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    Restaurant in Fort Lauderdale, United States · Inside Four Seasons Hotel and Residences Fort Lauderdale

    Evelyn's

    550Pearl Points

    Deep cellar, solid Mediterranean, book ahead.

    Evelyn's, Restaurant in Fort Lauderdale

    About Evelyn's

    Evelyn's is Fort Lauderdale's strongest case for Mediterranean dining with serious wine depth. A Michelin Plate (2025) kitchen, 3,575-bottle cellar curated by Wine Director Giulio Sicoli, and food pricing at $40–$65 for two courses make this a well-priced choice for the tier. Book 1–2 weeks ahead for weekend dinner.

    Verdict

    Evelyn's earns a confident recommendation for wine-focused diners who want Mediterranean cooking with genuine cellar depth on Florida's Gold Coast. The Michelin Plate recognition (2025) confirms the kitchen is operating at a level above most Fort Lauderdale competition, and the wine program — 3,575 selections, strength in France, Italy, and California — is the kind of list that changes how you plan a meal. At $$$ for food and $$$ for wine, this is a considered spend rather than a casual one, but the value case is strong compared to the handful of Fort Lauderdale restaurants operating at this tier.

    About Evelyn's

    Named for Evelyn Fortune Bartlett, a Fort Lauderdale socialite and arts patron whose name carried weight in this city long before the beach strip became what it is today, Evelyn's carries that reference lightly. The name signals an aspiration toward a certain kind of occasion dining , one where the room has history baked into it and the menu takes its cues from the broader Mediterranean rather than any single coastline.

    Chef Brandon Salomon runs a kitchen that sits in the same conversation as Mediterranean-focused rooms like La Brezza in Ascona or Il Buco in Sorrento , not identical in execution, but sharing the same underlying logic: produce-driven cooking anchored in the flavors of Southern Europe, where technique supports the ingredient rather than eclipsing it. The Michelin Plate designation in 2025 places Salomon's cooking in a bracket that Fort Lauderdale diners should take seriously. A Plate is not a star, but it is Michelin's signal that the kitchen is worth the trip.

    The address at 525 N Fort Lauderdale Beach Blvd puts Evelyn's squarely on the beach corridor, which means the context outside is tourist-facing , but the experience inside operates at a different register. This is where the wine program becomes the real differentiator. Wine Director Giulio Sicoli oversees 365 selections and nearly 3,600 bottles in inventory, with the list anchored in France, Italy, and California. A $$$-tier wine program in this city means bottles routinely clear $100, and the corkage fee sits at $75 if you bring your own , a number that tells you Sicoli's list is meant to be used, not bypassed. For a food-and-wine enthusiast, the depth here is closer to what you'd find at destination-level dining rooms like Single Thread in Healdsburg or Smyth in Chicago than anything else operating in Broward County.

    The combination of a Michelin-recognized kitchen and a wine list of this scope is rare in Fort Lauderdale. If your priority is a restaurant where the sommelier conversation is as important as the menu conversation, Evelyn's is the answer in this market. General Manager Jak Youssef anchors the front-of-house, which matters , at this price tier, service consistency is part of what you're paying for, and having named leadership in place is a positive signal.

    For context on what the Mediterranean format delivers at this price: a two-course meal runs $40–$65 per person before wine, which makes the food side of the ledger genuinely reasonable for a Michelin Plate restaurant. Add a mid-range bottle from Sicoli's list and you're looking at a total spend that competes well against Chef's Counter at MAASS, which operates at $$$$ and takes a more focused contemporary approach. Compared to the broader Fort Lauderdale dining scene , covered in depth in our full Fort Lauderdale restaurants guide , Evelyn's occupies a position that few local venues can match: a kitchen with credentialed recognition and a wine program with genuine institutional depth.

    Lunch and dinner service means Evelyn's is viable for a business meal at midday or a longer occasion dinner in the evening. The beach boulevard location also makes it a natural anchor for visitors who want to combine a serious meal with access to Fort Lauderdale's waterfront. If you're planning a broader trip and want context on where to stay or what else to do, our Fort Lauderdale hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide give the full picture.

    The 4.7 Google rating across 334 reviews is a supporting signal rather than the lead argument , but it confirms the experience is consistent enough to sustain strong public scores over a meaningful sample size. For a restaurant at this price tier, floor-level consistency matters as much as ceiling-level ambition.

    If Mediterranean cooking at serious wine-program depth is the brief, Evelyn's is the booking in Fort Lauderdale. The combination of Michelin recognition, a 3,575-bottle cellar, and a food pricing tier that keeps the experience accessible makes this one of the stronger value arguments in the city's upper tier. Book with a plan to engage the wine list , that's where the experience opens up.

    Ratings & Recognition

    • Michelin Plate (2025) , Michelin's recognition that the kitchen delivers cooking worth recommending
    • Google Rating: 4.7 / 5 (334 reviews)
    • Wine List: 365 selections, 3,575 bottles in inventory , strength in France, Italy, California

    Booking

    Booking difficulty is moderate. Evelyn's is not as hard to secure as Fort Lauderdale's tasting-menu formats, but it's not a walk-in venue at peak times. Plan at least 1–2 weeks ahead for weekend dinner. Lunch tends to be more accessible. No booking method is confirmed in available data , check the restaurant directly or use the major reservation platforms.

    Practical Details

    DetailEvelyn'sChef's Counter at MAASSDaniel's, A Florida Steakhouse
    CuisineMediterraneanContemporarySteakhouse
    Price (food)$$$ / meal $$$$$$$$$$
    MichelinPlate (2025)Check PearlCheck Pearl
    Wine depth3,575 bottles, 365 selectionsNot confirmedNot confirmed
    Meals servedLunch & DinnerCheck PearlCheck Pearl
    Booking difficultyModerateHighModerate
    Corkage fee$75Not confirmedNot confirmed

    For more Fort Lauderdale dining options at different price points, see 925 Nuevos Cubanos, Betty's Soul Food Restaurant, Calusso, and Casa D'Angelo Fort Lauderdale. Wine-focused travelers may also want to browse our Fort Lauderdale wineries guide.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Evelyn's good for a special occasion?

    Yes, with caveats. Evelyn's Michelin Plate recognition, a 3,575-bottle cellar overseen by Wine Director Giulio Sicoli, and Mediterranean cooking from Chef Brandon Salomon make it a credible choice for birthdays or anniversaries on Fort Lauderdale Beach. The $$$-priced wine list means a celebratory bottle is easy to find but will add up fast. If you want a full tasting-menu format for the occasion, check Chef's Counter at MAASS instead.

    What are alternatives to Evelyn's in Fort Lauderdale?

    Chef's Counter at MAASS is the local comparison for a more structured, tasting-menu experience. Heritage works if you want something with a distinctly regional Florida focus. Rustic Inn Crabhouse is the call for a casual, seafood-forward night without the wine-program investment. Evelyn's sits in a different lane from all three: it's the strongest option in the area when the wine list is a deciding factor.

    Is Evelyn's good for solo dining?

    It can work, though the venue's old-school elegance and Mediterranean format are better suited to pairs or small groups than a solo counter experience. There is no dedicated bar counter noted in available data, so solo diners should confirm seating options when booking. The $$ food pricing (two courses around $40-$65) keeps a solo meal manageable, and a glass from the deep French or Italian selections is a reasonable reason to go alone.

    Can Evelyn's accommodate groups?

    Groups are feasible but confirm directly before booking — no private dining details are documented in available records. At $$$ wine pricing with a 3,575-bottle inventory, larger tables should pre-align on whether the group wants to invest in the cellar or treat it as a standard dinner. For parties where half the table won't engage with wine, Daniel's, A Florida Steakhouse may be a more cost-efficient group format.

    What should I wear to Evelyn's?

    The venue's framing — named for a Fort Lauderdale socialite, Michelin Plate recognized, beachside address — signals a dressed-up crowd rather than beach casual. No formal dress code is documented, but arriving in resort wear when the room trends polished will feel out of place. Business casual or dinner-out attire is a reasonable default for the $$$-wine-list context.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Evelyn's?

    No tasting menu is documented in Evelyn's available data — the venue serves lunch and dinner in a Mediterranean format priced at $$ for food (roughly $40-$65 for two courses). If a structured tasting progression is what you're after, Chef's Counter at MAASS is the Fort Lauderdale venue to book instead. Evelyn's strength is its wine depth and a la carte Mediterranean cooking, not a tasting-menu format.

    Is Evelyn's worth the price?

    For wine-focused diners, yes. Food pricing at $$ (two courses around $40-$65) is reasonable for Michelin Plate Mediterranean cooking on Fort Lauderdale Beach, and the 3,575-bottle cellar with France, Italy, and California strengths is a genuine asset at this address. The bill climbs quickly if you engage the $$$ wine list, so set a bottle budget before you sit down. If wine isn't a priority, Larb Thai-Isan delivers more value per dollar for the food alone.

    Location

    525 N Fort Lauderdale Beach Blvd, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33304

    Fort Lauderdale, United States

    Compare Evelyn's

    The Complete Picture: Evelyn's and Peers
    VenueCuisineAwardsBooking Difficulty
    Evelyn'sMediterranean CuisineModerate
    Chef's Counter at MAASSContemporaryMichelin 1 StarUnknown
    Rustic Inn CrabhouseSeafoodUnknown
    HeritagePizzaUnknown
    Larb Thai-IsanThaiUnknown
    Daniel's, A Florida SteakhouseSteakhouseUnknown

    Comparing your options in Fort Lauderdale for this tier.

    Also Consider

    At the top of Fort Lauderdale's dining tier, Evelyn's competes most directly with Chef's Counter at MAASS. MAASS operates at $$$$ and takes a contemporary tasting-menu approach, higher booking difficulty, higher spend, more controlled format. Evelyn's is the better choice if you want flexibility in how you order and a wine program that actively shapes the meal. MAASS wins if you want a single fixed format with a tighter contemporary narrative. For a pure steakhouse splurge, Daniel's, A Florida Steakhouse operates at $$$$ but serves a fundamentally different cuisine category, not a direct competitor to Evelyn's Mediterranean approach.

    At lower price points, Heritage (Pizza, $$) and Larb Thai-Isan (Thai, $$) offer strong value for casual meals but don't compete on the occasion-dining or wine-program dimensions where Evelyn's operates. Rustic Inn Crabhouse is the local seafood institution that draws a different profile of diner entirely, a reliable choice for the full Florida seafood experience, but not a comparison for anyone prioritizing wine depth or Michelin-recognized cooking.

    The practical verdict: if wine is central to your evening, Evelyn's has no real competitor in Fort Lauderdale at this tier. The 3,575-bottle inventory and France-Italy-California depth from Wine Director Giulio Sicoli give you a list that most cities struggle to match at the $$$ food price point. For diners who want the highest-intensity tasting experience regardless of wine, MAASS may deliver a sharper edge. For everyone else, Evelyn's is the booking.

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