I donât know how they did it so fast, but the former Beef OâBradyâs located at 1660 Bruce B. Downs (BBD) Blvd. in the Shoppes at New Tampa plaza in Wesley Chapel, has reopened (only about four months after Beefâs closed) as Inchinâs Bamboo Garden, a small (30 units in 13 U.S. states and Canada) chain of âIndoChinese Fusionâ restaurants, with an existing Florida location in Orlando.
All I can tell you after two quick visits to my new friends Mohan and Sureshâs new restaurant is that it no longer looks anything like Beefâs (itâs actually quite elegant), has a beautiful full-liquor bar (with at least ten beers on tap and many others in bottles) and absolutely everything Iâve sampled so far has been en pointe.
My favorite Indian dishes so far are the fried momo dumplings (I had them with chicken, photo left; theyâre also available in veggie and with paneer, or Indian cheese, and steamed); the âToothpick lamb,â which is skewered chunks of lamb with mild rendang curry sauce, bite-size potato cubes, green onion, curry leaves and chili peppers; and my current favorite hakka noodles (thin eggless noodles, shredded vegetables, Napa cabbage and celery) with chicken (top photo).Â
Other Indian dishes recommended by friends of mine who also happened to be visiting the new Inchinâs are the garlic naan bread and the âChicken 65â (with curry leaf, bell peppers, onion, dry red chili & cumin).
Iâve also yet to sample any of the soups or any other starters, so you can rest assured that Jannah and I will be visiting Inchinâs Bamboo Garden again in the future â and soon!
Inchinâs Bamboo Garden is open every day for lunch (11:30 a.m.-3 p.m.) & dinner (5:30 p.m.-11 p.m. daily, except Sun. until 10). It closes daily between 3 p.m.-5:30 p.m. For more information, call (813) 388-2818 or visit Bamboo-Gardens.com. And, please tell Mohan and Suresh I sent you! â GNÂ
Yes, we know itâs been a few weeks but because of our once-every-four-weeks print schedule, the North Tampa Bay Chamber (NTBC)âs 2024 Wesley Chapel Fall Festival & Carnival was held the weekend of Oct. 26-27, which was the weekend after we went to press with our Oct. 29 issue, so this is our first opportunity to show you some of the scenes from that always-fun 20th annual event.
Held again at the Tampa Premium Outlets and benefiting the NTBCâs Foundation, a record 7,500 patrons raised a record amount of money and enjoyed carnival and pony rides, live entertainment, food trucks and vendors and of course, a great costume contest. For more info, visit NorthTampaBayChamber.com.Â
The first time I saw âLittle Shop of Horrors,â the campy, award-winning sci-fi/horror musical (based on an original 1960 film by âThe King of Cultâ Roger Corman) about a man-(and woman-) eating plant named Audrey II and the bumbling âSkid Rowâ flower shop employee who earns fame because of the voracious plant, I was sitting about eight rows back in the showâs original Off- Broadway Orpheum Theatre in the Little Ukraine section of Manhattanâs East Village in late 1982 or early 1983, only a few months after the show first opened to rave reviews.
Sitting directly in front of me were Liza Minelli, Sean Penn and Madonna. Yes, that famous trio (no one called them a âthrupleâ). We were all among the packed house of nearly 350 people who took in the spectacle of this flytrap-looking plant that grows from a pot on a counter to take up most of Mushnikâs Flower Shop â and plans to take over the entire world.
Four years later, âLittle Shopâ was made into a hit 1986 movie starring Rick Moranis, Ellen Greene (who also created the role of Audrey, the love interest of geeky Seymour Krelborn, who also loves âstrange and interesting plantsâ), Steve Martin as Audreyâs sadistic boyfriend Orin Scrivello, DDS, and Vincent Gardenia as the failing flower shop owner, Mr. Mushnik.
Fast-forward nearly 40 more years and Jannah and I are sitting in a theatre almost as large as the Orpheum â the New Tampa Performing Arts Center â on what turned out to be opening night of the New Tampa Players (NTP)â production of the show (Oct. 18), because the first weekend of performances got canceled following Hurricane Milton.
I have to admit that NTPâs âLittle Shopâ very much rang true to the original version I saw more than 40 years previous.
Yes, a show where four people are âeatenâ by a giant plant is a little disturbing, but an outstanding cast performing great songs (with book and lyrics by Howard Ashman and music by Alan Menken, the same creative team behind Disneyâs âThe Little Mermaid,â âBeauty and the Beastâ and âAladdinâ), great direction by NTPâs Thomas Pahl, musical direction by Rick Barclay and choreography by Makayla Raines, made NTPâs âLittle Shopâ an amazing tribute to that Off-Broadway original. (By the way, the Broadway revival production lasted only 372 performances between Oct. 2003 and Aug. 2004.)
And Away We Go!
NTPâs âLittle Shopâ opened with the title theme, sung by âthe urchinsâ â (photo #1, l.- r.) Paige Alter as Crystal, Sara Gutierrez as Chiffon and Patty Smithey (who portrayed Lorrell Robinson in NTPâs âDreamgirlsâ) as Ronette.
We then meet (photo #2, l.-r.) Mushnik (Luis Graham), who is threatening to close his flower shop on Skid Row because he canât do any business, the oafish, love-sick Seymour (Richard Brown) and Audrey (Madison Pulica, who has the original cartoon-ish speaking voice and mannerisms of the roleâs originator down to a âTâ).
Seymour shows Mushnik the âstrange and interesting plantâ that he found following a recent total solar eclipse and says that maybe displaying the plant will bring in customers â which it immediately does.
But soon, when Seymour cuts himself on a rose thorn, the plant â which Seymour names the âAudrey IIâ after his unrequited beloved â first shows its thirst for blood, so Stanley squeezes a few more drops into its open maw (photo #3), after which, Audrey II first begins to grow. Meanwhile, Audrey continues to display the painful results of the âaffectionsâ of her dentist boyfriend Orin (portrayed with very much Steve Martin-esque vigor by Tom Bronson), and sings (photo #4) to the urchins about her dream to move to âSomewhere Thatâs Green.â
We (and Seymour) then meet Orin for the first time, after Orin sings â(âYouâll Be A) Dentistâ to the urchins (photo #5). Seymour also sees Orin ârough upâ Audrey for the first time and, realizing that he canât continue to drain himself of his own blood for Audrey II, also wonders for the first time if maybe Orin should end up âprovidingâ the blood for the now-much-larger plant.
Mushnik is now so impressed with Seymour (who is revealed early on to be an orphan), that he tells Seymour in the song âMushnik & Sonâ (Photo #6) that he will re-name the now-much-more successful flower shop and adopt his now-star employee.
But next, we find out for the first time that Audrey II can talk â in the booming baritone of Christan McLaurine (at right in photo #9, who also was a scene-stealer as James âThunderâ Early in NTPâs âDreamgirlsâ) in the song âFeed Me.â
Act I ends as Seymour brings a gun to his visit to Orinâs dental office, which is replete with rusty, medieval-style torture appliances. Orin canât wait to ply his trade inside Seymourâs mouth, so much so that he gets his âspecial gas maskâ (photo #7) â not to sedate Seymour, but so Orin can âenjoyâ his work. Seymour now realizes he doesnât have to shoot Orin, who canât get the mask off and, without assistance from Seymour, asphyxiates and dies in the most authentic scene of the entire show.Â
Act II – âSuddenly, Seymour!â
With Orin now out of the way (and chopped into pieces by Seymour, so he can feed the dentist to Audrey II), it doesnât take long for Audrey to realize that Seymour has always loved her and (she thinks) that heâs a good man who shares her dream of moving to the country, despite his newfound (and unwanted) fame, which comes with Life magazine and TV interviews. The duet between Audrey and Seymour â âSuddenly Seymourâ is probably the most famous song in âLittle Shop.â
But, of course, everything falls apart quickly from there. Seymour next sacrifices Mushnik, who discovered Orinâs bloody lab coat in the storeâs garbage can, to Audrey II, even though Mushnik says he wonât tell the authorities, as Seymour still needs to feed the now-monster-sized plant (photo #8).
Next, Audrey, who reveals she was an exotic dancer before coming to Mushnikâs, sacrifices herself by having Seymour throw her into Audrey IIâs mouth. Then, Seymour, who now realizes that Audrey IIâs plan is to take over the world, also jumps into the plantâs maw. With all of the main characters now dead and plans to spread Audrey II seeds all over the country (as the plant planned all along), the show ends on a seriously ominous note.
Congrats to the Audrey II puppeteers (Joseph Conrad, at left in photo #9), Lily Sanford and Yoanivette Davila Aguiar, as well as to James Cass of Picture This Photography for the scenic art, scenic dressing and props, and Shelly Giles for the great costumes â and everyone else associated with the Players and this show. âLittle Shopâ was super-creepy but it was also super-fun!
For more info (including about ticket sales and audition info) about the 2025 New Tampa Players shows âInto the Woodsâ and âThe Music Man,â visit NewTampaPlayers.org.Â
This was fun this year. Instead of grouping all of the pizza places in both of our distribution areas in one category, we gave the pizza places in NT and those in WC their own separate categories this year. And boy, was the voting close. Via Italia was the clear winner, but #s 2-6 below were all separated by just a few votes each.Â
As we told you in this issue (as well as months ago in a previous issue), the cookie chain known as Cookie Plug (photo below left) is coming to the space in The Grove at Wesley Chapel next to the Ice Dreammm Shop â which, by the way, also sells cookies and was named one of our readersâ five Favorite Bakeries (as well as their second favorite ice cream shop) in New Tampa & Wesley Chapel.Â
Although we didnât know, at our press time, when this young chain which claims to serve, âThe fattest and thiccest cookies on the blockâ was expected to open, Cookie Plug, founded in 2019, today has 30 locations in 13 states (with the only Florida location in Ft. Myers), but according to CookiePlug.com, is planning to add more than 100 new locations, including more than 30 in the Sunshine State â ten in Tampa (including New Tampa), 15 in Orlando, five in Miami and this one in Wesley Chapel â over the next year or so.Â
I will say that Cookie Plug has its work cut out for it if it plans to serve fatter cookies than what you can get at the new Mo Cookies, which opened in the KRATE at The Grove container park (in the former location of Urban Sweets, which I hated to see close), just before we went to press with this issue.
Mo Cookies, which has an original location in Tallahassee, offers 20+ varieties of freshly baked cookies in four categories â âStandards,â which are thinner and cost $2.99 apiece (and are in the bottom row in the top photo); âPremiumsâ (which are thicker cookies served with toppings; top two rows); âSignaturesâ (3rd row from the top), which are âextra large, extra gooeyâ and cost $4.99 apiece; and âGrab N Go,â which cost $3.49 apiece (and arenât shown in the picture), although there are âPackâ discounts on all of these options, too. Mo Cookies also offers your favorite cookies as a âMoZookie,â topped with vanilla ice cream.Â
With varieties like âSâmores,â âFreshman 15â and âDark Chocolate Peanut Butterâ (the latter is my current favorite), it seems pretty likely that Mo Cookies is going to develop a local following, too. To order, call (813) 345-8059 or visit Order.Online or stop in & tell them I sent you!Â
Tous Les Jours Coming To S.R. 56!
Although New Tampa has now had its own Tous les Jours French-style Korean bakery inside the Lotte Plaza Market on Bruce B. Downs Blvd. for a little more than a year, many people who live in Wesley Chapel are happy that Tous les Jours has announced (with signage on the doors; photo above) that it is taking over the space previously occupied by Capital Tacos on S.R. 56. Although we had no information at our press time as to when the new Tous les Jours was expected to open, the fact that this international brand, with more than 1,600 locations worldwide (and 130+ in the U.S.), will bring its unique and huge selection of breads, pastries, pies, coffee, tea and blended drinks to Wesley Chapel will surely be a welcome addition.