesses (@Lionesses) July 29, 2025 It was a fitting intervention that, as the bus arrived from the Mall to a specially-erected stage in front of the palace at around 12:20, an overcast sky over London parted for the first time and bathed the European champions in sunshine. Some supporters had waited for 12 hours for captain Leah Williamson and her team. The earliest devotees reportedly set up camp just after midnight in anticipation of the players' arrival on the Mall just past noon, to be joined by fans who had travelled from all over the country and who represented a cross-section of ages and backgrounds. A carnival atmosphere had been heightened at around 11am when footage was shown on a big screen of England's remarkable route through the tournament. From the disappointment of the loss to France with which they began the defence of their title, to the escapology acts of the knockout stages that saw them fight back from the brink of elimination against Sweden and Italy. The England supporters' band – the soundtrack to so many tournament disappointments throughout decades of England teams returning home empty-handed – were in attendance, underscoring the significance to English football of the Lionesses' back-to-back tournament triumphs. Later, the Central Band of the Royal Air Force took over to serenade the players onto stage with a rendition of 'Sweet Caroline'. Addressing the crowd, a visibly emotional Williamson said: 'Special people, we love each other, we've got each other's back on and off the pitch. 'Everything we do, we do for us and the team but we do it for the country and young girls. This job never existed thirty years ago. This story's not done yet.' The duo you didn't know you needed 😁😁 — Lionesses (@Lionesses) July 29, 2025 Wiegman, who was coaxed into dancing by an on-stage appearance from Afrobeat star Burna Boy, said: 'We just kept hope and belief and (the players) showed up when it was really necessary and urgent. 'There's a huge talent pool in this team. The bonding in this team in this tournament, that made the difference. Everyone was willing to step up and support each other.' Kelly, whose goal in the final moment of extra-time put England through against Italy – before hitting the winning penalty in the final – said: 'Pressure? What pressure? It feels so good to stand side by side with these girls. Thank you to everyone who got out to support us. It's so f*****g special.' Goalkeeper and penalty hero Hannah Hampton said: 'Don't let people tell you what you can and can't do. If it makes you happy go and follow that smile.' Young player of the tournament Michelle Agyemang, whose equalising goals in the quarter-final and semi-final, said: 'It's still surreal. It doesn't even seem real.' The biggest cheer of the day was reserved for when Williamson lifted the European Championship trophy high as Buckingham Palace disappeared behind plumes of red and white smoke and 'Sweet Caroline' echoed again over London.


Daily Mirror
6 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
BBC Destination X ban as host Rob Brydon exposes rule on contestants
The new BBC gameshow sees 13 strangers embark on a European adventure as they attempt to win £100,000. Rob Brydon has lifted the lid on a peculiar rule imposed on the contestants of his new BBC gameshow, Destination X. The ten-part series sees 13 strangers compete for a £100,000 prize and the chance to embark on an adventure of a lifetime. In a unique road trip, they are whisked around Europe in a large coach, clueless about their location or destination as they strive to decipher the truth from the clues, deceit, and lies they're presented with. With sensory deprivation onboard the bus and no contact with the outside world, the contestants are challenged to deduce their possible location after being given a series of clues and red herrings. They're gradually eliminated until the winner is left standing, based on their guesses of their locations at the end of each day, with the person predicting the furthest away from their actual location being booted from the game, reports Wales Online. Hosted by Gavin and Stacey actor Rob, who accompanies the players around the continent, Destination X has been dubbed a hybrid of The Traitors and Race Across The World. But unlike The Traitors, which was filmed in a plush Scottish castle, and more akin to the conditions contestants face on Race Across the World, Destination X contestants had to endure living on a bus during the month-long filming. This meant sharing a single toilet, prompting Rob and executive producer Dan Adamson to disclose certain rules that were implemented. Before the series went to air, Rob confirmed to journalists that he wasn't bunking down on the bus alongside the contestants, choosing a rather more comfortable arrangement instead. Dan then revealed: "You plan and you plan and you plan and we had the most amazing production management team, and you plan everything, you think of everything, but we set ourselves a rule which gave ourselves one problem, which was that there was no number twos on the bus, and that was the rule. "It's a worldwide rule, right? And then suddenly it was like, 'Why do these people need to go to the toilet so often?' "So we had to create a system, which was that we had a convoy behind the bus, we had a special car with a trailer that had a couple of porta-loos on it. "So we had to find places to pull over, and goggles had to go on, producers would chaperone them off, take them to the door of the porta-loo, get them in, goggles off, do your business, wash your hands, put your goggles back on, and back in the bus. It was stuff like that." In an effort to maintain the secrecy of the bus and contestants' whereabouts, they were forced to implement additional measures. "Even giving them food, everything had to be decanted out of any local containers, we couldn't give them food that felt specific to the country," Dan revealed. Speaking about the enormous scale of the high-budget programme, which was filmed across 32 days and required 190 crew members who needed 7,000 hotel rooms in 30 different hotels as they travelled 11,000 km throughout Europe with more than 40 vehicles, Rob revealed it was unlike anything he'd experienced previously. He hinted: "I love the thought of the scale of it, because I've never done anything in television with that scale. We go all over Europe to some fantastic places, so the appeal was working on a show of that scale." "We had the chance to turn Europe into a board game, so we immediately thought that the way we bring scale to the challenges is we just get incredible locations and we take over whole castles, we run a train on a public network, we take over cable car systems, the scale just goes up and up and it's like, actually, what fun can we have with those toys?" the producer Dan added. Destination X airs from 9pm on BBC One and iPlayer tonight.