HaSalon in Vegas dishes up bold Israeli eats with a French-Japanese twist, serving vibrant plates by day and turning into a wild Tel Aviv-style dance party by night.
Palazzo side of the Venetian Resort, 3325 S Las Vegas Blvd, Las Vegas, NV 89109 Get directions
$100+ · Menu
"A vibrant dining venue featuring tabletop dancing, spinning napkins, and unique dishes like braided string beans." - Janna Karel
"This fine-dining Mediterranean and Israeli restaurant turns into a full-fledged Tel Aviv dance party after 8 p.m., so if your group needs a respite from the action or if you only want to dance on the tables in front of your chosen guests, HaSalon’s private dining rooms can accommodate parties both large and small. Combine the two rooms to twirl napkins above your head all night long with up to 140 of your closest friends and family." - Emmy Kasten
"Delivers on both quality and creativeness while introducing new cuisine to the Las Vegas Strip." - Janna Karel
"HaSalon for their focus on showcasing high quality ingredients through simplistic form." - Janna Karel
"Anyone who has dined at one of HaSalon’s locations in Tel Aviv, Miami, Ibiza, or New York city will recognize the concept as tailor-made for Las Vegas. After all, the vibey restaurant turns into a dance party as the night wears on, channeling the energy of chef Eyal Shani’s native Tel Aviv. Although you could broadly describe HaSalon as Israeli food influenced by Japanese and French techniques, the restaurant is meant to be less category, more dance party. Menu items have a kind of Where the Wild Things Are energy, like the “Horrible Hammer smashing herbs and flowers on meat into thin slices of carpaccio,” and “Asparagus exemplarily arranged inside a paper envelope,” or the “Pasta from the torn petals of an artichoke.” The whimsical menu descriptions would be easy to poke fun at if they weren’t so very delicious. And although HaSalon, like any restaurant in a casino, is a little more designed than, say, its New York City counterpart, with its tile and warm woods with modern and vintage furniture, it still gives the effect of being lived in—which is precisely what you want if you’ll be dancing on the table later." - Andrea Bennett