All up in your grill: The Mixed Grill from the Western Village Steakhouse.
All up in your grill: The Mixed Grill from the Western Village Steakhouse.

One of the finest beef houses in Northern Nevada sits behind Sierra Sidโ€™s off McCarran Boulevard and I-80. This hidden treasure is located in the far northwest corner of the casino. Thereโ€™s a small bar outside, but when you walk in, you immediately get the feeling youโ€™re in an old New York City-style supper club. Subdued lighting, paintings on the wall, padded booths separated by tasteful plants, black linen table cloths, and a table set for an elegant dinning experience with a wait staff well trained in customer attention.

Itโ€™s a reasonably priced ($17-$34), please-everyone menu. Chef Jennifer Pagni suggested the Mixed Grill ($33) to me. Sheโ€™s from Reno and graduated from the Art Institute of California-Los Angeles with a degree in Culinary Management. She worked as the sous chef at the Bimini Steakhouse in the Peppermill before moving to Western Village. She has a passion for her art, and her mantra is โ€œfarm fresh to table.โ€

Dianne Charvat is a diva of dining. She has been the maรฎtre dโ€™ at the steakhouse for more than 20 years and always makes the experience memorable. She does tableside preparation of salads and desserts, a throw-back to the golden days of dining when that kind of showmanship kept customers loyal forever.

The meals are complete with soup de jour or a salad. I went with the soup: pumpkin-potato curry. This was a bowl, not a cup, and the presentation was classy. A warmed bowl with fresh Parmesan and parsley in the bottom was set in front of me. The server poured the soupโ€”piping hotโ€”from a metal pitcher. The aroma of the curry hit my nose immediately. It was not spicy, but distinct with a fennel, cumin, ginger, coriander flavor combinationโ€”salty, a little peppery, tart, and a hint of sweet. The creamy, light, orange-colored, pumpkin-potato puree base made this hearty and an excellent fall starter.

The Mixed Grill was simple, plentiful and full of flavor. Two four-ounce Harris Ranch petite filets with steakhouse butter, grilled; three large shrimp, scampi style, and two Colorado lamb chops, eight ounces, grilled with a simple au jus reduction atop. These chops were marinated for 48 hours in Chef Pagniโ€™s marinade. The meats were a perfect medium-rare, with juicy, hearty, grilled flavors. The butter on the steak gave a garlic essence, and the reduction on the lamb delivered thyme, rosemary and a hint of garlic. The scampi in a white wine and butter reduction is superb. For the potatoes, au gratin and these were not boring Cheddar. They were a blend of Gruyรจre, Parmesan and blue cheeseโ€”creamy with a rich texture and a slightly tart, nutty-savory flavor and fresh, seasonal veggies to complete the plate.

For dessert, Dianneโ€™s Steakhouse Chocolate Cake ($7). Twelve layers of Ghirardelli decadence cause chocoholic bliss. Worth mentioning, the coffeeโ€”individual pots and the cream is steam-heated to temperature.

Charvat introduced me to Meiomi, a Pinot noir from Bella Glos ($12). Bucking tradition, this Pinot noir is a blend of multiple vineyards along the California coastโ€”Meiomi is a Native American word for โ€œcoastโ€โ€”from Sonoma, Monterey and Santa Barbara. Bright, deep garnet color fills the mouth with a velvety richness. A sensational nose, and then the wine unloads with flavors of bright cherry, cola, vanilla, leather and moderate, toasty oak. The wine list is respectable with by-the-glass wines starting at $5. If you ever had that Indiana Jones urge to discover something, the Western Village Steakhouse is like finding the jewel of the Truckee.

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