Inspections: 4 Central Florida restaurants shut down last week

Inspections: 4 Central Florida restaurants shut down last week

Four Central Florida restaurants shut down following health inspections the week of Aug. 18-24, according to data from the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation.

Orange

Thunya Thai Cuisine at 5174 Conway Road in Orlando shut down on Aug. 19. Officials found 14 violations, four of which were a high priority. Those violations included an operator unable to provide documentation for a source of fish, roach activity, food held at the wrong temperatures and raw food not separated from ready-to-eat food. The facility remained closed on Aug. 21, where inspectors found eight violations. On Aug. 22, inspectors conducted two inspections. On the first inspection, the restaurant remained closed with six violations. On the second inspection, after receiving time extensions for two high-priority violations, the restaurant met inspection standards.

Volusia

Sally’s Diner at 2487 S. Volusia Ave. Suite 101 shut down on Aug. 19. Inspectors found nine violations, only one of which was a high priority for rodent activity. On a second inspection, the restaurant had four violations. None were a high priority. The restaurant met inspection standards.

Daisy’s Diner at 915 N. Spring Garden Ave. in DeLand shut down on Aug. 20. Inspectors found 15 violations, four of which were a high priority. Those violations included roach activity, roach excrement, food held at the wrong temperatures and a sanitizer with the wrong concentration. Officials conducted another inspection on Aug. 21. Officials found five violations but none were a high priority. The restaurant met inspection standards.

Uncle Chicken’s at 440 Dixie Freeway in New Smyrna Beach shut down on Aug. 21. Inspectors found six violations, four of which were a high priority. Those violations included roach and rodent activity, a stop sale on food due to temperature abuse and food held at the wrong temperatures. A second inspection happened on Aug. 22. Inspectors found two violations. Both were a high priority from the previous inspection. Officials gave the restaurant a time extension on both violations. On Aug. 23, inspectors found no violations. The restaurant complied with the emergency order.

Complaints and warnings

Orange County had the top spot for most warnings and other complaints in Central Florida, with 37.

Volusia had 20, Brevard had 14, Seminole had 12 and Lake and Osceola had seven each.

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