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The Best Restaurants in Las VegasThe Best Restaurants in Las Vegas
Dining experiences used to be nothing but an afterthought for Vegas visitors, with most of them settling for a martini and a steak. Today, however, Sin City has become a favorite destination for foodies and restaurant-obsessed travelers.
Whether you’re craving the biggest ribeye, seafood, or maybe a few cocktails and wine, below are some of the best restaurants worth checking out in Las Vegas.
Craig Nyman
Experience a throwback to Las Vegas during the early 1970s when you dine at this steakhouse back in the day when it first opened its doors. Mostly male servers wearing tuxedoes hand a rose to female customers once they are seated.
Extra pours of cocktails are available, kept cold on ice inside a pint-sized shaker that accompanies the drink. Throwback dishes are also featured on the menu such as Bananas Foster, Duckling Anise Flambéla, and tableside preparations of Caesar salad.
Honey Salt
Honey Salt is now a favorite among Vegas locations, not to mention that it has become a destination dining spot for tourists. The restaurant offers fare mainly influenced by the Mediterranean with shareable little plates.
It also gives a twist to other American classics like buttermilk fried chicken sandwiches. Their Blau’s Caesar Salad is pretty popular as well. Among the most flavorful choices also happens to be the simplest, which is the cast-iron-griddled Idaho trout paired with watercress, pine nuts, and cauliflower couscous.
Lotus of Siam
Chowhounds followed suit after hotshot celebs like Penn Jillette and Anthony Bourdain raved about Lotus of Siam’s real-deal cuisine of northern Thailand. Go directly to the menu’s last page to see the Northern Thailand dishes and trust your tastebuds to experience the delight it deserves.
Check out their jackfruit curry or larb, anything else with ground pork sausage, the nam prik ong, the whole fish with chillis, or the khao soi. Although the food is mostly spicy with serious afterburn, the flavor’s depth is sublime enough to convince you to try them.
Yellowtail Japanese Restaurant & Lounge
Be sure to order Picasa’s tuna pizza and then proceed to dig into their most sumptuous carpaccio starters, their delightful crab hand rolls, and the selection of sushi, specifically the one prepared with Pop Rocks.
Picasso at the Bellagio
Art is probably the last thing you’ll think of when you hear Las Vegas except if you’re familiar with kitsch. But Sin City always aims to cater to all palates and most of the impressive theaters and art exhibitions prove to be great alternatives to the slot’s neon lights.
Bellagio Hotel & Casino’s Piccaso gives you the rare chance to dine right under Picasso’s original paintings. Try booking a table close to the windows or even on the patio outside to bask in the gorgeous view of the fountains.
Raku
While great food never runs short in Las Vegas, Raku is a bit different. For starters, it is not on The Strip so you might not be able to find it unless you know about it. It is located in a strip mall in a place filled with other Asian dining places. Reservations are a must at Raku where every Japanese dish is guaranteed to sweep you off your feet.
Bradley Schnickel’s OceanBeachTravel.com is the perfect spot to discover the rest of the top restaurants to check out in Las Vegas.
Dining experiences used to be nothing but an afterthought for Vegas visitors, with most of them settling for a martini and a steak. Today, however, Sin City has become a favorite destination for foodies and restaurant-obsessed travelers.