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| Where's
the Beef
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| Las Vegas chefs have blown
away the most famous question in advertising
— where’s the beef? — with burger
restaurants that catapult the icon of
American cooking into the culinary
stratosphere.
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THE
FRENCH REVOLUTION
Burger
Revolutionary…
Daniel Boulud
• Daniel
Boulud Brasserie Wynn Las Vegas
Marquée
chef Daniel Boulud launched gourmet burgers.
“When McDonald’s opened its first
restaurant in France,” he remarked, “there
was a so-called farmer who protested and tried
to burn down stores. John Tierney, a reporter
from The New York Times, called me about it;
and I joked that the guy was just jealous the
French didn’t think of it first. Then he
(Tierney) asked me if I liked burgers, and I
told him ‘yes’ and said, ‘If you want,
I’ll make one for you’. So I did. That was
2001, and we introduced the DB Burger at DB
Bistro Moderne on 44th Street in Manhattan.”
Describing
his burger as a “hybrid,” Boulud
elaborated. “It’s a classic French dish of
meat from braised ribs with foie gras and
truffles stuffed inside a classic American
burger,” he explained. “The ribs are
braised in red wine and veal stock, and the
meat is pulled off. I add truffles and a mire
pois (mix of finely diced vegetables) of
onions, carrots, and celery, and wrap it all
with ground sirloin.”
Local
Brasserie Executive Chef Wesley Holton
revealed more details. “We use three
different cuts of beef with different fat
content and different flavor,” he said.
“The burger weighs about 9.5 ounces total.
We serve it on a parmesan bun with freshly
grated horseradish, Dijon mustard, frisée,
shaved red onions, tomato compote, a fresh
tomato petal of Roma tomato and homemade
pommes frites…but no pickles. In truffle
season (November-December), we do a truffle
burger and shave black truffles over the top
and add truffle aioli.”
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The
Third (French) Man...Laurent
Tourondel
• BLT Burger
Mirage
I
interviewed Chef Laurent Tourondel while he
was driving to Washington, D.C. to cook
burgers for hotel magnates at J.W. Marriott.
“It’s weird, isn’t it,” he commented,
“taking beef and bread from New York because
they’re different than what’s available in
D.C. We premade everything yesterday in New
York and will cook it tomorrow.”
He
explained his restaurant’s name “BLT”
was inspired by the sandwich. “I was at a
diner eating a BLT,” he said, “and I
realized it had my initials in it…Burger
Laurent Tourondel. Burgers are what people
want to eat and cost what they want to spend.
There has definitely been a very strong
comeback of the burger in the last two or
three years. The anti-beef attitude has died
down.
“We’ve
developed burgers that accommodate people’s
various preferences. We also serve them
without bread. Bread shouldn’t overpower the
flavor of the burger. It must blend and suit
the purpose of classical burger taste.
Americans like the classic burger. The BLT
burger (yes, like the sandwich) is our #1
seller.”
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Stripburger
Fashion Show Mall
The
patio of Café Ba-Ba-Reeba at Fashion Show
transformed into Stripburger. It’s protected
by overhead “sails,” has misters to handle
the heat, and wind walls to combat most
inclement weather. The food is great; and,
amazingly, no food item costs over $9.95.
General
manager Michael Heid is understandably proud
of the quality and value. “Classic Vegas was
affordable,” he asserted. “You don’t
have to change a lot to give quality at a good
price now that times are tough. It’s fresh
meat and hand-cut potatoes and veggies. Our
beef is grain-fed from the Midwest.”
Their
bleu cheese burger is so popular people bring
in an ad to compare the photo to the real
thing. “Our Vegas Veggie Burger is truly
Vegan with no dairy,” Heid said. “We use
Panko bread crumbs on our fried pickles which
give texture and crunch. Our salsa is fire
roasted. We even make our own potato chips,”
he enthused. “For a touch of nostalgia, and
because it beat out all the other candidates,
we serve Good Humor ice cream. Only the white
truck with bells is missing!”
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Studio Café Burger Café
Mgm Grand
Studio
Café at MGM Grand has spawned a “café-within-a-café.”
Michael Omo, MGM’s assistant executive chef,
cited the economy as fueling the burger
bonanza. “Customers are more value
sensitive,” he stated. “For everyday
eating, they want fun, entertaining food. A
burger is a meal between two halves of a
bun.” He quoted staggering statistics…330
tons of burgers sold throughout the hotel
annually and two tons a month at Studio Café
Burger. (There are seven butchers on staff.)
“We tasted and tested over 30 burgers, and
only the best made it onto the menu,” he
remarked.
With
two 10-oz. Angus chuck burger patties as
foundation, the “Boulevard Burger” weighs
in as heavyweight champion. It’s loaded with
Gruyère, Cheddar, Provolone, Velveeta, and
Bleu cheeses, garlic mushrooms, hickory smoked
bacon, tobacco onions, jalapeño ranch
dressing, Mama’s tomato jam, lettuce,
pickle, sweet red onions, and tomato slices,
all piled on a brioche bun. This is a
two-fisted, four-napkin, invite-your-friends
and/or family challenge.
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Burger Joint
The Flamingo
Burger
Joint at The Flamingo straddles the gap
between fast food and gourmet burgers. The
menu sticks to the familiar. Choices of
cheeses, toppings, and buns provide variety.
Burgers come with unlimited fries, and the
pesto bun is house made. Fourteen flat-screen
TV’s surround the room. “We figured many
guests would want to keep track of their
favorite teams,” said vice president of food
and beverage Christophe Jorcin. “They
don’t miss a play.”
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Le Burger Brasserie
Paris
Burger
Brasserie represents Franco-American culinary
détente. This is the place for lamb burgers
— Le Originale; Saveur with mushrooms,
harissa mayo, fresh mozzarella, and herbs; and
Le Mediterranean, feta cheese, kalamata
olives, and avocado. The Blackjack burger
deals a winning combination of onions, jalapeño
peppers, jack cheese, and chipotle aioli.
Poultry burgers combine white and dark meat
(also the blend at other restaurants) for a
more juicy, flavorful taste. Daily specials
augment the menu.
For
a burger binge, order “The Works Burger,”
14 toppings! For a burger splurge, indulge in
the “777”, a $777 mammoth mound of Kobe
beef, Maine lobster, caramelized onions,
imported Brie, crispy pancetta, and
100-year-old balsamic. This extravagance
includes a bottle of Dom Perignon Rosé
Champagne. Otherwise, go for a shake — you
can build your own from up to three
flavors…ours was espresso, chocolate, and
peanut butter. Or try a 100-oz. beer tower.
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| Burger's
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Stripburger
Fashion Show Mall
Stripburger’s
menu isn’t huge, but the
quality-quantity-price value hits the jackpot.
Start
with tangy, tart, crunchy pickle fries,
guacamole and tortilla chips, and the chilled
tomato soup with fresh basil — you could
easily dive into a tureen and come up sated
and smiling. The tantalizing aromas of the
garlic fries are irresistible. Sweet potato
fries are luscious. Munch a blue cheese
burger, or hickory bacon or green chili
cheeseburger, or three-of-a-kind mini-burgers,
joined by a crispy fried “threesome” of
pickles, onion strings, and fries.
They
have thick shakes (carmelized banana with
caramel sauce and vanilla ice cream,
especially), and “shakers” (with booze),
and jumbo cocktails. Golfers will go for the
Hole n’ One of midori, Absolut mandarin,
lemon juice, with a pop rock rim. Save room
for “Baby Cakes,” super-rich chocolate
fudge or coconut.
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Burger Bar
Mandalay Place
When
all is said and done, the chef to beat in the
burger race is Hubert Keller. Trust his talent
or pick your basic burger, choose your bun,
and run amok among 40 toppings grouped under
garden, dairy, grill, farm, ocean, pantry, and
earth; the last one lists various mushrooms at
$1 and the ultimate French epiphany, black
truffles, $30 for 1/3 oz. Sauces are
sensational, including honey mustard (Dijon),
ranch with attitude, red wine with shallots,
and truffle. Fried zucchini is a must. So is a
voluptuous milkshake: nutella, chocolate mint,
vanilla peanut butter with Reeses pieces, or
create your own blend. If you prefer beer,
they pour over 125, including 24 on tap.
“Sweet Burger” desserts layer decadent
delights inside a cake doughnut with no hole.
Burger Bar belongs on your bucket list. o
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There’s
more.
Chef
Bradley Ogden (Bradley Ogden, Caesars Palace)
highlights meal-size burgers on the bar menu.
Matthew Hurley, Executive Chef at CUT in The
Palazzo, serves sliders blending two cuts of
beef ground differently, —American Kobe
really fine at one-fourth inch and NY steak, a
chunky three-fourths inch. You’ll find
hearty burgers at steak houses such as
Delmonico (The Venetian), Smith &
Wollensky (on the Strip), and Striphouse
(Planet Hollywood), to mention a few.
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Burger
Master…Hubert
Keller
• Burger Bar
Mandalay Place
In
2004, star French chef Hubert Keller elevated
the burger to celebrity status when he opened
his pub-style Burger Bar at Mandalay Place.
“It was more an accident than deliberate,”
he revealed. “Fleur de Lys (his haute
cuisine restaurant at Mandalay Bay) was under
construction, but there were delays. Bill
Richardson (former vice chairman of Mandalay
Resort), a regular customer at Fleur de Lys in
San Francisco, phoned and said a tenant at
Mandalay Place hadn’t come through and would
I take a look at the space and do something
with it. Laurent (Executive Chef Laurent
Paillard) and I checked it out and decided to
take a chance and open a burger place.
“Nobody
had had burger experience, but we were
determined to make the best burger we could.
We built our own butcher shop and applied fine
dining techniques to the burgers. We weigh
every burger (8 oz.). The ingredient prep and
burgers are hand done. You have to treat it
like prime filet or rib eye, sear it properly,
watch it, and let it rest before you serve it
so the juices and flavors organize.”
Burger
Bar took off. “We’ve become a destination
restaurant for locals, for visitors from all
over, and even famous chefs. We can’t fall
asleep because we’re successful. We’re
constantly trying something new.”
Recent
additions are the Hubert Keller Burger, his
favorite — buffalo meat, caramelized onions,
baby spinach, bleu cheese on a ciabatta bun;
and a Peppercorn Burger (think burger au
poivre), natural beef, fresh and dried
peppercorns, Dijon mustard, a plain bun, with
peppercorn cream sauce on the side. The most
expensive burger ($60), the Rossini, combines
Kobe beef, sautéed foie gras, shaved
truffles, and Madeira sauce, on an onion bun.
“We thought we’d only serve a few,”
Keller admitted, “but we’re serving three
to six a day.”
Keller’s
ultimate burger reigns at Fleur de Lys. The
“Fleurburger”-foie gras and black
truffle-stuffed Kobe burger served on a
brioche truffle bun and garnished with
truffles and a special truffle sauce-commands
a king’s ransom, $5,000. It’s accompanied
by a bottle of Château Petrus 1995, poured in
Ichendorf Brunello stemware exclusively
imported from Sweden. The glasses are shipped
to the guest’s home. They’ve served 17
since 2006.
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•
Le Burger Brasserie & Sports Grille
Paris
Although
Le Burger Brasserie’s Executive Chef John
Pascoe isn’t French, there’s definitely a
French accent to some burgers — for beef, Le
Paris with brie, Le Bleu with bleu cheese; for
salmon, La Mer with lemon aioli, and La
Normandie with mushrooms, provolone, and
micro-anise; and Promenade with brie, smoked
bacon, and caramelized shallots for chicken.
They go crazy with the French Onion Burger,
“Onion soup,” Pascoe joked, referring to
the grilled red onions, caramelized white, and
shallots, enveloped with Swiss cheese.
Most
beef burgers are 100% Black Angus half-pound
patties, ground in their own butcher shop.
Domestic Kobe Wagyu is on the menu, too. He
uses kosher salt and fresh-ground black pepper
for seasoning. “You’d be surprised how far
just those two seasonings go,” he said.
“We’re always creating new burgers. Our
turkey burger is Thanksgiving in a bun.” He
also revealed his success with sliders. “You
need to do a fast flip with sliders,” he
advised, “and we brush the top of the buns
with butter.”
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LBS
Red Rock
LBS
is the burger outpost on the west side. Its
décor reflects the mood of the food,
starting with distressed brick walls and
open-beam ceiling. Interstate route signs,
real hides on the chairs, license plate
ceiling and wall panels complete the look.
You half expect cowboys to belly up to the
replica of an old carved oak saloon bar.
Executive
chef Anthony Meidenbauer has created some
one-of-a-kind nibbles, including a potato
“twister,” a spiral cut potato chip.
“Our menu features fun stuff you won’t
find elsewhere,” he said. “The fried
cheesekurds hail from my home territory of
upstate New York. The dipping sauce is made
of herbed mayo, sweet pickle relish, sherry
vinegar, and Tabasco.”
Their
Vegan veggie burger has 27 secret
ingredients mixed into Irish oatmeal,
barley, steel-cut oatmeal, and quinoa, a
South American grain with seven essential
amino acids, and a garden’s worth of
veggies. Their special Heinz catsup is
organic. Beef burgers are made from “all
natural” 21-day dry-aged Hereford beef.
The entire menu is available “to go,”
with three-, six-, and 12-pack “Bag O’
Burgers” sliders — a huge hit.
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Bellagio Burgers
Bellagio
Executive Chef Edmund Wong heads the burger
brigade for all Bellagio-controlled dining:
the 24-hour Bellagio Café, Snacks, the pool
café, and in-room dining. “There’s
nothing more American than a burger,” he
said. “Our chefs worked for weeks to get it
right. We debated what kind of lettuce to use,
whether to shred it or use leaves. We wanted
the bun to be light and airy, so we use
brioche dough. The buns change with the
location: herb brioche in the Café,
onion-potato for in-room service, rosemary at
the pool café, and sesame at Snacks. We went
through over 15 different sauces. We make our
own pickles.
“We
use Angus beef and blend 80% chuck roll and
20% brisket for better moisture and flavor and
cook the burgers on a gas grill, not a flat
top. The grill slopes over the flame; so after
it’s seared, the burger can be moved to the
right area for cooking rare to well done. Buns
are buttered and toasted on the grill. The
grill cook is very busy.”
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Bellagio Café
Bellagio
Bellagio
begins with basics…half-pound Angus beef
burger, Atlantic salmon burger, and turkey
burger, plus a crowd-pleasing smoked bacon BBQ
cheddar burger, with bacon crisped as it
should be. Then you choose toppings. We added
sautéed mushrooms, guacamole, sautéed
onions, and an egg over easy to the beef
burger-overkill; left the turkey alone with
its cranberry mayonnaise and lively alfalfa
sprouts; and also enjoyed the salmon “as
is” on a feta dill roll with cucumber relish
and caper mayonnaise. We tackled parmesan
fries and onion rings, crisp and tasty. They
rate high marks for presentation, a platter
anchored by the burger with fries in a mini
deep-fry basket, cole slaw in its own bowl,
and mini-cup of sauce.
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BLT Burger
Mirage
BLT
Burger is a pre- and post-show mecca. Their
shakes are great…Berry Me, Mocha Mudslide,
Twinkie Boy, Campfire Marshmallows, The Lunch
Box, Nut Job. Spiked versions include
“Grandma’s Treat” (Maker’s Mark) and
“All Nighter” (Kahlua and Bailey’s).
They have huge straws so you can slurp all the
yummy immersed goodies.
The
vibe is high — what else when the servers’
black T-shirts are emblazoned with “Shake
it, don’t break it,” “If you are what
you eat, I’m fast, cheap, and easy,” and
“Double juicy.” There’s no joking about
the food, however, although they need to ramp
up the napkins, which don’t last through
four bites.
The
Baja, a spiced beef patty, supports Jack
cheese, guacamole, tomatillo salsa, crispy
tortilla chips, lettuce, tomato, and onions.
Other savory choices are Tex-Mex, The Stripper
(no bun), Veggie Falafel, and Asian “Bánh
Mi.” Best bets for dessert are the valrhona
chocolate praline cake and macaroon ice cream
sandwich.
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LBS
Red Rock
We
lined up “cheeseburgers,” cheddar, brie,
pepper jack, goat, Swiss, and bleu. Trust me,
each cheese has a distinctive taste. Turkey
also takes on a new personality from the
cheeses. Their veggie burger list is long,
creative, delicious, and another cheese
stronghold. Go for the red onion marmalade. A
“Billy Burger” celebrates Thanksgiving
with turkey and cranberry-orange relish. For
“build your own” burgers you choose the
“meat,” number of patties, cheese,
toppings, and sauces.
Their
dessert menu is aptly named “Sugar Rush.”
Chocoholics can flip a coin between All
American chocolate cake and Warm Fudge brownie
sundae. My mini-pie a la mode (a crumble crust
apple) was outstanding. Drinks include a
cookie crumble malt and root beer “from the
tap” float. Cocktails spotlight retro
favorites like Cuba Libras, Manhattans, Side
Cars, and Rickeys, as well as four trendy
“Adult Vitamin” drinks of a “sports
beverage” with fresh juices, nectar, and
either vodka or rum.
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Patrón
Pineapple
Ingredients:
•
1 oz. Patrón Silver
•
1/4 oz. Patrón Citrónge
•
Fresh pineapple juice
•
Lime squeeze
Method:
Pour
Patrón Silver and Patrón Citrónge over ice.
Fill
with pineapple juice. Finish with a squeeze of
lime.
Enjoy.
Patron
Social Club>> enter
here
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| The
Atlantis Resort, Bahamas
Costing
over $25,000 per night, this suite is the
costliest one in the world. It is situated over a
bridge in Paradise Island, Bahamas. The suite has
ten rooms all of which are richly decorated in
black, red and gold. Visitors can have access to
the games and the bar lounge apart from other a
lot of other facilities
view more
>>click
here |
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