Thanks for reading.

This blog is dead. Thanks for reading. Find me at www.brockradke.com.
Showing posts with label bradley ogden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bradley ogden. Show all posts

2.16.2009

bradley ogden.

Visiting friends (including these two again) and family celebrations were the excuses used to blow big cash for a fancy Valentine's Day dinner out, and my party of eight selected Bradley Ogden at Caesars Palace. By the looks of the casino and Strip traffic, the V-Day weekend may have been a much-needed boost for Vegas. I feel fine with my own contribution to the economy, evidenced by my gleeful snatch of the bill to see if we broke into four digits.

Bradley Ogden is considered by most as one of the top overall rooms in the city and as this was my first meal at the nearly six-year old restaurant -- Ogden's first outside California -- expectations were high. Incredibly high. Some of this excitement was built around the rare opportunity, for me, to go out plus 7, paving the way for a truly comprehensive experience. Lucking into this opportunity, I didn't disappoint, and neither did the restaurant. Mr. Ogden himself even strolled out of the kitchen to visit several tables (but not ours) during the almost four hours we were there, which is always nice to see when you're on the Strip and every restaurant has a big name on the wall but not necessarily in the kitchen.

In a word, outstanding.

A couple bottles of Melville Pinot Noir (which was Californian, people, not Oregonian like you thought) and too many $8 bottles of Voss accompanied farmers market green and Caesar salads, twice baked Maytag blue cheese souffle, squash soup, butter poached Alaskan king crab with Fuji apples, seared Sonoma foie gras, roasted chicken, scallops, pork loin, roasted sturgeon and bison. Everything was great and everyone was happy. The service was comfortably slow (until we tried to pay, then it became uncomfortably slow) and the staff was friendly and warm.

There were highlights, and they were very, very high. At least a couple of our almost vegetarians were completely turned by the South Dakota bison, which was plated as two small tenderloin filets on a dense potato pave, granola and a currant-red wine sauce. This was perfection: moist, lean, slightly smokey to stay in touch with the cowboyishness of the meat, and so delicious that we will wonder for a while why people eat beef. The foie gras, too, with a whimsical peanut butter and jelly accompaniment, was mind blowing. My chosen entree, the Duroc pork loin, was good enough (I'm still adjusting to piggy done on the rare side) but the top tastes on this plate came from the braised cabbage underneath and the spiced apples and bacon on top. I'm not complaining, because the Caesar was strong and the crab was fucking amazing. And there was a lot of crab on the dish, huge sweet chunks among strands of apple and a foam that tasted of creamsicle. Seriously. Ogden's crew also amuse bouched us with a little lobster and citrus, talked us into desserts of ice cream, rich cheesecake with berries and coconut flan, and threw in another something sweet with creamy shots of the best butterscotch pudding ever.

Before dinner, I was explaining to one of these good friends that my recent dilemma, as a developing Vegas epicurean, is highly recommended restaurants that simply cannot meet the expectations that grow and grow with each new fantastic meal. That wasn't a problem at Bradley Ogden. To walk into a high-priced restaurant on the Strip and automatically expect the best meal of your life, well, maybe that's foolish. But this was one of the best, even if the company had a lot to do with it.

11.10.2008

firefly. bradley ogden.

It's a tough job, when you're me, to settle on a location for an afternoon of eating and drinking somewhere in Vegas. I want to try new stuff. I want to get not-so-new stuff that I haven't been able to get yet. I also have a hard time not going for something reliably awesome. So we combined two of those factors on Saturday, going for a late lunch of tapas and cocktails at Firefly and then wandering around the Forum Shops at Caesars Palace before getting another drink and snack at Bradley Ogden.

Firefly has got to be one of the most beloved restaurants in Vegas. Tourists love it and eat there when they're hungover. Locals will tell you it's the best spot for tapas. It's kind of a hipster joint, which can lead to some douchey surroundings at times, but the food and drink are worth putting up with such a minor annoyance. Mojitos and sangria are mandatory, as are one of the tastiest bites I've ever had: the stuffed dates. It's a smoked almond crammed inside a date, wrapped with bacon and served with a red wine reduction and crumbles of bleu cheese. It's as good as it sounds. On this visit, we also sampled perfect portions of gazpacho, boquerones (white anchovies on baby toasts), a veggie empanada with a great tang from herb cream cheese, stuffed red peppers and ham and manchego cheese croquetas. As usual, everything was great, complemented by a table on the patio and perfect weather. It got me to thinking: is this the best Spanish restaurant in Vegas? And are there Spanish restaurants in Vegas that aren't all about the tapas? (Firefly does serve paella, although I've never tried it.) When Julian Serrano opens his at CityCenter next year, I'm sure that will answer questions like those.

Meanwhile, at Caesars, everybody is wandering around the Forum and not buying anything, and we are no different. After planning to grab a drink at either Joe's Stone Crab or Boa Steakhouse, I instead opted for Bradley Ogden's bar. This place is in my top 5 when it comes to Not New Restaurants I Still Haven't Eaten At. If I wasn't still partially full from lunch, I would have tried what many have hailed as the best burger in Vegas, the ground steak burger served at this bar. But instead, we munched a tasty plate of hummus and grilled flatbread and sipped two slightly disappointing cocktails: a Dirty Laundry, an extremely olivey vodka martini, and a Drunken Tortuga, basically a glass of gin with cilantro floating in it. I'm all for ordering expensive "signature" cocktails at expensive restaurant bars, but more often than not I regret it and wish I'd gone for some whiskey or a plain old gin and tonic. These drinks were not so great, but the hummus was. Still, it was nice to finally step foot in this restaurant and I look forward to returning for that burger.