Eating House Miami shared by @infatuation says: ""Maturity is good when it comes to dining choices. Without it, you might be eating cereal for dinner with friends who just discovered they can use Totino’s Pizza Rolls as a pizza topping. But we all have to grow up at some point. That’s what Eating House did after it closed and reopened a year and a half later in Giralda Plaza—and it’s better for it.  The previous version of Eating House was a pop-up-turned-restaurant that served the kind of dishes one might attempt to create in a kitchen at 3am. It threw big parties on April 20, hung graffiti art on the walls, mixed Tang mimosas for brunch, and paired steak with a blueberry teriyaki sauce they called "blueberryaki." Today’s Eating House is quite the contrast—with plain white walls decorated with long mirrors. The bare dining room is filled with black chairs and tables. It evokes corporate buzzwords like “streamlined” and “optimized.” But the restaurant still knows how to have fun with its food. This is most obvious in their rotating tasting menu, which experiments with dishes that pay homage to classic Miami restaurants like and . The regular dinner menu also still has some Eating House originals such as the heirloom tomatoes with frozen coconut milk and the brussels sprouts caesar. But at the new Eating House, those sorts of dishes aren’t the best things to order. The menu’s standouts are now the seemingly simple items like Parker House rolls, rigatoni, and a perfect NY strip.  Going to Eating House feels a lot like learning about behavioral economics from that one kid who ate Play-Doh in high school. It's come a long way. And even though it still lets loose from time to time (there are Cap’n Crunch pancakes on the brunch menu), it also understands that just because you can add Totino’s to a pizza doesn’t mean you should. "" on Postcard