Catch & Cut
On Las Olas Boulevard, Fort Lauderdale's most commercially active dining strip, Catch & Cut sits at the intersection of two formats that have separately defined South Florida dining for decades: the seafood house and the steakhouse. The combination positions it within a local scene that has steadily traded casual waterfront informality for more structured, dual-concept dining rooms over the past several years.

Las Olas and the Dual-Concept Dining Shift
Las Olas Boulevard has functioned as Fort Lauderdale's primary dining corridor long enough to reflect every significant shift in how the city eats. The strip's evolution tracks from tourist-facing casual houses in the 1990s through the mid-range Mediterranean and Latin formats that defined the 2000s, and more recently toward a wave of concepts that attempt to hold two distinct dining identities under one roof. Catch & Cut, at 1309 E Las Olas Blvd, belongs to that latter movement: a venue name that encodes its own duality, one half oriented toward the sea, the other toward the grill.
That dual-format structure is not unique to Fort Lauderdale, but it has particular resonance here. South Florida sits at the crossroads of a serious seafood tradition shaped by proximity to Atlantic and Gulf waters and a steakhouse culture imported from the broader American premium dining playbook. For years, those two categories occupied separate rooms on separate blocks. What has changed across the Las Olas corridor in recent seasons is a consolidation impulse: operators designing menus that serve both the table ordering fish and the table ordering beef, without asking either to compromise. Catch & Cut is a direct expression of that consolidation.
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To understand where Catch & Cut sits in the Fort Lauderdale dining order, it helps to map the broader Las Olas peer set. Baires Grill on Las Olas anchors the Argentine-inflected steakhouse segment of the boulevard, working from an asado tradition that is philosophically distant from the surf-and-turf hybrid model. Askaneli Restaurant & Steakhouse occupies another corner of the premium meat-focused category, bringing a Georgian culinary framework to a dining room that also reads as an event destination. What these venues share is a commitment to one primary identity with secondary dishes in support. Catch & Cut proposes something structurally different: parity between the two formats rather than dominance of one.
Further from Las Olas, Fort Lauderdale's seafood tradition has longer institutional roots. 15th Street Fisheries and Anthony's Clam House represent the more classically positioned seafood house model, where the menu builds outward from local and regional catch. Anthony's Coal Fired Pizza sits in a different category entirely but speaks to the same Las Olas appetite for restaurants with a defined, repeatable proposition. Catch & Cut's gambit is that Las Olas diners who might choose between a seafood house and a steakhouse on a given night can instead choose a room that does both at a standard the name implies is serious about each half.
The Evolution of the Hybrid Concept
The steakhouse-seafood hybrid as a fine dining format has a longer American history than its current prevalence might suggest. Classic white-tablecloth houses across the country offered surf-and-turf pairings for decades as a menu concession, a way of serving the table that couldn't agree. What changed in the post-2010 period was a shift from pairing as compromise to pairing as concept: chefs and operators began treating both categories with equivalent seriousness of sourcing, technique, and presentation. This is the version of the format that venues like Providence in Los Angeles helped institutionalize on the seafood side, and that high-end steakhouses in major markets simultaneously refined on the beef side.
At the national level, the restaurants that have defined serious cooking with fish, including Le Bernardin in New York City and Blue Hill at Stone Barns in Tarrytown, have done so by treating seafood as a primary subject rather than a supporting category. The implicit challenge for any venue carrying both identities in its name is whether its kitchen can hold that standard across two protein families simultaneously, or whether one inevitably becomes a secondary offering dressed in primary clothing.
South Florida's positioning as a coastal market with year-round dining traffic means that expectation travels with visitors. A table in from a city with access to restaurants like Addison in San Diego, Smyth in Chicago, or Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg arrives with reference points that go beyond regional norms. Las Olas venues that position themselves in the premium tier are, whether they intend it or not, benchmarked against that wider field.
Planning a Visit
Catch & Cut is located at 1309 E Las Olas Boulevard in Fort Lauderdale, positioned along the walkable central section of the strip where foot traffic from the surrounding residential neighborhoods and hotel visitors from the broader downtown area converges most densely. Las Olas is accessible by car with street and garage parking available in the corridor, and the address places it within the main concentration of the boulevard's dining activity rather than at its edges. For visitors arriving from Miami or Palm Beach, the drive along I-95 or US-1 puts Las Olas within direct reach of either direction. Given the venue's profile as a dual-concept room on a competitive restaurant street, booking ahead for dinner service is advisable, particularly on weekend evenings when Las Olas dining demand compresses across a relatively small number of blocks. For a broader orientation to the Fort Lauderdale dining scene before committing to a reservation, our full Fort Lauderdale restaurants guide maps the city's key corridors and current operators with more granular context.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What do people recommend at Catch & Cut?
- Catch & Cut operates as a dual seafood and steakhouse concept, which means the kitchen is structured to handle both directions seriously. Guests oriented toward seafood are working within a South Florida coastal market with strong year-round supply of Atlantic fish and Gulf shellfish, while the steakhouse side positions against the premium beef programs that have become standard at Las Olas dinner venues. Without menu-specific data to draw from, the more reliable orientation is to treat the name as a genuine signal: both categories are the proposition, not one with the other in support. For comparison with how leading American seafood-focused restaurants approach the craft at the highest level, Le Bernardin in New York City and Providence in Los Angeles offer useful reference points on what serious fish cookery looks like nationally.
- Is Catch & Cut reservation-only?
- Specific booking policy data for Catch & Cut is not available in our current records. That said, Las Olas Boulevard dining rooms in the premium tier routinely fill on weekend evenings, and a venue operating under a steakhouse and seafood format at this address is likely to manage demand through reservations during peak service. Fort Lauderdale draws consistent year-round visitor volume, and the mid-week versus weekend distinction on Las Olas matters more than in markets with sharper seasonal swings. Contacting the venue directly or checking current booking platforms before arrival is the practical approach. For context on how the Fort Lauderdale dining scene manages demand more broadly, see our full Fort Lauderdale restaurants guide.
- How does Catch & Cut compare to other Las Olas restaurants that combine seafood and meat menus?
- The Las Olas corridor hosts several restaurants that address both seafood and meat in their menus, but most do so with a clear primary identity and secondary offerings in support. Catch & Cut's naming convention suggests a deliberate structural parity between the two categories, which places it in a smaller subset of Fort Lauderdale venues that treat the combination as a co-equal concept rather than a compromise. On a boulevard where Baires Grill on Las Olas leads with an Argentine beef identity and 15th Street Fisheries anchors the dedicated seafood end of the Fort Lauderdale market, Catch & Cut occupies the middle position where both formats claim equal standing, a model that has gained traction in coastal American markets over the past decade.
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