Wynn Las Vegas Archives - San Diego Magazine https://sandiegomagazine.com/tag/wynn-las-vegas/ Tue, 19 Sep 2023 17:31:54 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://sandiegomagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/cropped-SDM_favicon-32x32.png Wynn Las Vegas Archives - San Diego Magazine https://sandiegomagazine.com/tag/wynn-las-vegas/ 32 32 Vida Las Vegas: Sustainability in Sin City https://sandiegomagazine.com/features/vida-las-vegas-sustainability-in-sin-city/ Wed, 29 Jun 2022 04:11:00 +0000 http://staging.sdmag-courtavenuelatam.com/uncategorized/vida-las-vegas-sustainability-in-sin-city/ Nevada's most glamorous city turns up the heat with its eco-friendly offerings

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Omega Mart

Omega Mart

Kate Russell

Las Vegas is arguably the last destination most people think about when thinking of eco-friendly vacations. I watched Teslas zoom by while I passed the solar fields just outside the Strip on an uncomfortably hot spring day and it made me think: Sure, I offset my road trip’s carbon by donating to an organization that plants trees along my planned route, but that seemed like a Band-Aid. I had hoped for this trip to use regenerative travel practices, a growing traveling philosophy that dictates one shouldn’t only leave a place as they found it, but also seek to make it better. With that in mind, I set out on a quest to do more good than harm in Sin, eh… Sinless City.

See

I start my venture with using the zero-emissions monorail on the Strip, which removes 2.1 million vehicles a year from the clogged roadway. Inside the just-off-the-Strip Area 51 is the family-friendly art experience Meow Wolf–the only certified B-Corporation (a certification program for environmental/social performance) in the themed entertainment industry.

The collective’s brand-new permanent installation, “Omega Mart,” is a tripped-out convenience store offering some food for thought on how we live now. Part of the entrance fee goes to support local community organizations. In addition, Meow Wolf partners with local artists to create public installations, like Luis Varela Rico’s e-waste sculpture at Goodwill of Southern Nevada.

Arcadia Earth, cave

Arcadia Earth

Leong Sim

Another artsy experience is Arcadia Earth, the first immersive environmental art exhibit to explore our natural world’s challenges. Using large-scale installations built from upcycled materials, plus augmented and virtual reality, Arcadia Earth presents climate education in a fun way. To offset their emissions, they partnered with Sea Trees, an ocean reforestation nonprofit, to help regenerate kelp forests in California.

Relax

Locating a truly green hotel can be a challenge in Las Vegas, but some properties are trying harder than others to reduce their environmental footprints. For example, a large portion of the electricity needed to power slots at MGM Resorts Aria and Vdara and pool pumping at the Wynn Las Vegas, are powered by solar fields like the one I’d seen driving in. Still, few Vegas resorts were making headway in their dependence on fossil fuels. A good tip is to look into a resort’s water reuse practices and use that as a guideline.

Wynn Las Vegas

Wynn Las Vegas

Barbara Kraft

Eat

While hunting for locally sourced cuisine, one friend laughed and said to me, “There are no farms in Vegas.” He was wrong. Enter the Summerlin neighborhood’s Honey Salt, Vegas’ only authentic farm-to-table restaurant (so far).

From the designing minds of Elizabeth Blau and Chef Kim Canteenwalla, the former of which is often credited for making Vegas a culinary destination in the first place, the sleek and stylish Honey Salt sources much of its veggie sides for its new summer seafood boil from Desert Blooms Farm in nearby Tecopa. Rumor has it that a carbon-neutral brewery, Brewdog, is also in the works for future visitors.

Do

Friends told me to get off the Strip to find inspiration and maybe make an impact. Spring Preserve’s Origen Museum educates community members and eco-travelers about the intense process of building sustainably in the interactive (and air-conditioned) LEED-certified museum. The property’s four trails, first traversed by the Paiute Indians, wind around the complex and ribbon into a cottonwood grove and past natural springs threaded with reeds. There, native tortoises baked in the sun, offering an unexpected lesson on how slowness helps a body adapt to oppressive heat.

I took a day kayak trip from the base of the Hoover Dam, up the Colorado River, to a natural hot spring and the Emerald Cave with Evolution Expeditions. Throughout the journey, I learned about conservation efforts and the west’s water crisis (40 million people rely on water from Lake Mead). Visitors can paddle along the rushing river, past waterfalls, bighorn sheep, and bald eagles, stopping to traverse slot canyons.

While meandering along a river so strong it carved canyons, it becomes clear to me that Vegas is evolving, perhaps not as quickly as other cities, but it’s trying. And spending our tourism dollars wisely can help support that.

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MENU GAWKING: Bijou https://sandiegomagazine.com/food-drink/menu-gawking-bijou/ Thu, 19 Jun 2014 08:24:00 +0000 http://staging.sdmag-courtavenuelatam.com/uncategorized/menu-gawking-bijou/ First look at the menu from James Beard nominee William Bradley

The post MENU GAWKING: Bijou appeared first on San Diego Magazine.

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William Bradley is coming down from the hills. Or at least his food is. Since 2006 the James Beard-nominated chef has wowed the very high-end clientele at Grand Del Mar’s signature dining room, Addison. Now he’s designed his second menu for San Diego, headed for the more public (thought still very high-end) streets of La Jolla.

The concept is Bijou, a classic French bistro set to open June 27. Bradley’s a historian (he started collecting vintage cookbooks in high school, when most of us were collecting wine cooler labels), and Bijou shows off his old soul.

“We went very, very classic to show some of those old preparations,” says Bradley. “Whenever you go to France, you find yourself in a bistro. It’s the soul of French cooking—it starts with bistro food and then gets refined later.”

Shaun Gethin has been named chef de cuisine for Bijou. Before joining Addison as a sous chef in 2012, Gethin spent time at Gary Danko in San Francisco and Wynn Las Vegas. He and Bradley went through four or five renditions of each dish for Bijou until they got it the way they wanted it. Once open, Bradley will continue to spend most of his time at Addison.

Earlier this year, Grand Del Mar originally put an offshoot of their restaurant Amaya in this space. When that concept didn’t pan out, brass decided to lean on their star to create Bijou.

The result is a menu that reads like a history lesson of French bistros. So I decided to treat it as such with a brief geo-historical perspective of some of the main dishes. You can view the full menu below.

Note: Unless said directly that it’s Addison’s preparation, many of the dish descriptions below are general, classic preps.

PATE DE CAMPAGNE

What’s known as a “country” pate or terrine. Anything with country in the name is simpler, rougher around the edges (more chunks of meat, usually pork shoulder, chicken liver, etc.). Campagne usually only uses a touch of liver, so it doesn’t have that overwhelming organ musk.

OUEFS MAYONNAISE

A bistro classic—basically boiled eggs with designer mayonnaise, which makes it somewhat of a deconstructed deviled egg. “One of my favorite bistros in Paris is Le Comptoir du Relais,” says Bradley. “And this was one of the best dishes I had there. We pay homage to Le Comptoir on the menu.”

FRENCH ONION SOUP

French onion has blue-collar origins as a get-through-the-day meal for laborers in France’s once-famous silk industry. The French didn’t invent onion soup, but they take credit for being good Frenchmen and adding cheese and bread.

STEAK TARTARE

The history of raw, ground meat points to the Mongols who lived on the steppes of Russia. The topography meant animals had to climb and exercise daily—leading to developed muscle and thus tough meat. So the Mongols ground it to make it more tender. French tartare actually has a history of being made with horsemeat, the result of a beef shortage during the Franco-Prussian War in the late 1800s. Bijou’s version will not be equine.

LYONNAISE SALAD

A classic salad found at all the bouchons across France. It’s usually made with frisee, croutons, lardon/bacon and a poached egg on top—so it looks like a birds nest. The bitter greens with the crisp bacon and the runny egg makes a perfectly balanced salad. “We use eggs from Windsor Farm,” says Bradley. “And put a touch of Hollandaise sauce on top of the egg.”

SWEET GEM LETTUCE SALAD

For this salad Bradley will use fines herbes, the classic French herb blend of tarragon, chives, chervil and parsley. Bistros have long used the herb quartet to make omelets and scrambled eggs taste amazing. He’s also topping it with green goddess dressing, created at San Francisco’s Palace Hotel in honor of actor George Arliss, who was starring in a play called The Green Goddess.

NICOISE

A classic salad preparation from Nice, the southern beach city of France. Nicoise has been tweaked a thousand different ways (tuna, lettuce, etc.) But the classic is a tuna-free crudité that, if done right, reeks of garlic, anchovy, olives and tomatoes. It’s a salty blast that couldn’t more perfectly evoke its seaport birthplace.

SALMON RILLETTES

Rillettes are very similar to a pate, only a little rougher. You basically cube your chosen meat, salt it heavily and slowly cook it in a fat until its tender enough to be shredded. They’re traditionally made with pork, so Bradley’s is a twist for the seafood and pilates set (his colleague Thomas Keller makes pretty famous salmon rillettes). There’s usually some sort of alcohol in it (Pernod, whiskey, Cognac, absinthe, etc.). Eat this with a glass of Champagne and hit a new life apex.

COQ AU VIN

You can’t have a French bistro without coq au vin. Julia Child was famous for the classic Burgundy dish. It literally means “rooster in red wine,” since it was created by French farmers to make old rooster meat palatable (the tannins in red wine are a great tenderizer). It’s a fricassee, meaning a slow-braised meat served in its sauce with onions, mushrooms and browned pieces of chicken. True coq au vin was finished with the blood of the rooster and stabilized with brandy and vinegar (which would prevent the blood from clotting).

STEAK FRITES

A fancy name for steak with French fries—found in every French bistro. Usually the cut is a porterhouse, rib-eye or flank, and traditionally pan-fried. The signature crispiness on the shoestring fries is achieved by frying them twice (first at a lower temp to cook them through, then at a higher temp to crisp). “Food that simple has to be so accurate,” says Bradley. “To do steak frites perfectly it takes a lot of concentration.”

GNOCCHI A LA PARISIENNE

Ah, Parisian gnocchi. The lighter, fluffier side of the famous potato dumpling. The secret here is to make an incredibly good pate a choux (cream puff dough). Pate a choux is made with eggs, flour and hot water instead of cold or room-temp water. By adding hot water to flour, you denature the proteins and smash them into little bits. If you’ve had gnocchi that were too dense, the dough was probably made with room temp or cold water. Bradley will serve his with noisette—browned butter, otherwise known as the best flavor on the planet.

VEAL PAILLARD

Paillard is an old French term that’s largely been replaced by escalope. It’s basically a thin veal scaloppine, the meat flattened and then cooked very briefly over a high heat (a grill, or hot skillet).

LOBSTER GRATIN W/ SAUCE A L’AMERICAINE

Lobster a l’Americaine is a traditional brasserie dish believed to have come from Provence. Lobster shells are pounded and scraped, then steeped in a fish veloute and butter so all that great crustacean flavor leeches into the sauce. Tomatoes, garlic, white wine, Cognac, cream and usually tarragon are added to make an incredibly rich ordeal. This dish takes patience, man-hours and dedication, on account of all the pounding, scraping and steeping.

MENU GAWKING: Bijou

MENU GAWKING: Bijou

Chef William Bradley

The post MENU GAWKING: Bijou appeared first on San Diego Magazine.

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MENU GAWKING: Bijou https://sandiegomagazine.com/food-drink/menu-gawking-bijou-2/ Thu, 19 Jun 2014 08:24:00 +0000 https://staging.sdmag-courtavenuelatam.com/uncategorized/menu-gawking-bijou-2/ First look at the menu from James Beard nominee William Bradley

The post MENU GAWKING: Bijou appeared first on San Diego Magazine.

]]>
William Bradley is coming down from the hills. Or at least his food is. Since 2006 the James Beard-nominated chef has wowed the very high-end clientele at Grand Del Mar’s signature dining room, Addison. Now he’s designed his second menu for San Diego, headed for the more public (thought still very high-end) streets of La Jolla.

The concept is Bijou, a classic French bistro set to open June 27. Bradley’s a historian (he started collecting vintage cookbooks in high school, when most of us were collecting wine cooler labels), and Bijou shows off his old soul.

“We went very, very classic to show some of those old preparations,” says Bradley. “Whenever you go to France, you find yourself in a bistro. It’s the soul of French cooking—it starts with bistro food and then gets refined later.”

Shaun Gethin has been named chef de cuisine for Bijou. Before joining Addison as a sous chef in 2012, Gethin spent time at Gary Danko in San Francisco and Wynn Las Vegas. He and Bradley went through four or five renditions of each dish for Bijou until they got it the way they wanted it. Once open, Bradley will continue to spend most of his time at Addison.

Earlier this year, Grand Del Mar originally put an offshoot of their restaurant Amaya in this space. When that concept didn’t pan out, brass decided to lean on their star to create Bijou.

The result is a menu that reads like a history lesson of French bistros. So I decided to treat it as such with a brief geo-historical perspective of some of the main dishes. You can view the full menu below.

Note: Unless said directly that it’s Addison’s preparation, many of the dish descriptions below are general, classic preps.

PATE DE CAMPAGNE

What’s known as a “country” pate or terrine. Anything with country in the name is simpler, rougher around the edges (more chunks of meat, usually pork shoulder, chicken liver, etc.). Campagne usually only uses a touch of liver, so it doesn’t have that overwhelming organ musk.

OUEFS MAYONNAISE

A bistro classic—basically boiled eggs with designer mayonnaise, which makes it somewhat of a deconstructed deviled egg. “One of my favorite bistros in Paris is Le Comptoir du Relais,” says Bradley. “And this was one of the best dishes I had there. We pay homage to Le Comptoir on the menu.”

FRENCH ONION SOUP

French onion has blue-collar origins as a get-through-the-day meal for laborers in France’s once-famous silk industry. The French didn’t invent onion soup, but they take credit for being good Frenchmen and adding cheese and bread.

STEAK TARTARE

The history of raw, ground meat points to the Mongols who lived on the steppes of Russia. The topography meant animals had to climb and exercise daily—leading to developed muscle and thus tough meat. So the Mongols ground it to make it more tender. French tartare actually has a history of being made with horsemeat, the result of a beef shortage during the Franco-Prussian War in the late 1800s. Bijou’s version will not be equine.

LYONNAISE SALAD

A classic salad found at all the bouchons across France. It’s usually made with frisee, croutons, lardon/bacon and a poached egg on top—so it looks like a birds nest. The bitter greens with the crisp bacon and the runny egg makes a perfectly balanced salad. “We use eggs from Windsor Farm,” says Bradley. “And put a touch of Hollandaise sauce on top of the egg.”

SWEET GEM LETTUCE SALAD

For this salad Bradley will use fines herbes, the classic French herb blend of tarragon, chives, chervil and parsley. Bistros have long used the herb quartet to make omelets and scrambled eggs taste amazing. He’s also topping it with green goddess dressing, created at San Francisco’s Palace Hotel in honor of actor George Arliss, who was starring in a play called The Green Goddess.

NICOISE

A classic salad preparation from Nice, the southern beach city of France. Nicoise has been tweaked a thousand different ways (tuna, lettuce, etc.) But the classic is a tuna-free crudité that, if done right, reeks of garlic, anchovy, olives and tomatoes. It’s a salty blast that couldn’t more perfectly evoke its seaport birthplace.

SALMON RILLETTES

Rillettes are very similar to a pate, only a little rougher. You basically cube your chosen meat, salt it heavily and slowly cook it in a fat until its tender enough to be shredded. They’re traditionally made with pork, so Bradley’s is a twist for the seafood and pilates set (his colleague Thomas Keller makes pretty famous salmon rillettes). There’s usually some sort of alcohol in it (Pernod, whiskey, Cognac, absinthe, etc.). Eat this with a glass of Champagne and hit a new life apex.

COQ AU VIN

You can’t have a French bistro without coq au vin. Julia Child was famous for the classic Burgundy dish. It literally means “rooster in red wine,” since it was created by French farmers to make old rooster meat palatable (the tannins in red wine are a great tenderizer). It’s a fricassee, meaning a slow-braised meat served in its sauce with onions, mushrooms and browned pieces of chicken. True coq au vin was finished with the blood of the rooster and stabilized with brandy and vinegar (which would prevent the blood from clotting).

STEAK FRITES

A fancy name for steak with French fries—found in every French bistro. Usually the cut is a porterhouse, rib-eye or flank, and traditionally pan-fried. The signature crispiness on the shoestring fries is achieved by frying them twice (first at a lower temp to cook them through, then at a higher temp to crisp). “Food that simple has to be so accurate,” says Bradley. “To do steak frites perfectly it takes a lot of concentration.”

GNOCCHI A LA PARISIENNE

Ah, Parisian gnocchi. The lighter, fluffier side of the famous potato dumpling. The secret here is to make an incredibly good pate a choux (cream puff dough). Pate a choux is made with eggs, flour and hot water instead of cold or room-temp water. By adding hot water to flour, you denature the proteins and smash them into little bits. If you’ve had gnocchi that were too dense, the dough was probably made with room temp or cold water. Bradley will serve his with noisette—browned butter, otherwise known as the best flavor on the planet.

VEAL PAILLARD

Paillard is an old French term that’s largely been replaced by escalope. It’s basically a thin veal scaloppine, the meat flattened and then cooked very briefly over a high heat (a grill, or hot skillet).

LOBSTER GRATIN W/ SAUCE A L’AMERICAINE

Lobster a l’Americaine is a traditional brasserie dish believed to have come from Provence. Lobster shells are pounded and scraped, then steeped in a fish veloute and butter so all that great crustacean flavor leeches into the sauce. Tomatoes, garlic, white wine, Cognac, cream and usually tarragon are added to make an incredibly rich ordeal. This dish takes patience, man-hours and dedication, on account of all the pounding, scraping and steeping.

MENU GAWKING: Bijou

MENU GAWKING: Bijou

Chef William Bradley

The post MENU GAWKING: Bijou appeared first on San Diego Magazine.

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