That all-you-can-stuff-in-your-piehole experience has evolved since the El Rancho Vegas opened its chuckwagon-style Buckaroo Buffet in 1941. With the opening of Wally’s in the new Resorts World Las Vegas, the city also now claims the most expensive steak ever served (a 60-ounce Porterhouse aged for 195 days, covered in black truffles, and sold for $20,000). But if one dining symbol that epitomizes the Las Vegas experience, it’s the buffet. There are more restaurants here serving certified Kobe beef than anywhere in the world, and more master sommeliers than any other city. The $1 shrimp cocktail, for instance, and the classic Vegas prime rib dinner (extra points if you have it at The Golden Steer).
Las Vegas has given the world a certain number of cultural culinary icons.