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Must-Try Eggs Benedicts at the Best Brunch Restaurant in Fort Lauderdale

  • Beluxe Creative
  • 2 days ago
  • 9 min read

If your idea of the perfect morning starts with a golden yolk breaking into rich hollandaise and a vibrant house cilantro aioli, then Café Bastille Fort Lauderdale needs to be at the top of your brunch bucket list. Located at 704 SE 1st St, this hotspot pairs its stunning waterfront views with a morning menu featuring three distinct Benedicts served daily from 8 a.m.: Roasted Turkey, Smoked Salmon, and Country Ham.


Every single plate is built on an incredible foundation. It starts with two cage-free organic poached eggs and rich hollandaise, layered over crisp signature potatoes and a hidden ribbon of house cilantro aioli. That aioli is the ultimate signature move, bleeding into the dish the moment your yolk breaks, and alongside the breezy patio, it’s exactly why locals rank this as the absolute best brunch in Fort Lauderdale.


In this guide:


Why Café Bastille runs the best eggs benedict in Fort Lauderdale


Stacking the perfect Eggs Benedict relies on a classic combination of textures: a warm, runny yolk, a golden toasted base, a savory anchor like ham or smoked salmon, and a glossy hollandaise sauce to bring it all together. While Café Bastille Fort Lauderdale nails this balance on every plate, it’s the atmosphere that sets the experience apart. Dining waterside along the Himmarshee Canal transforms a standard morning meal into the ultimate Fort Lauderdale brunch experience.


The patio runs along the Himmarshee Canal, shaded by large umbrellas, with sage green walls and the kind of waterfront view that turns a regular Saturday morning into something people text their friends about afterward. Arriving before 10 a.m. gives you a patio table while the light is still soft and the SE 1st St block has not yet picked up foot traffic. Locals and weekend regulars start to claim the canal-side seats early, which keeps the room feeling alive without feeling crowded.


The foundation is where the dish truly sets itself apart. Café Bastille exclusively uses cage-free organic eggs, poached precisely so the whites set while the yolks remain completely loose. The real kitchen secret, though, is that the signature potatoes underneath are fried in beef tallow to lock in an incredibly crisp edge. When you cut into the eggs, that warm yolk runs directly into a hidden layer of vibrant house cilantro aioli, instantly cutting through the rich hollandaise and brightening every single bite. It’s a deliberate, flavor-first approach that carries through every plate that leaves the pass.


The three Benedicts worth ordering at Café Bastille Fort Lauderdale


The Benedict section of the menu reads short, which is part of why it works. Each version is built deliberately and stands on its own. Here is how to choose between them.


Roasted Turkey Benedict for the dish that converts the table

Two open-faced Roasted Turkey Benedicts on toasted brioche topped with hollandaise, paprika, microgreens, turkey, brie, and avocado, served on a gray ceramic plate with a small ramekin of cilantro aioli

The Roasted Turkey Benedict is the one regulars tend to name when someone asks what to order for their first visit. Two poached eggs and hollandaise sit over the signature potatoes and cilantro aioli, with roasted turkey, brie cheese, avocado, and tomato finishing the plate. The brie changes the flavor profile in a way a standard Benedict does not prepare you for: it melts into the hollandaise and adds a creamy roundness that pairs with the avocado and the cool slice of tomato. It is the order for the person at the table who thought they did not want a Benedict and then ends up asking what everyone else's looks like.


Smoked Salmon Benedict for the plate that photographs first

The Smoked Salmon Benedict is the most coastal of the three. The same poached eggs, hollandaise, signature potatoes, and cilantro aioli underneath, with smoked salmon, avocado, and fried capers on top. The fried capers are the detail that makes the plate. They add a crisp, briny pop that cuts through the richness of the salmon and the hollandaise so every bite tastes specifically of the coast. It is the version that lands first when the table is sharing plates, and the one most guests photograph before picking up a fork. For a similar profile served at the Café Bastille Downtown Miami patio, the same salmon Benedict is one of the most-ordered plates on weekdays.

Open-faced Smoked Salmon Benedict topped with avocado and fried capers, served alongside fork and knife on a vintage floral plate

Country Ham Benedict for the appetite that wants the full version

Two open-faced Country Ham Benedicts on toasted brioche topped with paprika-dusted hollandaise, microgreens, and salt-cured country ham, served on a gray ceramic plate with a small ramekin of cream sauce

The Country Ham Benedict is the order for anyone who came in hungry. Two poached eggs and hollandaise, the signature potatoes and cilantro aioli below, country ham, and thick cut bacon piled on top. The country ham is salt-cured and carries a stronger profile than a standard breakfast ham, and the thick cut bacon adds a second layer of crisp and smoke that the hollandaise alone could not carry. When the yolk breaks and runs through the ham, the bacon, the cilantro aioli, and the potatoes, the plate becomes one cohesive thing. This is the Benedict for the morning when you want a real meal that carries you past noon without a second course.


What to pair with your Benedict at the best brunch in Fort Lauderdale


Each Benedict at Café Bastille Fort Lauderdale lands as a substantial plate, but the menu has the right starters and drinks to round out the table.


Lighter plates that pair well alongside

The Acai Bowl is the order to start with if the table wants something cold and bright before the Benedicts arrive. Mango, blueberry, strawberry, and banana over organic granola and honey, served cold so the fruit stays distinct and the granola holds its crunch all the way through the bowl. It also works as the plate to split with someone who wants to keep the morning on the lighter side.

Overhead acai bowl topped with mango, blueberry, strawberry, banana slices, and granola, served cold for brunch
Greek yogurt parfait layered with fresh strawberries and granola in a small glass jar

The Greek Yogurt Parfait is the second smart starter. Greek yogurt layered with homemade granola, berries, coconut flakes, and honey. The coconut flakes are the detail most guests notice second, after the snap of the granola. It is a good plate to put in the middle of the table if you are sharing.

For one course that reads as a proper Fort Lauderdale brunch sweet, the Almond Croissant is the move. A flaky croissant with almond filling and almond flakes baked on top, served warm enough that the filling stays soft. Order it first, before the Benedict arrives, while the croissant is still at its best temperature.

Hand-torn flaky almond croissant filled with almond cream, served on a green floral plate at the best brunch in Fort Lauderdale

Drinks to start or extend the brunch

Iced Tiramisu Matcha Latte served in a green ceramic bowl-style cup, held by a guest seated in a green velvet bistro chair at Cafe Bastille

The Tiramisu Matcha Latte is served iced only, made with mascarpone, milk, and a ladyfinger. It sits between a specialty coffee drink and a small dessert course, which is exactly the energy a slow Saturday morning calls for. The mascarpone is what makes it taste like something intentional rather than another flavored matcha. It is a popular finish for guests building the best brunch in Fort Lauderdale around a proper Benedict centerpiece.


The Iced Latte is the order for the guest who wants espresso, ice, and milk without the additions. Made with the same espresso the team uses across the menu, it is the steady, no-fuss order that pairs well with any of the three Benedicts.


What guests are saying about Café Bastille Fort Lauderdale


Café Bastille Fort Lauderdale holds a 4.9-star rating on Google across 16,789 reviews, which for a brunch spot a few blocks off Las Olas is a substantial base of repeat traffic. What is consistent across reviews is less about superlatives and more about the same details coming up: the service on the patio, the food coming out the way it is supposed to, and the canal-side setting.


Krystal Love, a Local Guide with 49 reviews, wrote three months ago: "I've heard great things about this restaurant so I decided to give it a try. I definitely recommend getting on the waiting list as soon as possible because there was an hour wait." She noted the wait was worth it, which is the kind of comment that tells you exactly how the Saturday demand reads from inside the room.

Patricia Mas, a Local Guide with 13 reviews, wrote two months ago: "Barbara's service was top-notch! She was very attentive, kind, and patient with us. We are very grateful to her." Service is the second detail that comes up repeatedly across reviews, and it is one of the reasons the same guests circle back month after month.


Daniela Rendón, who left a review three months ago, wrote: "Everything was so perfect!! Haven't seen a friend in a while, and I can tell you, we chose the best spot ever to meet again. The place was beautiful. We ordered the breakfast croissant, and it was amazing." Her note about the setting echoes what most patio guests say after a first visit.


Getting to Café Bastille Fort Lauderdale and making a morning of it


Café Bastille Fort Lauderdale is at 704 SE 1st St in the Arts and Entertainment District of downtown Fort Lauderdale, along the Himmarshee Canal and a short walk from Las Olas Boulevard.


By car from I-95 and the beach


From I-95, take exit 27 for Broward Boulevard and head east. Turn right on Andrews Avenue heading south, then turn left on SE 1st St. The restaurant is a short distance on your left. From Fort Lauderdale Beach, head west on Las Olas Boulevard toward downtown, turn right on SE 8th Avenue, then turn left on SE 1st St. The drive takes about 10 to 15 minutes depending on Saturday morning traffic.

Cafe Bastille Fort Lauderdale exterior with olive green facade, signature daisy cart, and all-day brunch signage at 704 SE 1st St

Where to park near the restaurant


The closest public parking is the Riverwalk Center Garage at 150 SE 2nd St, around the corner from the cafe. Street metered parking is also available on the surrounding downtown blocks. Rates and availability are subject to change, so confirm before you go.


On foot from Las Olas and the Riverwalk


If you are already on Las Olas Boulevard, the cafe is roughly a 10-minute walk west toward SE 1st St. From the Riverwalk Fort Lauderdale path along the New River, it is a short walk north into the downtown grid. For the version of Fort Lauderdale brunch that pairs with a Las Olas morning walk, the Café Bastille breakfast guide near Las Olas covers the pairing in more detail.


Where to walk after brunch in downtown Fort Lauderdale


After the best brunch in Fort Lauderdale, Las Olas Boulevard is a short walk and works well in the late morning before the afternoon shopping crowd builds. Riverwalk Fort Lauderdale follows the New River and is the easiest waterfront stroll out of downtown. If the morning is pulling you back toward the water, Fort Lauderdale Beach and Las Olas Oceanside Park are about 15 minutes east by car. For the broader Fort Lauderdale dining and things-to-do scene, the Visit Lauderdale guide has more options for the rest of the day.


Frequently asked questions about the best brunch in Fort Lauderdale


Q: Where is the best brunch in Fort Lauderdale near me with a real eggs benedict menu?

A: Café Bastille Fort Lauderdale at 704 SE 1st St is the best brunch in Fort Lauderdale near me for a proper eggs benedict selection. The team runs three versions every day, Roasted Turkey, Smoked Salmon, and Country Ham, on a canal-side patio off Las Olas.


Q: What time does Café Bastille Fort Lauderdale open?

A: Café Bastille Fort Lauderdale opens at 8 a.m. every day. Monday through Friday it serves until 4 p.m. and on Saturday and Sunday until 5 p.m. The full menu, including all three Benedicts, runs throughout the day.


Q: Does Café Bastille Fort Lauderdale take reservations?

A: Café Bastille Fort Lauderdale is walk-in only every day of the week. Saturday and Sunday tend to pick up after 10 a.m., so arriving closer to opening gives the smoothest path to a canal-side patio table.


Q: Which eggs benedict at Café Bastille Fort Lauderdale should a first-time guest order?

A: The Roasted Turkey Benedict is the version most regulars name as the entry point. Brie cheese, avocado, tomato, and roasted turkey set it apart from the standard ham-and-hollandaise version, and the cilantro aioli underneath the hollandaise is the detail that holds the plate together.


Q: Is Café Bastille Fort Lauderdale a good brunch spot for a group?

A: Yes. The three Benedicts cover most appetites, and the Acai Bowl, Greek Yogurt Parfait, and Almond Croissant give the table lighter options for sharing. The canal-side patio is the seat to ask for if it is available when you arrive.


Q: Are the eggs at Café Bastille Fort Lauderdale organic?

A: Yes. The cafe exclusively uses cage-free organic eggs. The cooks also fry with beef tallow, use butter and extra virgin olive oil only, and source seed-oil-free non-dairy milks, with gluten-free bread available on request.


Plan your visit to the best brunch in Fort Lauderdale


A Saturday morning at Café Bastille Fort Lauderdale starts with the canal-side patio, a coffee or an iced latte, and one of three proper Benedicts that hold up against anything else downtown. Las Olas Boulevard is a short walk away when the meal is done, the Riverwalk runs along the New River for a longer stroll, and Fort Lauderdale Beach is a short drive east when the morning is heading that way. For the Café Bastille brunch experience more broadly, the full menu and all three Café Bastille locations are online.


For travelers building the Fort Lauderdale morning into a longer day, Visit Florida's Fort Lauderdale guide covers the broader area.


Café Bastille Fort Lauderdale

Address: 704 SE 1st St, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33301

Phone: +1 786-425-3575

Hours: Monday–Friday 8:00 a.m.–4:00 p.m. | Saturday–Sunday 8:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.

Hours subject to change; always confirm current hours on the Café Bastille Fort Lauderdale Google Business Profile.

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WE ARE HERE

OPERATION HOURS

DOWNTOWN MIAMI

248 SE 1st St. Miami, 33131

MIAMI BEACH

538 Washington Ave. Miami Beach, 33139

FORT LAUDERDALE

704 SE 1st Street Fort Lauderdale, 33301

WESTON

1660 Market Street Weston, 33326

Monday to Friday 8:00am - 4:00pm
Saturday & Sunday 8:00 am - 5:00pm
DJ every week-end in Downtown Miami 

from 11:30am to 4:30pm

CONTACT US 

786-425-3575
contact@cafebastilledowntown.com

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all guests must wear a top | if bathing suit, bottom is mandatory | footwear is required

we reserve the right to refuse service to individuals not adhering to our dress code policy, as it is essential for maintaining the atmosphere of our establishment. If you have any questions or concerns regarding our dress code policy, please don't hesitate to speak with a member of our staff, who will be happy to assist you.

 
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