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A mouth-watering guide to restaurants, the best buffets and dining in Sin City.

Dining in Las Vegas


Such a deal, and it's only one of many in town.

Yes it's true.

You can get a breakfast buffet in this town for $2.49 and a steak dinner for under $3.

Then again, you can also spend $150 per person and have your wine retrieved by an angel.

Like just about everything else, eating is an experience in Las Vegas. The buffets are a long-standing staple; in fact, one of the city's key identifying marks.

The last few years have brought on an explosion of fine restaurants and just about every hotel has at least one upscale eatery.

The competition is so intense that even the elegant Mandalay Bay has stooped to stunts. At Aureole, wine is stacked in a see-through glass case where girls called angles rise up to pull out the bottles in full view of the patrons. The prices go even higher than the angels.

But this is a city of contrasts. In the very shadows of the billion-plus dollar Bellagio, you can get a complete steak dinner for $2.99 at Ellis Island Coffee Shop (4178 Koval St.) or steak and eggs for $2.49 at Arizona Charlie's (740 S. Decatur Blvd.), 24 hours a day. One of the best deals is the 99-cent shrimp cocktail at the Golden Gate Hotel at the end of Freemont Street.

Name a country, and its ethnic food is likely represented here. China, Japan, Mexico Italy, Greece, Cuba, well, we could in fact circle the globe. Not sure of a country? Then pick a place: Hollywood (Planet Hollywood), Daytona Beach (Harley Davidson Cafe), the Amazon (Rainforest Cafe) even under the sea (Dive, which brings new meaning to a submarine sandwich). Still can't decide? Just stride through any casino and enjoy a feast of food choices.

Yet it is the buffets where Las Vegas hangs its food hat. These all-you-can-eat extravaganzas were originated by the casinos in order to keep people inside the building at eating time instead of having them venture outside for a meal. The casinos also prefer that people spend their discretionary income at the gaming tables instead of the restaurant table, so the original prices bordered on ridiculous.

Sometimes, too, did the food. Remember the scene in the Las Vegas "Vacation" movie, where Randy Quaid is plopping down purple and green food on his plate while Chevy Chase is himself turning green? It was based on reality.

Fortunately, the quality has improved with increased competition, but not in every case.

Two off the best deals for food and quality are off the main part of the Strip at Boulder Station ($3.99 for breakfast, $5,99 for lunch and $8.99 for dinner). The Fiesta Hotel (same prices) gets equally good reviews. The Boulder Strip and Freemont Street areas offer the kinds of deals synonymous with Vegas, meaning you can eat lunch or dinner for the price of a gambling chip at the Mirage.

The best, though, is the Carnival World Buffet at the Rio. It's not cheap -- $12.99 for breakfat, $14.99 for lunch and $22.99 for dunner -- but with sushi, a Mongolian grill, and tasty stations featuring Mexican, Italian, pizza, hamburgers and much more, it's well worth the price. It's so good, locals eat there frequently. And then there's the buffett at the new Wynn – fantastic but at $38 per person for dinner it's also a feast on the wallet.

Z'Tejas Grille (3824 Paradise Road) is a restaurant/bar with tasty food that can have a lively atmosphere. It's mostly a locals dinner crowd but the margaritas and martinis are an attraction for the bar-seeking set.

Quite often, the worst thing about the buffets are the lines. At meal time, it seems as if every tourist in town suddenly became hungry at the same instant, making half-hour waits commonplace. A quicker alternative is the casino coffee shops, but the food is mediocre and prices are on par with regular restaurants.

For good, fast food, our favorite place is behind the Rio. In 'N Out Burger, a Southern California institution featuring a simple menu with fresh items, has happily made its way across the border to Nevada, much to the delight of visiting Angelenos. Order the Double-Double.

 

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