Las Vegas

A New Mediterranean Restaurant Is Reshaping This Growing Las Vegas Neighborhood

Pine Bistro is a fascinating mix of cultures and flavors in Southern Highlands.

Photo by Stephen Morgan
Photo by Stephen Morgan
Photo by Stephen Morgan
Photo by Stephen Morgan
Photo by Stephen Morgan
Photo by Stephen Morgan

The idea behind Pine Bistro was simple. Save a drive to the Strip and give Southern Highlands an upscale Mediterranean restaurant to call its own. However, the final result is such an intriguing mix of cuisine and culture that it’s bound to draw curious diners from throughout the Las Vegas Valley.

See what it’s all about when Pine Bistro celebrates an official grand opening on Thursday, September 28. The dining room is inviting, bright, and open, with wood decor and industrial touches that pair well with a hand-painted mural, copper accents, Turkish window frames, and wicker light fixtures, including lanterns that glow softly above the bar. The surroundings are designed to impress, but it’s the food that will keep you coming back.

Pine Bistro serves Mediterranean cuisine with a heavy Lebanese influence, rewrapping traditional recipes and flavor profiles into an elevated, contemporary package. “We want to take the same service, quality of product, and experience you get on the Strip and bring it into the communities where we live,” Lowell Raven of Ayya Hospitality Group, the driving force behind Pine Bistro, said. “We take traditional Lebanese cuisine, traditional Mediterranean flavors, and put them into a cool, modern, high-energy environment.”

Executive chef Dany Chebat, a Strip veteran, draws on his own Lebanese heritage in putting a wide array of dishes together. Deep, distinctive seasonings like sumac, za’atar, and kuzbara (coriander) are staples of the cuisine, balanced by the frequent use of mint, lemon, pomegranate, and other bright ingredients.

Photo courtesy of Key Lime Photography
Photo courtesy of Key Lime Photography
Photo courtesy of Key Lime Photography
Photo courtesy of Key Lime Photography
Photo courtesy of Key Lime Photography
Photo courtesy of Key Lime Photography

Almost always, a meal begins with a choice of dips and pita bread (the traditional kind that puffs up into a circle), baked fresh in a custom oven. Don’t be shy about ripping it apart and dragging pieces through the hummus, which is beautifully plated with olive oil paprika and garbanzo beans, and baba ghanoush, where a pop of pomegranate seeds offsets the smokiness of the roasted eggplant.

The same pita dough is used with a heavier texture in the fatayer–small pies filled with spinach, pine nuts, and sumac. “There’s a pine tree on the Lebanese flag,” Raven points out. “Pine nuts are in much of the cuisine.”

It’s just one of the items listed on the menu as “mezza,” the Middle East’s answer to tapas. So load up on dishes to share. The sambousek is a plate of tear-shaped beef and lamb pies with allspice, pine nuts, and a side drizzle of pomegranate syrup. Rakaket Jebneh is a plate of Lebanese cheese rolls with a delicate pastry shell stuffed with mozzarella, feta, and halloumi (a cheese traditionally made with goat and sheep milk). A touch of mint is the secret weapon to bring the flavors to life with onions, olive oil, and sesame seeds. Even the fries come with za’atar seasoning and shatta, a Middle Eastern hot sauce, on the side.

Photo courtesy of Key Lime Photography
Photo courtesy of Key Lime Photography
Photo courtesy of Key Lime Photography
Photo courtesy of Key Lime Photography
Photo courtesy of Key Lime Photography
Photo courtesy of Key Lime Photography

Kebabs are grilled over an open flame. Choose between chicken taouk with a side of garlic whip, filet mignon, beef kafta (similar to a meatball or sausage), plump Mexican shrimp, a vegetable combo, or all of the above in a shareable platter that feeds up to four people. You can also split a whole Mediterranean snapper, grilled or fried. Shawarma meat is sliced fresh from one of two vertical broilers, yet if you just want to splurge on a juicy American steak, ask for a New York Strip or bone-in Ribeye slathered in olive oil, sumac, and other spices while sizzled over the grill.

Two versions of baklava are made in-house: a traditional recipe with pistachio and another with ashta cream, which is almost cheese-like. The former is topped with an aromatic house-made pistachio and rose water ice cream. Any dessert pairs well with Arabic coffee served short and strong in a format similar to espresso.

Lewis Caputa, the former lead bartender at Rosina, leads a mixology team with Strip experience, crafting drinks with house-made syrups, fresh-pressed juices, appropriate glassware, and four types of ice. The cocktail menu has traditional classics, such as a Negroni or Aperol Spritz, and new creations inspired by the flavors of the cuisine. A smoked Buffalo Trace Old Fashioned is sweetened with fig syrup, while the Sumac Smack is made with cachaça (a Brazilian spirit similar to rum) and sumac syrup. Arak, a Middle Eastern spirit with a licorice flavor, is used in a red sangria and Temple of Niha cocktail with citrus flavors. It’s also available to sip on its own with water added, which is a traditional practice that tones down the intensity of the flavor. Ask about Lebanese wines and beers or a choice of Armenian brandies.

Photo courtesy of Key Lime Photography
Photo courtesy of Key Lime Photography
Photo courtesy of Key Lime Photography
Photo courtesy of Key Lime Photography
Photo courtesy of Key Lime Photography
Photo courtesy of Key Lime Photography

Pine Bistro will be open for dinner from 5 to 10 pm daily with hookah service available on the outdoor patio–a spacious layout with comfortable furniture, large umbrellas, a sleek water feature, and Strip views. An outdoor grill will cook whole lambs and other items for special events. Hookah service moves indoors at 10 pm with a menu of smaller bites, including wings, shawarma pita wraps, and the awesome house burger (a kafta patty topped with arugula, mild pickles, honey, and an aged yogurt spread) reimagined as sliders. A roaming cart provides the hookah, crafted with ice water and fresh fruit. It’s an elevated version of the service that’s more common in a place like Dubai than in Las Vegas.

The arrival of Pine Bistro reflects the growth of Southern Highlands, a master-planned community built around a golf course near the south end of Las Vegas. Ayya Hospitality Group also operates Thick & Thin (a juice bar and ice cream shop in one) and IVI Performance, a 5,000-square-foot fitness center for elite athletes (including professionals from the NFL and MMA) that focuses on one-on-one personal training. All three businesses are side-by-side near Keller Cactus Hill, a contemporary apartment complex alongside Interstate 15 that wasn’t even around a few years ago.

But why stop there? Ayya Hospitality Group also oversees Crust & Roux for savory and sweet pies at Town Square and is opening J. Blanco, a Mexican steakhouse at UnCommons in the Southwest by early 2024. Big things are happening, and they aren’t always on the Strip.Want more Thrillist? Follow us on Instagram, TikTok, Twitter, Facebook, Pinterest, and YouTube.

Rob Kachelriess is a full-time freelance writer who covers travel, dining, entertainment, and other fun stuff for Thrillist. He’s based in Las Vegas but enjoys exploring destinations throughout the world, especially in the Southwest United States. Otherwise, he’s happy to hang out at home with his wife Mary and their family of doggies. Follow him on Twitter @rkachelriess.

Las Vegas

A Fresh Take on Italian Dining Opens in Southwest Las Vegas

A first look at Basilico Ristorante Italiano.

Photo by Louiie Victa, courtesy of Basilico Ristorante Italiano
Photo by Louiie Victa, courtesy of Basilico Ristorante Italiano
Photo by Louiie Victa, courtesy of Basilico Ristorante Italiano

You can’t be all things to all people. Yet a new Italian restaurant strikes an intriguing balance between authenticity and inventive touches while helping to shape the identity of a new community in the booming Southwest Valley of Las Vegas.

Basilico Ristorante Italiano is now open at Evora, a master-planned apartment development still under construction that won’t be finished for at least five years. The 160-seat restaurant follows the vision of chef Francesco Di Caudo, a Sicily native who draws on his heritage and experience throughout Italy to build a compelling menu based on traditional techniques and modern ingenuity.

“I come from a country where farm-to-table is nothing new,” says Di Caudio, while emphasizing the importance of ingredient sourcing and simple, straightforward flavor combinations.

Photo by Louiie Victa, courtesy of Basilico Ristorante Italiano
Photo by Louiie Victa, courtesy of Basilico Ristorante Italiano
Photo by Louiie Victa, courtesy of Basilico Ristorante Italiano

Just look at the appetizers. Americans are used to eggplant parmesan that’s breaded and fried without restraint. Di Caudo sticks to a traditional Sicilian recipe with the vegetable sliced thin, sizzled in a pan, and layered with tomato and basil. No mozzarella. On the other hand, the Smoked Cigar is destined to be a signature showstopper. Duck, foie gras, and porcini mushrooms are packed inside a thin, cracker-like shell, presented in a box, and dipped into a glass ashtray. The “ash” in the centre is a black sesame and truffle mix. Don’t be shy about double dipping.

The risotto is bound to be another conversation piece. The recipe uses Carnaroli rice, a starchy grain from North Italy that produces a creamy texture, balancing the saltiness of a parmesan broth with a sweet splash of chestnut honey. The real surprise is the inclusion of Lavazza espresso, manipulated to crackle in your mouth like Pop Rocks candy.

Photo by Louiie Victa, courtesy of Basilico Ristorante Italiano
Photo by Louiie Victa, courtesy of Basilico Ristorante Italiano
Photo by Louiie Victa, courtesy of Basilico Ristorante Italiano

All pastas are made in-house, from a parsnip cavatelli to a lamb and thyme tortellini in a broth filtered from braised prosciutto. Some dishes have a subtle Asian influence, including a hamachi crudo with pomelo (similar to yuzu), Hokkaido scallops with oxtail, and a planned octopus braised in dashi. The flavours come to life inside a sharp, contemporary dining room with deep red chairs and stone, wood, and marble touches. The wine collection is dominated by Italian labels, with a few California and Oregon picks thrown in to round out the list. Bottles are on display near the front entrance and inside illuminated square shelves. “It looks like a fancy restaurant, but when you sit down, I want you to have fun,” adds Di Caudio.

Photo by Louiie Victa, courtesy of Basilico Ristorante Italiano
Photo by Louiie Victa, courtesy of Basilico Ristorante Italiano
Photo by Louiie Victa, courtesy of Basilico Ristorante Italiano

The bar is the heart of the restaurant, ready to serve up to 16 people inside and dozens more via accordion-style windows that open wide to a covered patio. The outdoor space, temperature-controlled with overhead fans and heaters, effectively extends Evora’s open-air plaza with dramatic water and fire features. It’s a natural spot for tastings and special events with a covered stage for live music. Evora is rolling out in four phases, with the first 342 apartments ready by fall. There could be as many as 1,400 when it’s all said and done. Rent begins at around $1,800 for studios and one-bedroom units and goes up to $4,000 for two-story top-floor residences with a loft and Strip views. The community will include swimming pools, pickleball courts, a putting green, a dog park, firepits, EV charging stations, and pavilions equipped with audio and video features.

“Basilico matches the demographic for our apartments,” says Danny Sorge of Digital Desert Development, the company behind the community. “The term ‘youthful sophistication’ has been thrown around about the restaurant and Evora as a whole. It brings something new to the area.”

Rendering courtesy of Evora
Rendering courtesy of Evora
Rendering courtesy of Evora

The development follows a deliberate strategy to have the commercial tenants in place before the first residents move in, occupying a stand-alone building that strikes a commanding presence on the corner of Patrick Lane and Buffalo Drive. Lemon Tree Cafe & Market is already open as a European-style grocery store with plenty of room to sit down with a sandwich and glass of wine. Keep your eyes peeled for Taps & Barrels (a self-service beer hall), Tachi Ramen, and EVOQ hair salon in the months ahead, with more businesses to come. The timing couldn’t be better. The Southwest Valley is on fire right now, with the Durango hotel and casino and UnCommons mixed-use development taking shape as new attractions in 2023. The Bend, a long-promised shopping and dining district, has been in a holding pattern for years but holds promise in an area where everything is getting bigger and better.

Meanwhile, the team behind Evora is staking a claim with Di Caudio running the kitchen at Basilico. The chef’s recent collaboration with Chef Oscar Amador helped Anima by EDO score a recent James Beard Award nomination and reputation as one of the best new restaurants in Las Vegas. Di Caudio first came to Las Vegas to work at Zeffirino at the Grand Canal Shoppes-a gig he expected to last about six months before returning home. Instead, he stuck around and continued to build his reputation at culinary destinations like Sinatra at the Wynn and Ferraro’s off the Strip.

Ultimately, Basilico will be a restaurant to keep an eye on as it develops under Di Caudio’s guidance. The menu will shift and evolve based on the chef’s preferences and the availability of seasonal ingredients. Di Caudio is also planning a smaller menu and social hour for the bar area and a reasonably priced tasting menu with around 10 dishes served family style.

Get the latest from Thrillist Australia delivered straight to your inbox, subscribe here.

Rob Kachelriess has been writing about Las Vegas in Thrillist for more than nine years. In addition, his work has appeared in Travel + Leisure, Leafly, Supercall, Modern Luxury, and Luxury Estates International’s seasonal publication. Follow him on Twitter @rkachelriess.

Related

Our Best Stories, Delivered Daily
The best decision you'll make all day.