New Walmart Also Will Include S.R. 56/Morris Bridge Rd. Improvements

To the likely delight of many residents — and to the dismay of others — in Wesley Chapel, Zephyrhills and eastern New Tampa, plans for a second Walmart in Wesley Chapel are continuing to move forward, with construction expected to begin later this year. Here’s everything you need to know. 

First reported in these pages in July 2025 as part of a Two Rivers development update, the new Walmart is planned for the southwest corner of S.R. 56 and Morris Bridge Rd., just inside the boundary of the River Landing Master Planned Unit Development (MPUD) and across Morris Bridge Rd. from the burgeoning Two Rivers community. 

Early rumors had suggested the site might become a Lowe’s Home Improvement store, but those plans have since been replaced — and all signs now point clearly to Walmart — despite a lack of markings on the county-approved renderings — and those approvals are helping it along. 

According to the latest site plan (left), the new Walmart will be slightly smaller than others in the area, totaling approximately 183,000 sq. ft. 

By comparison, most nearby Walmart Supercenters easily exceed 200,000 sq. ft. Despite the reduced footprint, the store is expected to include a full range of features, including a full liquor store, a drive-through pharmacy, a dedicated curbside pickup area, an auto care center and a large gas station with a 1,600-square-foot convenience store and up to 20 fueling positions located near the signal (as shown in plans from April). 

Notably, aside from the gas station, there will be no additional outparcels or standalone businesses on the Walmart site. 

Interestingly, none of the official permits or early plans explicitly state that the store will be a Walmart and no renderings were initially released — prompting some skepticism, even from us. 

Furthermore, the project is being developed by Stiles Corporation, a Ft. Lauderdale-based firm better known for building Publix-anchored centers and Costco developments, with no clear history of Walmart projects. That alone raised eyebrows. So we dug deeper. 

The confirmation came in an unexpected way: the curbside pickup parking signage shown in the plans (right) matched exactly with newly installed signage around the New Tampa Walmart — right down to the color specification labeled “Walmart Blue” (under “Pickup & Pharmacy”). 

That detail, combined with the overall site layout and operational features, provided the “smoking gun.” 

In other words, while the official “Walmart” storefront signage and announcement from corporate may come later, the parking lot plans already gave it away. 

Some residents have questioned the need for another Walmart in our area, but the reasoning largely comes down to spacing and demand. 

This new store will sit approximately: 

‱ 8 miles from the Walmart on S.R. 54 in Wesley Chapel 

‱ 9 miles from the Bruce B. Downs location in New Tampa 

‱ 9 miles from the Zephyrhills Walmart on Gall Blvd. (U.S. Hwy. 301) 

This creates a fairly typical “coverage triangle,” with an average spacing of about 8 miles between stores — a pattern Walmart has replicated across Florida. 

Equally important, this location will serve the southern portion of Zephyrhills, an area that currently relies heavily on the northern Zephyrhills store — and a store that many shoppers know can be overcrowded, with frequent inventory shortages and parking challenges. 

The new Walmart is clearly expected to help relieve that pressure while supporting the overall region’s continued population growth. 

The Walmart site falls within the 801-acre River Landing MPUD, which also includes the communities known as River’s Edge and Summerstone. River Landing has long-held entitlements for 250,000 sq. ft. of commercial/retail space and 150,000 sq. ft. of office space — and, to date, none of that commercial square footage has been developed, despite the residential portions of the MPUD being largely built out. The vacant corners at S.R. 56 and Morris Bridge Rd. — where the Walmart is planned — were always intended for this type of use. 

The only remaining residential component currently under construction (on the north side of S.R. 56) within River Landing is a 266-unit townhome development. 

As the Walmart project advances, so do plans to address traffic concerns along Morris Bridge Rd. On April 21, 2026, the Pasco County Board of County Commissioners approved a development agreement (DA) tied to the project that includes significant roadway upgrades: 

‱ Widening Morris Bridge Rd. from two lanes to four lanes between Colston Ave./Oldwoods Ave. and S.R. 56 

‱ Construction of a four-lane roundabout on Morris Bridge Rd. at the main southern development entrance 

‱ New turn lanes at the S.R. 56 intersection 

‱ Installation of 10-foot multi-use paths on both sides of Morris Bridge Rd. 

The Walmart developer will fund the design and construction of these improvements, with the county providing approximately $4.7 million in reimbursement because of the regional nature of the improvements.. 

While some residents voiced concerns about traffic and noise — particularly related to the Walmart — county officials emphasized that this DA strictly addressed roadway infrastructure, with commercial development details handled separately. 

With approvals in place and infrastructure planning under way, the long-anticipated Walmart appears to be on track to break ground soon. 

For an area experiencing rapid growth, the addition represents both a response to increasing demand and a continuation of the broader buildout of Two Rivers and surrounding communities. 

As always, the Neighborhood News will continue to follow updates as this project moves from planning to construction.

Bean Bar Co. Opens At AdventHealth WC

If you love The Bean Bar Co., located in The Shoppes at The Pointe plaza in Tampa Palms, and you also love working out, we have some great news for you! 

The Bean Bar Co. has now opened its newest location in the first floor lobby inside the Wellness Plaza at AdventHealth Wesley Chapel, with all of your favorite coffee, espresso and tea drinks, plus breakfast sandwiches, avocado toast and more! And, you don’t have to be a member at the Wellness Plaza to enjoy this open-to-the-public Bean Bar location! 

Also new inside the Wellness Plaza is a second Wesley Chapel location (the other is in The Shops at Wiregrass) of 3 Natives juice & smoothie bar. 

For info about The Bean Bar Co., visit BeanBarCo.com. For 3 Natives, visit 3Natives.com. — GN, photos by Charmaine George 

Food + Beer — Your Independently Owned, Elevated-Menu Sports Pub!

Photos by Charmaine George

Every time a new restaurant opens anywhere in or near New Tampa or Wesley Chapel, but especially anywhere near the Tampa Premium Outlets — since Jannah and I live across the street from that mall — we always get super-excited hoping that the newest place will end up being “our place.” 

But, since most of the restaurants that have opened are the same chain restaurants that open in every major suburb in this country, more often than not, we are disappointed. 

Our first glimmer of real hope came when Food + Beer opened in the former location of Shuckin’ Shack (in the same plaza as Chicken Salad Chick) towards the end of 2025. 

Yes, Food + Beer is still basically a sports pub, but it definitely has a much more interesting, diverse, elevated and tasty menu than any of the “similar” chains in our area. 

Food + Beer is a privately owned mini-chain that started in Sarasota in 2017 and the Lutz/Wesley Chapel location is the company’s eighth. The other locations are spread around Sarasota, Bradenton, Venice and Lakeland, with two more coming soon to Ellenton and West Tampa. Food + Beer was the brainchild of co-founders and friends Mike Whalen and Casey Daniels, who envisioned a casual place with lots of TVs and delicious comfort food conceived and made in a scratch kitchen. 

And yes, it has pretty much become mine and Jannah’s local “place.” We stop off regularly for a burger or some wings and quite a few times for one drink after driving home following a Tampa Bay Lightning game. The vibe is definitely upbeat and friendly and Jannah says the craft cocktails at the full premium-liquor bar are spot-on. 

I’m so glad you asked! Between us, Jannah, Charmaine and I have been through most of the menu, although there are seasonal additions every quarter. The company’s culinary director Justin Collins (top photo) definitely seems to love his job and the opportunity he has been given to experiment with different flavor combinations. 

“And, everyone loves our regular samplings when we come up with new menu items and give our people a chance to try them,” Justin says. 

The only drawback for me so far has been the fact that Food + Beer does all of its seafood in the same baskets, while all other non-seafood fried items are cooked in a separate basket. 

In other words, I can still eat the wings (which are outstanding!), the fries, the crisp sweet potato tots and the Cuban eggrolls (with tasty mojo pork, ham, pickles and Swiss cheese). Check. I can not, however, eat the fresh catch nuggets, crab Rangoon cheese sticks (right) or the current “Crab Fest” seasonal soft shell crab BLT — even though I’m not allergic to crab or grouper — because they are fried in the same baskets as the Buffalo shrimp, which is seriously a bummer. Soft shell crab is such a favorite of mine and you definitely don’t find it in most places, much less at most “sports pubs.” 

Starters — One of my favorite starters is the tender Mexican street corn (below), which is served on the cob, with chipotle mayo, paprika, cilantro and feta cheese. 

We all loved the unique tin can nachos, which are indeed served in a tin can (below right) and the chips are covered with tomatillo stewed chicken, white queso, pico de gallo, black beans and corn salsa, with lime crema and pickled onions. You might want to ask for help before flipping the can over to let all the chips fall out, although it is the best way I’ve seen to get all of the tasty nacho ingredients to mix. 

Jannah and I also definitely gave thumbs-up to the bacon ranch quesadilla and we did add the optional blackened chicken. The signature jalapeño ranch dipping sauce, “definitely gives everything a kick of flavor,” Casey told me when he was on hand for Food + Beer’s opening weekend. 

Nuggets + Wings — My favorite way to enjoy Food + Beer’s wings are to get the plain bone-in wings, which come out super-crispy, and then add whatever sauce you prefer on the side. In addition to the only semi-spicy “House Buffalo,” other sauces include “Stupid Hot,” garlic parmesan, Memphis BBQ, Carolina gold, Nashville hot, blackened and my two favorites — the sweet Thai chili and the teriyaki. 

We were all surprised how much we loved the “PB&J” wings (top left), which are coated in a combo of an Asian-style peanut sauce and a spicy jalapeño jelly that definitely has a kick. I again suggest a side of the jalapeño ranch dipping sauce, which pretty much goes with everything. 

I’m not usually the biggest boneless wing guy, but marketing director Cassi Knapik suggested we try the Buffalo chicken wedge (left), with iceberg lettuce, chopped red onion, cherry tomatoes, scallion, bacon jam, a 6-minute egg, House Buffalo nuggets and bleu cheese vinaigrette. And yes, all of that actually did work together nicely! 

Burgers — I’m not as into a lot of stuff on my burgers as some people, but I am partial to the basic cheeseburger and the Okeechobee Smash burger (with “a whole lotta onions”) at Food + Beer. But, Justin turned me on to a new favorite — the meatball smash burger (right), which is a seasoned patty with caramelized marinara, mozzarella, fresh basil and a zesty parmesan-crusted brioche bun. I’m definitely ordering extra marinara on the side of this one next time! 

Handhelds — My favorites are the Legalize Marinara (with scratch fried chicken, marinara, mozzarella, basil & parmesan on a garlic hoagie) and the “That Jawn!” cheesesteak, with shaved ribeye, caramelized onions and house yellow (cheese) “whiz,” although I also had it once with mozzarella — and liked it even better! (I know, Philly fan is threatening to hurt me for that one.) 

But, Jannah’s favorite things on the entire menu are the birria tacos (left) — grilled braised beef, Monterey Jack and cotija cheeses, plenty of cilantro, red onion and of course, a traditional consommĂ© dip. I’ve heard people rave about the Cubano and the Nashville hot chicken sandwiches, too, but I haven’t sampled those yet. The “Malibu Barbie” wrap — with chicken breast, bacon, avocado, pico de gallo, spring mix, bibb lettuce and honey-lime vinaigrette in a whole wheat wrap — is definitely on Jannah’s radar. 

Bowls & EntrĂ©es — We liked the stewed chicken burrito bowl, but my favorite so far has been the tasty Korean bulgogi beef bowl (below right), served over sticky rice with kimchi, pickled veggies and cucumbers, topped with a sunny-side- up egg and sesame seeds. The bulgogi beef is tender and has such a great, semi-sweet flavor. 

Platters — These all have items I can’t sample, but there’s one with 6 Buffalo nuggets and 5 fried colossal shrimp, another with five Buffalo bone-in wings and 5 shrimp, and the “Florida Man,” with PBR-battered grouper, gator bites and five shrimp. Please let me know if you try one! 

Desserts — There are three deliciously different indulgences, each offering a different style of decadence. First, there’s the “S’more What?,” with a double fudge brownie, graham cracker and torched marshmallow Fluff. 

Not feeling chocolatey? How about a bananas Foster ice cream sandwich, which is a Nightingale banana pudding ice cream sandwich with banana caramel sauce infused with Misguided Red Sky Rum, brulĂ©ed banana and chopped pecans — oh, and a 151 rum flambĂ© (this one’s for ages 21 + older only). 

But, my surprise favorite, because I’ve never really been a red velvet guy, are the fried red velvet Oreos (above). They’re dipped in red velvet batter, fried and topped with cream cheese icing and powdered sugar. The cookies retain some crunch but the Oreo cream inside becomes almost liquefied. Yum! 

Daily Specials, Happy Hour & More — Food + Beer also offers a number of different specials, including Burger Monday, when a basic cheeseburger + fresh-cut fries costs just $6.99 every Monday (dine-in only). There’s also Trivia Wednesday: starting every Wednesday at 6:30 p.m.; and Wing Thursday, with 89Âą bone-in or boneless wings every Thursday (also dine-in only). 

Food + Beer’s Weekend Brunch is every Saturday & Sunday, 10 a.m.-3 p.m., and features a Bottomless Mimosa Bar that lets you build-your-own, with multiple juice options and add-ons like gummy bears, strawberries, blueberries etc; available during weekend brunch only. 

The brunch menu includes so many great items, many of which we still haven’t tried (but are kicking ourselves for), including chicken & red velvet waffles, and the “Big Country,” with country-fried chicken breast over a split, griddled biscuit with sausage gravy, two eggs cooked to order and your choice of bacon or sausage, just to name a couple. 

Lunch Specials at Food + Beer are offered Monday-Friday, 11 a.m.-3 p.m., and range from just $8–$10. 

The New Happy Hour Menu offers daily drink specials from 3 p.m.-7 p.m. and 10 p.m.- close (including $3 “cheap ass” draft beers, $4 wells, $5 calls and $6 premium liquor & margaritas), plus new food specials from 3 p.m.-6 p.m. & 10 p.m.-close — and $5–$8 “bites” like pretzel bites, fried pickles, house Buffalo boneless wings, bacon ranch quesadilla and chips & queso. 

Unfortunately, specialty cocktails like Jannah’s favorite Strawberry Feels Spritz (left) and “Casey’s PK” (above right), a unique take on a piña colada, aren’t offered at Happy Hour prices. 

Late Night: Food + Beer stays open late, with food served until 1 a.m. or later every night — for everyone, not just you hospitality folks! 

In other words, there’s a lot to like about Food + Beer (25026 Wesley Chapel Blvd. extension). For more info, visit EatFoodDrinkBeer.com or call (813) 815-8001 — and please tell ‘em I sent you! 

Dentistry Deja Vu? Telling A $6 Billion Tale Of Two Identical New Heartland Dental Offices

The under-construction Heartland Dental office located south of County Line Rd. and west of BBD Blvd. (Photo by Joel Provenzano)

What we first thought was just another routine addition to Wesley Chapel’s growing commercial landscape has turned into something far more intriguing. 

While reporting our last cover story — “Olive Garden & Seasons 52 Coming to WC Blvd. at Gateway Blvd.!”—we briefly noted a standalone dental office planned for the same development, although we didn’t honestly know the office’s name at that time, but now know that it is Heartland Dental. Whatever it was to be called, the dental office barely registered with us. 

Until we saw it again. A second, nearly identical building — same size, same name — quietly rising on the south side of County Line Rd., and west of Bruce B. Downs (BBD) Blvd., in the LA Fitness/Aldi plaza (photo above) in New Tampa. No signage yet, just a shell. But the plans we saw online confirmed that it is another Heartland Dental. 

Two brand-new, 4,260-square-foot dental offices, each large enough for up to 12 exam rooms. Same operator. Same footprint. Same timing. That’s when curiosity turned into a deeper investigation. 

At first glance, two identical dental offices might seem unusual, but in today’s New Tampa and Wesley Chapel — and world — honestly, maybe it shouldn’t be. 

Multiple locations of the same brand popping up in a concentrated area can actually be a lagging indicator of that area’s economic strength. In simple terms: chains don’t plant roots unless the data says the area is “ready.” 

And, while New Tampa has already “arrived,” Wesley Chapel is clearly arriving. 

But, the dentistry scene? That’s always felt different. More local. More personal. Less
 corporate. Hmmm. 

Heartland Dental isn’t just another dental company — it’s apparently the largest “dental support organization” in the U.S. 

Founded in 1997 in Effingham, IL, Heartland Dental operates in 39 states and Washington, D.C., and supports 1,900+ offices and 3,000+ dentists. 

Rather than owning these practices outright in the traditional sense, Heartland usually operates behind the scenes — handling administration, staffing, billing, supplies and logistics — while the dentists the company serves retain clinical control. 

Think of it as a hybrid model where dentists focus on patients and Heartland handles everything else. But, that’s really just scratching the surface. 

At the center of this operation is Rick Workman, D.M.D., the founder and executive chairman of Heartland Dental — and, according to a recent Forbes magazine feature, the architect of a $6-billion empire. 

The March 26, 2026, article — entitled “Meet The Billionaire Dentist That Other Docs Want To Punch In The Teeth” — paints a picture of a controversial but undeniably effective industry “disruptor.” 

Dr. Workman (photo, right), who lives in the Orlando area, is an avid rare car collector, AND part owner of the Tampa Bay Rays. He built Heartland Dental on a simple but powerful idea: 

Let dentists be dentists — and treat everything else like a scalable business. And scale it, he has. 

Here’s where things get especially interesting — and particularly relevant to our area. 

Workman didn’t stop at managing dental practices. Early on, he created a separate real estate arm: WMG Development. 

WMG has developed $1.4 billion in real estate across 30+ states. The firm buys land, builds the buildings, and leases them to Heartland-supported practices. 

Sound familiar? That’s because we realized through a simple search that WMG is the site developer and land owner behind Wesley Chapel’s Gateway Plaza Retail Center project, which includes the future Heartland Dental office, Olive Garden and Seasons 52, all under a shell entity called Shoppes at Gateway, LLC. 

And, no big surprise here, WMG also is the developer of the upcoming New Tampa Heartland Dental location. That site’s land is owned by Southeast QSR, but the development ties back to the same network. 

In other words, this isn’t just expansion. It’s sheer vertical integration. 

An improved version of the map of the Gateway Plaza Retail Center that appeared in our last issue, still showing Olive Garden (OG) and Seasons 52 (S52), but also adding the Heartland Dental (HD) office, (Two maps provided by Pasco County were modified into one map by NN). 

If this model feels familiar, it should. 

Anyone who’s seen the movie “The Founder” (which is great, by the way) — the story of McDonald’s rise — knows that the global chain’s real money wasn’t really made in hamburgers. It actually was all about the real estate. 

Heartland is applying a similar strategy in its dental operations by controlling the real estate, standardizing the dental business’ operations and scaling rapidly. 

For an industry once dominated by small, independent practices — some even in home-based offices — this approach has been nothing short of revolutionary, and it was all Dr. Workman’s idea. 

Not everyone is celebrating, however. According to the Forbes article, Heartland’s structured systems include standardized clinical protocols, performance tracking across patient diagnostics and revenue-based compensation models. 

Heartland dentists typically earn a base salary, and begin earning about 25% of revenue after hitting certain production thresholds. The good news is that they average around $318,000 annually (vs. the dental industry average of about $208,000 per year). 

To supporters, this is efficiency and opportunity. To critics, of which there are apparently many, it raises important questions: Does standardization also influence treatment decisions and can corporate metrics coexist with personalized care? 

The debate is ongoing — and some dentists in our area are already part of it, similarly to what’s happened with other medical groups in other specialties. 

Heartland Dental already has a presence nearby, through supported practices like Somerset Dental Care in Tampa Palms, Watergrass Dental Care (on Curley Rd.), Dental Care at Quail Hollow and others. But these two upcoming Heartland locations definitely seem to be different. 

The “Heartland Dental” name apparently will appear directly on both of these new buildings. If that’s indeed what ends up happening, it could signal a shift toward more visible branding for Workman’s expanding company. 

In other words, this might mark a notable evolution in Heartland’s strategy. 

So, here’s the big question: 

Is our area truly ready for corporate dentistry at scale? 

On the one hand, we have strong population growth, rising household incomes and increasing national brand presence (especially in Wesley Chapel), where all signs point to “yes.” 

On the other hand, this could lead to higher base commercial rents, more competition and greater pressure on independent dental providers. Chains like Heartland could benefit from economies of scale, access to capital (including backing from firms like KKR, nĂ©e Kohlberg, Kravis & Roberts) and control over both operations and real estate. 

For smaller, single-location dentists, that can be a tough playing field to navigate. 

In fact, it may simply reflect the next phase of growth for the Wesley Chapel area as a whole. The arrival of chains — whether in dining, retail, or now healthcare — does often signal maturity of a market. 

But, it also changes the landscape. 

The question isn’t whether Heartland Dental will succeed here. The real question is will — or how will — the local dental industry ecosystem adapt? 

Because what’s being built isn’t just two dental offices. It’s a new model — one that could reshape how dentistry is delivered in our community for years to come. 

Florida Avenue Brewing Company — So Much More Than Just A Great Local Brewery!

Photos by Charmaine George

I remember being so pumped when Florida Avenue Brewing Company first opened its second location (the original is still in Seminole Heights) in the former location of Sports + Field on S.R. 56 in Wesley Chapel near the end of 2020, as the Covid-19 pandemic was winding down. The on-site brewery (more on that below) wouldn’t be operational for almost another year, but it was exciting to me that Florida Ave. was a big, non-chain real restaurant with an elevated, better-than-sports-bar menu that included items that became instant favorites of mine — such as Chinese sticky ribs and Korean-style bibimbap bowls, to name just two. 

But, the restaurant was just really finding its way at that time and has since been through, “I believe, five executive chefs since then,” says general manager Monroe Brown (left in top photo), who was a server and mostly bartender at the location when it first opened. “But, we’re really happy with the most recent version of the menu and our current executive chef — Baxter McManamy.” (right in the same photo) 

I’ll have to second that, even though both of those early favorite dishes of mine are no longer offered. And, despite having been with Florida Ave. for about a year now, Baxter isn’t taking credit for most of the new menu items, although he will say that he’s tweaked some of the recipes and given his sous chefs an opportunity to present new ideas to make the menu better, too. 

All I can tell you is that the new formula is working. Jannah and I honestly avoided Florida Ave. the last couple of years because it seemed like it was turning into just another sports pub, but…. 

If you check out the food pictures on this page, I think it’s pretty clear that Baxter, Monroe, the Derby family — Anthony, Amanda and their mom, Toni — and Florida Ave. are definitely back on the right track food-wise. 

In the top photo on this page, Monroe is holding a super-tasty new Rice & Bean Bowl, with adobo rice, “Rollin’ Derby” black beans, avocado and pickled red onions with “bistro steak,” Baxter says. “It’s a little tougher than filet mignon, but has a flavor similar to NY strip.” 

Speaking of Baxter, he’s holding a tasty double-patty Florida Ave. Smash Burger, with sautĂ©ed onions, bacon, American cheese and roasted jalapeño aioli on a brioche bun and a side of loaded hand-cut fries. Every burger on the menu also is made to pair with one of Florida Ave.’s beers, including the burger I mentioned, which the menu says should be paired with a Flipa American IPA, but that’s really up to you. 

If you’re looking for something a little more unique, perhaps try my favorite new menu item that photographer Charmaine George and I sampled on our most recent visit — the Gulf Coast mahi Fish ‘N’ Chips (left). I’ve never seen any restaurant use mahi for fish & chips, but it was beer-battered (“We beer-batter a lot of our dishes,” Baxter said. “Why wouldn’t we?”), super-crisp and snow-white inside. Oh, and it was frickin’ delicious, too. It didn’t even need the house-made tartar sauce served with it. 

Speaking of fresh, before we move on, Monroe and Baxter invited me into Florida Ave.’s super-clean kitchen and showed me that while there are two huge, walk-in refrigerators in there, the freezer is about the size of one of the little ones you’d find in your neighbor’s garage. 

“We just really don’t freeze anything here,” Baxter said. “We make most everything fresh.”

Another one of my new favorite options is the General Tso’s cauliflower (right). It’s served crispy outside, tender inside and the General Tso’s sauce is sweet and a little spicy. I probably will order the spicy aioli on the side next time, just to keep the cauliflower at its peak crispness. 

Another new favorite of mine is the new French onion dip handheld (below left). It features shaved ribeye, mozzarella and provolone, with a zesty horseradish cream on a toasted Amoroso roll. But, the big difference is the French onion broth that really gives this particular French dip a flavor all its own. 

That same delicious onion flavor is encased in Florida Ave.’s tasty crock of French onion soup (above right), which properly covers the broth and toasted bread with a combo of melted mozzarella and provolone cheese, which almost mimics the more traditional taste of French gruyere. 

Another recent addition is the Seasonal Grazing Board (left). For March, this selection of artisanal bites included Irish-style sausage, pretzel bites, kalamata olives, two kinds of cheese, red onions and a chunky tomato chutney. The seasonal board is made to pair with a four-beer flight. If you’re a beer drinker (I’m really not), this is a great way to start your meal, especially with a group of friends. Of the four brews shown with the grazing board, my favorite was the Dead Parrot light lager, but Charmaine preferred the Luminescence Hazy IPA. 

And, although I’m not a big salmon eater and can’t eat shrimp, Charmaine raved about both the BLT salad (below right) — with chopped romaine hearts, candied bacon, blue cheese crumbles, heirloom cherry tomatoes, chives, ranch dressing and balsamic glaze — which she had topped with blackened salmon that she said was flaky and delicately spiced; and the grilled Coastal Lime Shrimp tacos (top left). She loved the tequila lime aioli slaw and the fresh pico de gallo on top of the tacos, too. 

Even though we didn’t have room for dessert, we both still made room because the two house-made Florida Ave. desserts we sampled were both just so good! 

Charmaine’s favorite was the warm coconut cake (below left), which swims in a pool of delicious rum sauce and is topped with grilled pineapple and whipped cream. Decadent. 

But, my new favorite dessert is the Basque (Spanish-style) cheesecake (below right). The menu calls it “irresistible” and that’s pretty spot-on. The tender crust has a delicious char, but the cheesecake itself is as creamy as a true NY-style, but not as dense, and as light and airy as an Italian-style ricotta-based cheesecake, but with a better texture and flavor. It didn’t need the fresh berry coulis, but the end result was spectacular! 

I’m so glad you asked. Jannah and I always sit in the comfy high-top bar chairs at Florida Ave., which has a big advantage over most other breweries in that it has a full, premium liquor bar, not just beer and wine. So, even though neither of us are partial to the interesting selection of Craft Cocktails on the menu (she would get the “That’s My Jam,” with Tito’s vodka and a tropical syrup flavor, but would substitute club soda for the Regatta ginger beer it comes with), she has had excellent Cosmos at the bar and my Jameson on the rocks is always perfect. However, you Old Fashioned lovers will probably flip for the variety of “Cask Crafted” Old Fashioneds. 

Florida Ave. also recently added a “Taproom Brunch” every Saturday & Sunday, 11 a.m.-3 p.m., with items like warm French toast bites, avocado toast, a breakfast flatbread (with sausage, bacon, scrambled eggs, pico de gallo, borracha salsa and shredded mozzarella, topped with micro cilantro) and more. The brunch menu also includes bottomless mimosas and “bromosas” (OJ with your choice of Florida Ave.’s Dead Parrot, Luminescence Hazy IPA or You’re My Boy Blue). There’s even a mimosa flight served with four different kinds of juice. 

For lunch every weekday, 11 a.m.-3 p.m., Florida Ave. offers a “Pint & Plate” lunch, with your choice of soup or salad, paired with one of five different main courses (a flatbread, smash burger, tacos, a chicken Caesar wrap or a chicken parm or Milanese Brew Pub Sub) and one free draft beer, or soft drinks or coffee, for just $15. 

For “Hoppy Hour” (Mon.-Fri., 3 p.m.-6 p.m. and all night on Wed., from 3 p.m.-close), Florida Ave. offers its year-round draft beers for $5.25, specialty rotating draft beers from $6.25, sparkling, white or red house wines for just $6 and well & specialty cocktails for $7. There’s also a variety of Hoppy Hour “bites” for $5 (for cheese curds, loaded fries, crispy cauliflower & more), for $7 (for flatbreads or chicken wings) or for $9 (for tacos or Nashville chicken sliders). 

And, of course, Florida Ave. also has a great fenced-in open area out back, with its own bar and table service, as well as arcade games inside for the kids, plus private indoor areas for catered meetings and events. 

Now, let me see…what I am forgetting? 

Of course…BEER! Not only is the Wesley Chapel Florida Ave. one of the largest independent breweries in Florida, which provides cans of its now-famous brews, ciders and seltzers to other bars, it offers a huge variety of its rotating, house-brewed beverages to its happy customers. 

But, don’t take my word for it. Florida Ave. has more than 1,200 5-star reviews on Google, including Sabine M., who wrote, “This has to be one of the best breweries in the area. Every beer is delicious….They have amazing lunch deals…really cool space. A great place to meet up with friends.” 

And, every Saturday, you can even bring your group on a tour of the brewery for just $12 per person, which includes a beer and a souvenir pint glass. You must be 21 for the tours, all sales are final and they should be booked in advance. 

As Monroe says, “If it’s been a while, come give us another try!.” 

Florida Ave. Brewing Co. is located at 2029 Arrowgrass Dr. For more info, call or send a message to (813) 452-6333, visit FloridaAveBrewing.com or see the ad below for a FREE “Fourcaster” Appetizer Sampler!