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Rare Society Lands in Las Vegas With Fat-Washed Cocktails and Fire-Kissed Steaks

Rare Society Lands in Las Vegas With Fat-Washed Cocktails and Fire-Kissed Steaks

Eater02-07-2025
San Diego's retro-swanky steakhouse Rare Society makes its Nevada debut Wednesday, July 2, opening in southwest Las Vegas with Rat Pack-inspired swagger, in-house butchered steaks and wagyu tomahawks served exclusively at the new location.
The Southern Californian steakhouse from chef Brad Wise and Trust Restaurant Group draws on Wise's live-fire approach to classic chophouse fare. It's earned a following for its Santa Maria ranchero-style grilling — meat seasoned simply with salt, pepper, and garlic, seared over American red oak, then finished low and slow. The technique shines across wagyu steaks, Pacific swordfish, and flame-kissed vegetables, all smoked and charred over woodfire.
In San Diego, Rare Society is known for its dramatic steak boards — 53 ounces of dry-aged cuts arranged on custom-designed lazy Susans and served with bearnaise, horseradish, and buttery bone marrow. Other standout cuts include 40-day dry-aged bone-in New York strips and 'bullseye' rib-eyes, Wise's term for the ideal balance of weight and marbling in a rib-eye steak.
Beyond beef, Rare Society leans into seafood: broiled oysters with yuzu arugula butter and crispy capers, creamy lobster mashed potatoes, and $275 seafood towers overflowing with crab, ahi tartare, and a whole Maine lobster. Dessert looks like bananas Foster cheesecake with an espresso martini. At its new home in the Uncommons shopping and dining area, Wise includes items unique to Las Vegas, like Alaskan king crab and a richly marbled Snake River Farms wagyu tomahawk. The cocktail menu is similarly carnivorous, featuring Old Fashioneds made with dry-aged, fat-washed bourbon, rosemary oleo, bitters, and a lardo garnish.
Rare Society spans 5,000 square feet at 6880 Helen Toland Street, Suite 100, with seating for 160. The design channels classic Vegas steakhouse glam: dark woods, hand-stitched leather, and gleaming black stone details, warmed by layered lighting, mirrors, and polished metal accents. With award recognition for his San Diego restaurants Trust and Fort Oak, Wise brings serious culinary pedigree to Las Vegas. Rare Society joins a growing list of buzzy openings at UnCommons, alongside Amari Italian Kitchen, All'Antico Vinaio, and the upcoming Hawaiian food hall that will replace the closed Sundry food hall next year.
Rare Society is located at 6880 Helen Toland Street, Suite 100; open from 5 p.m. to close Wednesday through Sunday. Reservations can be made on OpenTable . See More: Vegas Restaurant Openings
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The Giving Pledge was meant to turbocharge philanthropy. Few billionaires got on board.
The Giving Pledge was meant to turbocharge philanthropy. Few billionaires got on board.

CNBC

time17 minutes ago

  • CNBC

The Giving Pledge was meant to turbocharge philanthropy. Few billionaires got on board.

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President Donald Trump's broad tariffs go into effect, just as economic pain is surfacing
President Donald Trump's broad tariffs go into effect, just as economic pain is surfacing

Chicago Tribune

time19 minutes ago

  • Chicago Tribune

President Donald Trump's broad tariffs go into effect, just as economic pain is surfacing

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World braces for shakeup as Trump tariffs begin
World braces for shakeup as Trump tariffs begin

The Hill

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  • The Hill

World braces for shakeup as Trump tariffs begin

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Many Republicans are dismissing the outbursts, alleging they have been choreographed by Democrats and groups aligned with them and do not reflect genuine voter sentiment. ▪ NPR: Flood on his viral town hall moment. To pitch the megabill, the GOP is leaning heavily on the U.S. Chamber of Commerce to host 100 roundtable meetings this month in states around the country. Much of the debate on Capitol Hill focused on Medicaid cuts and the impact on the deficit, which made the bill unpopular, so Republicans and their business allies are trying to drum up more attention on the tax-relief components. Tim Monahan, vice president and managing director of government affairs at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, said a 'lesson learned' after 2017 is that Republicans need to continue talking about the benefits of tax cuts after they've been enacted — a goal that was not fully accomplished after Trump's first tax package passed eight years ago. 'One of the most comprehensive tax reform bills in the history of our country got done and people kind of stopped talking about it,' he told The Hill's Alexander Bolton. ▪ The Hill: Trump's megabill could deplete Social Security's trust funds faster. ▪ ProPublica: Many of the Republican lawmakers who have targeted the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau for cuts have collectively directed thousands of constituents' complaints to the agency. OTHER CONGRESS NEWS: ▪ The Hill: A Florida Republican official and beauty pageant title-holder accused Rep. Cory Mills (R-Fla.) of threatening to release explicit videos of her after their romantic relationship ended earlier this year. Mills told The Hill in a statement that the claims 'are false and misrepresent the nature of my interactions.' ▪ The Hill: Are 'pocket rescissions' legal? The congressional watchdog says 'no.' ▪ The Hill: Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.) officially tossed her hat in the ring for the Tennessee governor's race. The Volunteer State Republican is running to replace outgoing Gov. Bill Lee (R), who is term-limited. ▪ Rolling Stone: A 'glitch' was to blame for parts of the Constitution being removed from a Library of Congress-run website. TOTAL CONTROL: Israel's security Cabinet today is expected to approve Benjamin Netanyahu 's plans to seize areas of Gaza it doesn't already control as the prime minister faces increasing pressure over the war both at home and abroad. Trump does not oppose Netanyahu's plan to occupy the entirety of Gaza, Axios reports, with sources saying Trump is leaving the Israeli government to make its own decisions. The Israeli military says it already controls 75 percent of Gaza after nearly two years of war. Netanyahu is under intense international pressure to reach a ceasefire in the enclave, which has been reduced to rubble. Most of the population of about 2 million has been displaced, and aid groups say residents are on the verge of famine. ▪ The New York Times: The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation will soon operate 16 distribution sites instead of four, according to U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee. ▪ The Washington Post: Leaked drafts of the State Department's annual human rights reports indicate that the White House intends to dramatically scale back U.S. government criticism foreign nations with records of abuse, including Israel, El Salvador and Russia. Opinion The economy is cracking. This trend is most alarming, by Heather Long, columnist, The Washington Post. Sorry, Billionaires — There's No Escape, by playwright David Mamet in The Wall Street Journal. The Closer And finally … It's Thursday, which means it's time for this week's Morning Report Quiz! Inspired by the Texas redistricting fight, we're eager for some smart guesses about the history of congressional mapmaking. Be sure to email your responses to kkarisch@ and ecrisp@ — please add 'Quiz' to your subject line. Winners who submit correct answers will enjoy some richly deserved newsletter fame on Friday. Who is the namesake of gerrymandering? 1. President Gerald Ford 2. Sen. Peter G. Gerry (D-R.I.) 3. Vice President Elbridge Gerry 4. Comedian Jerry Lewis The Cook Political Report lists how many of the 435 House districts as 'toss ups' — where either party could win — in the 2026 cycle? 1. 18 2. 56 3. 5 4. 35 Which newspaper first coined the term 'Gerry-mandering'? 1. The New York Times 2. The Boston Gazette 3. The Daily Telegram 4. The Wichita Daily Eagle How frequently does redistricting typically take place? 1. Every 15 years 2. Every two years 3. Every year 4. Every 10 years

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