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Your guide to living in Southern Nevada
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When nature malls
Red Rock canyon needS betteR RetaIL Life is shell
on the Road (and In the dIRt) wIth the toRtoISe tRackeRS
32of the valley's
best beverages, from suds to
smoothies
Plus:
cocktaIL tIme
machIneDrink your
way through history
at classic drinking
(and eating) spots that span the decadespage 43
Pros give tips!
So you want to
StaRt a wIne
coLLectIon
OCTOBER 2011
THREE MDS WITH THREE DIFFERENT AREAS OF INTEREST PROVIDE A COORDINATED FULL SPECTRUM OF AESTHETIC SERVICES. DR. GOESEL ANSON AND DR. TERRY HIGGINS EACH CONCENTRATE ON JUST ONE ASPECT OF COSMETIC REJUVENATION. DR. ANSON DEVOTES HER PRACTICE SOLELY TO COSMETIC FACIAL PROCEDURES. DR. HIGGINS WORKS FROM THE NECK DOWN AND WITH THE RECENT ADDITION OF DERMA-TOLOGIST DR. ALISON TAM, PATIENTS NOW HAVE ACCESS TO EVEN MORE SPECIALIZED SERVICES SUCH AS HAIR TRANSPLANT AND LASER TECHNIQUES.
MEDICAL DEGREEDR. ANSON: University of Illinois, ChicagoDR. HIGGINS: University of Texas at HoustonDR. TAM: Western University of Health Sciences
LOCATIONLas Vegas, Nevada
CONTACT702.822.2100
To learn more about the practice visitnatureredefi ned.com
Dr. Goesel Anson hung her shingle in Las Vegas in 1997. She joined forces with Dr. Terry Higgins almost a decade ago. The pair has been dedicated to creating a center of excellence for aesthetic surgery, where art-istry, integrity and excellence prevail. When asked for their key to success, Dr. Higgins replies “it’s simple: we deliver the very best care we can for our patients.“ They each have been recognized on both the local and national levels in Top Doctors lists and have been featured on Discovery and The Learning Channel.
Drs. Anson and Higgins are well known in the community for their natural looking results in a city where over-exaggerated enhancements are commonplace. “I want my patients to look lucky, not, done. Most of my patients want to look as good as they can for their age, not look like they’re trying to be 20 again,” says Dr. Anson whose expertise is in aesthetic surgery of the face. Dr. Higgins, who specialty is breast and body surgery, says “we both share the same aesthetic philosophy. Most of my patients are sophisticated and want to have a natural appearance.”
Skin care and non-surgical options are as important to the doctors as the surgical techniques themselves. “It’s not, either, or” says Anson, “but rather, which and when.” Towards that end, they offer Botox and a variety of fi llers. In fact, Allergan, the maker of Botox and Juvederm, has awarded them ‘Black Diamond’ status, reserved for the top 1% of practices in the US for their volume of injections.
Dr. Goesel AnsonDr. Terry HigginsDr. Alison TamAnson & HigginsPlastic Surgery AssociatesLas Vegas, Nevada
The doctors have developed their own skin care line, aptly named Anson + Higgins®, out of frustration with costs and lack of information in available product lines. Anson + Higgins® focuses on affordable, PABA free ingredients, active peptides and phytonutrients.
To further their vision, Drs. Anson and Higgins have welcomed a Cosmetic Der-matologist, Dr. Alison Tam. Dr. Tam brings the latest in laser techniques and hair transplant to the practice.
On staff at Anson & Higgins are three full time medical aestheticians who guide their patients through the myriad of skin care products. Anti-aging cosmeceuticals and new research in topical therapies make skin care more effective than ever, but also more confusing for the patient.
Drs. Anson and Higgins have an elegant, boutique practice that refl ects their aes-thetic sense and attention to detail. “We are fortunate to be able to blend all the tools available today, the latest in skin care, lasers, Botox, fillers AND surgery. Having all this available in one practice allows us to provide a coordinated, com-prehensive aesthetic plan for each patient “says Anson. Adds Dr. Higgins, “We have something for every age group. We want our patients to stay with us for life!
“three heads are better than one”
PLASTIC SU
RG
ERY
LLeeftt to right: DDr. Alisson Tamm, Dr. Terrry Higginns, Dr. GGoesel AAnsonn
Names you can trust
THREE MDS WITH THREE DIFFERENT AREAS OF INTEREST PROVIDE A COORDINATED FULL SPECTRUM OF AESTHETIC SERVICES. DR. GOESEL ANSON AND DR. TERRY HIGGINS EACH CONCENTRATE ON JUST ONE ASPECT OF COSMETIC REJUVENATION. DR. ANSON DEVOTES HER PRACTICE SOLELY TO COSMETIC FACIAL PROCEDURES. DR. HIGGINS WORKS FROM THE NECK DOWN AND WITH THE RECENT ADDITION OF DERMA-TOLOGIST DR. ALISON TAM, PATIENTS NOW HAVE ACCESS TO EVEN MORE SPECIALIZED SERVICES SUCH AS HAIR TRANSPLANT AND LASER TECHNIQUES.
MEDICAL DEGREEDR. ANSON: University of Illinois, ChicagoDR. HIGGINS: University of Texas at HoustonDR. TAM: Western University of Health Sciences
LOCATIONLas Vegas, Nevada
CONTACT702.822.2100
To learn more about the practice visitnatureredefi ned.com
Dr. Goesel Anson hung her shingle in Las Vegas in 1997. She joined forces with Dr. Terry Higgins almost a decade ago. The pair has been dedicated to creating a center of excellence for aesthetic surgery, where art-istry, integrity and excellence prevail. When asked for their key to success, Dr. Higgins replies “it’s simple: we deliver the very best care we can for our patients.“ They each have been recognized on both the local and national levels in Top Doctors lists and have been featured on Discovery and The Learning Channel.
Drs. Anson and Higgins are well known in the community for their natural looking results in a city where over-exaggerated enhancements are commonplace. “I want my patients to look lucky, not, done. Most of my patients want to look as good as they can for their age, not look like they’re trying to be 20 again,” says Dr. Anson whose expertise is in aesthetic surgery of the face. Dr. Higgins, who specialty is breast and body surgery, says “we both share the same aesthetic philosophy. Most of my patients are sophisticated and want to have a natural appearance.”
Skin care and non-surgical options are as important to the doctors as the surgical techniques themselves. “It’s not, either, or” says Anson, “but rather, which and when.” Towards that end, they offer Botox and a variety of fi llers. In fact, Allergan, the maker of Botox and Juvederm, has awarded them ‘Black Diamond’ status, reserved for the top 1% of practices in the US for their volume of injections.
Dr. Goesel AnsonDr. Terry HigginsDr. Alison TamAnson & HigginsPlastic Surgery AssociatesLas Vegas, Nevada
The doctors have developed their own skin care line, aptly named Anson + Higgins®, out of frustration with costs and lack of information in available product lines. Anson + Higgins® focuses on affordable, PABA free ingredients, active peptides and phytonutrients.
To further their vision, Drs. Anson and Higgins have welcomed a Cosmetic Der-matologist, Dr. Alison Tam. Dr. Tam brings the latest in laser techniques and hair transplant to the practice.
On staff at Anson & Higgins are three full time medical aestheticians who guide their patients through the myriad of skin care products. Anti-aging cosmeceuticals and new research in topical therapies make skin care more effective than ever, but also more confusing for the patient.
Drs. Anson and Higgins have an elegant, boutique practice that refl ects their aes-thetic sense and attention to detail. “We are fortunate to be able to blend all the tools available today, the latest in skin care, lasers, Botox, fillers AND surgery. Having all this available in one practice allows us to provide a coordinated, com-prehensive aesthetic plan for each patient “says Anson. Adds Dr. Higgins, “We have something for every age group. We want our patients to stay with us for life!
“three heads are better than one”
PLASTIC SU
RG
ERY
LLeeftt to right: DDr. Alisson Tamm, Dr. Terrry Higginns, Dr. GGoesel AAnsonn
Names you can trust
editor’s note
2 D e s e r t Co m pa n i o n O c tO b e r 2 01 1
TThere’s nothing I like more than commandeering a table at The Beat downtown for an epic rot — that is, a long, caffeine-fueled hangout session that is only incidentally (and therefore happily) productive. Surely you do this too at your fave coffee spot, unloading books, magazines, pens, notepads and laptop for a bout of aimless creative ferment or a little restorative catch-up. It’s deliciously un-American, in a way; it’s the rigor-ous inverse of the purportedly pro-ductive weekday grind. Much of our work lives entails doing somethings of questionable consequence in cubicles and under fluorescent tubes; the cafe invites us to do serious nothings in windowed view.
I have to credit much of my mod-est success in the writing life to this brand of slyly productive lassitude. I’m thinking of the Las Vegas cafes I’ve inhabited — and inhabited is the right word for it — over the years, from the old Cafe Espresso Roma on Maryland Parkway (the generous marble tables making the perfect instant office for creating cut-and-paste skate ’zines) to the dusty, couch-filled cavern that was Cafe Copioh, which by night was trans-formed into a bustling salon of artists, writers, goths and gutterpunks. And I’d be remiss not to mention down-town’s Enigma, that garden paradise of Fourth Street, where musicians and poets gathered for songs and readings
in the shade-dappled backyard. It was at Enigma that I learned pithiness of expression and concise branding strategy via whole afternoons scrib-bling Enigma Cafe slogans on their blank matchbooks. (As you can see, the lesson in pithiness didn’t exactly stick.) In every case, the caffeine jones was incidental; coffee was means to a meandering end.
My point: Don’t be fooled. This is-sue isn’t about drinking. Instead, it’s a celebration of alchemy, of how liquids are transformed into culture, commu-nity and conversation. Who among us hasn’t hatched a great idea thanks to a second cup of joe with a fellow creative? Cocktail mixers, we know, are popular for a reason: The buzz makes for great connections. I’m convinced, too, that there’s at least one defensible idea rat-tling at the bottom of most bottles of wine, particularly when shared. And if you’ve ever braced yourself for yet another despair-fogged day at the of-fice with a hurried, furtive nip of Wild Turkey from a brown bag slipped from beneath your car seat as you guiltily scan the company parking lot … well, actually, can’t help you on that score.
Desert Companion has been walking this talk for several months now. Chances are I haven’t seen you at one of our Desert Companion on Tour events, the perfect synthesis of coffee and community. It works like this: Every month, we do a live Q&A
with a Desert Companion contribu-tor or subject at a select location in town. Think of it as an intimate, live talk show with some substance. Since we launched the series, we’ve featured Review-Journal political columnist Steve Sebelius, journalist Steve Friess, aging management guru Dr. Jeffry Life and urban historian Brian Paco Alvarez. Save the date of 9:30 a.m. Oct. 15, and watch the Desert Companion website or friend us on Facebook to learn about this month’s guest and location. You’ll wet your whistle on some good coffee — and whet your appetite for some brain food.
Andrew Kiraly,Editor
Liquid assets
nextmonth
in Desert Companion
Celebrate
the giving
season with our
Holiday Guide
Copyright©2011Simon®
Client: The Forum Shops At Caesars Job Name: 500-0572 Specs: 4 color/Bleed Publication: Desert Companion Magazine ART PREPARED BY: nogginwerks® llc. / 6507 North Carrollton Ave / Indianapolis 46220
IF YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS REGARDING THIS ART, PLEASE CALL 317-202-9863 MECHANICAL 08/23/11
160 SPECIALTY SHOPS AND RESTAURANTS INCLUDING AGENT PROVOCATEUR, ANTIQUITIES, A|X ARMANI EXCHANGE, BANANA REPUBLIC, BRIGHTON COLLECTIBLES, CASA FUENTE CIGAR BAR, COACH, CH CAROLINA HERRERA, CHROME HEARTS, CUSTO BARCELONA, D&G, DIESEL, FRESH, GUESS, JAMES PERSE, JUICY COUTURE, LACOSTE, LORO PIANA, M•A•C COSMETICS, MARC JACOBS, MONTBLANC, PANDORA, STUART WEITZMAN, TORY BURCH.
SHOPPING LINE® 702.893.4800. FORUMSHOPS.COM.FACEBOOK.COM/FORUMSHOPS TWITTER.COM/THE_FORUM_SHOPS
Copyright©2011Simon®
Client: The Forum Shops At Caesars Job Name: 500-0572 Specs: 4 color/Bleed Publication: Desert Companion Magazine ART PREPARED BY: nogginwerks® llc. / 6507 North Carrollton Ave / Indianapolis 46220
IF YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS REGARDING THIS ART, PLEASE CALL 317-202-9863 MECHANICAL 08/23/11
160 SPECIALTY SHOPS AND RESTAURANTS INCLUDING AGENT PROVOCATEUR, ANTIQUITIES, A|X ARMANI EXCHANGE, BANANA REPUBLIC, BRIGHTON COLLECTIBLES, CASA FUENTE CIGAR BAR, COACH, CH CAROLINA HERRERA, CHROME HEARTS, CUSTO BARCELONA, D&G, DIESEL, FRESH, GUESS, JAMES PERSE, JUICY COUTURE, LACOSTE, LORO PIANA, M•A•C COSMETICS, MARC JACOBS, MONTBLANC, PANDORA, STUART WEITZMAN, TORY BURCH.
SHOPPING LINE® 702.893.4800. FORUMSHOPS.COM.FACEBOOK.COM/FORUMSHOPS TWITTER.COM/THE_FORUM_SHOPS
3429
18
Photography Christopher Smith
on the cover
desert companion magazine // desertcompanion.com
contents
4 D e s e r t Co m pa n i o n O c tO b e r 2 01 1
10.2011
features34Drink up!Sip the valley’s strongest, tastiest and strangest drinks
40Oh yes you decantYou drink it, so why not start a wine collection?
43Cocktail time machineDrink your way through the decades
48The searchersThe rich loneliness of the field biologist
11All Things to
All PeoplePair it up!
18Books
The bookfest’s keynote authors
By Jarret Keene and Joseph Langdon
22Q&A
Partisan all the time By Andrew Kiraly
29Dining
Tequila as a family business
By J.J. Wylie
54 Guide
From rock to theater to dance, your guide
to culture
64Last word
Welcome to NatureDome‰
By Dan Kennedy
Land Rover Las Vegas • 5255 West Sahara Avenue • LRLV.com • 579.0400
L I M I T E D T I M E O N LY2 0 11 R A N G E R O V E R S P O R T H S E
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$999 cash down including 1st payment. 48 month term. 10,000 miles per year. Based on approved credit. MSRP $62,745. While supplies last. Offer ends 9/30/11.
6 D e s e r t Co m pa n i o n O c tO b e r 2 01 1
masthead
Editorial & artAndrew KirAly Editor
CHriSTOPHer SMiTH Art Director
advErtisingCHriSTine Kiely Corporate Support Manager
lAurA AlCArAz National Account Manager
SHArOn ClifTOn Senior Account Executive
Allen grAnT Senior Account Executive
elizAbeTH guernSeyAccount Executive
MArKuS VAn’T HulSenior Account Executive
MarkEting CATHerine KiMMarketing Manager
subscriptions CHriS biTOnTi Subscription Manager
onlinE dAnielle brAnTOn Web Administrator
sEnior staFFflOrenCe M.e. rOgerS President / General Manager
MelAnie CAnnOn Director of Development
CynTHiA M. dObeK Director of Business, Finance & Human Resources
PHil burger Director of Broadcast Operations
contributing WritErsMaureen Adamo, John Cur-tas, Cybele, Alexia Gyorody, Jarret Keene, Dan Kennedy, Heidi Kyser, Joseph Lang-don, David McKee, Brock Radke, Lissa Townsend Rodgers, Thomas, Gregan Wingert, J.J. Wylie
contributing artistsSabin Orr, Aaron McKinney, Ryan Weber
To submit your organization’s event listings for the Desert Companion events guide, send complete information to [email protected]. Feedback and story ideas are always welcome, too.
Editorial: Andrew Kiraly, (702) 259-7856;[email protected]
Fax: (702) 258-5646
advErtising: Christine Kiely, (702) 259-7813; [email protected]
subscriptions: Chris Bitonti, (702) 259-7810;[email protected]
WEbsitE: www.desertcompanion.com
Desert Companion is published 12 times a year by Nevada Public Radio, 1289 S. Torrey Pines Dr., Las Vegas, NV 89146. It is available by subscription at www.desertcompanion.com, or as part of Nevada Public Radio membership. It is also distrib-uted free of charge at select locations in the Las Vegas Valley. All photographs, artwork and ad designs printed are the sole property of Desert Companion and may not be duplicated or reproduced without the express written permission of the publisher. The views of Desert Companion contributing writers are not necessarily the views of Desert Companion or Nevada Public Radio.
ISSN 2157-8389 (print)ISSN 2157-8397 (online)
Mission statEMEnt
Desert Companion is the premier city magazine that celebrates the pursuits, passions and aspirations of Southern Nevadans. With
award-winning lifestyle journalism and design, Desert Companion does more than inform and
entertain. We spark dialogue, engage people and define the spirit of the Las Vegas Valley.
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To Us
PuBL ISHED By NEVADA PuBL IC RADIO
the legend lives on
Written and directed by Jamie King
las vegas mandalay bay events center • december 3 – 27, 2011
tickets on sale now at cirquedusoleil.com
OFFicial sPOnsOrvenue
exPerience the First-ever michael JacKsOn Fan Fest discover the legacy of the King of Pop in a whole new way
December 3 – 14, 2011
the legend lives on
Written and directed by Jamie King
las vegas mandalay bay events center • december 3 – 27, 2011
tickets on sale now at cirquedusoleil.com
OFFicial sPOnsOrvenue
exPerience the First-ever michael JacKsOn Fan Fest discover the legacy of the King of Pop in a whole new way
December 3 – 14, 2011
8 D e s e r t Co m pa n i o n O c tO b e r 2 01 1
nEvada public radio board oF dirEctorsoFFicErselizAbeTH freTwell, CHAir City of Las Vegas
SuSAn brennAn,ViCe CHAir Brennan Consulting Group, LLC
reed rAdOSeViCH, TreASurer Northern Trust Bank
flOrenCe M.e. rOgerS, SeCreTAry Nevada Public Radio
dirEctorsSHAMOOn AHMAd, M.d., MbA, fACP
CynTHiA AlexAnder, eSq. Snell & Wilmer
lOuiS CASTle, direCTOr eMeriTuS
PATriCK n. CHAPin, eSq., direCTOr eMeriTuS
KirK V. ClAuSenWells Fargo
SHerri gilligAn MGM Resorts International
jAn l. jOneS Caesars Entertainment Corporation
jOHn r. KlAi iiKlai Juba Architects
lAMAr MArCHeSe, President Emeritus
williAM MASOn Taylor International Corporation
CHriS MurrAy direCTOr eMeriTuS Avissa Corporation
CurTiS l. MyleS iii Las Vegas Monorail
jerry nAdAl Cirque du Soleil
PeTer O’neill R&R Partners
williAM j. “bill” nOOnAn, direCTOr eMeriTuS Boyd Gaming Corporation
MArK riCCiArdi, eSq., direCTOr eMeriTuS Fisher & Phillips, LLP
MiCKey rOeMer, direCTOr eMeriTuS Roemer Gaming
TiM wOng Arcata Associates
nEvada public radio coMMunitY advisorY boardMArK riCCiArdi, eSq. CHAirMAn Fisher & Phillips, LLP
dAVid CAbrAl American Commonwealth Mortgage
denniS CObb President, DCC Group
riCHArd i. dreiTzer Fox Rothschild LLP
Al gibeS Al Gibes Enterprises
CArOlyn g. gOOdMAn Meadows School
MArilyn gubler The Las Vegas Archive
KurTiS wAde jOHnSOn Absolute Auto Care
MegAn jOneS Friends for Harry Reid
edMÉe S. MArCeK College of Southern Nevada
SuSAn K. MOOre Lieutenant Governor’s Office
jennA MOrTOn
STeVe PArKer uNLV
riCHArd PlASTer Signature Homes
CHriS rOMAn Entravision
KiM ruSSellSmith Center for the Performing Arts
CAndy SCHneider Smith Center for the Performing Arts
STePHAnie SMiTH
bOb STOldAl Sunbelt Communica-tions Co.
KATe Turner wHiTeley Kirvin Doak Communications
brenT wrigHT Wright Engineers
bOb gerST Boyd Gaming Corporation
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What makes our orthopedics great? Navigation technology. Minimally invasive procedures. Reduced pain. Faster recovery. Knowing all of this should reassure you and give you the courage to reclaim your active life.
Fracture repair, total shoulder and hip and knee replacements and spine, foot and hand surgeries.
Feel comfortable in your choice of Centennial Hills Hospital.
Contact an orthopedic surgeon: 702-388-4888
Orthopedic Surgeryat Centennial Hills Hospital Medical Center
Physicians are independent practitioners who are not employees or agents of Centennial Hills Hospital Medical Center. The hospital shall not be liable for actions or treatments provided by physicians.
Centennial Hills Hospital is a tobacco-free campus.
6900 North Durango Dr. • Las Vegas, NV 89149-4409702-835-9700 • www.CentennialHillsHospital.com
Walk.Sit.Lift.Work.Play … in comfort, again.
Children’s Heart Center has provided quality medical care to children with heart disease since 1980. But more than that, they go the extra mile for patients who need help paying for medical expenses. When they needed a banking partner, they chose Nevada State Bank because we share their dedication to helping Nevadans. We found innovative solutions to help their practice lower its operating costs - so they could pass on the savings to the children who depend on them. As Nevada’s largest state-chartered community bank, we’ve been making a di� erence in the lives of Nevadans for over 50 years.
www.nsbank.com | 1.866.618.3574
MAKING A DIFFERENCE FOR CHILDREN’S HEART CENTER
The Childrens Heart Center Client Since 2010
job #: 15692
client: The Smith Center
title: Design Your Own Series
Desert Companion – October______________________________
run date: October 2011
release date: 9/9/11
release via: email______________________________
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pub: Desert Companion
bleed size: 8.875” x 11.25”
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HE RTOF THE ARTS.THE
Béla Fleck & The Flecktones
The Cleveland Orchestra
Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater
David Sedaris
Yo-Yo Ma and Kathryn Stott with The Assad Brothers
THE SMITH CENTER PRESENTS THE DESIGN YOUR OWN SERIES. Experience The Smith Center’s very first season in a spectacular way—your own way. With the Design Your Own series, you can choose from 19 must-see shows and save up to 15% off each ticket. The more shows you add to your series, the more you will save. This is the moment we’ve all been waiting for, and you can make it all your own. Visit TheSmithCenter.com to see the full lineup and purchase your Design Your Own series package.
Debuting, March 2012 | 702.982.7805 | TheSmithCenter.com
d e s e r tco m pa n i o n .co m 11
Learn wine-tasting tips from experts at “KNPR’s State of Nevada” at www.desertcompanion.com/hearmore
“Vegas! The Show” sings and dances entertainment history on “KNPR’s State of Nevada” at www.desertcompanion/hearmore
{ Hear More }
N E W S
P E O P L E
P O L I T I C S
S H O P
H U M O R
TToo many people see drinking as little more than the pursuit of an alcoholic buzz, or social lubrication. Not that there’s anything wrong with that. But to connois-seurs, the consumption of alcohol is more than just that.
Most great chefs realize that the proper wine, spirit or cocktail can add something special to a great meal. And never is that fact more apparent than in a great pairing dinner: a multi-course feast where each course is perfectly matched with the prop-er alcoholic beverage. And we’re not just
talking about a glass of red wine with your spaghetti. Here are a few of the most inter-esting places in town to get a great pairing. But if you’re a true drinker, you’ll want to eat and drink your way though all of them.
As the craft beer movement continues to grow, great sommeliers are discovering the joys of offering beer as well as wine with fine dining. In that tradition, Morels French Steakhouse and Bistro in The Palazzo has started a series of late-night beer dinners. Beer-lovers gather at 10 p.m. on the restau-rant’s Strip-side patio for four courses of
Chef Jose Navarro’s culinary creations — each paired with an American craft beer.
The most recent event, held Sept. 29, fea-tured pan-seared diver scallops paired with Sierra Nevada Kellerweis, a grilled endive and romaine salad accompanied by North Coast Brewing Company PranQster, prime sirloin with Firestone Union Jack, and pear and apple pie a la mode — washed down with Unibroue Éphémère Apple. (The events take place every few months. To find out when the next is planned, call Morels at 607-6333.)
There’s no better place to learn about sake than Sushisamba in The Palazzo. It boasts the largest sake selection in Las Ve-gas, with about 130 bottles. And one of the best ways to sample it is with their pairing
d i n i n G
Get a pair already
10.2011
Pairing dinners are becoming more popular — with beer, wine and
beyond.
continued on page 12©iS
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12 d e s e r t co m pa n i o n O c tO b e r 2 01 1
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continued from page 11
menu. The restaurant is known for its fusion of Japanese, Peruvian and Brazilian cuisine. But for the pairing dinner, they stick with Jap-anese — particularly dishes cooked up on the robata-style charcoal grill. The six-course meal features delicious skewers of filet mignon, pork belly, lobster, squid, eggplant and duck. And each is paired with a different sake — and we’re not talk-ing about the hot sake you throw back at your local sushi joint. These are chilled, junmai ginjo varieties — the second-highest of Japan’s pre-mium sake categories.
At Mandalay Bay’s Border Grill, Chef Mike Minor regularly choos-es one of his favorite tequilas to serve as the inspiration for a spe-cial multi-course meal. In July, his bar staff whipped up cocktails from peligroso blanco, reposado and anejo, and offered a course to match each. And in September, Pa-tron served as the inspiration.
The dinners are always — sur-prise — giant parties. Minor has been known to set up an impromptu kitchen in the patio and don a head-set microphone while he cooks so guests can get a glimpse into the chaos of a professional kitchen. And Border Grill owners Mary Sue Mil-liken and Susan Feniger usually fly in from L.A. to participate.
Plenty of fine French and Ital-ian restaurants in Las Vegas offer tasting menus with wine pairings. But a Creole dinner with a wine pairing? Not quite as common. The only one we know of comes from Chef Carlos Guia at Wynn Las Ve-gas’ Country Club.
Guia is a veteran of New Orleans’ famed Commander’s Palace. So, despite the golf-course setting of his current restaurant, he knows Big Easy cooking. And with his six-course Taste of New Orleans menu (always available if you ask), he provides classics such as shrimp re-moulade, gumbo, crab cake, pecan-crusted fish, Creole-spiced filet and beignets, accompanied by fine wines from France, California, Italy, Oregon and California. We’ll drink (and eat) to that. — Al Mancini
Juanny romero would be the last person to tell you she’s a tea guru, be-cause she understands better than most people what that truly means: thousands of years of knowledge and tradition, painstakingly practiced, recorded and transmitted from expert to apprentice, again and again.
But she’s certainly close. It’s Romero’s appreciation of this tradition, along with her genuine love of good tea, that make Sunrise Coffee a reliable go-to for a cuppa in Las Vegas — whether you prefer Ca-mellia sinensis or some other botanical brew in that cup. Although better known for its joe, Sunrise carries a respectable collection of tea and tisanes (herbal teas), with a variety of blacks, greens, whites and herbals that even a true tea snob would agree hits all the major bases.
Touching on highlights of her tea selection, Romero says, “I’ve never had better oolong in my life. It comes from Taiwan, only picked above 10,000 feet. … We get single-estate Assam, and we know about the farm it comes from. … Our Summer Orchard, which is really popular, has to be steeped for 10 minutes, then left in the fridge overnight to slowly release the fruit flavors. ...”
Even so-called non-gurus geek out sometimes.Like any good apprentice, Romero gives credit for everything she knows to her teachers — in this
case, tea suppliers. She gets her Japanese green teas, the Keiko brand, from Montreal-based Top Taste International, and blacks and other teas from Eco Prima, based in Elmsford, N.Y. Both special-ize in organic and Fair Trade tea. While Sylvana Levesque and Anupa Mueller, respective heads of those companies, are great sources of knowledge, Romero says, her closest ally is Keith Ducko, owner of locally based Kachina Tea Company, who focuses on herbal blends.
“He’s a bastion of knowledge,” Romero says. “When he comes back from a trip, we’ll say, ‘Hey, what did you find out in China?’ and he’ll spend an afternoon telling us.”
Ducko, who says his most recent product development research was done on an Indian reserva-tion near Window Rock, N.M., is a respiratory therapist at University Medical Center by day, and a tea blender by night. He got interested in tea while a student at New York University 20 years ago, when a biochemistry professor introduced him to it.
Today, in addition to Sunrise, Ducko supplies health care professionals with tea, making medicinal blends based on the healing properties of herbs. The business has been so successful, he says, that he plans to open his own tea shop soon, with Romero’s help.
“I put a lot of time and effort into the tea I blend myself,” Ducko says. “If I’m going to hand it over to a group of folks like the Sunrise Coffee people, I like to pay special attention to their knowing not only how to prepare it, but also the fundamental objective in making it appropri-ately — the customer’s consumption of it.”
Translation: When you order tea at Sunrise, don’t expect to be handed a super-hot paper cup with a string and paper tag hanging over the side. In proper tea preparation, the quantity of dry tea, tem-perature of the water and amount of time they steep together are not optional. A few degrees or a few seconds can make the difference between a smooth sip and a bitter pill to swallow. Every cup at Sunrise is carefully measured and timed, Romero says.
“If you come to our store, we’re going to show you the way we drink it and the way experts drink it,” says Romero. “We’re not going to let you do what you want — and sometimes people get offended, because they think they know tea — but you’re going to have a good experience.” — Heidi Kyser
Sunrise Coffee is located at 3130 E. Sunset Road, 433-3304; learn more about Kachina Tea Company at www.kachinatea.com.
B U s i n e s s
Steep thoughtsdunk the bag, add sugar and sip, right? not on your leaf, say these tea gurus
Sunrise’s tea selection spans the globe.
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Ted Hartwell’s struggles inspired him to help other families.
‘It’s about keeping people from falling through the cracks.’Born in Spokane and raised in Texas, Ted Hartwell came to Vegas in 1991 for all the unusual reasons — scouring Yucca Mountain for archeologi-cal sites as a member of the research faculty of the Desert Research Institute and playing cello in the Las Vegas Philharmonic. However, living in this city excavated something destructive in his personality. A gambling addiction. After relying on the social safety net for treatment, he found more constructive ways to spend his time. Two years ago he became a volunteer for Clark County’s Court Appointed Special Advocates (CASA) program. Why? Paying it forward. “I came close to putting my family through the anguish that some of these families might be enduring.” The mission: Giving kids a voice in the system. With 3,500 abused, neglected kids in the foster care system, being an advocate is critical. His role is to ensure a child’s best interests are represented in court, that every child is placed in a safe home, and that every child achieves permanency in a timely fashion. An advocate often serves as the only permanent figure in the life of a kid, who’s likely bounced from foster home to foster home, school to school. Hartwell’s goal is to reunite the family. But first things first: Not before parents succeed in overcoming their own challenges. “Sharing my story with families is meant to give hope, to inspire them to do the work necessary to reunite.” Courtoom drama. So far he’s worked two cases, reuniting families at the mercy of the 8th Judicial Court. He generates an official report on the child or family in question and offers testimony. Judges weigh this information carefully before making a decision, asking advocates to speak on behalf of the child. Help needed. CASA (www.casalasvegas.org) needs volunteers—or rather the children do. only 20 percent of kids currently in the system have someone in their corner. “You greatly reduce the time a child spends caught in the legal machine,” says Hartwell on the effectiveness of being a CASA volunteer. “You can make a real difference here.” — Jarret Keene
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Max Brooks discusses zombies, the film business and more on “KNPR’s State of Nevada” at www.desertcompanion/hearmore{ Hear more }
books
ImaxBrooks:DonoftheDeaDIf it seems you can’t swing an (un)dead cat without hitting a zombie novel, zombie TV series, zombie movie, zombie comic book or zombie videogame, well, it’s because you can’t. But the writer most responsible for the current trend of apocalyptic horror doesn’t deal in straightforward B-movie clichés. Instead, his acclaimed, best-selling novel, “World War Z: An Oral History of the Zombie War,” takes the living dead idea into a super-realistic, ultra-historical direction.
“World War Z’s” nameless interviewer, a member of the United Nations Postwar Com-mission, documents stories of Zombie War survivors. They’ve endured everything—see-ing friends being devoured in the shallow wa-ters of an Indian shipyard to experiencing a gut-wrenching moment when their Air Force transport plane crashes into a Louisiana swamp infested with flesh-eating monsters. Pick up the book, and you’ll turn sweaty pag-es as if caught in a fever dream.
Deemed the Studs Terkel of zombie journal-ism, Brooks wasn’t initially considered a hor-rorist. His 2003 debut, an imaginative how-to tome called “The Zombie Survival Guide,” was filed under “humor” in bookstores.
“The marketing department at Three Rivers Press just didn’t know what to make of it,” says Brooks during a recent phone interview. “They figured since I was Mel Brooks’ son, which au-tomatically means I’m just like him, and since I’d just done two seasons writing for Saturday Night Live, where I got fired, then naturally this weird book must’ve been intended as a joke.”
Brooks dug himself out from under that pro-verbial rock by doing everything possible to tell
his side of the story. He claimed a spot among the horror elite with his follow-up, 2006’s “World War Z.” Rather than dispense a plot-by-numbers, the book immerses the reader in a world where zombies are serious, their existence documented in an oral-history format.
“Everyone else was doing formula,” says Brooks, when asked why he didn’t deploy a sim-ple third-person narrative. “Why go through the trouble of writing something I could just read? The whole point of ‘WWZ’ was to answer ques-tions I had when reading or watching tradition-al, small-group, first-person, zombie stories.”
“WWZ” involved tons of research—tech manuals, newspaper articles, stacks of books.
The private lives of zombiesConversations with the Vegas Valley Book Festival’s two keynote authors, Max Brooks and Jane Smiley
“Everyone else was doing formula,” says Max Brooks,
author of zombie novel “World War Z.”
D e s e r tCo m pa n i o n .Co m 19
Still, half his research came from interviews with friends possessing fascinating jobs and “actual usable skills.”
“I asked them big questions,” says Brooks. “Like: ‘What kind of heart condition would al-low me to frame a story that requires a special organ transplant?’ Some questions were small but important details like: ‘Does a C130 have a bathroom?’ Turns out some do, some don’t.”
Brooks insists there’s nothing zombies can do to us that we haven’t already done to each other. Before he was a sci-fi/horror nerd, he was a his-tory geek. He has always been fascinated with what he calls “a life story of the human race.”
“When WWZ was in its final draft, I asked Random House to hire a fact-checker because I didn’t trust my research,” he confesses. “I nailed the really hard stuff — place names in India, Chi-nese slang words for peasants, technical aspects of the International Space Station. But I totally failed on some of the easy stuff, like putting the address of a sporting goods store in my very neighborhood on the wrong street.”
Brooks has also been labeled patriotic. In “WWZ,” Americans come out looking slightly better than the rest of the world.
“I’m an optimist,” says Brooks. “I have to be. Real life is pretty damn dark. I’ve lived and worked and traveled in countries where most people think life is crap and anyone who thinks otherwise is a child who needs to grow up. No thanks. I’ll take ‘Yes, we can’ any day.”
How does Brooks imagine Vegas might fare in a “real-life” zombie attack?
“Depends on your city’s history. Have you ever suffered a catastrophe? If so, how did your city weather it? I’ve divided most of my life between New York and L.A. I was in New York for 9/11 and the blackout of ’03, and I can tell you the Big Apple’s ready for anything. I’ve also been in L.A. during floods, fires, earthquakes and the Rodney King riots, and I can tell you that the City of An-gels is toast. Examine Vegas’ history and decide for yourself.” — Jarret Keene
Janesmiley:therealist,thereaDer
When novelist Jane Smiley was researching her biography of Charles Dickens she found that the great writer fancied himself some-thing of a thespian, too.
“He transformed his readings into melodra-matic one-act plays. People would scream and faint while he was reading, and his blood pres-sure would shoot into the stratosphere. It was quite dangerous for him to read certain scenes.”
Smiley may not hit Dickensian histrionics, but she will aim to entertain when she reads to close
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out the BMI/Vegas Valley Book Festival. “I like a reading to be a little bit like a production,” she says. “The pleasure is in gathering together in the good-humored energy that can come into a room if a reader is up there actually perform-ing.”
Smiley knows the value of a good reading. After growing up in St. Louis and doing a turn at Vassar College in the tumult of the late-1960s, she decamped for Iowa City to study Old Norse and attend the Writers’ Workshop. Her most important literary influence there may have been a reading by E.L. Doctorow.
“He used an accessible, realistic (narrative) voice to tell amazing stories,” she says of the sections he read from “Ragtime” — Houdini dangling beneath a plane; Freud and Jung in the Coney Island Tunnel of Love. “It was amazing to me that someone could make stuff up like that and have it be so delightful. That reading was a revelation to me.”
Those characteristics — gripping stories wrought in down-to-earth prose, with histori-cal and allusive elements turned loose in real-ist fiction — have become hallmarks of Smi-ley’s work. Through stories, essays, nonfiction books, and 13 novels — including “A Thousand Acres,” the transplant of King Lear to an Iowa farm that captured the Pulitzer in 1992 — Jane Smiley has carved an enviable plot in the land-scape of contemporary American letters.
Her latest, “Private Life,” (lauded by The Washington Post as a “quantum leap” for an al-ready virtuosic writer) takes us from Missouri in the aftermath of the Civil War to San Francisco during the descent into World War II. The cast
features a cosmologist with a paranoid vendetta against Einstein, a trailblazing female journalist who pals around with the likes of Ezra Pound, and a name-and-accent-shifting schemer with a murky role in the Russian Revolution.
The central character, however, is para-lyzed by the expectations placed on a turn-of-the-century Midwestern housewife and by the domineering personalities around her. Margaret Mayfield is so closed off from even her own inner life that Smiley was forced to re-write the novel from first- to third-person “in order to get more access to what’s going on in her than she would actually have.”
Smiley does not consider her main char-acter passive, though. She’s just normal. Margaret doesn’t drive the plot, she copes with it, and that, Smiley says, “is a more nor-mal way for a person in our world to be: not to seize the day, but to have to deal with it every day.” — Joseph Langdon
Jane Smiley is known for bringing energy and passion to her readings. “I like a reading to be a little bit like a production.”
maxBrooksdelivers the Vegas Valley Book Festival opening keynote address 7 p.m. Nov. 3 at the Clark County Library Main Theater.
Janesmileydelivers the closing keynote address 3:30 p.m. Nov. 5 at the Historic Fifth Street School, followed by a conversation with Carol Harter.
theVegasValleyBookfestiValis Nov. 3-6 at the Historic Fifth Street School and other venues. Info: vegasvalleybookfestival.org.
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Will redistricting be a partisan nightmare? Hear a discussion on “KNPR’s State of Nevada” at www.desertcompanion/hearmore{ Hear more }
q&a
Aare you a wingnut or a moonbat, a fib-eral or a dittohead? Pick a side, because in this politically polarized age, the middle ground is nowhere to be found.
Or maybe we just to have to work harder to find it. National Public Radio senior national correspondent Linda Wertheimer thinks we need to turn off the snark, stop jerking our knees and return to a saner time when com-promise and common ground were the tools of political discourse. She shared her thoughts in a recent interview in advance of her Nov. 6 talk at UNLV.
American politics have always been wild. Are we really living in a more partisan, po-litically polarized age?
It certainly is if you compare the current age to my long, long, long experience of observing Congress in action. It seems to be that it’s just about as bad as I’ve seen it. Compromise has gone out of style, as has the idea that the lead-ers of the House and Senate and two parties should be friends, should know and respect one another. That idea died with Tip O’Neill. The general tone of presidential politics has changed to more of a “my way or the highway” atmosphere.
How did we get to this point?It’s hard to put a mark on where it began,
why it began and who started it, but it seems to me it had something to do with 1994 and the Contract with America. It was then that one began to sense there was no longer an appetite for solving problems and much more of an ap-petite for holding onto power.
Why is partisanship a bad thing? Doesn’t it signal that there’s an actual difference be-tween political parties?
There are times when people can play at politics and it won’t matter much. When the country is prosperous, they can try out theo-ries, try to solve problems everybody thought were insoluble. But if you’re talking about the time we live in now, this is not the time to play politics. This seems to me to be to be an “all hands on deck” kind of time.
There’s no question we went through a long period of time when people were upset with members of Congress, when they would say they’re all alike — that’s something you would hear over and over — but it was never true.
meet in the middleNPR’s Linda Wertheimer on Tea Parties, missing Tip O’Neill and why we can’t all just get along
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“Compromise has gone out of style” in politics, says Linda Wertheimer.
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That’s always a fallacy. Politicians are not alike and they’d never be alike — in fact, trying to get into office by stressing that you’re not like the other guy is the time-honored way of doing it. But what we’re left with is the idea people are still carrying in their minds that they are all alike.
When you don’t like the ones who are in power, though, you don’t necessarily want to take on board all the philosophical baggage coming with the new person you’ve elected.
Is there any upside to partisanship? It cer-tainly makes elections more interesting, no?
I don’t think it makes elections more in-teresting. But what it does seem to do is turn the whole enterprise into being about con-flicts and elections and not about governing. It makes it hard for people who are elected, makes it difficult for them to run the country and the state. There are exceptions to this. Take New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie. He’s a Republican and a he’s a very pragmatic man. He looks at something, sees it isn’t working, and he does something about it.
Do we even have a political center anymore?I think we do have a viable political center.
What people are doing, though, they’ve hand-ed off the nomination process to the edges of their parties. You get very right-wing nomina-tions in the Republican party … the process has a way of generating these very one-note candi-dates. The Democratic party does it, too, but to a lesser extent.
Is a more open primary the answer? That way, independent voters would ideally bring a moderating factor to the primary process.
I don’t have a quarrel with primaries. What’s important is that even earlier in the process, people need to be eyeballing their candidates. It can never hurt to take a long look at who you’re voting for.
Is this polarization a distinctly American problem?
As long as we don’t have a parliamentary system, we’re not going to be like the other guys. Nations with parliamentary systems deal with trends in a different way. They don’t have the starmaking capacity we have in this coun-try. They bring everyone up through their own system when they feel they’re ready to work with the electorate. They bring them up from within the system. We don’t always do that. President Obama, for example was a Senator, he was young and didn’t have all that much ex-perience. Then all of a sudden, he’s something very different.
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q&a
Would we be better off with a parliamen-tary system?
I don’t even believe in third parties. The system we have has worked, can work and should work, if we put in people who are com-mitted to making it work.
What’s been the media’s role in creating extreme partisanship?
Lots of people feel that the media are more sort of tearing down than building up, accen-tuating the negative versus the positive. But I don’t see buying into the argument that press negativity is the problem. As a journalist, I try to spend my life trying to show up to see clearly and say what I say.
Hasn’t the Internet played a big role in this process? It was supposed to usher in an age of information and understanding, but it seems like people use it to reinforce their own views and biases.
I call that the “information versus affirma-tion” quandary. I have a very hard time believ-ing that more information can be a bad thing. It seems to me that any time people have the capacity to find things out, that’s got to be a good thing.
Some of the most interesting things going on in the political season was how citizen reporters will put something on YouTube, something a candidate says or does something that you would think would go unnoticed. Former Sen. George Allen from Virginia lost an election because of a clip on YouTube. In another era we would never have envisioned that in a million years.
I think we’re stuck with that. I don’t see anything particularly wrong with it. I think that everybody in public life should have to answer for everything they say in public life.
That said, it’s an incredible revolution. It’s easy to see how the Internet could contribute to a polarizing effect, but consider the up-side: That you have an amazing resource with which to do research on a candidate and find out what they believe.
As campaign season heats up, do you see the political landscape getting more parti-san or less partisan? Are you optimistic or pessimistic?
I’m mostly mystified. I think we should all hope and pray that we will come back to a period when we have a more temperate and more cooperative view of politics. We had periods in America when the southern Demo-crats were more conservative than anyone and were very hostile to civil rights. There
was a great tension, and we recovered and moved on.
What I basically think is we have seen enough periods when the American people look at what’s going on with leadership, and they’ve said enough of that, we need to fix that. They’ve risen up with all the power the Constitution has conferred upon them and made change happen.
Wait. Isn’t that what the Tea Party did? We have to wait and see what the Tea Party
actually is. It made itself felt in an off year. When the American people get thoroughly sick, they will change it. My experience is that candidates can raise zillions and spend zil-lions in order to get and stay elected, but they can still be trumped by voters.
Is there anything we can do to counteract this trend of partisanship?
If you feel like cooperation is necessary — because some people don’t think it is — if you think partisanship has gone too far, the most useful thing you can do is exactly what the Tea Party is doing — go into the smallest unit of the electoral process, the primary, and make yourself felt there. And I’d say pay attention to whom you’re electing. Make sure this is what you want. Most Americans are not in charge of nominating their candidates. A very small sliver is. You may find you don’t have any good choices, but you have to shop around, figure out early enough in the process who’s a good guy, who matches your idea of how policy should be carried out. It sounds silly and al-most Pollyanna-ish, but people do really have the last word if they choose to.
We are about to embark upon a political campaign that is about as important as any-thing could be. It’s incredibly important that the people who are in charge of our fate make sensible decisions from here on out.
Has observing this polarization affected the way you cover politics?
I generally think leaping into the cover-age of a political campaign is a joyful thing, but I’m not sure about this election. I have a feeling this is going to be an unpleasant ex-perience.
NPR senior national correspondent Linda Wertheimer delivers the Saltman Center’s annual Peace in the Desert lecture, “Cooling the Partisan Fires,” 1 p.m. Nov. 6 at UNLV’s Artemus Ham Hall.
Since 2002, the Caesars Foundation has directed millions of dollars
in support to social service organizations nationwide, from groups that
help America’s seniors live healthier, more fulfilling lives to those that
make higher education accessible to students from all backgrounds.
In every case, we’re guided by the values of fairness, inclusion and
equal opportunity – qualities that truly represent
the best our nation has to offer.
Changing lives. Transforming communities.
Creating a brighter future for all. That’s what
our will to do wonders™ is all about.
the will is strong, the results are
The will to do wonders®
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WONDROUS
d e s e r tco m pa n i o n .co m 29
diningN e w s
R e v i e w s
i N t e Rv i e w s
e at t h i s N o w !
o N t h e P l at e
10.2011
30 The Dish
Smooth operator
32Eat This Now!
Hangover, away!
PH
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av
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Land of plenty: When Jose Davalos wanted to launch a tequila company, he looked
homeward.
“I want my tequila to speak for itself,” Jose Davalos says. He says this after he talks for a couple of hours about the history of his family and how they came to be creators and purveyors of the liquor that bears their name.
But that history is crucial. Davalos Tequila may be new to the market, but it’s also the culmination of generations of family commitment, currently led by this soft-voiced, unassuming Las Vegan who has a day job with Klai Juba Architects.
“I had a whole list of possible names when we were developing our tequila,” Jose says. “But a friend told me that my family name would mean so much more than any brand I could make up.”
The short version of the Davalos Tequila saga begins in Mexico, in the highlands of the state of Jalisco, where Jose’s grandparents be-queathed parcels of land to Jose’s father and uncles. They soon parlayed those parcels into
bustling haciendas that, among other things, grew agave as a cash crop.
“My father and my uncles made a name for themselves for their hard work and dedi-cation,” Jose says. “I’ve been to neighboring towns where people find out I’m the son of one of the Davalos brothers, and I get wel-comed with open arms.”
smooth ideaBut even the most enterprising of ranch-
ers is still hostage to the ups and downs of the marketplace. As the commodity price of raw agave fell, Jose and his family cast about for ways to keep their haciendas in the black.
“We realized that we were experts at grow-ing the agave, and we had great relationships with local processors and distillers,” Jose says. “So, in 2007, we decided to develop our own tequila.”
By then, Jose’s own personal career path, which included graduating from college and become a U.S. citizen, had brought him to Las Vegas, which he feels is the perfect launching pad for his tequila.
“This city hosts millions of people from all over the world every year, all looking for the best way to enjoy themselves,” Jose says. “What better place to introduce them all to the affordable luxury of Davalos Tequila?”
Issa Khoury, of Khoury’s Fine Wine & Spirits, agrees that “affordable luxury” — salesy as it sounds — is an apt catchphrase for Davalos Tequila.
“It has a taste that is smoother and more
Davalos añejo tequila
t h e d i s h
Back to the landJose Davalos distilled family heritage and do-it-yourself
drive into a new tequila brand
by j.j. wylie
PHOTOGRAPHY BY sabin orr
Jose Davalos at the Royal Resort’s Barrymore restaurant, which carries two specialty cocktails based on his tequila.
30 d e s e r t co m pa n i o n O c tO b e r 2 01 1
d e s e r tco m pa n i o n .co m 31
www.klaijuba.com
“We’re proud of our work . . . our reputation and the
company we keep.
Thanks for the opportunities.”
flavorful than more well-known tequilas,” Khoury says. “And Jose has set its price point below that of established brands like Patrón. That combination makes it easy to recommend.”
Chef Beni Velázquez of Bar+Bistro in the Arts Factory concurs, so much so that Ve-lázquez recently hosted a “Tequila Pairing Dinner” that featured the liquor as an in-gredient in every course, from the appetizer (Carpachio Scallops Tepache) to the dessert (Davalos Tequila Flamed Smores).
“Because it doesn’t have the harshness that most people associate with tequila, Davalos lends itself to a wide variety of combinations,” Velázquez says.
(My taste test results: They’re right. Both va-rieties of Davalos Tequila are indeed smooth, settling warmly on the tongue and having vir-tually none of that back-of-the-throat, etha-nol burn you associate with hard liquor. The Blanco variety offers an initial, bright flash of flavor with notes of citrus, but I prefer the Añejo variety, aged in oak bourbon barrels for 16 months. This aging makes the Añejo deeper and darker, with a flavor that carries tones of pepper and smoke.)
hold your drinks“I’ve been accused of adding sugar to the
tequila to reduce its edge,” Jose says. “But the fact is, since we control every step of the pro-cess, from growing the agave to processing it to distilling it to bottling and distributing it, my family can ensure the quality of the prod-uct that bears our name.”
This focus on quality control is one of the main reasons that Davalos Tequila is currently not being carried by one of the large local li-quor distributors. Instead, Jose Davalos went through the grueling and expensive process of becoming an independent distributor himself.
“I couldn’t be sure that a large distributor would do anything more than just put our te-quila on a crowded shelf next to the dozens of other tequilas that they sell,” he says. “And I don’t want to spend a lot of money on market-ing, trying to become the next trendy drink.”
Indeed, Jose Davalos seems content to ply his family’s signature product himself, going from store to store in the only city where Davalos Tequila is sold, getting individual operators and drinkers to taste his tequila and decide for themselves whether or not to carry it.
“We’re building our brand organically, one relationship at a time,” Jose says. It’s an approach as personal as the origin of the te-quila itself.
Our favorite recent dishes that have us coming back for seconds
Dolsot bibimbap at Mr. Tofu
We’ve all got our secret-weapon drunk food to help stave off the slurs and wobbles. But how secret is it? Cheeseburger, eggs ‘n’ toast, nachos. Yawn. Hey, you’re already buzzed — be as bold as you were earlier when you were positively owning that karaoke machine with a larynx-stretching rendition of “More Than a Feeling.” The dolsot bibimbap at Mr. Tofu will sponge up those Heinies and quench your thirst for adventure. Bibimbap is essentially a Korean one-bowl scramble, except you do the scrambling, churning up the rice, meat, pickled vegetables and egg in the sizzling hot stone bowl — and don’t forget liberal spatterings of hot sauce. At $9.95, the bibimbap at Mr. Tofu is hearty, filling and unfussy, the perfect bookend to a night of bar-crawl-ing. Craving something more exotic? Peruse the small menu, but it’s not like you’re going to remember. — Andrew KiralyMr. Tofu 3889 Spring MounTain road 388-7733
Tuna melt with egg at Omelet House
The humble tuna melt is often overlooked as a hangover cure, fighting off the morning quease you began investing in last night with the help of a Bon Jovi-rich jukebox and two-for-one Jell-O shots. The thing about a tuna melt is how it sits in the stomach with a polite but anchoring heft — that much-needed a.m. ballast — without, say, the chunky, vaguely damning bloat of a hamburger/fries combo. The egg? That’s a bonus, a hug.
Any eggs ‘n’ bacon joint can bust this plate out, but the folks at Omelet House seem to know what ordering a tuna melt with egg truly is: A telepathic cry for morning-after mercy in what studied drinkers call the nervous light of Sunday. Thus your bread will be gravid with, happily unbidden, an extra dose of stom-ach-settling butter. You will be whole again. — A.K.oMeleT HouSe MulTiple locaTionS www.oMeleTHouSe.neT
eat this noW
!
bib
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Mr. Tofu’s Dolsot bibimbap
32 d e s e r t co m pa n i o n O c tO b e r 2 01 1
Dine in Style.
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Baja California Restaurant & Cantinaserving summerlin at Boca Park! new fall menu and hours! m- F 3pm to close, Week-ends 12 to close. Best happy hour in town 7 days a week 3 to 6. BC incorporates the unique flavors of Baja California cuisine in a beach-like resort atmosphere. enjoy the fall evenings on our outdoor patio with bar or our “man Cave” cigar lounge. entertainment Friday & saturday nights.
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600 east Warm Springs Roadlas Vegas, nV 89119(702) 263-0034
Ferraro’s italian Restaurantexperience Italian dining at its best at Ferraro’s, family-owned and operated for over 25 years! “Love Your Lunch,” available daily from 11:30am – 4pm, offers you a choice of entrée and a house salad or soup for just $9.95. With our Locals Advantage discount, enjoy 50% off our dinner menu on Fridays and saturdays with your nevada Id. (tax and gratuity not included; offers may not be combined.
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Sambalatte torrefazionesambalatte is the most exclusive and unique Caffè Lounge & espresso Bar offering Las vegas fresh roasted and sustainable coffee beans from around the globe. sambalatte offers healthy options while providing a hip and trendy place to sip, savor, and socialize.
750 S. Rampart Blvd. Ste. 9, las Vegas, nV(702) 272-2333
34D e s e r t Co m pa n i o n O c tO b e r 2 01 1
From martinis to milkshakes, here are some
the valley's sweetest, strongest
(and strangest) drinks.
Bottoms up!photography by CHRISTOPHER SMITH
D e s e r tCo m pa n i o n .Co m 35D e s e r tCo m pa n i o n .Co m 35
Talk about cups runnething over. For our inaugural Drink Up! Issue, we trekked (and sometimes stumbled) across Las Vegas to find the strongest, tastiest, most exotic beverages in the valley. We’ve got champagne supernovas and bacon martinis and plenty of beer. ¶ Don’t partake of spirits? Fret not. We cover sodas, smoothies, coffee and tea, too. Prepare to be quenched!
Holstein’smalts
They have you at the teeny-weeny chocolate and vanilla malted milk balls sprinkled on a four-inch-thick cloud of whipped cream. Then, there’s the first sip of white shake with its unmistakable explosion of malt flavor, followed by sweet ribbons of black chocolate, streaming down your throat. It has to be so thick your eyes pop out trying to suck it up the straw; anything this good is meant to last a long, long time. (In Cosmopolitan, 3708 Las Vegas Blvd S., 698-7940) Heidi Kyser
WorlDFamous
mt.CHarlestonCoFFee
As much a ritual as a drink, the Mt. Charleston Coffee is a creamy number dosed with Drambuie and brandy, perfect for calling a fireside truce after extended snowball conflicts up the mountain. In cozy dessert mode? Hold off on the sugar packets and ask for an extra shot of Drambuie. (Mount Charleston Lodge, 5375 Kyle Canyon Road, 872-5408) Andrew Kiraly
tHeavoCaDosmootHie
A diagnosed avocadoholic, I’d drink guacamole from a squeezebag if the attendant yellow-green froth-mustache weren’t so unseemly. So my heart leaped when I discovered the avocado smoothie: At last, a socially acceptable avocado-drinking vehicle! Don’t worry, though; Volcano Tea’s avocado smoothie isn’t like glorping down liquefied 'cado. This creamy, well-balanced blend is a novelty drink with populist appeal. Diplomatically sweet with notes of green tea, the avocado essence of Volcano Tea’s
smoothie emerges more as an insistent hint than an eruption. (Volcano Tea, 4215 Spring Mountain Road) A.K.
platinumCanDy
At first, it’s kind of like the Kool-Aid Man has wrenched your tongue from your head wedgie-style and he’s spanking it with his big ol’ spatula-hands: Blunt, cartoonish, vaguely frightening. Give it time, though, and you’ll give this drink some credit. Monolithically sweet at first sip, the Platinum Candy goes on to reveal other treats: Lots of foreplay between tart and sweet, with raspberry, cranberry and apple; the peach schnapps and melon liqueur lend some fruity assist. As the big red man says: Oh yeah. (Platinum, 211 E. Flamingo Road, 365-5000) A.K.
KiuCHiHitaCHinonestWeizen
You might not expect to find interesting beers at a Japanese noodle house in a casino, but it’s part of the deal at Dragon Noodle Company. This ultralight hefeweizen is mad apple cidery with lots of bubbles and a crisp, slightly sour, tangy finish. Summer might be over, but you can hang on to the season with this tingly beer. (In Monte Carlo, 3770 Las Vegas Blvd. S., 730-7965) Brock Radke
CHampagnesatlaguna
You would think champagne and Vegas would go together like D-list celebrities and nightclubs, but strangely, there is only one bar in town dedicated to the art of the world’s greatest fizzy wine. Whether your poison is a classic Kir Royale (made properly with Marie Brizard Crème de Cassis de Dijon), or a sip of Gosset Grand Rose, this elevated perch off the Palazzo casino lets you do it style, while you wonder what in the world the hoi polloi is sipping from those plastic guitars. (Palazzo, 3325 Las Vegas Blvd. S., 607-7777) John Curtas
aviation
Vanguard offers a black-tea infused version of this Prohibition-era classic, and it’s appeared in Downtown Cocktail Room’s repertoire, but I prefer the drink as it was invented — made with gin, maraschino liqueur, lemon juice and the crème de violette that gives the drink its dreamy pale blue hue and delicate floral notes. (Herbs and Rye, 3713 W. Sahara Ave., 982-8036) Maureen Adamo
pearCiDer
Crown & Anchor has its own version of V8 — the Pear Cider. Ideal for cooling off, it doesn’t skimp on content either, offering a nice 6 percent alcohol kick. The crisp, refreshing and slightly sweet brew satisfies without bogging you down with a typical beer bloat. Sustenance with a buzz? Sounds like a fruitful investment. (Crown & Anchor, 1350 E. Tropicana Ave., 739-8676) Alexia Gyorody
nortHCoastBrotHertHelonious
Another boozy, dark drink, this California brew also tastes of bourbon with a sour smash of cherries and a creamy finish. It’s another pale ale made more palatable with a balance of sweetness, but this one’s more violent … like the Incredible Hulk punching pastry. It’s one of the bolder options among Yard House’s seemingly never-ending beer menu. (In Town Square, 6605 Las Vegas Blvd. S., 734-9273) B.R.
Jeangeorges’virginsoDas
Who needs Canada Dry or Dr. Pepper when fresh fruit syrups are waiting for a spritz of seltzer, like they are every night at Jean Georges, the top-flight steakhouse in Aria? Twice as refreshing and half the cost of a cocktail, there’s no beating a cherry-yuzu, calamansi (tasting like a tangerine crossed with a lime) or passion fruit-chile soda on a warm summer’s night — or after a cold day at the tables. And just think of the hangover you’ll save. (In Aria, 3734 Las Vegas Blvd. S., 877-230-2742) J.C.
sHirleytemple
The early 20th century décor of the new restaurant inside the Royal Resort, The Barrymore, provides an idyllic location for this timeless drink. The Barrymore’s is a flawless blend of Sprite, ginger ale and grenadine syrup, best sipped in one of their plush, oversized booths. (The Royal Resort, 99 Convention Center Drive, 407-5303) A.G.
“Cellos”atsirio
Home- and house-made is all the rage these days, whether it’s salumi, sausage, cheese or liqueurs. Chef Vincenzo Scarmiglia takes infused-booze to “11” with a trio of house-made “cellos” – lemon, mixed berry and black truffle – that could make a tippler out of Carrie Nation. It’s hard to argue with the tart freshness of his limoncello, or the smoothness of the mixed berry, but the year-long maceration of truffle shavings gives it an
other-worldly, chocolate cake-like nose that impels you to keep sipping. (Aria at CityCenter, 3730 Las Vegas Blvd., 877.230.2742) J.C.
2007niCKel&
niCKelCaBernetsauvignon
I call this recipe Upscale Trail Mix. Do this: Sidle up to the bar at Sonoma Cellar, order a glass of the Nickel & Nickel ($23). That and the complimentary nuts — almonds, cashews, Brazils, peanuts — are your dinner. This big, flashy, meaty, flourishing cab is your fruit. (In Sunset Station, 1301 W. Sunset Road, 547-7982) A.K.
CHampagnesupernova
The black-shirted calorie-pushers at Hash House will brag about their Bloody Mary and strawberry lime margaritas, but I like the Champagne Supernova. It tastes like the sweat of an intergalactic courtesan, this alt-mojito made with mint, lemonade and rips of dry and sweet Rieslings. Much smoother and subtler than the roster of drinks and dishes designed to send your pancreas into shuddering hyperdrive, the Champagne Supernova makes for a quiet counterpoint to the edible rock concert that is the Hash House menu. (Hash House A Go Go, multiple locations) A.K.
tarotFruitsnoW
Anybody can toss some acai berries, bananas and wheat grass into a Vitamix, but just try to recreate Boba City’s Tarot Fruit Snow. Boba City interprets “snow,” the East Asian term for cold, slushy fruit drinks, as “smoothie,” and they take it seriously. The owners chop fresh mango,
honeydew melon, strawberries and other fruit and freeze it for blending with soy milk and a proprietary flavor blend to create the creamiest thing that never came from a cow. (Boba City Café, 4126 S. Rainbow Blvd., 220-5273) H.K.
tHeragin’CaJun,BlooDy
Caesar,BlooDyBull
Two of the newest twists on the Bloody Mary can be found at Society in Encore, which has a dedicated Bloody Mary menu, all $12. Despite its billing, the Ragin’ Cajun will not turn the drinker into James Carville. Despite the presence of Absolut Peppar and “bayou seasoning,” it’s surprisingly mild. A lightly spiced tiger shrimp takes the place of the traditional olive.
More flavorful — and equally creative in its garnish — is the Bloody Bull, which augments Skyy vodka with beef broth and a Slim Jim, plus two very firm and tasty olives. The ensuing taste is beefy in more ways than one. The heartiness of the broth makes this a drink to savor at leisure. For those who don’t want a peppery “afterburn,” old reliable Bloody Caesar is a mellow alternative. The combination of Clamato and Absolut Peppar (plus two olives) is unexpectedly effective. Careful: You’ll knock this back right quick. (In Encore, 3131 Las Vegas Blvd. S., 248-3463) David McKee
36D e s e r t Co m pa n i o n O c tO b e r 2 01 1
WiDmerBrotHersBarrel
ageDBrrBon
The Pub at Monte Carlo was once one of few local microbreweries; today it isn’t making its own stuff but it does offer a recently revamped craft beer list that ranks among the most varied in the city. This winter beer was brewed once, part of the Widmer Brothers Reserve Series, and it’s mighty strong. But for its high alcohol content, it’s a highly drinkable dark amber beer, light and crisp with — obviously — bourbon undertones. (In Monte Carlo, 3770 Las Vegas Blvd. S., 730-7420) B.R.
rootBeerFloat
Also called the Brown Cow, this libation is a real masterpiece of BJ’s Restaurant and Brewhouse. Aside from their generous serving of ice cream, the root beer is brewed on site. You might think the root beer float contains some secret, third ingredient. But
no. That’s the smooth taste of homemade root beer. (BJ’s Restaurant & Brewhouse, multiple locations) A.G.
saxBy’sCappuCCino
Neither downtown nor independent — two death-kisses in the minds of most java hipsters — Saxbys Coffee nevertheless makes micro-foam you could rest your head on. Their velvety espresso, from Central America and Indonesian beans, disappears in the froth, which baristas take their sweet time making. The smallest Cappuccino on the menu is 12 ounces, but purists can ask for the “dry cap” and get a single shot of espresso, the rest foam. (Saxbys Coffee, 72 W. Horizon Ridge Parkway #155, 558-1838) H.K.
neurosoniCPackaging: Voluptuous 14.5 oz. dark pink plastic sex cylinderTastes like: Flintstones chewables and VagueBerry Kool-AidPayload: Phosphatidylserine, L-theanine (“supports memory and cognition”)Effects: Persistent memory of forgotten cell phone; effortless cognitive superimposition of sexy “Honky Tonk Woman” drums over steady beat of crosswalk blips at corner of Charleston and Casino Center boulevards
raCeFuelPackaging: Soothing blue 12 oz. can, quaintly unironic retro-modest design and mission statement: “help(s) you concentrate on being your best”; disappointment when first-glance reading of “RAGE Fuel” found to be inaccurateTastes like: Squirt, with lingering lip-smacky ginger notionsPayload: Unspecified, miniscule amounts of caffeine, Panax GinsengEffects: Noticeably more “pep” while whistling and doing quick, shallow knee bends with hands in trouser pockets; did not fall asleep
spiKesHooterPackaging: Frantic, 8.4 oz. can splashed with terrifying, emotionally confusing mix of goads (“GET SPIKED!™”) and dire warnings to consumers with pre-existing pulmonary, thyroid or psychiatric conditions.Taste: Pre-GI scan cherry isotope jubileePayload: Caffeine (300 effin’ milligrams), B vitamin megadose, Yohimbine (tree bark-derived stimu-toxin)Effects: Skin flush; insomnia; at 4 a.m., moon appears more disheveled, self-absorbed than usual; bread items taste like the number 6
zizzazzexplosiveenergymix(tangerineFlavor)Packaging: Elongate powder pouch with kinetic script, Chinese fireworks-style starbursts and fluttering American flag icon: “MADE IN USA” (and headquartered in Las Vegas)Taste: When dissolved in 16 oz. water, sweet citrus-y, vitamin-y sweetness with sweet aftersweetPayload: Caffeine, B vitamins, ginseng extract, Rhodiola Rosea extract (sweet-named, anti-anxiety, anti-fatigue herbal “adaptogen”)Effects: Relaxation with elevated alertness; increased sensitivity to sweetness: went “Awww!” when just the cutest widdle kitty in the world rolled over and wiggled her widdle paws
— Dave Surratt
Liquid highOur writer [hearts] trying energy drinks, but almost lost his liver testing these
D e s e r tCo m pa n i o n .Co m 37
DuriansmootHie
To an unaccustomed palate, the first few sips of durian smoothie aren’t completely unpleasant. That strong smell, a mix of sugary melon and astringent onions, is reflected directly in the smoothie’s taste, but it’s suspended beautifully in a thick, cold, lemon-colored custard with its own notes of sweetness. But then you realize that the aftertaste, like onions on steroids, never fades. Indeed, with each subsequent sip, it just keeps building. Sure, each new mouthful brings a refreshing frisson of sweetness and cold, but it also feels like the onions are actually building up in the back of your throat and filling your sinuses. The mounting power of this aftertaste morphs from onions to something approaching turpentine.
And so you surrender. The result is that two-thirds of your durian smoothie ends up in the trash as you stumble out of Lee’s Sandwiches, gripped by nausea and shame. But you’ll be back. (Lee’s Sandwiches, 3989 Spring Mountain Road, 331-9999) J.J. Wylie
tHesteaK&eggssHot
The shot itself is bright red and accompanied by a slice of lemon that’s been dipped in something. “Just close your eyes, down the shot, and suck on the lemon,” says Rocco Russo, the manager. “And, I swear, you’ll taste steak and eggs.”
The shot goes down easy, a nice blend of warmth and flavor. It’s whiskey and tomato juice. Then I suck the lemon slice, which delivers a clean wash of citrus mixed a bewildering array of spice.
I take a moment to let it all sink in. Then I open my eyes. “I got it,” I tell Rocco. He smiles and tells me the ingredients.
The smokiness and heft of the Jameson whiskey mixes nicely with the acidity of the tomato juice, and, when followed by the lemon slice that’s been dipped in a mix of Worcestershire and steak sauce, it creates an aftertaste that recalls the flavor of steak and eggs. And not just any steak and eggs, but the kind of steak and eggs you eat after a long, late pub-crawl that ends in a casino coffee shop. (Mango’s Beach Bar, 6650 Vegas Drive #140, 631-4711) J.W.
FinKBomB
Frankie’s mai tais are my standard racing fuel when on a rum kick, but when I want to methodically build an overarching alcoholic superstructure from which to launch a night
of near-misdemeanors, I start off with the Fink Bomb, a potent brew of coconut rum, rum and melon liqueur. Supernaturally sweet and deceptively strong, it’s like drinking suntan lotion off a feverishly horny witch. (Frankie’s Tiki Room, 1712 W. Charleston, 385-3110) A.K.
BaConmartini
No special glass with a pig etched into it, no tossed-in handfuls of gourmet bacon bits. Rather, they stuff three or four slices of cooked bacon into the bottle of vodka and let it sit for a couple of weeks before serving. Upon sipping the bacon martini, what hits you first is the emulsified bacon fat, which coats the tongue and mouth, sending your brain into a bacon-drenched universe from which you’re unlikely to return for at least an hour. You’ll also fight the urge to constantly lick your own mouth like a dog eating peanut butter. And when you finish, resist ordering another. Or maybe not. Because only a pig would do that. (Double Down Saloon, 4640 Paradise Road, 791-5775) J.W.
ellisislanDHeFeWeiss
I’m not a big Hefe drinker, but this one is local, highly effervescent, with a little citrus and a lot of wheat flavor. Fact is, I’m a big fan of the Ellis Island Casino Brewery, a longtime locals’ hangout just off the Strip stocked with barbecue, karaoke, Metro Pizza and cheap Vegas fun. And the beer ain’t bad. If you don’t like it, try the house-brewed root beer, definitely an old-fashioned treat. (Ellis Island Brewery, 4178 Koval Lane, 733-8901) B.R.
38D e s e r t Co m pa n i o n O c tO b e r 2 01 1
loCalCeleBrityKegtappersThough October, 7 p.m. No Oktoberfest is complete without a visit to the Hofbrauhaus and the slew of events in October is sure to please anyone hoisting a stein. Celebrity keg-tapping events feature Oscar Goodman on Oct. 1, Holly Madison Oct. 7, Robin Leach on Oct. 8 and others. More info at www.hofbrauhauslasvegas.com
5tHannualtasteoFspiritWinetasterOct. 7, 6:30-9:30 p.m. Features wine and beer tastings, dinner, local musicians, a live auction and raffle. All proceeds benefit the Spirit Therapies, a nonprofit organization that provides therapeutic horseback riding for individuals with special needs. $50-$75. South Point Casino, 219-1728, www.spirittherapies.org
FallBeerFestivalOct. 14, 7-10 p.m.; Oct. 15, 3-9 p.m. Hundreds of craft beers will be at the mercy of Oktoberfest patrons during this beer festival. The first event kicks off with the All American Craft Beer Tasting, with 120 craft beers and award-winning brew masters. $50. The second day offers an Oktoberfest Pool Party, 200 international and domestic beers and a German band. Free. The Golden Nugget Hotel, 386-8100, www.goldennugget.com
CHeerstoCHoColateOct. 15, 5-8 p.m. Forget cheese. Tivoli Village is pairing wine with something more decadent. “Cheers to Chocolate” is a wine- and chocolate-tasting that will satisfy any wine snob’s sweet tooth. Proceeds from the event benefit Easter Seals Southern Nevada. $35-$45, Tivoli Village, www.eastersealssn.org
all-starWeeKenDOct. 21-23. Beer, wine and cocktails will be in abundance at FOOD & WINE magazine’s All-Star Weekend. Party with culinary masters and celebrities with an appetite. This epicurean event features interactive cooking demonstrations and a one-of-a-kind walk-around tasting. $75-$150, various locations, www.mgmresorts.com/foodandwine
singlemaltsCotCHDinnerOct. 24, 6:30-9:30 p.m. Chef Jose Luis pairs a seven-course meal with seven single malt scotches. Limited seating, reservations suggested. $89. Elements Kitchen & Martini Bar, 4950 S. Rainbow Blvd. #100, 750-2991, www.elementskitchenandmartinibar.com
toWnsquareWineWalKOct. 22, 4-8 p.m. Whether your name is Roxanne or Bob, you’re going to want to wear your red dress to this. It’s a Red Affair at Town Square, meaning all red wines, along with sake, cocktails, beers and food. Attendees dressed in red are entered into a raffle. Proceeds benefit New Vista Community, $50-$60, www.winewalklv.com
neWvistaCommunity’sBreW’sBest,HanD-CraFteDBeerFestivalNov. 12, 1 p.m.-6 p.m. Listen to live music and sample more than 70 brews from local and regional breweries. All proceeds benefit New Vista, a charity that supports adults and children with intellectual challenges through programs that target teaching independence. $25-$30, The Village, Lake Las Vegas, www.newvistanv.org, 457-4677 ext. 33.
Drinking dates
HorCHataatlosantoJos
Is there such a thing as an adult-friendly horchata? Yes, and it’s here, friends. You can tell, because it doesn’t come out of a box, and isn’t made mostly of sugar or served from a machine that churns it all day like a 7-Eleven slush. This is the real deal – homemade from a family recipe, with just the right amount of cinnamon. (Los Antojos, 2520 S. Eastern Ave. #B, 457-3505) H.K.
amarosatCarnevino
Formerly enjoyed only by the adventuresome, or bocce ball players and the occasional euro-trash jet-setter, amaros, aperitivos and disgestivos are as hot as a Calabrian chile pepper these days. Carnevino, boasting more than 30 of these pre- and post-prandial libations (and its own green almond, green walnut and apricot liqueurs), is the perfect
place to get your herbaceous alcohol education. They function as an appetite boost (aperitivos — sipped before the meal) and digestive aid (amaros — afterwards), and work splendidly as long as you lay off the grappa. (In Palazzo, 3325 Las Vegas Blvd. S., 789-4141) J.C.
uniBroueraFtman
The Quebec brewery Unibroue is a personal fave, and fortunately there are several bars around town that share my great taste in beer. But the coolest place to drink it is at Sage, known more for its gourmet grub and fancy cocktail program. This modern bordello-styled bar designates one tap for a seasonal Unibroue offering, and last time I checked, it was spewing the smokey, whiskeyish Raftman. If this is a summer beer, I hope the heat never goes away. (In Aria, 3734 Las Vegas Blvd. S., 877-230-2742) B.R.
reDFoxrussianimperialstout
At first sip, locally brewed stout Red Fox presents a bright flash of flavors, including notes of coffee and chocolate and even fruit. As it warms, this stout’s flavor settles into maltiness, and its alcohol content becomes more prevalent. This is strong stuff that requires a certain commitment from its drinker. No one’s pouring Red Fox into beer bongs at a frat party. If you do get a hankering for a stout, this is a homegrown alternative to the Dublin-born brew everybody already knows. (Khoury’s Fine Wine & Spirits, 9915 S. Eastern Ave. #110, 435-9463) J.W.
FantomesaisonD’erezeeprintemps
Okay, this is some serious stuff. I’m not even sure if this beer exists, and that’s after I drank it. It was an ethereal experience, a possession more than a tasting. That’s what you get when you go roaming the beer cooler’s Belgian section with owner Adam Carmer at the Freakin’ Frog. Heavenly orange like your favorite sunset, it comes on strong and sour, then blossoms into an earthy, well-spiced masterpiece. I tried it among many other beers one Saturday, and nothing was as memorable. (Freakin’ Frog, 4700 S. Maryland Parkway, 597-9702) B.R.
DesCHutestHeDissiDent
The Dissident’s complex flavorings only begin with sourness. From there, things move quickly into a richness imparted by the pinot and cabernet barrels it’s fermented inside at Deschutes’ headquarters in Oregon. Also unlike other sour beers, there’s little sweet to offset that first taste. This one goes deep. The fact that it rotates on the taps at Aces & Ales is one of the factors that makes this Boulder Highway area bar special; The Dissident is hard enough to find by the bottle. (Aces & Ales, 3740 S. Nellis Blvd., 436-7600) B.R.
D e s e r tCo m pa n i o n .Co m 39
BonusThirsty for more? Read about
us tackling some of the most
outrageous drinks in the valley
and more of our favorite libations
at www.desertcompanion.com.
40D e s e r t Co m pa n i o n O c tO b e r 2 01 1
you decant
Oh yes
You love drinking it, so why not collect it? Budding wine-lovers, take note story by Heidi Kyser
D e s e r tCo m pa n i o n .Co m 41
theexperts
timWilsonDirector of
beverage for the Wolfgang
Puck Fine Dining Group
ChrishammonD Founder of Rock & Roll Wine Guys
WilliamshererMaster
sommelier at Aureole
CrunChthe
numbers
How much do you want to spend? You don’t need an enormous amount of expendable income to start a wine collection; you just need to know how much you’ve got to play with.
Tim Wilson, director of beverage for the Wolfgang Puck Fine Dining Group, suggests asking yourself, “What’s my goal? Is it for investment purposes or personal consumption?” This will help you budget.
Say you can afford to invest $50 a week in wine — that’s $200 a month, $2,400 a year. When you start to identify the wines you want to buy, you may find some great bottles for $25; you can get two of those a week. Or, you may find a bottle you really want for $200. You can only get one of those a month.
And, although investment-quality wines will come with a price tag, beginning collectors need not limit themselves to bottles that fetch a week’s salary, says Chris Hammond, founder of Rock & Roll Wine Guys.
“The most obvious beginner pitfall is judging a wine’s quality by its price,” he says. “You can have some fabulous wines at around $20 a bottle.”extraCreDit:Track your investment. Record what you bought, when, and how
much you paid for it. It will help you valuate your stock should you ever decide to insure it, or re-sell some of it.
Drink—alot
You don’t know what to collect until you know what you like, and you don’t know what you like until you’ve tasted it.
“Don’t limit yourself,” Hammond says. “The more you taste, the more refined your palate will be, and the broader your range will become.”
Beginners beware: Your tastes will change. Don’t buy $1,000 worth of a wine that’s best aged for a while unless you are prepared to sell half of it a few years down the road — when you will have moved on to another favorite.
“As you start to taste more wines, you’ll be surprised how much less the wines you used to like will mean to you later. You understand how expensive they are,” Wilson says.
The good news is that wines can be resold, if they’re good to begin with and stored well.extraCreDit: Go to the source. There are plenty of wineries within driving distance or a short flight. Tasting wine in a store or at a club is one thing, but tasting it in its native environment creates an emotional collection and deeper knowledge.
Chillout
Good storage is non-negotiable. In the ideal world, every collector would have a cool, dry wine cellar. But considering the dearth of new-home construction in Southern Nevada, most of us will have to settle for a wine refrigerator for now.
“You need to have conditions that are 55 degrees with 70 percent humidity,” says Wilson. “That’s the most important thing. Without that, it’s pointless. You’re wasting your money.”
suCkup
Get to know your vendor, says William Sherer, master sommelier at Aureole.
“A hit list of them would be Marché Bacchus, Khoury’s, Green Valley Wine & Cheese, Lee’s Discount Liquor and Total Wine and More,” he says.
Particularly in the current market, this relationship is key to collecting. In the recession, Sherer explains, both distributors and retailers have stopped stocking any inventory that they are not sure to sell, so you will not be able to get your hands on anything special if you don’t have access to the back of the house or get notifications of good wines coming in so you can pre-order them.
keeponlearning
So, you’ve got your fridge, you’re attending tastings, cultivating your palate, spending $200 a month on wine. Look at you: You’re an expert!
Not so fast, Eddie Osterland. The more
you learn, the more you should realize how little you know. Read up, join clubs, have conversations – whatever it takes to keep improving your knowledge. It can only refine your palate, which enhances your investment.
“I’m not a huge fan of just going by scores of any wine media, but I am a big fan of the articles and references that wine media does, especially Wine Spectator,” Sherer says. “They give good references about what makes a particular wine tick.”extraCreDit: Read “Great Wine Made Simple,” by master sommelier Andrea Immer.
knoWWhen
toholD’em
As the definition of collecting suggests, you have to buy more than you drink. Whatever you budget for your collection, it should be on top of what you’re already spending on wine for regular consumption.
Sherer recommends collecting in threes. “One bottle to try within the year, one to give away as a gift or save for a special occasion, and one bottle to taste later, when it’s aged.”
However, Hammond believes there is no reason to collect if you don’t allow yourself to enjoy a good bottle from time to time.
“The key component to a good wine cellar is a mix of stuff that’s inexpensive, that you can pop open on a Tuesday night, and other stuff that’s a little more expensive that you’re saving to have for a special occasion,” he says.
YouDipthetipofYournosejustinsiDetherim of your glass. Mm… a slight whiff of pomegranate shot through lush notes of cocoa. No doubt about it; you’ve fallen in love with wine. ¶ Nothing would make you happier than having your own collection to dote on and show off. Trouble is, you have no idea how to go about it. Take heart, budding oenophile. Starting a wine collection is not as hard as you think.
d e s e r tco m pa n i o n .co m 43
Cocktail
t ime machine
Drink your way through history at classic drinking
(and eating) spots that span the decades
story Lissa Townsend RodgeRs
Photography
CHRisToPHeR sMiTH
Drink Styling
MaTT MyeRs
Assistant Director
of Beverage, Bellagio
44 d e s e r t co m pa n i o n O c tO b e r 2 01 1
1910s RustiC exotiCaLas Vegas was officially incorporated in 1911: The beginning of the city, but the beginning of the end of the Wild West mining town. However, if you want an idea of what it was like to hit the bars back then, take a trip to Goodsprings, where the Pioneer Saloon (310 W. Spring St., 874-9362) has been serving drinks at the top of the hill for nearly a century. It’s exactly as you’d imagine it, too, from the pressed-tin walls and ceilings to plank floors and cast-iron stove. Even the bullet hole in the wall is authentic 1915 with a coroner’s report to prove it (cheating at cards, don’tcha know).
But these were also civilized times. Drinks went proto-exotica like the gin-brandy Singapore Sling. Or they paid homage to man’s newfound ability to fly with the Aviation, a gin-based potion whose pale hue evokes
clouds and sky. However, the Pioneer Saloon isn’t exactly the bar for drinks that require a cocktail shaker — but don’t worry, both Budweiser and Pabst were in business back then. Conveniently, refrigerators had just been invented.
With Prohibition running from 1919 to 1933, there isn’t much in the way of surviving bars from this decade — but not because Las Vegas lacked them. There were plenty. In Vegas’ notorious Block 16, an area between Ogden and Stewart avenues from 1st to 3rd streets, drinking went the way of gambling and prostitution — to the back room. The Arizona Club was the area’s foremost saloon, with
an ornamented brickwork façade and long oak bar. The Arizona was known for its sloe gin fizzes, but gimlets were also popular: Just make certain yours is mixed with both Rose’s lime juice and fresh lime juice — taken singly, the former will make it too sweet and the latter too sour.
All the buildings are gone now (parking garages), though there are still a few bars in the area. Pull up
a seat to the enormous horseshoe bar at Triple George (201 North 3rd Street, 384-2761) and sip a neat Scotch while paging through Dorothy Parker, or perhaps go proletarian and peruse your Sinclair Lewis over some suds in the white tile-and-copper vat setting of Main Street Station's Triple 7 brewpub (200 N. Main St., 387-1896). Either way, make sure you’re wearing a hat.
1900s CaRibbean queensthe Golden Gate casino
(1 Fremont St., 385-1906) is Las
Vegas’ oldest hotel. how old? it
opened in 1906 and the telephone
number was 1. Originally the hotel
nevada, the Golden Gate has
renovated, but remains distinctly
old school: wood moldings and
wainscoting, ceiling fans spinning,
blackjack dealers in suspenders
and sleeve garters. today, the
baby grand player piano is pre-
empted by michael Jackson
remixes and the go-go girls in
fringed bikinis were definitely not
here when theodore Roosevelt
was president. actually, Roosevelt
had a slight hand in the birth of
new rum drinks during the
aughts: Both the daiquiri and the
cuba Libre were invented in the
caribbean around the time of the
Spanish-american War, and the
recipes were imported stateside
along with the bottles and cases
of booze. after a nice period
cocktail, you can saunter over to
Du-Par’s and
partake of
the era’s other
new flavor
sensation,
the French
dip sandwich.
maybe even
have a nice
slice of pie —
thankfully you’re
not being choked
by a celluloid collar or
steel-boned corset, so
chow down.
1920s Gimlet eye
1940s manhattan pRojeCtBugsy Siegel’s brief and explosive Las Vegas legacy began downtown at the El Cortez Hotel and Casino (600 Fremont St., 385-5200). He basically picked the joint up as a headquarters for his racing wire operations but, as we all know, he soon got bigger ideas.
The hotel’s exterior remains pretty much in period, a low brick building with fire escapes worthy of a hood’s quick getaway and some of the finest vintage neon signs downtown. However, the interior has been redone several times, with echt-’70s chandeliers and über-90s upholstery putting a wrinkle in the circa 1941 aesthetic. But some corners are still flush with MGM/RKO glow: The low-lit, half-spiral staircase by the front desk is perfect for slinky femme fatale entrances — and the bar below is a fine spot for an appreciative audience. The Flame Steakhouse sometimes offers a “vintage” menu of dishes like oysters Rockefeller and strawberries Romanoff. Or just pull up a stool at the lounge, but be aware that if you’re going to do full period, you’ll have to smoke cigarettes — filterless cigarettes — but ordering a Manhattan or a Mai Tai should be enough.
1930s
tRue maRGaRitavilleBoulder City is the closest thing we have to the ’30s preserved. It’s about a half-hour drive from Vegas,
but worth the trip. And go ahead and eat all the junk food you want on the way: This was the decade of Twinkies, Fritos, Snickers, Lay’s, Carvel …
The center of the hamlet’s historic district is 1933’s Boulder Dam Hotel (1305 Arizona Street, 293-3510), whose white-pillared “Dining – Cocktails” splendor has hosted royalty
such as the Mahajara of Indore and Bette Davis. There’s even a mini-Grand Hotel shopping arcade with a tea room and a jewelry store peddling paste replicas of Bette’s
canary diamond ring or, if you prefer, Marlene Dietrich’s rubies. The hotel dining room closes mid-afternoon, but that’s still plenty of time for a chicken salad sandwich and a sidecar or two. Afterward, cross the street to the Big Horn Restaurant (1300 Arizona St., 293-0273), housed in one of the Edward Hopper-esque storefronts, and pull up to the mirrored deco-style bar for a margarita — on the rocks, not that Slushee stuff. The margarita was invented in the 1930s — there are more than a dozen pretenders to the originator’s throne, but it seems to have been the concoction of some hotel bartender somewhere
in Mexico. If tequila can make memories of last night hazy, imagine what it does to recollections of the previous century.
d e s e r tco m pa n i o n .co m 45
46 d e s e r t co m pa n i o n O c tO b e r 2 01 1
1970s When We WeRe luRidin Vegas, the ’70s seem
as well-preserved as a
showgirl who married
well, with a number
of spots firmly
stuck in the Bailey’s
and Quaaludes
decade. naturally, the peppermill (2985
Las Vegas Blvd. S., 735-
4177) is at the
top of the list:
Burgundy plush, pink
neon, fake trees and,
of course, that
bubbling fire pit and
those waitresses in
backless dresses. if
it wasn’t for those
infernal plasma
screens,
it’d be perfect —
order yourself a
harvey Wallbanger off
the extensive and lurid
drink menu and try to
ignore them. if not, hit
the Las Vegas hilton,
where you can still
imagine elvis on the
marquee and James
Bond scaling the side
to break into Willard
Whyte’s penthouse. if
you prefer something
more serene, head
for the dispensary Lounge (2451 e.
tropicana ave., 458-
6343) with its shag
carpeting, shiny wood,
hideous upholstery,
waitresses in leotards
— did i mention the
giant mill wheel with
real water and fake
plants? Suck down a
Long island iced tea,
peruse your copy of
Fear and Loathing in
Las Vegas and wonder
where all the good
times have gone if the
places we had them in
are still here.
1950s steeR and stinGeRsThe ’50s has a set of neon bookends, with Vegas Vic going up in 1951 and the “Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas” sign arriving in 1959. In between, the Sahara, the Sands, the Stardust and a half-dozen other casinos swung open their doors.
Still, nothing says old-school like a steakhouse, and no steakhouse is more old-school than the Golden Steer. The Steer (308 W. Sahara Ave., 384-4470) has served kings from Sinatra to Elvis and maintains the classic red plush/dark wood machismo that’s so swell with a T-bone and an iceberg wedge. For cocktails, try a stinger, the brandy/Crème de Menthe drink favored by ladies from Jayne Mansfield to Peggy Olsen. The look of the era should be easy to come by: Banana Republic’s “Mad Men” collection has plenty of floral-print sheath dresses and narrow-lapeled gray suits. The Golden Steer is also open in the afternoon — go ahead, ask for Dean Martin’s booth, then slide right into that two-martini lunch. How did all of these people get in your room anyway?
1960s bouRbon ComfoRtWhen they opened, both Caesars Palace and the Las Vegas Hilton were examples of over-the-top ’60s glamour at its finest, although both have been stripped virtually all of their swinging glory. But if your vision of the era is more John Cassavetes than James Bond, Decatur Liquors (46 S. Decatur Blvd., 870-2522) is in near-pristine, early-’60s condition, from woodgrain formica to groovy primary-colored fonts. It was a big time for White Russians, and this is the sort of comforting, off-the-path bar you could
down a few in. Or order a bourbon, which Congress declared “America’s Native Spirit” and our national drink in 1964, punch up some Motown on the jukebox and see if the Munsters are on TV.
Still not sufficiently bathed in authenticity? Step through the side door to the adjacent lunch counter, where there’s still floral vinyl on the booths and Swiss steak on the menu … or the drugstore, where rows of bull’s-eye greeting cards and pink foot pumices take on a pop art all their own — and try to tell me that packet of disposable rectal thermometer sheaths hasn’t been there since the Kennedy administration!
1980s absolut exCessIn a way, the ’80s have to be the Mirage (3400 Las Vegas Blvd. S., 791-7111). When it opened in 1989, it was the first major casino to open in almost 16 years and the harbinger of new, slick, high-rise tower Vegas. And, well, what’s more “Miami Vice”-era than being under a glass dome, surrounded by oversized tropical foliage, contemplating a sushi menu while the Bangles blare over the sound system? How about the Sports Bar, with its Sharper Image-style signage, brass horse head railings and endless acres of digital sports scores dancing above your head? Pay gustatory homage to the era by ordering anything made with Absolut — bonus points if it’s a blue kamikaze — and getting a barbecue chicken pie from the adjacent California Pizza Kitchen.
Even the new areas feel retro. The Rhumbar may be Palm Beach chic, but the glossy white finish on everything and abundance of sunglass-wearing, cigar-smoking males are still kinda, “Say hello to my little friend.”
If you want to escape the casino and favor vibe over authenticity, there’s always downtown’s video game bar, Insert Coins (512 Fremont St., 477-2525), where every night is ’80s night. Sip a fuzzy navel while dividing your attention between Tetris on the little screen and “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off” on the big one.
1990s smells like spiRits
The ’90s brought a slew of new casinos: The Excalibur, Treasure Island, New York New York — but let’s ignore that brief and foolish attempt at making Vegas “family-friendly.” No, head straight for the high-end that started this whole luxury casino ball rolling: The Bellagio (3600 Las Vegas Blvd. S., 693-7111). Stride boldly across the gaming floor, whose vaguely haute Euro style also set the trend in resort design until the current fad for Mid-Century Meh took over. Hit the Baccarat Bar at the Bellagio, sink into a beige velvet couch and call for a Cosmo. People-watch and debate whether that woman is a hooker, or just another tourist who thinks everyone in Vegas is supposed to dress like a hooker. Eavesdrop on the Johnnie Walker Blue-swilling stock brokers behind you, and recall that this was the decade that originated luxury liquor, the luxury casino and, well, Johnnie Walker Blue-swilling stock brokers. But we were more tolerant then, back in those innocent days when we thought the boom would never have a bust.
d e s e r tco m pa n i o n .co m 47
48D e s e r t Co m pa n i o n o c to b e r 2 01 1
the searchers
I mistake them at first for street kids bumming on the sidewalk outside the Rosewood Apartments, a well-worn
complex over in Winchester. Then I notice their bags are a bit too full, too well-packed; their sun-battered skin and dusty boots have an aura of purpose. These are the people I’ve come to meet, a team of field biologists about to head deep into the Mojave to monitor the rare and threatened desert tortoise.
Kirsten Dutcher, the crew’s leader, pulls up in a massive truck emblazoned with their hand-painted insignia — “Knight Viper” — and stamped with carapaces, like kills on a cockpit, to commemorate each tort they’ve spotted.
“You’re lucky,” Dutcher tells me. “Most days we start out at three or four in the morning.”
The waiting crew members fling their heavy packs into the truck, scan maps, and assess water and provisions. These are the foot soldiers in the struggle to defend the environment. Field biologists do the dirty work that provides much of the raw data that guide preservation and recovery plans around the planet and help shape local, national and international law.
They’re also the bohemians of the science world. Their jobs are generally low-paying, itinerant and rarely last longer than a couple of months, so they routinely camp out on each other’s floors and crowd into cheap apartments. Like members of a band, they travel the country in run-down vans, heading to whatever gig they can find.
When Dutcher was getting her master's
degree in ecology, one of her advisors warned her that field research is “the bottom of the barrel of biology.”
“It’s the most physically demanding,” Dutcher explains, “definitely takes the most of your time, still requires the same amount of education (as laboratory work), the same amount of hard science background, but often you’re paid less than minimum wage. You rarely have health care, don’t have benefits, and the jobs don’t last.”
I’m about to follow her into the untrammeled desert to find out why she’s been doing it for a decade — and has no intention of quitting any time soon.
and then we walk
Their crew of six heads north on Highway 93 into Coyote Springs as fighters from Nellis zip overhead. We follow a gravel
road until it becomes a dirt road, and keep going until that trickles down to two ruts in the earth that eventually dissolve to nowhere in particular. Then we walk.
The team must hike in and establish a base camp five kilometers away, just on the far side of a saddle in the Desert Range that rises nearly a kilometer high. We each have to hump in about 30 pounds of water, plus food and supplies.
At this point I might as well note that I’m not really a backpacker — in that I’ve never done it before. Most of my gear is borrowed. My boots have their shoe-store sheen. My
hat is a fedora. None of my clothing bears the imprimatur of an outdoorsy European brand — just brown cotton slacks and an old army jacket. No fibers naturally “wick.”
As I clamber up the rocks, I struggle to cope with having a third of my body weight swinging on my back and attempt to tune out a discussion of rattlesnakes — specifically, what a great habitat this is for rattlesnakes.
At the crest, we’re rewarded with a view of limitless ranges and valleys all around. The only trace of humanity is the highway, reduced to an indecipherable ribbon of white far below. We stop for just a minute or two to suck on the thin air. Then we descend. On the way down, I notice that my comrades do not employ the arm-flailing balancing technique that I tend to favor.
here, tortoise tortoise tortoise
In 1994, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service determined that the threatened Mojave population of the desert tortoise
must be monitored for at least a generation; for a species that can live to be octogenarians, that means at least 25 years of close observation. Dutcher and her crew, who work for Reno-based Great Basin Institute, are among more than 50 biologists from three organizations surveying 46,000 square kilometers of critical habitat that also includes areas of Utah, Arizona and California.
Instead of hunting for tortoises, the researchers use a method called line-distance sampling, which requires hiking in pairs and scouting for torts along square, 12-kilometer transects. These randomly generated routes provide researchers with an unbiased sample over a large area. The downside is that for the stats to work, the teams must follow the transects precisely — and the computers give no allowance to terrain. The routes cut at all angles across mountains and cliffs, and through gullies, canyons and washes.
Teams have the option of cutting really brutal transects in half, but they seem to prefer gutting it out. Simeon Caskey and Daniel Leach pride themselves on conquering a transect that marched straight across a series of six deep washes.
“They weren’t even washes, they were canyons,” Leach, 26, says, recalling the steep, 50-meter faces he traversed despite a blister on his heel the size of a silver dollar (though it “wasn’t as bad as it looks”). The really tough part about walking transects, he says, is that after you make it up that last cliff, “you turn the corner, then you have to go back through everything you just did again.”
D e s e r tCo m pa n i o n .Co m 49
Low pay. No benefits. Long days in the lonesome desert. Why do field biologists do it? A thirst for adventure — and a sense of purpose BYJosephLangDon
i
t
i
The "Knight Viper" team, from left: James Miller, Kirsten Dutch-er, Simeon Caskey, Daniel Leach,
Corrine Michaud and Dave Ellis
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“Honestly, I really enjoyed it,” says his partner, Caskey, 25. “We were in some mountains that probably very few humans have ever been in. This one peak was more or less inaccessible unless you wanted to climb some cliffs. It was pretty neat to think that you might be the only people who have ever been there.”
“And we did destroy last year’s time,” Leach adds.
This gig is tough, but it beats other jobs he’s had, like crunching data in a lab or “watching plants grow.” As a proudly proclaimed “dirtbag biologist,” Leach hasn’t worked a job longer than seven months since he graduated college. Unemployment is frequent, and competition is stiff.
“You have to apply to 50, 60, 70 jobs, because you’re going to get a call back from maybe two,” says James Miller, 25. As a result, instead of having a narrow specialty, field biologists tend to move all around the country, or the globe, working on a wide range of projects.
Dave Ellis, 27, has worked in South Africa, Central America and Peru, and Corrine Michaud, 28, is a lepidopterist with two master’s degrees, but this is their first time in the American West. They were welcomed to February in the desert by thunderstorms, hail, snow and a windstorm in a fire-ravaged transect that blackened them with soot “like firefighters.”
Not that they mind too much. Ellis, who grew up in a tough-luck Philadelphia suburb, got to fulfill his boyhood dream of spotting a Gila monster in the wild.
“I’ll never forget the look on his face,” Dutcher recalls. “He smiled from here to here and here to here,” she says, touching her chin, nose and ears. (They beg Ellis to flash his Gila-smile again, but he just reddens a little over a tight grin. “Can’t be replicated,” he says.)
Attracting experienced researchers like these who can be counted on to bring home sound data is critical to any study.
“You can’t describe the status of a species by waving your arms in the air,” says Linda Allison, Desert Tortoise Monitoring Coordinator for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, who oversees the operation. “So much conservation work would not even get through the planning phase without nuts and bolts information about where the tortoises are and what types of places they live in.”
Allison says they try to recruit researchers who take pleasure in the tough conditions (“it is very hard work, otherwise”) and strive to keep them motivated throughout what can be a grueling season.
“They need to feel confident that they can work in any situation and that the difficult work they do matters,” she says. “It sounds abstract, but becomes very real if field personnel give up on a project.”
These jobs are in high demand, despite the drawbacks, but it takes a special breed of scientist to serve in the field year in, year out.
“There are lot of people who graduate with degrees in biology (who) want to go out and do the kind of work they see on the Discovery Channel,” Dutcher says. “They have a real romantic idea of what it’s going to be and go out and (only) work for a season or two … There’s a definite weeding-out process.”
At 35, Dutcher, who grew up as a military kid and spent the most time in California, is a veteran of several tortoise seasons. She may also win the prize for diciest transect. A couple years ago, she and her partner were stopped by a swarm of armed men in desert fatigues.
“They didn’t tell us where we were,” she says. “They just said, ‘Don’t you know where you are? Every map in the world will tell you not to enter this place.’”
The place was the Nevada Test and Training Range, home (perhaps) to Area 51.
They were released after a three-hour Q&A with a man in a Hawaiian shirt who, despite the shirt, Dutcher says, “had no sense of humor.”
the (slow) thrill of the hunt
“Base camp” turns out to be a bit of over-exuberant marketing. It’s the spot where we roll out our sleeping bags between
bushes. The threat of rain forces us to abandon the soft sands of a wash for higher, harder ground called, quite aptly, “desert pavement.”
It doesn’t take me long to realize that I am
over-prepared in terms of fancy (heavy) trail mix, and under-prepared in terms of clothing to block out the chill desert wind that has begun to ripple down the valley, heavy with moisture. I planned to use my extra socks for a tiny pillow, but I stick them on my hands instead. As the temperature drops with the sun, I uncrinkle my emergency blanket like a giant noisy sheet of cellophane.
“Who’s eating chips?” a voice asks in the dark.
The rain holds off. When the clouds break I am awakened by the light of a full moon shining down on me like God’s own headlamp.
We set out at dawn. Or they do, at least. Every team must start at precisely the same time, so there’s no waiting up for me as I chase after them, marveling at how the desert teems with vegetation. Or perhaps I should say “bristles” — there’s the majestic, pointy Joshua tree; the noble, spiky yucca; the ancient, pokey creosote.
Blossoms speckle the valley in colors of lavender, blood orange, lemon peel, neon magenta. Even the ground is alive — cryptobiotic soil crawls in patches of black, white and blue.
But there’s a new color in the desert, a brown that creeps over the landscape like rust. This is bromus, an invasive kind of cheatgrass that is drought-adapted and fire-resistant. It grows too rapidly for this land of eons — the surrounding Joshua trees are several centuries old; the creosote bushes have been growing bit by bit for perhaps a millennium, perhaps more. Bromus sucks up water and chokes out the colorful natives. It spreads like wildfire, and then it spreads the wildfire, too.
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The battle against it is all but given up. The most the researchers can do is take photos at every waypoint.
“Bromus wasn’t (at this site) two years ago,” Dutcher says. “If in a couple of years this is all grassland, they’ll be able to document the change.”
For a couple hundred meters I attempt to scan for tortoises, moving my gaze like a lazy scythe. The study assumes researchers will find every tortoise at their feet and a diminishing percentage at distances farther off the line, so it’s crucial on these long, hot, rugged treks that the teams keep up a constant search for reptiles that look just like rocks and often move like them, too. It’s surprisingly fatiguing, and a good way to test the toe of your
boot against sharp rocks. The hardest part is to just keep at it, like a zen discipline. We walk an unseen mandala through the Mojave.
Mostly, I linger behind and take pictures of pretty flowers and the stately husks of yucca I give names to (names like “Mojave Cockatiel” and “Rat King”). Dutcher spots an orange-tinged horned lizard. Her partner, Miller, points out a pack rat’s nest built in the side of a gully like a scale-model cliff dwelling. Other teams cross a coachwhip snake, even a den of coyote pups playing. My find is a few popped balloons, stamped “Verizon.”
We do not find tortoises.We hump it back to the trucks, back out
the same five kilometers over the same ridge after the eight-hour hike. Dutcher’s crew
heads for a fresh transect tomorrow. They spend five days a week in the desert and hike a transect every day. On their off days, they do laundry, maybe hit a buffet, and often manage to squeeze in some climbing or bouldering or even hiking, these curious fauna.
Exhausted, I beg off and head for civilization. It isn’t long until downtown comes into view. In under an hour I have journeyed from nature untouched by humanity back to what is, in a sense, humanity untouched by nature.
where refrigerators go to die
On the way out, the researchers talked about how draining it can be to work for days without spotting a tortoise. Even though
they, and not the Gopherus agassizii, were my quarry, I’ve got a taste for how they feel. I’m sunburned, sore, and gimpy — and I want a look at one of these buggers.
To cheat a little, I link up a week later with Brent Sparks, who monitors a separate tortoise population that was relocated away from a water line to the eastern fringe of Henderson. He keeps tabs on them via telemetry, tracking them by their radio transmitters, so we know just where to find them.
We roll up to what ain’t the prettiest part of town, desert-wise. It seems to be a popular dumping ground/shooting range.
“This is where refrigerators, microwaves, and computer monitors come to die,” Sparks says. We tiptoe through what looks like a dystopian battlefield of spent shells and
D e s e r tCo m pa n i o n .Co m 51
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Clockwise from left: A searcher travels a tran-sect; Sleepy the tortoise; the Knight Viper team readies camp.
broken glass. Sparks points out what was, until recently, “Osama’s fridge.” “They put Bin Laden’s face on it and shot it up pretty good,” he says.
The low hills, though, are clean, and the tortoise population seems to be adapting well to the rugged terrain — a promising sign for tortoises threatened by development. Sparks, 37, has been observing them for three years, a rare long-term gig for a field guy. A West Virginian, he did a lot of work with bats back east before moving to Vegas.
“I really like bat work,” he says. “Of course, you got to work nights. You don’t really have a normal social life when you’re working with bats.” He hopes to stay on in the Mojave when his project ends this year.
I track a tortoise with an antenna that looks like a homemade lightning rod. Louder blips mean we’re on target. “Think of yourself as a radar-guided missile,” Sparks says. “That’s all it is.”
I get a lock on #132, a young male Sparks calls “Sleepy.” After this long, Sparks identifies them by their habits — like “Dr. Evil,” who seems to delight in forcing his trackers along steep precipices, or “Mama,” whom he has caught more than once in flagrante delicto.
On this afternoon Sleepy betrays his moniker and emerges from his burrow to investigate us. He looks like a gentle creature, wizened, as if each specimen somehow bears the collective weight of the species’ paleogenic age. But Sleepy is a young buck, somewhere in his teens. With a full life, he could see the year 2075. The question is whether his habitat, this edge of living desert abutting the developed world, will last that long.
Tortoise #132 turns around and, with striking ferocity, flings up clouds of dust and stone as he claws his way back underground.
next leg of the journey
I finally catch up to Dutcher again late one night after she’s returned from a trek, recreational this time, to the hot
springs. The season is over. They each hiked 500 kilometers in eight weeks. Laterally, anyway — vertical distance doesn’t count. The
“Knight Viper” truck spotted 57 torts in all. It’s not for them to say if that’s good or not; it will take months to sift the data and years to interpret it.
“(We’re looking for) gradual change, which is about what a tortoise does — change gradually,” says U.S. Fish and Wildlife’s Allison. Some indicators do suggest, though, that the population — estimated around 100,000 in the monitored area — remains in decline.
Over in the Rosewood Apartments, nearly two dozen young scientists are clearing out of the three apartments they’d been crammed into for months and begin to scatter to new projects across the country.
Dutcher doesn’t live in the Rosewood Apartments, not anymore. And she’s not leaving this time. She’s decided to stay in Vegas, an ideal habitat for a herpetologist, and just took out a mortgage on a rancher near Paradise Park.
Granted, she still has a half-dozen biologists bivouacking in her living room and plans to spend time each year on projects elsewhere, but a permanent address is a big step for someone who has worked more than 30 jobs on three continents over the last decade.
“I got tired of living out of my truck,” she explains. “Last summer in California I caught myself dreaming about a couch. This is the first sofa I’ve had since college.”
Setting roots isn’t easy in this line of work,
52D e s e r t Co m pa n i o n o c to b e r 2 01 1
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a forest and look for something amazing," says Kirsten Dutcher.
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especially when you have to explain your job history to loan officers.
“That was hugely problematic,” Dutcher says. “They were like, you worked five places in 2010? Did you get fired?”
Dutcher is accustomed to defending her work and resisting pressures that sound a lot like those faced by artists — pressures to find office work with benefits, to go back to school, to teach. And there’s always the temptation of what they call “biostitution” — contracting for developers. It can pay five times what they make in the field and does provide a valuable service (the 'dozers are coming, someone might as well move the snakes), but to some it feels like selling out.
Surviving a life in the field requires toughness that goes beyond enduring back pain and a paltry bank account. It’s hard forming such intense relationships — some forged by working with a single person for months in isolation — that often pass with the seasons.
And it’s hard living on the front lines of what can seem like a losing battle. Field work has been critical to landmark victories like the recovery of the bald eagle or the banning of DDT, “but the field researcher tells the same story over and over and over again,” Dutcher says. “You can ask someone what’s causing the decline of this or that species and they might word it differently, but the answer is always ultimately the same: We are.”
So why does she do it? Why does anyone do it?The need to keep fighting, she says, in the
face of it. And the desire to live as a part of the natural world in a way that few people do anymore. And a sense of enlightenment. Some things are more valuable than a 401k. And then, of course, there’s the simple joy of a girl who loved to play in the dirt.
“It’s shocking to me sometimes that I got paid to walk around a forest and look for something amazing,” she says. “Or that I got paid to catch frogs all day. To be able to say, that’s what I did today: I walked through a marsh and caught frogs.”
Dutcher reclines on her new used couch and sings a few lines of “I Don’t Mind,” a song by a band called the Tabasco Donkeys, kind of a field workers’ anthem:
I wouldn’t want to be an old manSittin’ in an office building someplace far
awayWith worry on my face.Well you can take my car, my stereo, my little
money, Leave me with nothin’ but my trail family. Take my dress-up clothes, my cheap cologne,
my college loans. I don’t mind. I don’t mind.
D e s e r tCo m pa n i o n .Co m 53
In the Footsteps of Thomas Moran
Mark Bangerter
Joshua Been
Arlene Braithwaite
Doug Braithwaite
Royden Card
Michelle Chrisman
John Cogan
Bets Cole
Bill Cramer
Cody DeLong
Dennis Farris
George Handrahan
Brad Holt
William Scott Jennings
Michael Chesley Johnson
Donal Jolley
Roland Lee
Gloria Miller Allen
David Nakabayashi
Peter Nisbet
Sheila Savannah
Kathleen Strukoff
Anne Weiler-Brown
Seth Winegar
Plein Air Artist Invitational at Zion National Park
September 20 to November 27Participating artists exhibition at the Zion Human History Museum
October 31 to November 3Watch artists paint from Thomas Moran’s 1873 sketchbook locations
November 4Quick Draw and Auction
November 5 to November 6Public Wet Paint Sale at the Zion Nature Center
Workshops, demonstrations, and lectures all week. Event proceeds will benefit the Zion National Park Foundation, the Zion Human History Museum, and support art education in Zion National Park. For information, call 800.635.3959 or visit www.zionpark.org.
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2 Hark and forsooth, knave-
face. Get thee to the wenchtacular Age of Chivalry Renais-sance Festival for a day of jousting and dragon meat. The Age of Chivalry Renaissance Festival happens Oct. 7-9 at Silver Bowl Park. Tickets $5-$25. Info: www.lvrenfair.com
5 It’s a cliché to say video games cause violence but, uh,
shooting virtual zombies point blank with a Howitzer for nine hours straight can’t exactly be good for your brain. “Neighborhood III: Requisition of Doom” explores the phenom in darkly satirical fashion Oct. 21-Nov. 6 at Las Vegas Little Theater. Info: www.lvlt.org
3Remember storytime? Your eerily placid second-grade teacher reading some fantastic tale as you fought off sleep? Storytelling bash “The Tell” is nothing like
that. It’s storytime run through a blender, dosed with alcohol, laughter and, of course, live stories that range from hilarious to heartbreaking. This installment features Review-Journal col-umnist Norm Clark and Lauren Weedman of “The Daily Show,” among others. This free event happens 7:30 p.m. Oct. 14 at Artifice Bar, 1025 S. First St. Info: 489-6339
1Stories about women coping with loss? Don’t reach for the Kleenex yet. Laura van den Berg’s debut collection, “What the World Will Look Like When
All the Water Leaves Us,” addresses her subject with exotic settings and quirky situations. Think women paid to dress up as Bigfoot and chase tourists around. Van den Berg reads 7 p.m. Oct. 20 at UNLV’s Greenspun Auditorium. Info: www.blackmountaininstitute.org
4Hey, why aren’t there Marie Antoinette-branded snack cakes called “Let ’Ems”?
Trademark! Spongy desserts and aloof royalty are the thematic fuel behind “Let Them Eat Cake,” featuring artists’ takes on the des-sert that is like bread on prom night. The opening reception is 6 p.m. Oct. 16 at UNLV’s Marjorie Barrick Museum; the exhibit runs through Dec. 12. Info: www.barrickmuseum.unlv.edu
take
10.2011
Lauren van den Berg
54D e s e r t Co m pa n i o n O c tO b e r 2 01 1
LorraineLeslie’s“redVelvetrevolution”
ageofChivalryrenaissanceFestival
D e s e r tCo m pa n i o n .Co m 55D e s e r tCo m pa n i o n .Co m 55
see what all the buzz is aboutMeet the Desert Companion staff — and fellow readers — over complimentary drinks and hors d’oeuvres. Enjoy custom Davalos Tequila cocktails as we celebrate our October Drink Up! issue.
Ferraro’s Italian Restaurant Thursday October 6, 2011 5:00 pm-7:00 pm
Please RSVP by October 4, 2011 by visiting www.desertcompanion.com
ARTImportant Conversations in Midwestern BrownThrough Oct. 2. Darren Johnson fuses
realist figurative images with cartoon
speech bubbles in his series of oil
paintings. His work depicts people’s
desperation to communicate with oth-
ers in order to relieve our own feelings
of alienation and emptiness. Windmill
Library
First FridayOct. 7, 6 p.m. Downtown street festival
features gallery showings, local musical
performances, craft booths and food
vendors. Free. www.firstfriday-lasve-
gas.org
Bellagio Gallery of Fine Art Free Admission Day Oct. 8, 10 a.m. -7 p.m. In honor of Smith-
sonian Magazine’s Annual Museum
Day, BGFA will give the public a free
chance to see “A Sense of Place:
Landscapes from Monet to Hockney,” a
display of landscape artwork through
the ages. Free. Bellagio. Download
your complimentary ticket online at
www.bellagio.com/bgfa
Lolita Develay: Window ShoppingThrough Oct. 14
Develay’s paintings take readers win-
dow shopping through the luxury of
the Strip. The art examines consumer
culture through the incorporation of
futuristic mannequins drenched in high
fashion, using vibrant color and an
almost otherworldly sensibility.
Winchester Cultural Center Gallery
Zak Ostrowski: New WorkThrough Oct. 14. Using both traditional
techniques and modern technology,
Zak Ostrowski’s sculptures are cre-
ated from metal, wood and concrete.
Ostrowski shapes human forms in a
mix of media to achieve his signature
style. Clark County Government Center
Rotunda Gallery
Let Them Eat CakeOct. 16-Dec. 12, opening reception Oct. 16,
6 p.m.-8 p.m. Feast your eyes on some
sweet artwork. Let Them Eat Cake is a
collection of local artists’ work inspired
by all things cake — and Marie Antoi-
nette’s beheading. UNLV’s Marjorie
Barrick Museum
56D e s e r t Co m pa n i o n O c tO b e r 2 01 1
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Figurative Works in RakuThrough Oct. 23. Ceramic artist Shari Bray
showcases works in Raku that feature
line-drawn figures and hands into the
clay, similar to Japanese woodblock
prints. Raku typically gives ceramic art
a shiny glaze; Bray uses the process
to create surprisingly painterly effects.
Enterprise Library
Beneath the Surface: New work by Linda AlterwitzThrough Oct. 22. Linda Alterwitz aims to
capture the realm of light and shadow
in an eerily abstract expression. Images
of external landscapes such as hills and
valleys can also be viewed as internal
landscapes of flesh and bone. UNLV’s
Donna Beam Gallery
The Best Little Pet Show in Vegas!Through Oct. 27. Participating artists
Chieko Amadon, Dawn Anderson,
Montana Black, Bert Hornbeck, Marty
Kreloff, Clare Little, Scott VanderMo-
len and Mary Warner showcase both
comical and serious images of pets in
a variety of media. Bridge Gallery, 400
Stewart Ave., 229-1012
The Pano ProjectThrough Oct. 27. In this most recent set of
panoramic photographs, Angela Bel-
lamy explores the diverse spaces that
constitute Las Vegas’ urban landscape
and the people who inhabit them,
creating striking panoramic images.
Charleston Heights Arts Center, 800 S.
Brush St.
Art Coming to LifeThrough Nov. 5. View the art of Nja Onê
as she captures the world’s cultures in
her works. West Las Vegas Arts Center,
947 West Lake Mead Blvd. 229-4800.
Works by Erik BeehnThrough Nov. 14. Reception, Sept. 8, 6
p.m. Local contemporary artist Erik
Beehn’s work is featured in the next
installation of its “Locals Only” rotating
exhibition series. He conveys a tone of
disquiet in his photorealistic illustra-
tions of urban interiors and exteriors.
CENTERpiece Gallery
Recent Works by Laraine KaiserThrough Nov. 8 Laraine Kaiser has a
secret life: The Las Vegas Philharmonic
musician also paints. Her recent work
of oil on canvas ranges from classical
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reproductions to abstract originals and
surreal styles. Spring Valley Library
10 x 10Oct. 24-Dec. 2. Visual artists and writers
whose work is influenced or inspired by
Southern Nevada collaborate to mark
the 10-year anniversary of the Vegas
Valley Book Festival. The artist recep-
tion will feature a spoken word event
during First Friday, Nov. 4, 6 to 8 p.m.
Free. Clark County Government Center
Rotunda Gallery
DANCEGlass WorksOct. 21, 8 p.m.; Oct. 22, 2 p.m. and 8 p.m.
UNLV’s dance department pays tribute
to 100 years of Tiffany Glass creations
in the form of uniquely choreographed
dance pieces. $10-$18. UNLV’s Judy
Bayley Theatre
City Moves Dance ConcertOct. 22-23, 1 p.m. Performers from the
Strip and elsewhere join creative forces
and take to the stage to benefit the
CSN Performing Arts Center. Co-
directed by Courtney Combs and
Heather Sirois-Arnold, cast members
of Phantom – The Las Vegas Spectacu-
lar, this show benefits Family Promise,
which helps homeless families. $15-$20.
Nicholas J. Horn Theatre, 651-5483, csn.
edu/pac
Nevada Ballet Theatre Season PremiereOct. 29, 2 p.m.; Oct. 30, 8 p.m. Kicking off
its fall season with work from Jiri Kyl-
ian, George Balanchine and NBT’s own
James Canfield, Nevada Ballet Theatre’s
fall show will feature a range of dance
styles. $29. Paris Theâtré in Paris Las
Vegas, www.nevadaballet.org
Halloween Dance with the Jerry Tiffe Band Oct. 29, 7 p.m. Adults are invited to bust
a move to the “Monster Mash” at the
annual Halloween-themed dance. Hal-
loween costume attire is encouraged.
$10-$15. Charleston Heights Arts Center
Ballroom, 800 S. Brush St., 229-6383 or
visit www.artslasvegas.org
Las Vegas Contemporary Dance Theatre Fall SeriesNov. 4, 7 p.m.; Nov. 5, 6, 1 p.m. The Las
Vegas Contemporary Dance Theatre
launches its fall season with “Vespers,”
a piece that celebrates the power of
family ties and deep religious faith.
$30-$40. West Las Vegas Library
Theater, www.lvdance.org
ComplexionsNov. 5, 8 p.m. This dance troupe from
New York features former Alvin Ailey
company members who are known for
creating intense, challenging work.
$35-$75. UNLV’s Artemus Ham Hall
FAMILY & FESTIVALSGirls & Boys Rites of Passage Mentoring Workshops (ages 10-16)Oct. 1-Dec. 10. Boys and girls will travel
a 10-week journey toward the path
of adulthood. Advanced registration
required. $30. West Las Vegas Arts
Center, 947 W. Lake Mead Blvd.,
58D e s e r t Co m pa n i o n O c tO b e r 2 01 1
One score to rule them all
Film composers are used to hearing their offspring abused. Sometimes hours of music is commissioned for a single film, only to be obscured by dialogue, buried under sound effects, bumped out of place or simply left on the cutting-room floor. Most times, there won’t even be a soundtrack album.
But if you’re Academy Award-winner Howard Shore and wrote the mammoth scores for Peter Jackson’s “Lord of the Rings” movie trilogy, your music will be front and center at the Orleans Arena Oct. 14. Under the baton of Ludwig Wicki, the Munich Symphony Orchestra, Phoenix Boys Choir and Pacific Chorale, The Fellowship of the Ring’s orchestral tapestry will purl forth from the stage.
In a turnabout that ought to please any much-bruised Hol-lywood tunesmith, the movie will now accompany the score. Footage from Jackson’s film will be projected in 1080p HD for-mat onto a 60-foot screen. Like the epic movie endeavor itself, “LOTR in Concert” requires patience: The live-performance version of Shore’s Two Towers score tours next year, followed by Return of the King in 2013.
“The Lord of the Rings In Concert” is 8 p.m. Oct. 14 at Orleans Arena. Tickets $35-$125. Info: 284-777 or www.or-leansarena.com. — David McKee
“Lord of the Rings in Concert”
D e s e r tCo m pa n i o n .Co m 59
229-4800
Art in the ParkOct. 1-2, Art in the Park is one of the
largest outdoor juried art festivals
in the Southwest and is the largest
fundraiser for the Boulder City Hos-
pital Foundation, benefiting Boulder
City Hospital. Jennifer Main has
been named featured artist for the
Boulder City Hospital Foundations
49th art event. Free. Wilbur,
Bicentennial and Escalante Parks,
401 California Ave., Boulder City,
www.artinthepark.org
Age of Chivalry Renaissance FestivalOct. 7- 9, 2011, 10 a.m. For the 18th year, a
medieval kingdom will unveil itself at
a new location, Silver Bowl Park, with
lavishly costumed knights, knaves, fine
ladies and wenches. Food, crafts and
art will also be available. $5-$25. Silver
Bowl Park, 6800 E. Russell Road,
www.lvrenfair.com
Fall Beer FestivalOct. 14, 7 p.m.-10 p.m. and Oct. 15, 3 p.m.-9 p.m.
This two-day beer festival kicks off
with the All American Craft Beer Tast-
ing, where attendees can sample more
than 120 craft beers. Tickets $50. The
second day is a free admission Okto-
berfest pool party where 200 differ-
ent international and domestic beers
are available for purchase. The Golden
Nugget Hotel, 386-8100,
www.goldennugget.com
Green Girl Music & Arts Festival Oct. 14-16 Promoting the empowerment
of women and going green, this festival
seeks to raise environmental aware-
ness while featuring local and touring
musicians, artists, dancers and poets.
Various Venues. www.greengirlmusi-
candartsfestival.com
Haunted Harvest Oct. 14-16, 21-23, 28-31, 5 p.m.-9 p.m.
Bring the little monsters out for a
night of family-friendly entertainment
and trick-or-treating. The Springs
Preserve will be decorated with a
scarecrow display and lined with food
concessions and game booths. $5-$8,
Springs Preserve
Coastwest UnrestOct. 14, 7 p.m. As part of the Young Origi-
nals concert series, Coastwest Unrest
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performs Americana-tinged folk rock
songs that address the West and life
in Las Vegas. $10. Winchester Cultural
Center
Scarecrow Festival VIP Scarecrow Kick-off, Oct. 21, 6 p.m.-
9 p.m.; Scarecrow Festival Oct. 22,
10 a.m.-6 p.m. $5-$10 Wind your way
through a spectacular hay maze pep-
pered with unique scarecrows, deco-
rated by community businesses, youth
groups and individuals. Have fun while
you help Communities In Schools of
Nevada raise funds to empower stu-
dents to stay in school and achieve in
life. VIP event, $75-$150; festival $5-$10.
All American Sports Park, 121 E. Sunset
Road, 595-4985
Southern Nevada Musical Arts SingersOct. 22, 2 p.m. The Southern Nevada Musi-
cal Arts Singers perform Ariel Ramirez’
Misa Criolla and Byung Hee Oh’s Horn
Mass and songs by Lerner and Loewe.
This globe-spanning music mix will
cover Argentinian sacred music, Korean
jazz and classic Broadway. $10-$12.
Winchester Cultural Center
Life In Death FestivalNov. 1-2, 5 p.m.-9 p.m. Celebrate Day of
the Dead at a festival that addresses
death and dying with both respect
and a sense of humor. View traditional
Mexican ofrendas (altars) and dance to
festive music. Free. Winchester Cultural
Center
The harp of the matterAs though playing the harp isn’t tricky enough. Chris Caswell, an American Celtic Bard, is not only a harpist, but he also plays the Scot-tish bagpipes, Irish flute, tinwhistle and bodhran (Irish frame drum). On top of that, when Caswell isn’t making music, he makes things that make music, crafting tradi-tional harps. Hear his homegrown Celtic harp music at a free concert noon Oct. 21 at the Lloyd D. George Federal Courthouse Jury Assembly Room. Info: 229-3515 or www.arts-lasvegas.org — Alexia Gyorody
D e s e r tCo m pa n i o n .Co m 61
Vegas Valley Book FestivalNov. 3-6 The city’s largest literary festival
brings more than 100 authors for panel
discussions, readings, book signings,
workshops, poetry readings, spoken
word performances, exhibitions and
other special programs. Free admission
to most events. Historic Fifth Street
School and other locations, 229-5431,
www.vegasvalleybookfestival.org
Vegas Valley Children’s Book FestivalNov. 5, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Bring the kids out
for story time at the largest Las Vegas
children’s literary event. The festival
features local authors, educational ac-
tivities and stage performances. Free,
Centennial Plaza at the Historic Fifth
Street School, 229-3515,
www.vegasvalleybookfestival.org
Día de Muertos Nov. 5, 4-10 p.m. Celebrate the dead at
Springs Preserve during a traditional
Mexican holiday that honors the de-
ceased. The event is complete with
mariachis, storytelling and sugar skull
decorating. $5-$8. Springs Preserve
LECTURES, READINGS AND PANELSTransforming Artists Oct. 3, 7:30 p.m. This UNLV Forum Lecture
Series features Moniro Ravanipour, an
internationally acclaimed author, Margot
Mink Colbert, a dancer and choreogra-
pher, and Roberta Sabbath, instructor
in the UNLV English department. They
will explore the theme of exile from their
unique perspectives. Free. UNLV’s Mar-
jorie Barrick Museum Auditorium
Theism and Atheism Oct. 13, 7 p.m. Reza Aslan will moderate
a panel on theism and atheism with
writers Sam Harris, author of “The End
of Faith,” and Karen King, author of
“Reading Judas: The Gospels of Judas
and the Shaping of Christianity.” Free.
UNLV’s Student Union Ballroom
The TellOct. 14, 7:30 p.m. Spoken-word artist
Dayvid Figler and Heather Hyte host
this storytelling session by local and
national talent, with tales ranging from
the humorous to the bizarre to the
poignant. This installment features
R-J columnist Norm Clark and Lauren
Weedman of “The Daily Show.” Free.
Artifice Bar, 1025 S. First St., 489-6339
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62D e s e r t Co m pa n i o n O c tO b e r 2 01 1
Reading with Laura van den Berg Oct. 20, 7 p.m. Critically acclaimed author
Laura van den Berg will read from her
collection of stories called “What the
World Will Look Like When All the Water
Leaves Us.” The collection of stories about
women coping with loss and grief has
been long-listed for The Story Prize and
shortlisted for the Frank O’Connor Award.
UNLV’s Greenspun Hall Auditorium
Emerald Isle Escapade: A Literary Jaunt of IrelandOct 26, 7:30 p.m. UNLV English profes-
sor Stephen Brown guides a virtual
tour of well-known literary landmarks
in Ireland. Using pictures, readings and
stories, he will introduce you to James
Joyce’s tower in Sandy Cove and Lady
Gregor’s estate at Coole Park. Free.
UNLV’s Barrick Museum Auditorium
Max BrooksNov. 3, 7 p.m. The acclaimed “Studs Terkel
of zombie journalism” is author of “The
Zombie Surival Guide” and “World War Z,”
infusing his works with a sense of deeply
researched realism. He delivers the open-
ing keynote address of the Vegas Valley
Book Festival. Free. Clark County Library
Theater
An Evening with Poet Martín EspadaNov. 4, 8 p.m. Martín Espada, often called
the Pablo Neruda of North America,
will give a reading and discuss po-
etry and language. Free. Winchester
Cultural Center, www.vegasvalleybook-
festival.org
Jane Smiley Nov. 5, 3:30 p.m. As part of the Vegas Val-
ley Book Festival, Jane Smiley, a Pulit-
zer Prize-winning author, will read and
discuss her work. Smiley is author of
“A Thousand Acres,” “The Age of Grief”
and “The Greenlanders,” among oth-
ers. Free. Historic Fifth Street School
Auditorium
Linda Wertheimer: Cooling the Partisan FiresNov. 6, 1 p.m. NPR’s senior national cor-
respondent Linda Wertheimer deliv-
ers the Saltman Center’s Peace in the
Desert lecture. She’ll discuss today’s
highly charged political atmosphere
and whether strident partisanship in
political discourse is here to stay. Free.
UNLV’s Artemus Ham Hall
MUSICFalla Guitar TrioOct. 12, 8 p.m. This California-based trio
is known for moving effortlessly from
classical pieces to popular classics
to jazz standards and beyond. $40.
UNLV’s Lee and Thomas Beam Music
Center, http://pac.unlv.edu
Steely DanOct. 13, 9 p.m. Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
inductee Steely Dan does it again.
Watch them perform in concert at the
Pearl inside the Palms. $75-$150. Palms,
944-3200
The English BeatOct. 16, 7:30 p.m. One of the original pur-
veyors of second-wave ska, The English
Beat brought a touch of pop sophisti-
cation to the musical form. The band
will perform its hits and more as part of
their U.S. tour. $24-$28, House of Blues
Chris Caswell, an American Celtic BardOct. 21, 12-1 p.m. Watch American Celtic
Bard Chris Caswell perform live Celtic
harp music. Audience members are
invited to brown bag it to this lunchtime
concert. Free. Lloyd D. George Federal
Courthouse Jury Assembly Room, 229-
3515, www.artslasvegas.org
Pops I ConcertOct. 22, 8 p.m. A Tribute to Frank Sinatra
and the Great American Songbook.
This tribute features guest conductor
Vincent Falcone and guest vocalist Bob
Anderson. $34.25-$78. UNLV Artemus
W. Ham Concert Hall, 895-2787 or
www.lvphil.com
Serenades of Life – Doctors in ConcertOct. 22, 7 p.m. Doctors have secret lives,
and this concert exposes a few talented
physicians. Witness musical perfor-
mances by local doctors and medical
professionals. Henderson Pavilion 200
S. Green Valley Parkway, $30
Mardi Gras MamboOct. 29, 7:30 p.m. Listen to Michael Ray
Tyler on trumpet, David Poe on clarinet
Gary Queen on guitar, Bill Bailey on
bass and Alfredo Alvarenga on drums
as they perform authentic New Orleans
jazz. $10-$12. Winchester Cultural
Center
Tyler WilliamsOct. 29, 2 p.m. Jazz bassist Tyler Williams
celebrates the launch of his new CD
“Hear Me Now” with Peter Erskine on
drums and Dirk K on guitar. $15-$20.
Clark County Library Theater
THEATERCharlotte’s WebOct. 7, 8, 14,15, 7 p.m.; Oct. 9, 15, 16, 2 p.m.
Rainbow Company Youth Theatre will
be celebrating the classics and its 35th
anniversary season by opening with the
childhood favorite “Charlotte’s Web.”
$3-$7. Charleston Heights Arts Center
A Streetcar Named DesireOct. 7, 8, 13-15, 8 p.m.; Oct. 9, 16, 2 p.m.
Tennessee Williams’ Pulitzer Prize-
winning play performed by the Nevada
Conservatory Theatre at UNLV and
directed by Jeffrey Koep, dean of the
College of Fine Arts. $25. Judy Bayley
Theatre, 895-2787
Neighborhood III: Requisition of DoomOctober 21-Nov. 6. In a faceless suburb,
teens play a violent video game that
entails killing zombies, but things soon
take a disturbing turn. $13-$15. Las Ve-
gas Little Theater, www.lvlt.org
FUNDRAISERS The UNLV Foundation’s Annual DinnerOct. 13, 5:30 p.m.-10 pm The UNLV Founda-
tion celebrates its 30th anniversary and
acknowledges university supporters. This
year, keynote speaker is political adviser
and commentator David Gergen. $150-
$5,000. Pinyon Ballroom, Aria Resort &
Casino, 895-0999, http://foundation.unlv.
edu/annualdinner2011
theCosmopolitan3708 Las Vegas Blvd. s., 698-7000, www.cosmo-politanlasvegas.com
CenterpieceGalleryin CityCenter3720 Las Vegas Blvd. s., 736-8790, www.centerpiece.com
CharlestonHeightsartsCenter800 s. Brush st., 229-6383
ClarkCountyGovernmentCenter500 Grand Central Park-way, 455-8239
CollegeofsouthernnevadaBackstage theater, nicholas J. Horn theater, recital Hall, 3200 e. Cheyenne ave., north Las Vegas, 651-5483, www.csn.edu
HistoricFifthstreetschool401 s. Fourth st., 229-6469
HouseofBluesinside mandalay Bay3950 Las Vegas Blvd. s., www.hob.com
insurgo’sBastardtheater900 e. Karen ave. D114, www.insurgotheater.org
LasVegas-ClarkCountyLibraryDistrictCentennial Hills, Clark County, enterprise, rainbow, sahara West, summerlin, sunrise, West Charleston and Whitney libraries, 734-reaD, www.lvccld.org
mGmGrandGardenarenain the mGm Grand,3799 Las Vegas Blvd. s., www.mgmgrand.com
theorleansshowroominside the Orleans4500 W. tropicana ave., www.orleanscasino.com
reedWhippleCulturalCenter821 Las Vegas Blvd. n., 229-1012
thespringspreserve333 s. Valley View Blvd., 822-7700, www.spring-spreserve.org
UnLVartemus Ham Hall, Judy Bayley theater, Beam music Center recital Hall, Barrick museum audito-rium, Black Box theater, Greenspun Hall audito-rium, Paul Harris theater, student Union theatre. 4505 s. maryland Parkway, 895-2787, www.unlv.edu
WinchesterCulturalCenter3130 s. mcLeod Dr. 455-7340
VENUE GUIDE
Poet martín espada reads 8 p.m. nov. 4 at the Win-
chester Cultural Center
D e s e r tCo m pa n i o n .Co m 63
last word
DDear County Commissioners, County Clerks, Judges, ex-lovers who accuse me of lacking vision or ambition, et al.:
Kindly let the record show that I’m opposed to the approved plans for a development over-looking scenic Red Rock Canyon. No offense, but building 4,700 homes and a few business parks in the area overlooking Red Rock is the kind of minor league crap I could phone in all day long if I didn’t expect more of myself and that canyon.
Allow me to present NatureDome™ from Canyon Consumer Concepts (I am owner).
I’m willing to make your ordinary canyon into a NatureDome™ ConsumerCanyon® (su-per-structure). My canyon-based mall/solution will have 20 sides instead of the traditional four-sided boxy layout. Its design will take a page from the canyon dwellings of ancient Pueblo people; that is to say, solid big-box retailers will anchor every corner of the dodecahedronic structure, while fistfuls of smaller merchants (fast food, wig/tanning shops, top-brand track suit discount outlets, knife stores, one of those places that sells executive massage chairs, sev-eral magic/costume shops, Sbarro, Booze Barn, etc.) will be speckled between the behemoth merchants in a manner that suggests an en-chanted constellation of canyon dwellings. This layout will integrate my augmented Consume-R-Plex® seamlessly with the “natural beauty” of the canyon in order to keep any hopeless sentimentalists from whining about me adding a MUCH-NEEDED massive retail presence in Red Rock Canyon, a canyon that currently of-fers consumers NO MALL whatsoever.
Since I formed NatureDome® Canyon Con-sumer Concepts, Inc. about two months ago, there have been times when it feels like every-one is against me. Believe it or not, we still live in a country where people have certain preju-diced ideas about where malls are “allowed” and national parks and conservation areas are, sadly, still places where malls are banned. It seems consumer-based super-structures suf-fer the brunt of the intolerance that STILL EXISTS in this country. The point is, I see the story about this housing development going in and I think, Finally! Some forward-thinkers who
get me. And since you get me, Let’s Get Your Canyon Outfitted With One Of My Giant White Hot Clusters Of Twenty-Sided Consumer So-lutions™. (I’m working on a better trademark phrase, but I’ve got 250 quality stationery pads with that one printed on them, so I have to go with it for a bit.).
People will have questions about my pro-posal. Let me answer all three of them: 1.) Yes, I have a history of drug and drinking problems and I’m having money problems again. 2.) My MegaNature® National Consumption Park will pull out all the stops in order to compete with and surpass the natural grandeur of the surroundings. 3.) Yes, it will be a premium-quality gigantic 20-sided super-structure (or
a low-quality standard-size mall structure, depending on what level of funding I am able to secure). And finally, 4.) Yes, it will stand proudly in reply to the question that visitors to America’s national parks and conservation areas have been asking for ages: “If nature is such a perfect system, why does it fail to meet my premium shopping needs as a consumer?”
My bankruptcy proceedings allow me to do business in Nevada,
Dan KennedyNew York, NY
Humorist Dan Kennedy is the author of Rock On: An Office Power Ballad.
64 D e s e r t Co m pa n i o n O c tO b e r 2 01 1 IllustratIon BY AARON MCKINNEY
Welcome to NatureDome™
ConsumerCanyon®
by dan kennedy
©20
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