Skip to content
Tampa Bay Business & Wealth

Tampa Bay Business & Wealth

Primary Menu
  • News
  • Real Estate
  • Retail
  • Sports
  • Policy
  • Tech
  • Insights
  • PodcastsWatch TBBW | Tampa Bay Business Videos, Interviews & Stories
  • Events
  • Magazine
  • About TBBW
    • Meet TBBW’s Team
    • Contact
    • Advertising with Tampa Bay Business & Wealth
Newsletter
  • Home
  • 2025
  • October
  • 1
  • Indian Rocks wine bar Wyne rises after storms

Indian Rocks wine bar Wyne rises after storms

When hurricanes ended Slyce, its owners reinvented themselves with Wyne, a wine bar built on resilience, rhythm and community.
Barbara Lynch November 27, 2025

Hurricanes Helene and Milton tore through Pinellas County in 2024. On the barrier islands, restaurants and bars faced the same choice: rebuild or close. For many, the cost left little choice.

For Jack Bennett and Suzanne Brown, it became an opportunity to reinvent themselves. The two spent 14 years building Slyce, their stone-fired pizza concept with locations in Indian Rocks Beach and St. Pete Beach. When the storms destroyed both, they chose to pivot. (Slyce’s Madeira Beach location, however, remains open and continues to serve loyal fans.)

On June 4, 2025, Bennett and Brown opened Wyne, a wine bar that blends coastal ease with continental style. They traded pizza ovens for curated vintages, creating a space that feels both sophisticated and welcoming.

READ: Clearwater’s Yo Mama’s Foods racks up 36,000 orders after GMA feature

Food, music and collaboration

The new chapter began with food but found harmony in music. Jazz musician Wayne Levy discovered general manager Emmitt’s spice rub, 1905 Bagby, through an online order. A connection formed, leading to Levy’s role at Wyne’s Sunday Jazz Brunch.

Friday nights bring another layer of rhythm, with John Feazell’s Motown sets pairing soul with vino in the intimate space.

Inside the kitchen, collaboration drives the menu. While Emmitt serves as the chef, owners Bennett and Brown, as well as the “Wynetenders,” contribute ideas for seasonal dishes. The result is food that feels rooted in community and crafted with precision.

Highlights include:

  • Poached on the Coast: a shrimp cake topped with a poached egg and Old Bay aioli
  • Spicy Cucumbers with Harissa
  • Sweet Heat Whipped Cheese with pistachios, oranges and Calabrian jam
  • Seasonal flatbreads like the Black and Bleu with steak, Gorgonzola, mushrooms and roasted peppers
  • Smoked Salmon Dip with cream cheese, dill, capers and pita chips
  • A celebratory Classic Brunch Board with breakfast favorites presented charcuterie-style
  • Crepes layered with cinnamon butter, fresh fruit and honey
Poached egg over a shrimp cake with Old Bay aioli, avocado slices and toasted bread.
Smoked salmon dip with cream cheese, dill, capers and red onion, served with cucumbers, crostini and flatbread.
Sweet Heat Whipped Cheese topped with oranges, pistachios and Calabrian jam, served with warm flatbread.

Wine, events and community

True to its name, Wyne’s wine program rotates often, offering bottles for both exploration and familiarity. Guests can also order to-go for beach picnics or sunset gatherings.

Programming extends beyond dining. Wine tastings, disco nights and “mimosas and macramé” workshops turn Wyne into a social hub. The venue’s social channels share details and keep regulars engaged.

READ: How Frank Fiume built i9 Sports and changed youth sports forever

A new chapter after the storm

Though the hurricanes silenced Slyce’s ovens, they could not erase its spirit. The hospitality and community that defined the pizzeria live on through Wyne.

Here, resilience pours into every glass and echoes through every live note, proving that the best establishments are never confined to walls but to the spirit they carry forward.

Stay Connected

Sign up for TBBW’s newsletter

Follow TBBW on social media

Read more TBBW stories

Post navigation

Previous: $187M luxury tower planned for Rocky Point waterfront
Next: A torch passed: Columbia’s fifth generation steps forward

Latest

Consultant selection begins for Sarasota downtown master plan 1

Consultant selection begins for Sarasota downtown master plan

March 27, 2026
Staffing costs rise in St. Petersburg as council weighs $2M increase 2

Staffing costs rise in St. Petersburg as council weighs $2M increase

March 27, 2026
Tampa entrepreneur Gary Hartfield enters mayor’s race 3

Tampa entrepreneur Gary Hartfield enters mayor’s race

March 27, 2026
Ritz-Carlton Tampa opens second tower on Bayshore Ritz-Carlton Tampa opens second tower on Bayshore 4

Ritz-Carlton Tampa opens second tower on Bayshore

March 26, 2026

Stay Connected

Facebook
X (Twitter)
YouTube
LinkedIn
Instagram

March Cover Story

Tampa Bay Business and Wealth Digital Magazine Cover Read

Read More

Hartfield,Gary

Tampa entrepreneur Gary Hartfield enters mayor’s race

Chuck Merlis March 27, 2026
Hartfield joins Tampa mayor race with focus on housing and small business.
Read More Read more about Tampa entrepreneur Gary Hartfield enters mayor’s race
BayCare to open first urgent care in Plant City BayCare Urgent Care facility exterior in Plant City with blue signage and parking lot

BayCare to open first urgent care in Plant City

March 25, 2026
Tampa startups say AI is changing how they hire businessman show virtual graphic of AI Technology

Tampa startups say AI is changing how they hire

March 23, 2026
Florida home insurance stabilizes as litigation drops 80%, insurer says Suburban Florida homes with tile roofs and palm trees in a residential neighborhood

Florida home insurance stabilizes as litigation drops 80%, insurer says

March 26, 2026

About TBBW

Tampa Bay Business & Wealth (TBBW) is the leading source of Tampa Bay business news, telling the stories behind the region’s biggest companies and the leaders shaping Tampa Bay’s economy.

We report on founders, CEOs and entrepreneurs whose decisions influence jobs, investment, development and long-term growth across the region.
Published daily online and monthly in print, TBBW delivers paywall free coverage with local context and editorial depth.

Our mission is to inform, explain and connect by putting people at the center of business reporting. We believe strong journalism helps business leaders make better decisions and helps communities understand how growth happens, who drives it and why it matters. Learn More

Newsletter

Subscribe to TBBW Newsletter

Stay Connected

Facebook
X (Twitter)
YouTube
LinkedIn
Instagram
  • 1901 Ulmerton Road, Suite 100
  • Clearwater 33762
  • (727)-860-8229

DIGITAL MAGAZINE

Tampa Bay Business and Wealth Digital Magazine Cover Open Digital Magazine
Copyright © 2026 All rights reserved. | MoreNews by AF themes.
Sign up for TBBW’s free newsletter!

Subscribe

* indicates required