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South Florida gets crabby: Why are Cajun seafood boil restaurants suddenly everywhere? | VIDEO

  • King Crab Shack, 4449 Okeechobee Blvd., West Palm Beach; 561-687-2122,...

    Amy Beth Bennett / South Florida Sun Sentinel

    King Crab Shack, 4449 Okeechobee Blvd., West Palm Beach; 561-687-2122, TheKingCrabShackWestPalm.com Build-your-own Cajun boils are served up alongside chicken wings, cheeseburgers, mahi mahi and fried chicken sandwiches, po' boys and desserts.

  • Crafty Crab Restaurant, 9511 Westview Drive, Coral Springs; 754-225-9688, CraftyCrabRestaurant.com...

    Carline Jean / South Florida Sun Sentinel

    Crafty Crab Restaurant, 9511 Westview Drive, Coral Springs; 754-225-9688, CraftyCrabRestaurant.com Among the biggest Cajun boil chains in the country, there are many locations from South Miami to Boynton Beach, with outposts in Lauderhill, Margate and Pompano Beach coming soon. Along with boil-in-bag seafood, Crafty also carries fried shrimp and chicken tender baskets, salads and desserts.

  • Rock 'n' Crab, 871 Village Blvd., #602B, West Palm Beach;...

    Amy Beth Bennett / South Florida Sun Sentinel

    Rock 'n' Crab, 871 Village Blvd., #602B, West Palm Beach; 561-335-5149, TheRockNCrab.com Amid American nautical décor (fishing nets, steering wheels, anchors, buoys), Rock 'n' Crab dishes Cajun combination boils, chicken burger sliders, raw oysters, hush puppies, crab meat fries, seafood pasta and rice.

  • In a typical Cajun boil at Yami Crab in Sunrise,...

    Michael Laughlin/Sun Sentinel

    In a typical Cajun boil at Yami Crab in Sunrise, seafood, corn, potatoes, Cajun seasonings and spices are served in a clear plastic bag filled with steam.

  • Crab Holic, 4599 S. University Drive, Davie; 954-450-4627, CrabHolic.com With...

    Michael Laughlin/Sun Sentinel

    Crab Holic, 4599 S. University Drive, Davie; 954-450-4627, CrabHolic.com With a dining room covered in wooden piers, traps, nets, buoys and plastic crabs, owner Phong Nguyen's Crab Holic opened this summer inside a former Davie wing joint, and serves fried calamari and mac 'n' cheese, salads, seafood gumbo, po' boys, fried seafood baskets and shrimp and fish tacos.

  • Red Crab, 1837 N. Military Trail, West Palm Beach; 561-683-9888,...

    Amy Beth Bennett / South Florida Sun Sentinel

    Red Crab, 1837 N. Military Trail, West Palm Beach; 561-683-9888, RedCrabSeafood.com The five-year-old chain is owned by Liming Zhang, an Oklahoma City restaurateur, and features po' boy sandwiches and fried seafood baskets along with its usual seafood boils.

  • King Crab Shack, 4449 Okeechobee Blvd., West Palm Beach; 561-687-2122,...

    Amy Beth Bennett / South Florida Sun Sentinel

    King Crab Shack, 4449 Okeechobee Blvd., West Palm Beach; 561-687-2122, TheKingCrabShackWestPalm.com Build-your-own Cajun boils are served up alongside chicken wings, cheeseburgers, mahi mahi and fried chicken sandwiches, po' boys and desserts.

  • Cajun Boil, 8000 W. Broward Blvd., Suite 1329, Plantation; 954-474-8009,...

    Michael Laughlin/Sun Sentinel

    Cajun Boil, 8000 W. Broward Blvd., Suite 1329, Plantation; 954-474-8009, CajunBoil.com This Cajun boil-in-bag restaurant, owned by Yu Bi and Tingjun Lei, does fresh oysters, shrimp po'boys, and wok-fried garlic noodles, Cajun rice, frog legs and lobster mac 'n' cheese.

  • Rock 'n' Crab, 871 Village Blvd., #602B, West Palm Beach;...

    Amy Beth Bennett / South Florida Sun Sentinel

    Rock 'n' Crab, 871 Village Blvd., #602B, West Palm Beach; 561-335-5149, TheRockNCrab.com Amid American nautical décor (fishing nets, steering wheels, anchors, buoys), Rock 'n' Crab dishes Cajun combination boils, chicken burger sliders, raw oysters, hush puppies, crab meat fries, seafood pasta and rice.

  • Mr. and Mrs. Crab, 11432 W State Road 84, Davie;...

    Michael Laughlin/Sun Sentinel

    Mr. and Mrs. Crab, 11432 W State Road 84, Davie; 954-541-5598, MMCSeafood.com With locations in North Lauderdale and Davie, Mr. and Mrs. Crab specializes in Cajun boils - of course - and offers a limited menu of sides, including fried seafood baskets, New England Clam Chowder, and desserts.

  • Yami Crab & Bar owner/chef Jimmy Chi presents a mixed...

    Michael Laughlin/Sun Sentinel

    Yami Crab & Bar owner/chef Jimmy Chi presents a mixed seafood boil, which includes crab, lobster and shrimp, Tuesday, September 21, 2021.

  • Crafty Crab Restaurant, 4402 N. University Drive, Lauderhill; 954-530-4995, CraftyCrabRestaurant.com...

    Carline Jean / South Florida Sun Sentinel

    Crafty Crab Restaurant, 4402 N. University Drive, Lauderhill; 954-530-4995, CraftyCrabRestaurant.com Among the biggest Cajun boil chains in the country, there are many locations from South Miami to Boynton Beach, with outposts in Lauderhill, Margate and Pompano Beach coming soon. Along with boil-in-bag seafood, Crafty also carries fried shrimp and chicken tender baskets, salads and desserts.

  • Cajun Crab, 6901 Okeechobee Blvd., Unit B-1, West Palm Beach;...

    Carline Jean / South Florida Sun Sentinel

    Cajun Crab, 6901 Okeechobee Blvd., Unit B-1, West Palm Beach; 561-429-3697 One of South Florida's oldest seafood boil-in-bag chains, Cajun Crab strictly does Cajun boil-in-bag seafood and combos but not much else.

  • A combo seafood boil of crab, lobster, shrimp, red potatoes...

    Michael Laughlin/Sun Sentinel

    A combo seafood boil of crab, lobster, shrimp, red potatoes and corn-on-the-cob -- the typical ingredients of a Cajun boil -- are shown mid-preparation at Yami Crab restaurant in Sunrise.

  • Juicy Crab, 10281 Pines Blvd., Pembroke Pines; 954-589-5158, TheJuicyCrab.com Along...

    Amy Beth Bennett / South Florida Sun Sentinel

    Juicy Crab, 10281 Pines Blvd., Pembroke Pines; 954-589-5158, TheJuicyCrab.com Along with seafood boils, Juicy Crab's lone South Florida location does fried tilapia and catfish, sweet potato fries and steamed rice, beer and wine.

  • Juicy Crab, 10281 Pines Blvd., Pembroke Pines; 954-589-5158, TheJuicyCrab.com Along...

    Amy Beth Bennett / South Florida Sun Sentinel

    Juicy Crab, 10281 Pines Blvd., Pembroke Pines; 954-589-5158, TheJuicyCrab.com Along with seafood boils, Juicy Crab's lone South Florida location does fried tilapia and catfish, sweet potato fries and steamed rice, beer and wine.

  • Crafty Crab Restaurant, 2019 N. University Drive, Sunrise; 954-530-1841, CraftyCrabRestaurant.com...

    Carline Jean / South Florida Sun Sentinel

    Crafty Crab Restaurant, 2019 N. University Drive, Sunrise; 954-530-1841, CraftyCrabRestaurant.com Among the biggest Cajun boil chains in the country, there are many locations from South Miami to Boynton Beach, with outposts in Lauderhill, Margate and Pompano Beach coming soon. Along with boil-in-bag seafood, Crafty also carries fried shrimp and chicken tender baskets, salads and desserts.

  • Yami Crab, 12705 W. Sunrise Blvd., Sunrise; 954-838-9777, YamiCrabSunrise.com At...

    Michael Laughlin/Sun Sentinel

    Yami Crab, 12705 W. Sunrise Blvd., Sunrise; 954-838-9777, YamiCrabSunrise.com At Yami Crab in Sunrise the crab restaurant, owned by Zhi Chi (he goes by "Chef Jimmy"), shares its storefront with Friends Hot Pot, meaning you can order a diversity of cuisine, from Chinese hot pot to Korean barbecue to seafood in a bag. There is also Japanese karaoke available.

  • Mr. Q Crab, 5975 N. Federal Highway #103, Fort Lauderdale;...

    Carline Jean / South Florida Sun Sentinel

    Mr. Q Crab, 5975 N. Federal Highway #103, Fort Lauderdale; 954-595-2923, MrQCrabHouse.com Along with its flagship location in Hollywood, Mr. Q Crab, owned by Joy Wang, features Cajun boils along with shrimp and seafood fried rice, crab corn and gumbo soup, po' boys, shrimp and seafood pasta, fried baskets and desserts – and robot servers who sing and bus food to and from your table.

  • Yami Crab, 12705 W. Sunrise Blvd., Sunrise; 954-838-9777, YamiCrabSunrise.com At...

    Michael Laughlin/Sun Sentinel

    Yami Crab, 12705 W. Sunrise Blvd., Sunrise; 954-838-9777, YamiCrabSunrise.com At Yami Crab in Sunrise the crab restaurant, owned by Zhi Chi (he goes by "Chef Jimmy"), shares its storefront with Friends Hot Pot, meaning you can order a diversity of cuisine, from Chinese hot pot to Korean barbecue to seafood in a bag. There is also Japanese karaoke available. Window decorations filled with seafood boils are displayed at Yami Crab in Sunrise.

  • Mr. Q Crab, 5975 N. Federal Highway #103, Fort Lauderdale;...

    Carline Jean / South Florida Sun Sentinel

    Mr. Q Crab, 5975 N. Federal Highway #103, Fort Lauderdale; 954-595-2923, MrQCrabHouse.com Along with its flagship location in Hollywood, Mr. Q Crab, owned by Joy Wang, features Cajun boils along with shrimp and seafood fried rice, crab corn and gumbo soup, po' boys, shrimp and seafood pasta, fried baskets and desserts – and robot servers who sing and bus food to and from your table.

  • Crab du Jour, 299 S. Pompano Parkway, Pompano Beach; 954-953-8999,...

    Carline Jean / South Florida Sun Sentinel

    Crab du Jour, 299 S. Pompano Parkway, Pompano Beach; 954-953-8999, CrabduJour.com With 100 locations in 18 states Crab du Jour, from CEO and New Jersey-based Chinese entrepreneur Leon Chen, is arguably the fastest-growing chain of Cajun boils. Along with Pompano, Crab du Jour has locations in Midtown Miami and two more opening in 2021 in South Miami and Kendall.

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Phillip Valys, Sun Sentinel reporter.
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:

You can’t seem to throw a claw these days in South Florida without hitting a Cajun-themed boiled crab restaurant.

They barely existed here a few years ago. Now fast-casual crab restaurants are scuttling into pandemic-emptied Ruby Tuesdays, Roadhouse Grills and Metro Diners at the blistering pace of Spirit of Halloween stores.

They all bear crabby names that are dizzyingly similar, like crustacean paint-by-number: There’s Crafty Crab and Yami Crab, Mr. and Mrs. Crab and Mr. Q Crab, Crab Holic and Juicy Crab, Red Crab and Cajun Boil, Crab du Jour and Rock ‘n Crab. While po’boys, burgers and fried seafood often pad their menus, the main attraction is always the same: Head-on shrimp, sauce-slicked crawfish, garlic-buttery clams and mussels, halved red potatoes, crab and corn on the cob, served tableside in a clear plastic bag that steams like a puffed marshmallow. Customers wear plastic bibs and plastic gloves because the meal is claw-crackingly messy.

More than 50 Cajun boil restaurants have popped up across Broward and Palm Beach – and the number is growing. Four restaurants — King Crab Shack, Juicy Crab, Red Crab, Rock ‘n Crab — recently crawled onto a one-mile stretch of Okeechobee Boulevard in West Palm Beach.

So what blew up South Florida’s crab bubble, and how is it distinctly Cajun? Call it a combination of well-timed pandemic opportunity and the cultural mashup known as Viet-Cajun cuisine.

The Chinese and Vietnamese restaurateurs who primarily own these Cajun boils describe a modern-day gold rush to open as many storefronts as possible – before the trend disappears.

“It’s pretty much about trying to get a piece of the gold mine as fast as we can,” says Chris Nguyen, general manager of Davie’s Crab Holic, a Vietnamese family-owned restaurant which opened in July inside a former chicken-wing joint that shuttered in the pandemic. “Red Lobster is boring. Have you tried it recently? The food is just plain, so Asian people got in the mix and added a twist to it, modernized it.”

Crab Holic, 4599 S. University Drive, Davie; 954-450-4627, CrabHolic.com
With a dining room covered in wooden piers, traps, nets, buoys and plastic crabs, owner Phong Nguyen's Crab Holic opened this summer inside a former Davie wing joint, and serves fried calamari and mac 'n' cheese, salads, seafood gumbo, po' boys, fried seafood baskets and shrimp and fish tacos.
Crab Holic, 4599 S. University Drive, Davie; 954-450-4627, CrabHolic.com
With a dining room covered in wooden piers, traps, nets, buoys and plastic crabs, owner Phong Nguyen’s Crab Holic opened this summer inside a former Davie wing joint, and serves fried calamari and mac ‘n’ cheese, salads, seafood gumbo, po’ boys, fried seafood baskets and shrimp and fish tacos.

Nguyen, whose brother, Phong, ran Vietnamese restaurants in New Jersey and Virginia pre-pandemic, says restaurant friends tipped off his family last year about a pandemic-proof idea: boil-in-bag seafood that kept mudbugs and snow crab legs hot during takeout orders. But the eureka moment came when Nguyen learned of the overnight success of another Viet-Cajun competitor – Georgia-based Juicy Crab, which has 35 mid-Atlantic spots and four coming to Fort Lauderdale, Deerfield Beach, Lauderhill and West Palm Beach this year.

“Other friends alerted us that the Cajun crab business is the hot thing to get into, even though it’s mostly Chinese-owned these days and we’re Vietnamese,” Nguyen says. “We were like, ‘Dang – this is making lots of money.’ And they’re so easy to run.”

A combo seafood boil of crab, lobster, shrimp, red potatoes and corn-on-the-cob -- the typical ingredients of a Cajun boil -- are shown mid-preparation at Yami Crab restaurant in Sunrise.
A combo seafood boil of crab, lobster, shrimp, red potatoes and corn-on-the-cob — the typical ingredients of a Cajun boil — are shown mid-preparation at Yami Crab restaurant in Sunrise.

Every day, he says more than 50 takeout orders fly out of his dining room, and 80 percent of them are Cajun seafood boils. The décor at Crab-Holic? Like many Cajun boils in the area – Crafty Crab, Mr. Q Crab, etc. – the dining room has all-American crab shack décor: wooden piers, traps, nets, buoys, plastic crabs.

The Cajun boil has become a new moneymaker for Asian entrepreneurs who’ve seen profits at their Chinese and other restaurants decline in the pandemic, and because of recent anti-Asian bias, adds Tini Hui, a Broward real-estate broker who helped Yami Crab open its third location in a Sunrise strip mall.

“I’ve got so many Chinese entrepreneurs looking to open Cajun boils right now, but the only problem is space,” she says.

History of Viet-Cajun boils

You could disappear down a crawdad hole mining the origins of the Viet-Cajun craze, but here’s the truth: the seafood boils are not Vietnamese or Cajun, says Ani Meinhold, owner of Miami’s first Viet-Cajun restaurant, Phuc Yea.

Instead, it’s a complete invention, she says, spreading like wildfire in New Orleans, Houston and San Francisco since 2007 before belatedly catching on here. It’s also a story of migration and assimilation, what happens when immigrants unite flavors with new environments. The phenomenon was born in the 1970s when South Vietnamese refugees planted roots on the Gulf Coast of Louisiana and took jobs in the area’s crabbing and shrimping industry.

Although crawdads didn’t exist in Vietnam, immigrants cottoned to the region’s river culture and finger-lickin’ backyard freshwater boils, she says.

“It was easy to cut and paste your life out of South Vietnam and bring it to the Gulf,” says Meinhold, who is half-Vietnamese and cooked for six years in Houston with her partner, Phuc Yea co-owner Cesar Zapata. “The river communities, the fishing economy was so similar. That’s a big reason New Orleans and Houston have the third- and fourth-largest Vietnamese communities outside of Vietnam.”

Put another way, boiling live seafood is ingrained in Vietnamese DNA, Andrea Nguyen, a Vietnam-born cookbook author, told the Dallas Morning News in 2018.

“We are very used to eating with our hands, picking at seafood and noshing,” she said.

Mashing up flavors of the South with ingredients from Southeast Asia happened gradually, Meinhold says. A traditional Cajun crawfish boil, for example, drops cayenne, bay leaves, coriander, paprika and salt into the boil with potatoes and corn-on-the-cob. Once marinated, the mudbugs are served naked.

Not so with Viet-Cajun, which added a twist: Asian lemongrass, Thai basil and chili, or fish sauce instead of salt – all ingredients that compliment Cajun flavors well, she says. Although history is murky about who did it first, those Viet-Cajun boils wound up inside clear plastic bags, drowning in rich pools of garlicky butter, lemon pepper, Cajun spice and Asian lemongrass.

After Hurricane Katrina, many Vietnamese resettled in Houston, Meinhold says, and the city morphed into a hotbed of Viet-Cajun cuisine. Crawfish & Noodles, chef Trong Nguyen’s mecca for Viet-Cajun crawfish, opened in Houston in 2008, giving clout to the cuisine and netting him finalist and semifinalist nods from the James Beard Foundation.

But South Florida almost certainly got inundated with crabs thanks to the pandemic, Meinhold says, with Chinese-American entrepreneurs mostly driving the trend.

“Because of the pandemic, we’ve had an influx of Asians and New Yorkers trying to make a living down here, and [franchising a Cajun boil] is the least expensive way of going about it,” she says.

The growth of local Cajun boils makes perfect sense to Hudson Riehle, senior vice president of research for the National Restaurant Association. Seafood prices aren’t surging as much as meat this summer, takeout is still king – and boil-in-bag seafood takes advantage of both.

“Just over 60 percent of traffic is off-premises, compared to 90 percent in the depths of the pandemic,” he says. “The products of Cajun boil restaurants align with the way consumers spend now.”

It’s all in the sauce

How have South Florida Cajun seafood restaurants boiled up so quickly? The answer, if you ask Jeffrey Schroth, is smart timing and a novel idea: Slipping into undesirable restaurants killed off in the pandemic.

“I hate to say it, but it’s capitalism at its best,” says Schroth, national general manager for Crab du Jour, which has added 100-plus locations in 18 states since 2019. “No one is buying old chains that used to be Ruby Tuesday’s or Chili’s or Outback Steakhouse, so they’re more inexpensive to lease. It’s sucks, and I’m sorry these places closed, but it’s an opportunity for us. It’s a trend with sticking power.”

Crab du Jour, 299 S. Pompano Parkway, Pompano Beach; 954-953-8999, CrabduJour.com
With 100 locations in 18 states Crab du Jour, from CEO and New Jersey-based Chinese entrepreneur Leon Chen, is arguably the fastest-growing chain of Cajun boils. Along with Pompano, Crab du Jour has locations in Midtown Miami and two more opening in 2021 in South Miami and Kendall.
Crab du Jour, 299 S. Pompano Parkway, Pompano Beach; 954-953-8999, CrabduJour.com
With 100 locations in 18 states Crab du Jour, from CEO and New Jersey-based Chinese entrepreneur Leon Chen, is arguably the fastest-growing chain of Cajun boils. Along with Pompano, Crab du Jour has locations in Midtown Miami and two more opening in 2021 in South Miami and Kendall.

Schroth is the company’s “official go-fer,” tracking down leases for new storefronts, filling them with employees, training cooks to boil seafood. Forty five days later, he’ll open another Crab du Jour, then another. His mandate – open as many Crab du Jours as possible before the trend jumps the shark – comes from his boss, Crab du Jour’s president, CEO and New Jersey-based Chinese entrepreneur Leon Chen.

Cajun boils, more common in Broward and Palm Beach than in Miami-Dade (where fewer Asian-Americans live, according to 2020 U.S. Census data), thrive on volume, not vibe, Meinhold adds.

“You have to try really hard to screw up shellfish,” she says. “You don’t need to hire great chefs. Skill isn’t necessary. And shellfish is considered a luxury good, and customers know they’ll pay a pretty penny for it.”

Lately the number of customers ordering from Chef Jimmy’s Yami Crab has been breathtaking, with 300 hundred pounds of seafood going out of their Sunrise location a day.

The restaurant also sells Korean BBQ and Chinese hot pot – Yami Crab opened as Friend’s Hot Pot last October, then rebranded as Cajun boils took off – but its Cajun boil ($46.99 for nearly a pound, $61.99 for 1.5 pounds) accounts for more than half of all sales.

“It has been crazy,” says Chef Jimmy – his given name is Zhi Chi – through a translator. “We spent $750,000 getting all these hot pot tables shipped in from China. And then my business partners, who own Chinese restaurants, told me to implement the crab boils. Lots of Chinese places are jumping on the bandwagon for profit.”

Yami Crab & Bar owner/chef Jimmy Chi presents a mixed seafood boil, which includes crab, lobster and shrimp, Tuesday, September 21, 2021.
Yami Crab & Bar owner/chef Jimmy Chi presents a mixed seafood boil, which includes crab, lobster and shrimp, Tuesday, September 21, 2021.

Chef Jimmy worked in Louisiana Cajun restaurants for 10 years, training under his mentor, restaurateur Steve Lin. Chef Jimmy sources his fish through Ocean Blue, a seafood wholesaler he owns in Pompano Beach, enabling him to import year-round: snow crabs from Canada, black mussels from Chile, green mussels from New Zealand, shrimp from El Salvador and crawfish from … Egypt?

“Not New Orleans. Louisiana crawfish are small, tiny, not much meat,” says Chef Jimmy, who this year added Yami Crabs to Fort Lauderdale and Hollywood. “Egypt crawfish are more expensive, but there’s more meat, more juice.”

That’s not the only way Yami Crab diverges from traditional Cajun-style. At Yami Crab, customers choose their seasonings (Cajun, butter-garlic, lemon pepper) and spiciness from mild to what its menu calls “my mouth on fire.”

In a typical Cajun boil at Yami Crab in Sunrise, seafood, corn, potatoes, Cajun seasonings and spices are served in a clear plastic bag filled with steam.
In a typical Cajun boil at Yami Crab in Sunrise, seafood, corn, potatoes, Cajun seasonings and spices are served in a clear plastic bag filled with steam.

“Twenty years ago, people loved American Chinese food. Ten years ago, it was sushi. Now it’s changed again to boiled seafood,” he says.

As for how Chef Jimmy finds his storefronts, he says, “It’s a business secret I’d rather not disclose.” But he gives the Cajun boil trend another three to five years because places like Washington, Oregon and the Midwest are ripe for expansion.

Now that more Cajun boils are heating up, so is the competition, forcing restaurateurs like Chris Nguyen to differentiate Crab Holic in Davie from new seafood shacks clawing into the market.

And he’s hit on a solution: the flavorful sauce that pools at the bottom of seafood bags. The restaurant created a signature Crab Holic sauce blend – fresh garlicky butter, lemon pepper, Cajun-citrus, lemongrass and other “secret” spices – when customers told him his competitors were blending sauces.

“Our family drove around and bought every other competitors’ seafood boil, and we dissected it, and came up with our own,” he says. “To make the most sales, the most important thing is, ‘Who has the best sauce?’ “

Crafty Crab Restaurant, 4402 N. University Drive, Lauderhill; 954-530-4995, CraftyCrabRestaurant.com
Among the biggest Cajun boil chains in the country, there are many locations from South Miami to Boynton Beach, with outposts in Lauderhill, Margate and Pompano Beach coming soon. Along with boil-in-bag seafood, Crafty also carries fried shrimp and chicken tender baskets, salads and desserts.
Crafty Crab Restaurant, 4402 N. University Drive, Lauderhill; 954-530-4995, CraftyCrabRestaurant.com
Among the biggest Cajun boil chains in the country, there are many locations from South Miami to Boynton Beach, with outposts in Lauderhill, Margate and Pompano Beach coming soon. Along with boil-in-bag seafood, Crafty also carries fried shrimp and chicken tender baskets, salads and desserts.

How does South Florida feel about the crab explosion? In the Let’s Eat, South Florida Facebook Group, run by the Sun Sentinel, locals heaped praise, cynicism and obvious puns (“Broward’s got crabs!”) in equal measure about South Florida’s Cajun crab bubble. Members applauded the easy-to-find locations but knocked their shabby décor and “value-priced frozen seafood boiled inside a plastic bag.” Other commenters declared the crustacean takeover “a short-lived fad” and professed love for local institutions such as Riggins Crabhouse in Lantana, Rustic Inn in Fort Lauderdale and Joe’s Stone Crab in Miami Beach.

Ann Hildreth, of Oakland Park, thought her Cajun boil’s sauce “did all the heavy lifting” at a Fort Lauderdale Crafty Crab on North Federal Highway.

“The flavor was overpowered by the broth, and it was kind of mushy, but it was fresh,” says Hildreth, whose boil included snow crabs. “This is probably a fad but I liked it.”

Where to find Cajun boils in South Florida

King Crab Shack

4449 Okeechobee Blvd., West Palm Beach; 561-687-2122, TheKingCrabShackWestPalm.com

Build-your-own Cajun boils are served up alongside chicken wings, cheeseburgers, mahi mahi and fried chicken sandwiches, po’ boys and desserts.

Crafty Crab Restaurant

Multiple locations, CraftyCrabRestaurant.com

Among the biggest Cajun boil chains in the country, there are many locations from South Miami to Boynton Beach, with outposts in Lauderhill, Margate and Pompano Beach coming soon. Along with boil-in-bag seafood, Crafty also carries fried shrimp and chicken tender baskets, salads and desserts.

Mr. Q Crab

5975 N. Federal Highway #103, Fort Lauderdale, 954-595-2923; and 4221 N. State Road 7, Hollywood, MrQCrabHouse.com

Mr. Q Crab, owned by Joy Wang, features Cajun boils along with shrimp and seafood fried rice, crab corn and gumbo soup, po’ boys, shrimp and seafood pasta, fried baskets and desserts – plus robot servers who sing and bus food to and from your table.

Rock ‘n’ Crab

871 Village Blvd., #602B, West Palm Beach; 561-335-5149, TheRockNCrab.com

Amid American nautical décor (fishing nets, steering wheels, anchors, buoys), Rock ‘n’ Crab dishes Cajun combination boils, chicken burger sliders, raw oysters, hush puppies, crab meat fries, seafood pasta and rice.

Mr. and Mrs. Crab

11432 W. State Road 84, Davie, 954-541-5598; and 7990 W. McNab Road, North Lauderdale, 954-724-8882, MMCSeafood.com

With locations in North Lauderdale and Davie, Mr. and Mrs. Crab specializes in Cajun boils – of course – and offers a limited menu of sides, including fried seafood baskets, New England Clam Chowder, and desserts.

Cajun Boil

8000 W. Broward Blvd., Suite 1329, Plantation; 954-474-8009, CajunBoil.com

This Cajun boil-in-bag restaurant, owned by Yu Bi and Tingjun Lei, does fresh oysters, shrimp po’boys, and wok-fried garlic noodles, Cajun rice, frog legs and lobster mac ‘n’ cheese.

Yami Crab

Multiple locations, YamiCrabSeafood.com

Yami Crab, a Cajun boil restaurant owned by Zhi Chi (he goes by “Chef Jimmy”), has locations in Hollywood, Fort Lauderdale and Sunrise. The Sunrise location shares its storefront with Friends Hot Pot, meaning you can order a diversity of cuisine, from Chinese hot pot to Korean barbecue to seafood in a bag. There is also Japanese karaoke available.

Cajun Crab

6901 Okeechobee Blvd., Unit B-1, West Palm Beach; 561-429-3697

Once specializing in boil-in-bag seafood, Cajun Crab now serves lowcountry boil-style Cajun seafood plus stir-fry garlic noodles. The restaurant also features Vietnamese daily specials such as blue crab udon.

Crab du Jour

Multiple locations, CrabduJour.com

With 100 locations in 18 states Crab du Jour, from CEO and New Jersey-based Chinese entrepreneur Leon Chen, is arguably the fastest-growing chain of Cajun boils. Along with Pompano Beach, Crab du Jour has locations in Midtown Miami and two more opening in 2021 in South Miami and Kendall.

Red Crab

1837 N. Military Trail, West Palm Beach; 561-683-9888, RedCrabSeafood.com

The five-year-old chain is owned by Liming Zhang, an Oklahoma City restaurateur, and features po’ boy sandwiches and fried seafood baskets along with its usual seafood boils.

Juicy Crab

10281 Pines Blvd., Pembroke Pines; 954-589-5158, TheJuicyCrab.com

Along with seafood boils, Juicy Crab’s lone South Florida location does fried tilapia and catfish, sweet potato fries and steamed rice, beer and wine.

Crab Holic

4599 S. University Drive, Davie; 954-450-4627, CrabHolic.com

With a dining room covered in wooden piers, traps, nets, buoys and plastic crabs, owner Phong Nguyen’s Crab Holic opened this summer inside a former Davie wing joint, and serves fried calamari and mac ‘n’ cheese, salads, seafood gumbo, po’ boys, fried seafood baskets and shrimp and fish tacos.