Max Jacobson

Contributing Editor, Food

Contact: Email

Vegas Seven’s food critic started his career as a food journalist in Japan in the early ’80s. Since then, he has been a columnist for the Los Angeles Times and has written for a variety of national publications, such as Saveur and Gourmet. He's best known as an authority on Asian food, but he has rarely met a cuisine he doesn't like. He has covered the Vegas culinary scene since 2000.

Recent Articles

Dining

Superstar Chef Nobu Matsuhisa Puts Teppan on the Table

The venerable chef opens his second Las Vegas restaurant

Nobu Matsuhisa is a superstar. The 63-year-old globalized the cuisine of his native Japan, and he has restaurants in Budapest, Hungary; Capetown, South Africa; and Perth, Australia on a lone list of international locations. Actor Robert De Niro is his partner, and Nobu himself has a long list of credits as an actor. May you remember him as a villain in Austin Powers: Goldmember?

Read More »
Diner's Notebook

The Other Georgia, Restaurant Week, James Beard Slights, Diaoyutai Delights

I love to use this space to describe unusual local food experiences. For instance, there is cuisine from the former Soviet republic of Georgia being given a workout at Forte European Tapas Bar & Bistro, the Bulgarian/Spanish restaurant owned by the Manchev family (4180 S. Rainbow Blvd., 220-3876.)

Read More »

Our Ramen Empire

Two new noodle houses have fans—and our critic—lapping it up

Read More »
A Small Bite

Hope for Ogden’s Harvest

Serious food lovers were saddened when Las Vegas lost Bradley Ogden, one of America’s truly iconic restaurants, following a long run at Caesars Palace. Ogden did one of the best burgers in the world on his bar menu, had relationships with dozens of our best artisanal food producers, and his desserts, such as butterscotch pudding, have an international following.

Read More »
Diner's Notebook

One Hot Mess, One More Ramen, One Night at Nobu and a Really Long Table

One Super Bowl commercial featured the Hot Mess Burger, a new sheriff in Fast Food City ($4.29, Jack in the Box). So your intrepid reporter felt compelled to run out and try one. And in spite of several umami-spiked ingredients—a seasoned beef patty topped with melted white cheddar, runny pepper jack cheese sauce, onion rings and jalapeños piled on toasted sourdough—it managed to be almost completely tasteless.

Read More »

The New BurGR King

Gordon Ramsay’s most casual Strip concept might just be his most exciting

With the opening of Gordon Ramsay BurGR at Planet Hollywood, the British chef completes his Las Vegas trilogy of restaurants. It’s ironic that he is now entitled to the mantle of Best Burger on the Strip. Bradley Ogden, the tenant that got 86’d at Caesars Palace to make room for his Gordon Ramsay Pub & Grill, was the former champion.

Read More »
Diner's Notebook

The Best New Pie in Town, Lacking Lankan and Perhaps the Scariest Dinner Ever

Chef Marc Sgrizzi—known to some of us as Marc Ritz of Parma on the Northside—has opened a pizzeria, Novecento 900, at 5705 Centennial Center Blvd. (685-4900), and it’s terrific. The pizzas cook at 900 degrees in an astonishing 90 seconds, and the crust comes up bubbly, blistered and chewy.

Read More »
A Small Bite

Post-Caesars Departure, Bradley Ogden Returns to Las Vegas With Harvest & Hops

It's time to celebrate: Chef Bradley Ogden will return to Las Vegas this year with a new concept, Harvest & Hops, at Tivoli Village in the space recently vacated by Bottles & Burgers.

Read More »
Diner's Notebook

Fat Choy Ahoy, Bellagio Ups its Epicurean Series Game, and Ramsay Makes Nice

Sheridan Su—a French-trained, Chinese-American chef who ran a terrific food truck, Great Bao—has surfaced in a new venture, Fat Choy in the Eureka Casino (595 E. Sahara Ave., 794-3464). And it’s here he’s being given a chance to showcase his unique gifts. A sign over the door tells us we are in for Asian-American fare. And how!

Read More »

Tivoli's Second Wave

Poppy Den springs up from Petra's ashes and positively takes off

Angelo Sosa, the young, movie-star-handsome chef at the new Poppy Den in Summerlin, is a protégé of Jean-Georges Vongerichten. Like his mentor, Sosa is a world traveler; as I write this, he is consulting on a project in Korea. The result of his wanderings is a menu filled with whimsy, imagination and bold flavors.

Read More »

Follow Us