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	<title>Steve's Everything Las Vegas &#187; Dining Guide</title>
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		<title>Dining Special: August 2005</title>
		<link>http://www.everythinglv.com/2005/08/05/dining-special-august-2005/</link>
		<comments>http://www.everythinglv.com/2005/08/05/dining-special-august-2005/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 05 Aug 2005 10:57:41 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>MrVegas98</dc:creator>
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Joe&#8217;s Seafood, Prime Steak &#38; Stone Crab brings Miami tradition to Las Vegas. By Ken White


Joe Weiss and his wife, Jennie, opened Joe&#8217;s Stone Crab in Miami in 1913, serving their signature dishes with stone crab claws from the Gulf of Mexico and Key lime pie on the front porch of their house.



The location moved [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
Joe&#8217;s Seafood, Prime Steak &#38; Stone Crab brings Miami tradition to Las Vegas. By Ken White
</p>
<p>
Joe Weiss and his wife, Jennie, opened Joe&#8217;s Stone Crab in Miami in 1913, serving their signature dishes with stone crab claws from the Gulf of Mexico and Key lime pie on the front porch of their house.
</p>
<p><span id="more-25"></span></p>
<p>
The location moved a few blocks down and the restaurant has continued serving its signature dishes from Oct. 15 through May 15, year-in an year-out.
</p>
<p>
The Icon restaurant company that owns Joe&#8217;s Stone Crab expanded to Chicago four years ago with an altered concept: more steaks and an expanded lineup of seafood.
</p>
<p>
Now the company brings Joe&#8217;s Seafood, Prime Steak &#38; Stone Crab to the Forum Shops at Caesars, 3500 Las Vegas Blvd. South.
</p>
<p>
The expanded Joe&#8217;s still serves the Weiss&#8217; signature mustard sauce with the stone crab, which is flown in daily (except Mondays) from Miami. The Las Vegas location gets some seafood items from the same purveyors as the restaurants in Miami and Chicago, while using local purveyors as well, says managing partner Michael Rotolo.
</p>
<p>
Plus the company has four fisheries of its own, including two in the Florida Keys and two on the Florida gulf coast.
</p>
<p>
&#8220;We&#8217;ve only found this species of stone crab in the Gulf of Mexico,&#8221; Rotolo says. &#8220;The sweet flavor of the meat makes it different, and the pinkish-orange hue when it&#8217;s cooked and the dark black pincers. Other types of crab are purple-brown, and without the sweetness.&#8221;
</p>
<p>
The Las Vegas location featuress a bar with four high-definition televisions; a patio; mahogany wood trim throughout; wood floors in the main dining room; the multimedia Boardroom for private dining and meetings; and an upstairs area that opens later this week for private parties.
</p>
<p>
Joe&#8217;s also has a 4,000-bottle wine storage room and an addition 3,000 stored in the kitchen.
</p>
<p>
While the wait staff is clad in tuxedos, the dress for customers is casual.
</p>
<p>
Joe&#8217;s is open daily for lunch and dinner from 11:30 a.m. to 11 p.m. Sundays through Thursdays and until midnight Fridays and Saturdays. Reservations are suggested (792-9222).
</p>
<p>
Following are dinner menu selections:
</p>
<p>
&#8226; Starters: Stone crabs (market price); spinach-stuffed mushrooms ($9.95); steamed black mussels ($10.95); shrimp and scallop ceviche ($10.95); fried calamari ($11.95); oysters Rockefeller ($12.95); jumbo shrimp cocktail ($14.95); and jumbo lump crab cake ($13.95).
</p>
<p>
&#8226; Soups and salads: Manhattan clam chowder ($5.95); stone crab bisque ($6.95); hearts of lettuce salad ($5.95); Joe&#8217;s all-greens salad ($6.95); Caesar salad ($8.95); chopped lettuce, tomato, onion and blue cheese ($11.95); vegetable chopped salad with crumbled blue cheese and creamy vinaigrette ($12.95); and seafood chopped salad with shrimp, scallops and crab ($16.95).
</p>
<p>
&#8226; Entrees: Seafood: Sauteed garlic gulf shrimp ($21.95); Joe&#8217;s Famous Scallops ($21.95); shrimp scampi with linguini ($21.95); stone crab Bolognese with fettuccini ($22.95); jumbo lump crab cakes ($27.95); 22-ounce grilled jumbo lobs ter tail (market price); crispy halibut fish and chips ($18.95); blackened mahi mahi ($21.95); broiled salmon au poivre ($22.95); grilled Florida grouper with tomato-cucumber relish ($24.95); crab-stuffed sole with lobster sauce ($25.95); grilled swordfish with roasted tomato vinaigrette ($24.95); garlic-herb crusted red snapper ($25.95); and ahi tuna ($26.95).
</p>
<p>
Chicken: Fried chicken, teriyaki chicken and broiled lemon-herb chicken breast ($15.95).
</p>
<p>
Steaks: Twin chopped tenderloin steaks with green peppers and onions ($15.95); veal cutlets ($21.95); grilled pork chops with caramelized onions ($24.95); filet mignon (eight-ounce, $28.95; 12-ounce, $34.95); 16-ounce rib-eye ($36.95); and 16-ounce New York strip ($38.95).
</p>
<p>
&#8226; Extras: Hash browns ($7.95); baked potato ($4.95); fried green tomatoes ($7.95); steamed asparagus with lemon-butter sauce ($8.95); garlic creamed spinach ($7.95); and rice pilaf ($7.95).
</p>
<p>
&#8226; Desserts: Key lime pie, Boston creme pie, chocolate fudge pie, banana cream pie with Foster sauce, coconut cream pie, apple pie a la mode and peanut butter pie with hot fudge ($6.95 each); and gold brick sundae and peppermint ice cream with hot fudge ($5.95 each).
</p>
<p>
http://www.reviewjournal.com/lvrj_home/2004/Nov-10-Wed-2004/living/25184478.html<br />
<br />Jimmy Buffett&#8217;s Margaritaville By Heidi Knapp Rinella
</p>
<p>
Pages from the Jimmy Buffett&#8217;s Margaritaville Our-Guests-Don&#8217;t-Have-a-Clue Training Manual:
</p>
<p>
When we arrived at the hostess&#8217; podium, she told us the wait would be at least an hour and a half. I actually wasn&#8217;t surprised, because they don&#8217;t take reservations, a convention of thick-necked men was in town, and, in my experience, thick-necked men tend to love places that sell burgers and beer and play beach music. If we had had a choice, we&#8217;d have moved on. But, as I&#8217;ve told you, this job has its shortcomings. One little problem: They were out of pagers. So she gave us a piece of paper and told us to come back in an hour for one. And I&#8217;m wondering, Geez, Jimmy, this is a high-volume place, and you&#8217;re kinda raking it in. How much do pagers cost, anyway? And if you tend to lose them because people decide they don&#8217;t want to wait an hour and a half after all, maybe you should install a box for pager drop-off, like other high-volume restaurants. If you still tend to lose a lot of pagers, see sentence beginning, &#8220;And I&#8217;m wondering, Jimmy&#8230;&#8221; above.
</p>
<p>
&#8226; We decided to relax in some comfortable chairs on the other side of the sprawling, fully stocked gift shop that, for your convenience, provides a place for you to browse for that hour and a half (and that you have to pass through in order to enter the restaurant). I had a hunch the restaurant and bar didn&#8217;t exactly use Riedel crystal, but still figured maybe they, like most other non-casino-owned casino restaurants, weren&#8217;t too keen about glasses walking out the door. I try to be a nice person, so I asked the hostess if it would be OK if we got drinks at the bar and took them to the chairs to wait.
</p>
<p>
&#8220;Sure,&#8221; she chirped. &#8220;This is Vegas. You can drink anywhere.&#8221; And while I was thinking that Metro might take a little exception to that statement, I also was thinking she&#8217;d totally zoned the question. But that, of course, was before I saw that everyone at the bar was drinking out of plastic cups or beer bottles. So I&#8217;m still thinking, but at this point it went like this: &#8220;Hmmm. Jimmy Buffett equals Florida Keys equals endangered coral reefs and, right in the neighborhood, an $8 billion Everglades restoration project, which equals environmentalists.&#8221; Even if<br />
<br />they recycle all of those plastic cups, that doesn&#8217;t seem very environmentally friendly. (See sentence that begins &#8220;And I&#8217;m wondering&#8221; above.) And I&#8217;m also wondering why the bartender didn&#8217;t ask if I wanted it frozen or on the rocks. And while $6.50 for a weak Margarita isn&#8217;t bad by Strip standards, it is when it&#8217;s for a weak Margarita in a plastic cup. (See sentence beginning, &#8220;And I&#8217;m wondering&#8221; above.) So here&#8217;s a little piece of advice: If you do choose to wait an hour and a half, use the time to walk down to the Westward Ho, where you can get a weak Margarita in a plastic cup for 99 cents.
</p>
<p>
&#8226; Back we went in about 45 minutes for a pager, at the second hostess stand because you have to do this sort of yellow-brick-road thing before you can get a seat. This second hostess looked at our slip of paper and coolly told us only 30 minutes had passed. And while I was wondering why that mattered and again, why they didn&#8217;t have enough pagers, I also was wondering if she is a product of Clark County schools because she clearly couldn&#8217;t do the math. She did give us a pager after we promised we wouldn&#8217;t do it again.
</p>
<p>
&#8226; When our pager went off, we showed up and identified ourselves as (insert made-up name). Another hostess picked up menus, looked at us and walked away. Did she want us to follow her? Heck if we knew, although we did it anyway because we were hungry and the pager wasn&#8217;t that appetizing. Maybe she could&#8217;ve said, &#8220;Right this way, please.&#8221; Or &#8220;I&#8217;ll show you to your table.&#8221; Or even &#8220;Follow me.&#8221; Or anything but &#8221; &#8220;. When<br />
<br />we arrived at our table, she said, &#8220;Here.&#8221; Not, &#8220;Will this table be all right?&#8221; Not &#8220;Is this OK?&#8221; Just &#8220;Here.&#8221; And then, &#8220;(name withheld) will be your waitress.&#8221; And I&#8217;m withholding the waitress&#8217; name here only because she turned into a fairly OK server once things quieted down a bit, after starting out like a cur.
</p>
<p>
A cur. There&#8217;s a good word.
</p>
<p>
Yes, they were busy. Then again, they&#8217;re probably always busy, because there are a hell of a lot of people who come to this town wanting nothing so much as to waste away in Margaritaville. So they need to get used to it. And that&#8217;s not even considering that being busy is not an excuse for blowing out your service standards.
</p>
<p>
Oh, the food? I can&#8217;t seem to spell the sound-effect I&#8217;d use, but it translates to something along the lines of &#8220;OK.&#8221; The Cheeseburger in Paradise ($8.95) was nothing special &#8212; more like a Cheeseburger in an Overcommercialized Restaurant &#8212; but it was OK, and the onion rings on the side ($1 extra if you get them instead of fries) were really good &#8212; crisp-crusted and not greasy.
</p>
<p>
Volcano nachos ($8.95) was a huge pile with lots of jalape&#241;os and some pretty spicy chili, plus guacamole, sour cream, tomatoes, scallions and a bunch of other stuff. Huge, hearty and a sure bet with the thick-necked men, I&#8217;m guessing.
</p>
<p>
Jamaica Mistaka Wings ($7.95) didn&#8217;t live up to their name, which is a good thing because it breaks every rule in the Restaurateur Common Sense Dish-Naming Guidebook. They were nice and meaty, and their habanero-honey sauce had a decent depth of flavor that belied the fact that after a couple, the fire in them would sneak up and kick us in the butt. Tricky.
</p>
<p>
Rudy&#8217;s Barbecue Ribs ($15.95 for the half-rack we chose, or $18.95 for a full) failed to deliver on the promised &#8220;secret spice blend with Dominican-inspired guava barbecue sauce.&#8221; We don&#8217;t know who Rudy is, but he needs to get out more. I wondered if the Dominicans in question were Dominican nuns.
</p>
<p>
And finally, the Mango Creme Brulee ($5.95). Considering the ubiquitousness of creme brulee these days, pretty much everybody has figured out how<br />
<br />to caramelize the sugar so the custard doesn&#8217;t carry the consistency of ground glass. Pretty much everybody except those who work at<br />
<br />Margaritaville.
</p>
<p>
So, OK, I know I&#8217;ve been mincing words; what did I really think? That the atmosphere is pretty cool, with its boat booths and airplane-fuselage<br />
<br />booths and amazing views of the Strip. That I don&#8217;t get why, when they had a band in the lounge being shown upstairs on closed-circuit TV, they<br />
<br />had different music coming out of the speakers. That it&#8217;s not a bad place for a burger and is probably a place everybody should experience once,<br />
<br />but no way is it worth and hour-and-a-half wait.
</p>
<p>
That I now know what a pirate does at 40 (or, actually, 57): He counts his money. reviewjournal.com &#8212; Neon &#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8211; BOA Steakhouse takes<br />
<br />new look at steakhouse decor. By Ken White
</p>
<p>
BOA Steakhouse doesn&#8217;t look like the standard Las Vegas steakhouse.
</p>
<p>
The newly opened restaurant on the third level of the new addition inside the Forum Shops at Caesars skipped the dark-wood and near-dark lighting<br />
<br />for an open dining room with 800-year-old driftwood as the centerpiece, along with a patio off the dining room and another soon to open on the<br />
<br />second level of the Forum Shops, both with a view of the Strip.
</p>
<p>
Corporate executive chef Josh Thomsen says the restaurant gets all of its steaks from Kansas City and are cooked bone-in with seasonal garnishes<br />
<br />added.
</p>
<p>
A part of the Innovative Dining company&#8217;s lineup of restaurants, other BOA Steakhouse locations are in Hollywood and Santa Monica, Calif. The<br />
<br />company also owns Sushi Roku at the Forum Shops and in Hollywood, Santa Monica and Pasadena, Calif.
</p>
<p>
Most of the restaurant&#8217;s signature dishes are in all locations, Thomsen says. Differences in the menu at each location are few, but &#8220;here we can<br />
<br />get away with larger portions and more cream&#8221; in the dishes, notes Thomsen, who was formerly chef at Nob Hill in the MGM Grand and Simon&#8217;s at the<br />
<br />Hard Rock Hotel.
</p>
<p>
All dishes are made in-house, according to Thomsen, and the emphasis is on fresh and top-quality products. &#8220;With the meat, we wanted to go<br />
<br />all-out,&#8221; he says. &#8220;If somebody has a better rib-eye, I&#8217;ll get it from that purveyor. I like to think that when you say `steakhouse,&#8217; we fall<br />
<br />into the innovative dining room category.&#8221;
</p>
<p>
BOA Steakhouse is open from 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Sundays through Thursdays, and 11 a.m. to midnight Fridays and Saturdays.
</p>
<p>
&#8226; Starters: Steak tartare with capers, evo and toasted croutons ($14); ahi tuna and hamachi with a black radish salad, mustard oil and yuzu<br />
<br />vinaigrette ($16); Dungeness crab cake with shaved fennel, frisee, organic watercress and mustard aioli ($14); goat cheese beignet with<br />
<br />oven-roasted ratatouille and basil evo ($10); black truffle nachos made with Yukon Gold potato chips and imported truffle cheese ($13); escargot<br />
<br />served with garlic, butter and parsley ($13); and seared Hudson Valley foie gras with caramelized Granny Smith apples, brioche and<br />
<br />huckleberry-balsamic reduction ($18).
</p>
<p>
&#8226; Soups and salads: Caramelized onion soup ($8); BOA chop chop salad with artichokes, chickpeas, olives, tomatoes, toasted pine nuts and grilled<br />
<br />vegetables ($10); Sausalito Springs watercress salad with endive, caramelized walnuts, Pear Point Reyes blue cheese and champagne ($12); the<br />
<br />Wedge, featuring iceberg lettuce, vine-ripened tomato and Point Reyes blue cheese dressing ($9); and Caesar salad, made to order tableside ($11).
</p>
<p>
&#8226; Entrees: Bone-in filet mignon ($35), petite filet mignon ($27), Kobe filet mignon (market price), 35-day dry-aged New York strip ($42), bone-in<br />
<br />rib-eye ($35), flat iron steak ($32) and porterhouse ($40). All steak selections come with a choice of rub and crust, sauce or mustard. Among the<br />
<br />rubs and crusts are tri peppercorn, blackened, herbed butter, blue cheese crust and foie gras crust (add $4). Sauces include cabernet,<br />
<br />Worcestershire, green peppercorn, chimichurri, bearnaise, creamy horseradish, caramel soy and ginger and the chef&#8217;s special J-1 sauce. The<br />
<br />mustards include whole grain, Dijon, horseradish, violette or green peppercorn.
</p>
<p>
Other entrees include salmon cooked on a cedar plank with fingerling potatoes, Castroville artichokes and sweet cherry tomatoes ($27); roasted<br />
<br />free-range chicken breast with broccoli rabe, dried apricot and pine nuts ($26); halibut T-bone with sweet pepper confit, chorizo, rice beans and<br />
<br />parsley ($28); jumbo prawns, scampi style, with white wine, garlic, lemon, parsley and butter ($32); grilled ahi tuna with roasted shiitake<br />
<br />mushrooms, baby bok choy and wasabi potatoes ($32); fried free-range chicken with truffled macaroni and cheese ($27); and linguine with<br />
<br />littleneck clams steamed with white wine, roasted garlic, chili flakes and Italian parsley ($20).
</p>
<p>
&#8226; Extras: Sauteed seasonal mushrooms, grilled jumbo asparagus, balsamic grilled red onions, roasted squash and sage brown butter, bamboo steamed<br />
<br />vegetables, broccoli rabe with dried apricot, chili and pine nuts ($8 each); and fingerling potatoes, potato gratin, homemade crispy fries,<br />
<br />truffle macaroni and cheese, roasted garlic whipped potatoes and wasabi whipped potatoes ($7 each).
</p>
<p>
&#8226; Desserts: New York-style cheesecake, seasonal fruit and berry cobbler with cr?me fr&#8240;iche ice cream, cinnamon sugar doughnut holes with warm<br />
<br />dipping sauce, vanilla bean cr?me brl&#233;e, warm chocolate brownie sundae, chocolate hazelnut crunch bars with raspberries, ice cream sandwiches,<br />
<br />warm apple tart with a cider reduction and cinnamon ice cream, and a selection of ice cream and sorbet ($9 each). reviewjournal.com &#8212; Living:<br />
<br />APPETIZERS &#8212;&#8212;&#8212;- Mesa Grill by Heidi Knapp Rinella
</p>
<p>
So there we were at Bobby Flay&#8217;s new Mesa Grill at Caesars Palace, and these were virtually the first words to come from our waitress&#8217; mouth &#8211;<br />
<br />after, maybe, &#8220;hello&#8221;:
</p>
<p>
&#8220;Would you like some bottled water for the table? We have Saratoga sparkling or flat.&#8221;
</p>
<p>
And I&#8217;m thinking, odd, that brand-new kitchen and no tap water available?
</p>
<p>
Ah, geez, Bobby. Maybe this is still the drill in New York, but high-end Las Vegas restaurants gave it up a long time ago.
</p>
<p>
Restaurant critics think of it as the great water scam, and many of us around the country railed on it for a while, until pretty much driving it<br />
<br />back into the ground (source of all of that water &#8212; or not, as the case may be). Much of the pique stemmed from the fact that there&#8217;s a huge<br />
<br />markup (up to 600 percent in some cases) on bottled water in most restaurants, and there was a time when some of them strong-armed customers to<br />
<br />&#8220;choose&#8221; one, the customer erroneously thinking that it would be included with dinner or acquiescing rather than to be thought cheap. Then the<br />
<br />server would fetch another when the first ran dry, without asking (but while charging, of course) &#8212; something they&#8217;d never do with any other<br />
<br />beverage that didn&#8217;t involve free refills. To quote a Texas oilman I once overheard tell a waiter: &#8221; `Evian&#8217; is `naive&#8217; spelled backward.&#8221;
</p>
<p>
My own feeling is this sort of thing is an insult. I like bottled water, even have a few favorite brands (and no, Saratoga isn&#8217;t among them) and<br />
<br />I know that nearly all restaurants sell it. So if I wanted a bottle, I could go ahead and ask for it, now couldn&#8217;t I? But if wine is my primary<br />
<br />beverage with dinner, I might not want more than few sips of water. Then there&#8217;s the fact that many high-end restaurants filter their tap water<br />
<br />these days. (Except that, judging from the taste, Mesa Grill isn&#8217;t among them. Whoops.)
</p>
<p>
Then our waitress asked if we&#8217;d been in before. Well, no; the restaurant&#8217;s only been open since October. Well, she said, the chef is Bobby Flay,<br />
<br />and this is his first restaurant outside New York, and he&#8217;s in the kitchen right now!
</p>
<p>
Wow!
</p>
<p>
OK, so maybe she thought we&#8217;d just wandered in, had never heard of Flay, and didn&#8217;t know Jack &#8212; or rather, Bobby. And, maybe that we didn&#8217;t know<br />
<br />celebrity chefs were pretty common in Las Vegas these days. Whoops again.
</p>
<p>
It was a new experience; no server in a celebrity-chef restaurant has ever pointed out that the guy was in the kitchen at that very moment &#8211;<br />
<br />even when I knew for a fact that he or she was. Somehow I can&#8217;t imagine it happening in the restaurants of those who are a little more, shall we<br />
<br />say, low-profile. Heck, most of the staffs tend to keep quiet, I&#8217;m assuming because they want customers to think that celebrity chefs are in all<br />
<br />of their kitchens all the time. (And some of them do manage that, though that&#8217;s for another time.)
</p>
<p>
And then, minutes after she told a neighboring table that Flay was in the kitchen, I saw him walk out the door, at 9 o&#8217;clock, sans chef&#8217;s whites.<br />
<br />Whoops again.
</p>
<p>
So by this time I&#8217;m thinking this guy&#8217;s Mr. Showmanship chops would embarrass Liberace and the food&#8217;s going to put me to sleep. But then I looked<br />
<br />more closely at the menu, and saw the likes of jerk-spiced bluenose snapper with papaya-black-bean salsa and black-eyed pea risotto. Holey moley;<br />
<br />talk about creative fusion &#8212; and I could see it all working, although an aversion to the perfumy nature of papaya prompted me to move on.
</p>
<p>
How about a grilled venison chop with cranberry-cascabel pepper chile sauce and sweet potato-chipotle gratin ($37)? &#8220;Farm-raised, of course,&#8221; our<br />
<br />waitress said, and yes, of course (hunters not being the most reliable of purveyors), but that&#8217;s a good thing with venison, which in the wild can<br />
<br />be a little too lean, sometimes just a little too gamy.
</p>
<p>
This venison was moist and had just enough of the characteristic flavor, which was at once complemented by the cranberry and brightened by the<br />
<br />cascabel. Sweet potatoes and chipotle? Who knew? These were great flavor notes that did more for sweet potatoes than all those horrendous<br />
<br />&#8220;candied&#8221; versions ever could.
</p>
<p>
Elements of surprise and great flavor notes are Flay&#8217;s way, it seems. Same theme, different song in the roasted pumpkin soup ($10) with<br />
<br />pomegranate and pecan relish. Nice textural contrasts as well. Pumpkin soups and same-vein butternut squash soups are seasonal all-over-the-place<br />
<br />things, but never have I tasted one this surprising &#8212; and this good.
</p>
<p>
Nice touches in the cornmeal-crusted oysters ($16), too. I don&#8217;t know how the heck Flay manages this one, but the oysters had both a crisp,<br />
<br />substantial (but not overly so) crust, while inside they were plump and faintly crunchy in that only-the-freshest-oysters way, and bore the<br />
<br />flavor of the sea. Accenting them further was a nicely balanced sweet/hot sauce. I even liked the fact that they balanced the shells on little<br />
<br />beds of cornmeal instead of the classic rock salt, which can get a little messy.
</p>
<p>
We felt compelled to try a Flay classic, and so chose the coffee-spice-rubbed rotisserie filet mignon ($34), which is prepared on the big<br />
<br />circular grill that dominates the tiered dining room. I can&#8217;t say I detected any coffee flavor, try as I might, but the rub did create a nice<br />
<br />crust on the meat, which was exceptionally juicy as a result. A wild mushroom-ancho chile sauce and horseradish potato gratin rounded things out<br />
<br />quite well.
</p>
<p>
Ditto for a vanilla-black currant swirl parfait with spicy strawberry caramel sauce ($12), which was a little tough to access with the spoon<br />
<br />provided, but worth digging for.
</p>
<p>
Also rounding things out nicely: a basket that contained wonderful blue-corn muffins, an interesting (and very good) cranberry-sesame bread, and<br />
<br />ciabatta that was OK but could&#8217;ve been a little crustier. There was also a margarita list (margaritas going nicely with spicy, except that I want<br />
<br />to stress that this food is not gratuitously spicy), with around 10 specialty margaritas, 48 tequilas &#8212; even a flight of Del Maguey Single<br />
<br />Village Mescals.
</p>
<p>
There is a decent enough wine list as well, although the 2002 Seghesio Zinfandel ($40) we ordered from the list turned out to be a 2003 when it<br />
<br />was delivered.
</p>
<p>
Whoops again.
</p>
<p>
So the front of the house at Mesa Grill could use a little work &#8212; to root out those vestiges of New York state of mind and smooth out those<br />
<br />snags.
</p>
<p>
The back of the house, however, couldn&#8217;t be better. reviewjournal.com &#8212; Neon: RESTAURANT REVIEW: Mesa Grill &#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8211; Palms&#8217; Little Buddha<br />
<br />offers Asian-California fusion that works. By Max Jacobson
</p>
<p>
If atmosphere were the sole consideration for visiting a restaurant, Little Buddha at the Palms would never have an empty table. This is a most<br />
<br />wondrous place to look at, and no knock on the food here, a pan-Asian food-fest to beat the band.
</p>
<p>
If you&#8217;ve never stepped inside, Little Buddha evokes&#8212;like its prototype, Buddha Bar in Paris, and several of its predecessors, (most notably San<br />
<br />Francisco&#8217;s Betelnut)&#8212;the esprit de corps of &#8217;30s Shanghai, when everything was tinged in crimson and celadon, a page from Bertolucci&#8217;s script<br />
<br />for The Last Emperor.
</p>
<p>
If all this sounds somewhat ersatz in the Vegas context, consider that this looks a lot more real than the fa&#231;ade of Manhattan at New York, New<br />
<br />York, or the scaled down La Tour Eiffel at Paris.
</p>
<p>
At the front podium, there are dozens of statues of the Buddha himself, silver things sitting in square red boxes. The main dining room is an<br />
<br />enormous rotunda, with a tented ceiling from which a giant, almost octopus-like chandelier is suspended. The entire room glows faint red, and<br />
<br />there are sweeping red banquettes to sit on, or seashell-shaped booths to handle a larger number of guests.
</p>
<p>
Throughout the front room, long, cylindrical, jade-green shades hang down, with gold tassels on their bottoms. Above the entrance to the larger<br />
<br />back dining room is a statue of Buddha, a giant, foreboding thing that looks as if it had been lifted from a Thai temple.
</p>
<p>
It&#8217;s clear that no expense has been spared. Tabletops are lacquered an onyx black, and there is a retro-looking bar with a backlit top,<br />
<br />embellished with portraits of Chinese children, resembling faded, sepia-hued images from a photo album. The only modern touch is a selection of<br />
<br />soft jazz playing constantly on the sound system. If you like the music here, you can buy it. The original Paris Buddha Bar markets a collection<br />
<br />of CDs.
</p>
<p>
If you are like most people who dine here, you&#8217;ll probably start things off with one of the interesting cocktails, such as the Fuji Tea, a<br />
<br />surprisingly refreshing drink made with gin, rum, Midori, and of all things, Sierra Mist; or a martini-like Sweet Buddha Love, which contains<br />
<br />everything but the kitchen wok.
</p>
<p>
When Little Buddha opened, I thought much of the food a bit sweet. But the new chef, German Edgar Theisen, has improved the kitchen considerably,<br />
<br />and now I like the food here more than ever.
</p>
<p>
The sushi bar is a dependable performer, even though Theisen isn&#8217;t working there. All the usual suspects are on hand: spicy tuna roll, edamame<br />
<br />soy beans, fatty tuna, yellowtail and fresh-water eel, to name a few, and a variety of creative specialty rolls, as well.
</p>
<p>
The appetizer menu is interesting and intelligent, and though press releases describe this place as classic Chinese with French touches, that is<br />
<br />more the case at Buddha Bar in Paris than here. I&#8217;d call Theisen&#8217;s food California fusion with swatches of China, Hawaii and the rest of Asia,<br />
<br />especially Japan, and even Korea. It&#8217;s mostly all good, anyway.
</p>
<p>
My favorite appetizers exhibit eclectic tendencies. Wok-fried calamari and shrimp, both nicely battered, come with a Vietnamese sweet-and-sour<br />
<br />dipping sauce. Chinese chicken salad uses Napa cabbage, a few types of fried noodles to vary the texture, lots of shredded white and dark<br />
<br />chicken, and perfect amounts of sesame oil and soy.
</p>
<p>
Steamed shrimp dumplings, a take on the Cantonese dim sum dish, ha gow, deviate from the program thanks to a nice lobster-miso sauce. The one<br />
<br />appetizer that didn&#8217;t work was the crispy chicken spring rolls with sweet chili sauce. The rolls came to the table oily and overfried.
</p>
<p>
Entr&#233;es are all over the map, too, and not quite as consistent as the appetizers or sushi. A wok-fried &#8220;kalbi&#8221;-style beef does not employ short<br />
<br />ribs&#8212;which kalbi means in Korean&#8212;but a lesser cut of beef, and the meat wasn&#8217;t sizzling or fragrant with sesame oil or spices as it should be in<br />
<br />a Korean barbecue establishment.
</p>
<p>
But kasuyaki-marinated salmon with chilled soba noodles is terrific, as is Chinese roasted half-duck with star anise-mango gastrique, a beautiful<br />
<br />marriage of East and West.
</p>
<p>
I&#8217;d also give high marks to a very Thai-tasting red-fire curry shrimp with rice noodles in a stir-fry, and a simple grilled pork chop with spicy<br />
<br />ginger pineapple relish. Chinese? Nah.
</p>
<p>
Another bonus to dining here are the good desserts, a tough hill to climb at authentic Asian restaurants. Little Buddha has wonderful sweets,<br />
<br />starting from the light, excellent sorbets and a wonderful caramelized lemon tart that is more like a lemon-flavored cr&#232;me br&#251;l&#233;e, to the more<br />
<br />substantial, a fine French-apple crumble and liquid-centered chocolate cake with good vanilla ice cream.
</p>
<p>
You get all this, and Buddha too. Oh, and don&#8217;t forget to clap your hands three times before you order, like a properly respectful Buddhist.<br />
<br />http://www.lasvegasweekly.com/2005/03/10/taste.html &#8212;&#8212;&#8212; Playing with fire There&#8217;s a rodizio rumble in the Rumjungle
</p>
<p>
BY AL MANCINI
</p>
<p>
If you&#8217;re anything like me, the first things that come to mind when you think of Rumjungle at Mandalay Bay are probably pulsating music and<br />
<br />scantily clad women shaking their asses on the catwalk behind the bar. But while the place may be best known to a lot of locals as a nightclub,<br />
<br />it&#8217;s also a restaurant open for lunch and dinner seven days a week. And while the club isn&#8217;t exactly my idea of a good time, the food is worth<br />
<br />the trip.
</p>
<p>
The house specialty at Rumjungle is the Fire Pit, a take on the Brazilian tradition of rodizio, where diners indulge in a variety of meat brought<br />
<br />to their tables on skewers. There are a handful of all-you-can-eat rodizio places here in town in various price ranges &#8212; but at $39.95 per<br />
<br />adult, Rumjungle&#8217;s is pretty close to the top of the food chain in both price and quality. There are a total of eight types of meat included. But<br />
<br />while most rodizio places offer fairly basic rotisserie versions of their various meats, every offering at Rumjungle features unique and<br />
<br />delicious seasonings that set it apart from the competition.
</p>
<p>
The Angus beef is prepared with a sugarcane, guava and caramelized onion glaze. The ahi tuna is marinated in mango and rum, and coated with<br />
<br />jalapenos, peach and passion fruit. The glaze on the turkey is made with mangos and habaneros, while one of the varieties of chicken comes coated<br />
<br />in pineapple-rum teriyaki sauce. There&#8217;s also jerk chicken cooked in chipotle-guava barbecue sauce and wrapped in bacon, mai-tai cured salmon and<br />
<br />chorizo specially made.
</p>
<p>
But my favorite course on the fire-pit menu is slow-roasted pulled pork with banana-chipotle ketchup served on sea salt-crusted tostones. If you<br />
<br />order the Fire Pit, you also get a nice variety of side dishes, including Peruvian salad, two types of rice, two varieties of beans and fried<br />
<br />plantains &#8212; but most of those only serve to divert valuable stomach space from the meats.
</p>
<p>
The Fire Pit at Rumjungle is good enough that I could eat there regularly without feeling the need to sample anything else. But the rest of the<br />
<br />menu has plenty of choices tempting enough to lure you away from the signature meal. Appetizers include conch fritters with banana-chipotle<br />
<br />ketchup ($9.75), ahi tuna spring rolls with pineapple-avocado salsa, and seared sea scallops with Thai red curry gazpacho and cucumber sweet<br />
<br />pepper slaw ($16). The entr&#233;e choices range from salmon served with green poblano chile cake, pineapple-mango salsa and sugarcane butter sauce<br />
<br />($21) to prosciutto-wrapped pork tenderloin with mango chutney, vanilla bean mashed potatoes, grain mustard and mango glaze ($25). On one of my<br />
<br />recent visits, a friend had a large portion of seared ahi tuna served over ratatouille and noodles in a delicious sweet chili sauce ($29) that<br />
<br />was just as good as anything in my all-you-can-eat deal.
</p>
<p>
The staff at Rumjungle is friendly, and the food with the Fire Pit comes fast and furious. There&#8217;s a bit of the problem with the fact that after<br />
<br />the first time that each course is brought to your table, it can be tough to get someone to return with a second helping of the dishes you most<br />
<br />enjoyed. However, I didn&#8217;t find that all that annoying.
</p>
<p>
My only real problem with eating at Rumjungle is the d&#233;cor. The place has the feel of a hectic nightclub, and all of the water and fire that<br />
<br />might make it a fun place to dance at midnight are a little distracting when you&#8217;re trying to eat. In fact, my wife had to switch seats during<br />
<br />one recent visit because staring at the huge wall of water across from our table was making her nauseous.
</p>
<p>
The d&#233;cor is also cheapened a bit by the two monstrous TV screens that were running ESPN&#8217;s coverage of Texas Hold &#8216;Em the last time I was there.<br />
<br />But none of that would be enough to keep me away the next time I&#8217;m craving meat.
</p>
<p>
Rumjungle 3950 Las Vegas Blvd. S. In Mandalay Bay 702-632-7408 http://www.lvcitylife.com/articles/2005/03/17/dining_out/dining.txt</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Everything Las Vegas: Dining Special June 2005</title>
		<link>http://www.everythinglv.com/2005/06/08/everything-las-vegas-dining-special-june-2005/</link>
		<comments>http://www.everythinglv.com/2005/06/08/everything-las-vegas-dining-special-june-2005/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 08 Jun 2005 23:19:28 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>MrVegas98</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Dining Guide]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[
Asia gets a face-lift and transforms into Ming&#8217;s Table
By Ken White


Harrah&#8217;s popular Chinese restaurant, Asia, has been transformed into Ming&#8217;s Table.


But, other than the name change, a d cor makeover and a tweaked menu, diners may not know the difference between the two.


&#8220;Our intent was to make Ming&#8217;s Table a little less intimidating for diners, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
Asia gets a face-lift and transforms into Ming&#8217;s Table<br />
<br />By Ken White
</p>
<p>
Harrah&#8217;s popular Chinese restaurant, Asia, has been transformed into Ming&#8217;s Table.
</p>
<p>
But, other than the name change, a d cor makeover and a tweaked menu, diners may not know the difference between the two.
</p>
<p>
&#8220;Our intent was to make Ming&#8217;s Table a little less intimidating for diners, more casual,&#8221; says Tim Bowen, director of culinary operations at Harrah&#8217;s Las Vegas, 3475 Las Vegas Blvd. South.
</p>
<p><span id="more-8"></span></p>
<p>
The room chef is the same &#8212; Winston Chung &#8212; and even the number of seats is<br />
<br />maintained &#8212; 90.
</p>
<p>
&#8220;The food here before was great, and it&#8217;s still great,&#8221; Bowen says. &#8220;We put a<br />
<br />few things on the menu with a broader appeal. But the same things are selling<br />
<br />as before.&#8221;
</p>
<p>
Ming&#8217;s Table also offers diners a Chinese menu containing more items of an<br />
<br />authentic nature, such as bird&#8217;s nest with seafood soup ($60 per ounce),<br />
<br />jellyfish with pork sausage ($24.99); and live giant clam sashimi ($48 per pound).
</p>
<p>
Those items are aimed more at the resort&#8217;s high-end Chinese players, Bowen<br />
<br />says.
</p>
<p>
Ming&#8217;s Table is open from 11:30 a.m. to 11 p.m. Sundays through Thursdays and<br />
<br />11:30 a.m. to 2 a.m. Fridays and Saturdays.
</p>
<p>
Starters: Vegetable spring rolls with sweet and sour sauce ($5.99); crab<br />
<br />Rangoon with crab meat and cream cheese in a crispy won ton shell ($6.99); roast<br />
<br />pork with Asian barbecue sauce ($6.99); wok-fried pot stickers ($7.99); minced<br />
<br />chicken lettuce wraps ($7.99); tempura fried rock shrimp with sweet and sour<br />
<br />and tempura sauces ($8.99); and tempura soft-shell crab with sweet and sour and<br />
<br />tempura sauces ($8.99).
</p>
<p>
Soups: Chinese vegetarian soup ($4.99); cream of corn soup with minced<br />
<br />chicken ($4.99); Hong Kong won ton soup with pork- and shrimp-stuffed won ton,<br />
<br />sliced chicken, barbecued pork, straw mushrooms and bok choy ($5.99); and noodle<br />
<br />soup with a choice of beef, chicken, roast pork, fish cake or won ton ($8.99).
</p>
<p>
Entrees: Shark&#8217;s fin soup with crab meat ($28); Peking duck ($58); walnut<br />
<br />shrimp ($22); sliced abalone ($48); steamed live spotted prawns with garlic paste<br />
<br />(seasonal price); whole live Dungeness crab (seasonal price); pad Thai<br />
<br />($12.99); supreme lo mein with chicken, beef and shrimp ($12.99); green pepper steak<br />
<br />($12.99); Mongolian beef ($12.99); beef and broccoli ($12.99); kung pao<br />
<br />chicken ($11.99); ginger chicken with broccoli ($10.99); roast duck ($13.99);<br />
<br />braised pork with baby eggplant ($11.99); pork chop with Mandarin sauce ($11.99);<br />
<br />kung pao shrimp and scallops ($13.99); Szechwan ocean shrimp ($13.99); steamed<br />
<br />salmon with ginger soy sauce ($13.99); barbecued pork fried rice ($9.99).
</p>
<p>
Extras: Yang chow fried rice with roast pork, shrimp, lettuce, spring onion<br />
<br />and egg ($10.99); Buddha&#8217;s vegetarian feast ($5.99); and ma pao tofu with<br />
<br />braised pickled vegetables, spring onions and tofu ($5.99).
</p>
<p>
Desserts: Mandarin orange cheesecake, fresh fruit plate, fried banana with<br />
<br />vanilla bean ice cream and a selection of house made ice creams and sorbets<br />
<br />($5.99 each).<br />
<br />reviewjournal.com &#8212; Living &#8211; APPETIZERS<br />
<br />&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-<br />
<br />Buffet Review: Gold Coast Ports O&#8217;Call<br />
<br />By Rick Garman
</p>
<p>
As even the formerly inexpensive buffets on The Strip get more and more<br />
<br />pricey, with the average dinner check running around $20, there&#8217;s little choice but<br />
<br />to head elsewhere for the kind of high-quality, low-cost buffet that you used<br />
<br />to be able to get on Las Vegas Blvd. Luckily, you don&#8217;t have to go very far.<br />
<br />The Gold Coast is located on Flamingo Road, about a mile and a half west of<br />
<br />the intersection where you&#8217;ll find Bellagio and Caesars Palace. You know where<br />
<br />The Rio and The Palms are? Gold Coast is right there too, operating in relative<br />
<br />obscurity in the shadow of its higher priced neighbors.
</p>
<p>
Walk inside and you&#8217;ll find all of the ingredients of a successful locals&#8217;<br />
<br />style casino &#8211; low-limit gaming, low-cost rooms, and lots of affordable<br />
<br />restaurants including the Ports O&#8217;Call Buffet.
</p>
<p>
Done with a subtle ships at sea theme, the buffet has several &#8220;regions,&#8221;<br />
<br />each themed to a different cuisine from around the globe. There&#8217;s Mexican,<br />
<br />Chinese, Italian, American, and salads. I&#8217;m not sure what country salads are<br />
<br />supposed to represent, but let&#8217;s not get crazy with the details here.
</p>
<p>
A big seafood section (love those shrimp and crab legs), a carving section,<br />
<br />and a fully-stocked dessert station round out the offerings.
</p>
<p>
There&#8217;s nothing you can find here that you can&#8217;t find at another buffet.<br />
<br />People looking for adventurous food choices will be disappointed, but it has all<br />
<br />of the traditional elements and a couple of perks. For instance the carving<br />
<br />station offers up full rotisserie chickens, not just a hunk carved off to go<br />
<br />with your mashed potatoes.
</p>
<p>
Being the big, fat, giant pig that I am, I sampled a little bit of everything<br />
<br />&#8211; from pizza to potstickers, beef fajitas to lamb chops. Everything I tasted<br />
<br />was fresh, flavorful, warm when it was supposed to be and cool when it wasn&#8217;t.<br />
<br />Again, the food won&#8217;t win any epicurean awards anytime soon but it&#8217;s all<br />
<br />solid, hearty, and well-prepared.
</p>
<p>
Granted you can get solid, hearty, and well-prepared food at almost any<br />
<br />buffet, but that&#8217;s where we have to start comparing prices. Breakfast at a<br />
<br />comparable Strip buffet is around $10. Here it&#8217;s $6.45. Lunch on The Strip will run<br />
<br />you $12-15. At Ports O&#8217;Call it&#8217;s $7.45. Dinners and Sunday brunches are often<br />
<br />over $20 a mile away but at the Gold Coast you&#8217;ll pay $12-17, the latter for<br />
<br />their all-you-can-eat seafood night.
</p>
<p>
Heck, even their all-you-can-eat steak night is only $13. That&#8217;s a dollar<br />
<br />cheaper than the breakfast buffet at Bellagio.
</p>
<p>
The service is neighborhood casino friendly and efficient. Our server had two<br />
<br />drinks for every person waiting by the time we got back to our table.
</p>
<p>
The moral of the story is, if you&#8217;re in the mood for a good buffet but don&#8217;t<br />
<br />want to pay a fortune for it, head for the coast. The Gold Coast, that is.
</p>
<p>
Ports O&#8217;Call Buffet<br />
<br />Gold Coast Hotel &#38; Casino<br />
<br />4000 W. Flamingo Rd.<br />
<br />702-367-7111<br />
<br />Hotel Website<br />
<br />Mon-Sat breakfast 7-10am, lunch 11am-3pm, Sun brunch 8am-3pm, nightly dinner<br />
<br />4-10pm<br />
<br />Breakfast $6.45, Lunch $7.45, Brunch 11.95, Dinner $11.95-16.95<br />
<br /><a href="http://www.vegas4visitors.com/column/05_05_23.htm">http://www.vegas4visitors.com/column/05_05_23.htm</a><br />
<br />&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8211;<br />
<br />Pink&#8217;s Pales to LA<br />
<br />By Mac Jacobson
</p>
<p>
The entire world may come to Vegas, but unless you happen to be invited to a<br />
<br />Vegas magazine party, have a friend in the NBA staying at the Palms, or show<br />
<br />up at the latest hot poker tournament, celebrity sightings are random.
</p>
<p>
It&#8217;s different in Hollywood, especially at 2 a.m., if you are willing to get<br />
<br />in line at Pink&#8217;s, LA&#8217;s most famous hot-dog stand. One evening, I ran into<br />
<br />Cameron Diaz on an elevator in the El Royale Apartments, and a few hours later,<br />
<br />saw her lining up for a dog. Jay Leno has been known to pull up on his<br />
<br />motorcycle. Hell, I even saw Orson Welles waiting for a hot dog once upon a time.
</p>
<p>
In LA, a city not exactly known for its regional cuisine, Pink&#8217;s is a<br />
<br />treasured institution, a way of life. A man named Paul Pink borrowed $50 and started<br />
<br />the business with a pushcart back in the Depression, and just after the war,<br />
<br />moved to the present location on La Brea and Melrose avenues. They&#8217;ve been<br />
<br />doing a landslide business ever since.
</p>
<p>
Now you can eat the famous Pink&#8217;s 10-inch stretch, all-beef Hoffy dog, or one<br />
<br />of the spicy Polish dogs in various incarnations in the Zanzibar Caf&#233; in the<br />
<br />Aladdin. I suspect this new development has some tie-in with the fact that<br />
<br />Planet Hollywood is taking over ownership of the place.
</p>
<p>
The Zanzibar Caf&#233; was already one of the most eclectic eateries in town,<br />
<br />boasting a huge menu of dishes from all over the planet, everything from pad Thai<br />
<br />to Louisiana crab cakes and flat-iron steak, from opulent breakfasts to<br />
<br />sumptuous desserts.
</p>
<p>
The sign above the entrance trumpets &#8220;The Year Of The Dog&#8221; and the Pink&#8217;s<br />
<br />logo. And now you can eat, say, a gut bomb like the Huell Howser&#8212;a two-hot-dog<br />
<br />sandwich that includes chili, cheese and onions&#8212;24/7, which makes the Pepcid AC<br />
<br />folks happy indeed.
</p>
<p>
Zanzibar Caf&#233; is one of those large, sprawling casino cafeteria spaces such<br />
<br />as ones that house buffets or major coffee shops. Walls are painted with big<br />
<br />desert murals depicting village life in the Arab world&#8212;camels, minarets, lots of<br />
<br />sand&#8212;and booths are commodious enough, I guess.
</p>
<p>
The two pages of Pink&#8217;s are in the dead middle of Zanzibar&#8217;s encyclopedic,<br />
<br />spiral-notebook format menu. A pale pink color makes them hard to miss, but also<br />
<br />hard to read. One page is taken up with a short history of the business,<br />
<br />while the other is essentially a list of the two hot dogs offered here, in their<br />
<br />various forms.
</p>
<p>
This amounts to what is, essentially, a short list of what is available at<br />
<br />the LA stand, minus the turkey dog, red onions and a few other tricks played by<br />
<br />the original. There are, of course, the items that really count: the 10-inch<br />
<br />Hoffy, the homemade chili, the sauerkraut and the gooey melted cheese, but a<br />
<br />few items are missing, too.
</p>
<p>
Heinz yellow mustard on all the tables is a poor substitute for the brown<br />
<br />deli mustard I like to eat with a Pink&#8217;s hot dog. And the pastrami on pastrami<br />
<br />burrito, a cardiologist&#8217;s nightmare that I will describe shortly, lacks that<br />
<br />certain je ne sais quoi.
</p>
<p>
But by and large, the sandwiches taste exactly as they do in Hollywood, with<br />
<br />one key component missing. Spicy Polish, for example, is simply a world-class<br />
<br />sausage, and has a real bite. Have it with grilled onions and it becomes the<br />
<br />Harry Potter dog, though I do not know why.
</p>
<p>
And the 10-incher is available in various forms, but the quintessential way<br />
<br />to eat it is as the chili cheese dog, where you get a nice ladle full of Pink&#8217;s<br />
<br />mild, meaty, delicious chili; a gooey cheese that even your mother doesn&#8217;t<br />
<br />want you to eat; and the dog.
</p>
<p>
I sacrificed my body to science and ordered, at 10 a.m., the pastrami<br />
<br />burrito: a flour tortilla wrapped around two hot dogs, Swiss cheese, grilled<br />
<br />pastrami, chili and onions. Hey, it&#8217;s like G. Gordon Liddy famously said, &#8220;Whatever<br />
<br />doesn&#8217;t kill me, makes me stronger.&#8221;
</p>
<p>
With the sausages, you get average fries, unevenly cooked frozen potatoes<br />
<br />that don&#8217;t make much of an impression, or for 95 cents extra, the caf&#233;&#8217;s vastly<br />
<br />superior onion rings, a much better choice. It&#8217;s all pretty good, but as I<br />
<br />intimated before, minus a key element.
</p>
<p>
That is simply the camaraderie and atmosphere of standing at an LA hot-dog<br />
<br />stand, with the weirdos, painted Valley girls, industry wannabees and<br />
<br />zoot-suiters. Like it or not, the scene is as big a part of the Pink&#8217;s experience as<br />
<br />what is between the buns, and that is just something that cannot be reproduced.
</p>
<p>
I didn&#8217;t see a single celebrity, either.<br />
<br /><a href="http://www.lasvegasweekly.com/2005/05/19/taste.html">http://www.lasvegasweekly.com/2005/05/19/taste.html</a><br />
<br />&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8211;<br />
<br />RESTAURANT REVIEW: Gaylord India Restaurant<br />
<br />Money Is an Object: The food at Gaylord India Restaurant is excellent, but it<br />
<br />comes with a side order of sticker shock.
</p>
<p>
By Heidi Knapp Rinella
</p>
<p>
Gaylord India Restaurant is one of the most elegant rooms in town, with<br />
<br />crystal and etched-glass accents, rich colors and an island-of-serenity feeling,<br />
<br />tucked away in a quiet corner of the Rio away from the hubbub of the casino and<br />
<br />the added cacophony of the &#8220;bevertainers.&#8221;
</p>
<p>
The food is equal to the task of matching that elegance. The menu is nicely<br />
<br />varied, a mix of dishes you&#8217;ve seen and probably sampled if you&#8217;ve visited even<br />
<br />one Indian restaurant in this country, plus a few that would probably be<br />
<br />unfamiliar.
</p>
<p>
There&#8217;s a lot to like about Gaylord, but that doesn&#8217;t mean it&#8217;s not without<br />
<br />flaws. And those would include service.
</p>
<p>
Our waiter was actually quite personable. He didn&#8217;t have an attitude problem<br />
<br />&#8211; something we&#8217;ve begun to encounter again lately, after a welcome respite we<br />
<br />thought had been born of training and enlightenment but might just have been<br />
<br />because of dumb luck &#8212; but he did have a bit of a communication problem.<br />
<br />There was, for example, the matter of the cocktail menu.
</p>
<p>
Gaylord&#8217;s menu lists a number of specialty cocktails. My eye was instantly<br />
<br />drawn to the Pimm&#8217;s Cup. With its damn-the-heat refreshing flavor and elegant<br />
<br />nature that stems from its British Colonial roots, a Pimm&#8217;s Cup is perfect for<br />
<br />an Indian restaurant &#8212; especially an elegant one &#8212; but nearly impossible to<br />
<br />find these days in any spot, Indian or not, owing in large part to the fact<br />
<br />that hardly any bars are moved to stock its obscure principal ingredient, Pimm&#8217;s<br />
<br />No. 1.
</p>
<p>
So ordered two of them we did. And, as you might expect, we were rather<br />
<br />surprised to learn that our waiter had no earthly idea what we were talking about,<br />
<br />despite the Pimm&#8217;s Cup&#8217;s prominent spot among a short list of specialty<br />
<br />drinks. We explained. We pointed to the menu. He nodded and was off &#8212; only to<br />
<br />return and tell us that they didn&#8217;t have it. Aw, sheesh.
</p>
<p>
Things didn&#8217;t get a whole lot better after that. He was always earnest, but<br />
<br />nearly always had a difficult time understanding just what we were asking for.<br />
<br />We spent a lot of time pointing at the menu. While we did, though, we snacked<br />
<br />on some excellent papadum, crackerlike flatbread that was flecked with whole<br />
<br />cumin seed, and which owed its success in large part to the feisty cilantro and<br />
<br />mellow tamarind sauces that accompanied it.
</p>
<p>
One of the things readers have commented to me about Gaylord is what they<br />
<br />perceive as sticker shock. That may be the case &#8212; Indian restaurants have a<br />
<br />well-deserved reputation as bargain spots where one can fill up on a lot for a<br />
<br />little &#8212; but I would defend it. Gaylord is in a casino, where the overhead is<br />
<br />understandably higher than it would be in a Sahara Avenue strip center. And the<br />
<br />elegance of this room and, communication problems notwithstanding, generally<br />
<br />genteel service raises it a few notches. Still, we had a quibble or two.
</p>
<p>
As in the Rogan Josh ($23.95), which is, as the menu notes, &#8220;the classic lamb<br />
<br />curry.&#8221; The curry itself was lovely &#8212; the meat as tender as it gets, the<br />
<br />complex flavor of the seasonings so myriad-faceted as to bring us different<br />
<br />flavors with each bite. But as we were ordering, our waiter asked, &#8220;would you like<br />
<br />rice with that?&#8221; Sounded good to us, but we were a little surprised, when we<br />
<br />got the bill, to note the $6.95 charge for it. It was decent enough rice,<br />
<br />basmati with a sprinkling of peas, although lacking even the subtlety of the<br />
<br />saffron the menu promised.
</p>
<p>
Overall, though, the food was excellent. The Pudina Paratha ($6.25) tandoori<br />
<br />bread was sprinkled with mint instead of stuffed with it, as the menu noted,<br />
<br />but this quibble didn&#8217;t affect its lovely flavor and excellent, flaky-chewy<br />
<br />texture.
</p>
<p>
Tandoori chicken ($17.95) was just spicy enough, tender and moist and, we<br />
<br />thought, one of the best bargains on the menu. Kheer, ($6.50) nut-studded rice<br />
<br />pudding, was satisfyingly creamy.
</p>
<p>
We had a little bit of sticker shock on the assorted vegetable hors<br />
<br />d&#8217;oeuvres, though. For $13.95 we expected a good-sized plate of the promised pakoras,<br />
<br />samosas and papadums, but alas, a baby-bear version arrived. No papadums,<br />
<br />either, although we thoroughly enjoyed the single samosa (sort of like a turnover)<br />
<br />and several pakoras (which are akin to fritters).
</p>
<p>
So yeah, dinner at Gaylord India will cost you more than a stop at a<br />
<br />mom-and-pop. The service will no doubt depend on which server you&#8217;re assigned, but<br />
<br />you&#8217;ll be served top-quality food in a serene, elegant environment. The value<br />
<br />judgment is yours.<br />
<br />reviewjournal.com &#8212; Neon: RESTAURANT REVIEW: Gaylord India Restaurant<br />
<br />&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8211;<br />
<br />The Hole truth<br />
<br />Battista&#8217;s fills a local void with casual, family-style Italian
</p>
<p>
BY AL MANCINI
</p>
<p>
Landmark or tourist trap? That&#8217;s a question I&#8217;ve been asking myself about<br />
<br />Battista&#8217;s Hole in the Wall for the past few years.
</p>
<p>
I&#8217;d heard dozens of frequent Las Vegas visitors rave about the place. Most of<br />
<br />them, however, were old-school tourists from middle America who&#8217;d been coming<br />
<br />to Las Vegas for so long that they may very well have known Bugsy Siegel &#8212;<br />
<br />which left me suspicious that they might value familiarity in a restaurant more<br />
<br />than quality. So every time I passed the place, just a block east of the<br />
<br />Strip on Audrie and across Flamingo Road from Bally&#8217;s, I would briefly resolve to<br />
<br />check it out sometime. But with new restaurants opening here in the valley<br />
<br />faster than I can visit them, and countless obscure ethnic establishments begging<br />
<br />to be discovered, Battista&#8217;s never made it to the top of my to-do list until<br />
<br />a week or so ago.
</p>
<p>
My first impression was that Battista&#8217;s is the kind of Italian restaurant I<br />
<br />remember from my youth. It&#8217;s a dark, casual place with large red-leather<br />
<br />booths. The d&#233;cor consists primarily of Chianti bottles and autographed celebrity<br />
<br />pictures, and the menu is printed on the walls. Grated parmesan cheese sits in a<br />
<br />shaker on every table, and wine is poured from a bottle or carafe into small,<br />
<br />plain, shotglass-looking glasses.
</p>
<p>
It&#8217;s the kind of restaurant you definitely want to visit with a large group,<br />
<br />and I was glad that I&#8217;d managed to assemble one.
</p>
<p>
The menu is similarly casual and familiar. The vast majority of items are<br />
<br />Italian basics: pastas, veal, chicken and steak. Cioppino ($34.95) is about as<br />
<br />exotic as it gets.
</p>
<p>
Given the casual, &#8220;family-style&#8221; feel of the place, first-time visitors may<br />
<br />very well be taken aback by the prices. Plain old spaghetti with your choice of<br />
<br />sauce is priced at $18.95. Most of the other pastas, which include ravioli,<br />
<br />lasagna, manicotti, cannelloni and fettucini with seafood sauce, will set you<br />
<br />back $20.95. Chicken dishes or steak pizzaiola come in at $24.95, and the three<br />
<br />veal choices are two bucks more than that.
</p>
<p>
Seafood dishes start at $28.95, while a filet mignon or New York strip steak<br />
<br />will set you back $34.95. Even a simple side order of Italian sausage or<br />
<br />meatballs costs $7.50.
</p>
<p>
A closer look at the menu, however, makes those prices a lot more palatable.<br />
<br />Every meal includes minestrone soup or a salad, garlic bread, a side dish of<br />
<br />pasta, homemade cappuccino and house wine.
</p>
<p>
As soon as we sat down, our waiter brought my party of five a carafe each of<br />
<br />red and white wine, which was about as good as you&#8217;d expect free wine to be<br />
<br />but decent enough to keep us drinking it throughout the meal. That was followed<br />
<br />by soup for me, which was pretty basic, as were my companions&#8217; salads. My<br />
<br />entr&#233;e of linguine with chopped clams ($24.95) was delicious and huge. I finished<br />
<br />less than half of it and had plenty leftover to take home for lunch the<br />
<br />following day. Nearly all of the other dishes I sampled were also basic and good.<br />
<br />The sole exception was an order of chicken alfredo, which featured a thick, rich<br />
<br />white sauce that was closer to carbonara than alfredo (not a bad thing in and<br />
<br />of itself, although the person who ordered it wasn&#8217;t happy).
</p>
<p>
All of that was followed up with a sweet cup of cappuccino that tasted more<br />
<br />like hot chocolate than coffee (once again fine with me, although purists might<br />
<br />not appreciate it).
</p>
<p>
Overall, it was a decent meal &#8212; but nothing to rave about.
</p>
<p>
More importantly, however, Battista&#8217;s Hole in the Wall is the kind of place<br />
<br />where a group of people can get together in a comfortable surrounding and<br />
<br />slowly get drunk and get a little loud while they eat some basic and familiar food.<br />
<br />So is it a tourist trap or a landmark? Probably a little of both. But given<br />
<br />the tab of a mere $150 for a party of five &#8212; generous tip included &#8212; there<br />
<br />are worse places to get together with your friends.
</p>
<p>
Battista&#8217;s Hole in the Wall<br />
<br />4041 Audrie St.<br />
<br />702-732-1424<br />
<br /><a href="http://www.lvcitylife.com/articles/2005/01/20/dining_out/dining.txt">http://www.lvcitylife.com/articles/2005/01/20/dining_out/dining.txt</a><br />
<br />&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-<br />
<br />Carnegie Deli a lesson in East Coast attitude.<br />
<br />By Muriel Stevens
</p>
<p>
It was a kick having lunch at Carnegie Deli in the Mirage with Sanford<br />
<br />&#8220;Sandy&#8221; Levine recently. Carnegie Deli is the kind of deli I grew up with in<br />
<br />Philadelphia. Unless you&#8217;ve lived in New York, where Carnegie Deli is a legend, or in<br />
<br />Philadelphia, where wannabe Carnegie delis are almost as good, the wry deli<br />
<br />humor can be a shock to someone who just wants a sandwich.
</p>
<p>
Levine is the business maven for New York&#8217;s Carnegie Deli and its related<br />
<br />businesses. He is the consummate deli operator, wit and all. Ask him what the<br />
<br />&#8220;MBS&#8221; on his business card stands for.
</p>
<p>
According to Levine, with such a large menu (almost as large as the New York<br />
<br />menu), he had hoped to hire some experienced counter people who were familiar<br />
<br />with specialized deli foods. They were in short supply. So Levine, Vice<br />
<br />President of Food and Beverage Bart Mahoney and the Mirage chefs put their heads<br />
<br />together &#8212; and it worked.
</p>
<p>
Many of the foods, including the famous house-made corned beef and pastrami,<br />
<br />the tasty real deli rye bread, homemade potato knishes and the crispy<br />
<br />half-done pickles, are shipped in from Carnegie&#8217;s huge commissary plant in New York.
</p>
<p>
Portions are large. There&#8217;s no way to eat a Carnegie pastrami or corned beef<br />
<br />sandwich in ladylike fashion. Packed with meat, my pastrami sandwich had to be<br />
<br />cut in half and then in quarters before I could eat it with a modicum of<br />
<br />manners. The whole-grain house mustard is a zesty addition to any sandwich.
</p>
<p>
A Brown&#8217;s cream soda (diet, of course) was a tasty accompaniment. The<br />
<br />desserts are decadently divine. The size is madness. One slice of the Hershey&#8217;s 5th<br />
<br />Avenue Bavarian Chocolate Cream Pie could easily satisfy three to four<br />
<br />fressers.
</p>
<p>
This deadly concoction included in the thick chocolate frosting big chunks of<br />
<br />a 5th Avenue bar. Who thinks up these tantalizing towers of toothsome diet<br />
<br />busters? The famous cheesecake still holds its own. The number of whole<br />
<br />cheesecakes that have been sold during the few weeks Carnegie Deli has been open is<br />
<br />remarkable.
</p>
<p>
Breakfast is served all day. I don&#8217;t know if I&#8217;ll ever eat my way through the<br />
<br />wide array of hot and cold sandwiches, salads, soups, burgers, hot platters,<br />
<br />chicken in the pot and much more. There&#8217;s still some tweaking going on and<br />
<br />Levine said more dishes will soon be added.
</p>
<p>
Brian Ward, the general manager, handles the dining room with grace and<br />
<br />style. The international staff, most of whom had never heard of stuffed derma<br />
<br />before working at the deli, are so accommodating that it shouldn&#8217;t be long before<br />
<br />they&#8217;re hawking the Woody Allen Broadway Danny Rose combination sandwich that<br />
<br />must be at least 6 inches tall. Wooden skewers replace the usual toothpicks to<br />
<br />keep it all together.
</p>
<p>
Carnegie Deli hours are 7 a.m. to 2 a.m. Expect a short wait during prime<br />
<br />times.
</p>
<p>
Adam Tihany&#8217;s deli design is right on. It looks like a deli, it smells like a<br />
<br />deli and is another winner in the designer&#8217;s boffo restaurant portfolio.<br />
<br />Las Vegas SUN: Columnist Muriel Stevens<br />
<br />&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-<br />
<br />Busy chef takes time to open Mesa Grill at Caesars.<br />
<br />By Ken White
</p>
<p>
Bobby Flay may very well be America&#8217;s busiest chef.
</p>
<p>
Not only does he own Mesa Grill in New York, he serves as resident chef for<br />
<br />the CBS morning news show, and host of &#8220;BBQ with Bobby Flay,&#8221; &#8220;Boy Meets Grill&#8221;<br />
<br />and &#8220;Hot Off the Grill with Bobby Flay&#8221; on the Food Network.
</p>
<p>
Now he has added his first Mesa Grill restaurant outside New York at Caesars<br />
<br />Palace, 3570 Las Vegas Blvd. South.
</p>
<p>
Like the original Mesa Grill, his new outpost serves Southwestern cuisine in<br />
<br />a flame-themed atmosphere. Designed by David Rockwell and the Rockwell Group,<br />
<br />the decor features flagstone and teak wood floors, flamed copper on the walls<br />
<br />and flame-patterned carpet.
</p>
<p>
But the restaurant&#8217;s centerpiece is a 20-foot rotisserie with a grill and<br />
<br />quesadilla oven.
</p>
<p>
There is a separate 48-seat private dining room for parties or meetings. Mesa<br />
<br />Grill seats 190 in its three-tiered dining room. A full menu is served at the<br />
<br />28-seat bar-lounge.
</p>
<p>
Desserts are created by pastry chef Vicki Wells.
</p>
<p>
Mesa Grill is open for lunch from 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Monday through Friday.<br />
<br />Brunch is served from 10:30 a.m. to 3 p.m., Saturday and Sunday. Dinner is<br />
<br />served from 5 to 11 p.m. daily.
</p>
<p>
&#8226; Starters: Tiger shrimp and roasted-garlic corn tamale with corn-cilantro<br />
<br />sauce ($15); grilled shrimp and cilantro pesto quesadilla ($14); cotija-crusted<br />
<br />quesadilla with wild mushrooms, cascabel chilies and white bean-white truffle<br />
<br />hummus ($14); Native American fry bread taco with smoked lamb, goat cheese and<br />
<br />almond mole sauce ($14); cornmeal-crusted oysters with mango-Scotch bonnet<br />
<br />hot sauce and American caviar ($16); and spicy tuna tartar with blistered<br />
<br />serrano hot sauce and avocado relish ($14).
</p>
<p>
&#8226; Soups and salads: Roasted corn soup with smoked tomato salsa and cilantro<br />
<br />pesto ($10); grilled sea scallop salad with charred corn, green chilies,<br />
<br />coconut and jalape&#241;o pesto ($16); and romaine salad with Parmesan crisps, hominy<br />
<br />croutons and spicy Caesar dressing ($10).
</p>
<p>
&#8226; Entrees: Ancho chili-honey-glazed salmon with a spicy black-bean sauce and<br />
<br />roasted jalape&#241;o crema ($30); New Mexican spice-rubbed pork tenderloin with<br />
<br />bourbon-ancho chili sauce and sweet potato tamale with crushed pecan butter<br />
<br />($31); 16-spice rotisserie chicken with caramelized mango sauce and<br />
<br />buttermilk-chive mashed potatoes ($28); yellow corn-crusted chili relleno filled with wild<br />
<br />mushrooms and goat cheese, served with a salad of grilled vegetables and white<br />
<br />truffle oil ($23); grilled tuna steak with apricot-mustard-mint glaze, served<br />
<br />with a green chili-toasted pine nut couscous ($35); grilled lamb chops with<br />
<br />preserved jalape&#241;o sauce and sweet potato chipotle gratin ($38); blue<br />
<br />corn-crusted red snapper with warm salsa cruda of sweet cherry tomatoes, green olives,<br />
<br />capers and serrano chilies ($33); coffee spice-rubbed rotisserie filet mignon<br />
<br />with wild mushroom-ancho chili sauce and horseradish potato gratin ($34); aged<br />
<br />buffalo rib-eye with mustard-habanero barbecue sauce and cayenne-sour cream<br />
<br />onion rings ($38); ancho chili-cumin-rubbed pan-roasted rabbit with yellow<br />
<br />tomato-green onion risotto ($33); and crispy whole fried (farm-raised) striped bass<br />
<br />with five-pepper ginger sauce and coconut cashew rice ($34).
</p>
<p>
&#8226; Extras: Southwestern fries, cayenne-sour cream onion rings, sweet potato<br />
<br />gratin with smoked chilies, California flat leaf spinach, buttermilk-chive<br />
<br />mashed potato, and double-baked potato with horseradish, green onions and crme fra&#8221;<br />
<br />che ($7 each).
</p>
<p>
&#8226; Desserts: Wild blueberry shortcake with lemon ice cream and blueberry basil<br />
<br />syrup; coconut custard br&#382;l&#233;e tart with papaya apricot-tequila sorbet and<br />
<br />mango blackberry compote; warm chocolate and dulce de leche cake with toasted<br />
<br />pecan ice cream; chocolate raspberry Napoleon with roasted banana sorbet and<br />
<br />orange rum syrup; smoked vanilla and roasted pecan flan with coffee caramel and<br />
<br />bourbon molasses cakes; and espresso pine nut toffee ice cream sandwich with<br />
<br />milk chocolate wafers and warm toffee sauce ($12 each).<br />
<br />reviewjournal.com &#8212; Living: APPETIZERS</p>
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