Categories
Music Music Features

Slayer at the Horseshoe Casino

This Friday night, heavy metal legends Slayer will play the Horseshoe Casino in Tunica, alongside Anthrax and Death Angel. Yes, you read that right. The band responsible for the most metal song of all time — “Raining Blood” — is playing at a casino. Formed in 1981 by guitarists Kerry King and Jeff Hanneman, Slayer are one quarter of the thrash-metal assault that took the world of heavy metal by storm in the mid-’80s, alongside Anthrax, Metallica, and Megadeth. You could also include hardcore band Suicidal Tendencies as an honorary member of that “core four,” as the Suicidal fan base exhibits some of the same characteristics as Slayer worshippers.

Slayer

Slayer’s insanely dedicated fan base will tell you that the band has never released a bad album, but it was the trifecta of Reign in Blood (1986), South of Heaven (1988), and Seasons in the Abyss (1990) that solidified Slayer as the world’s best metal band leading into the ’90s. The band has won two Grammy awards and influenced everyone from Slipknot to Pantera, but the California powerhouse has also had their fair share of controversy. In addition to being accused of being Nazi sympathesizers (Slayer’s iconic logo mimics a Nazi relic), the band has been accused of bringing thousands of teens to worship the Dark Lord by moms and dads who just don’t “get it.” Their lyrics deal with themes that are not exactly uplifting in nature, and their albums consistently feature grotesque, violent, and controversial cover art. Pentagrams tend to do that.

Taking all of these things into consideration, Saturday’s concert should make for one of the most historically significant shows the Horseshoe has ever booked, and with Anthrax on the bill, there’s a good chance the gig will sell out.

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Now Open: the new Jack Binion’s Steakhouse

Joelle_Being_Flirty.jpg

I set out for the Horseshoe Casino in Tunica, Mississippi. Come on, come on, I thought, blowing on a pair of red, translucent dice. Daddy needs to pay off his college loans.

But on this particular night, it wasn’t just the craps table that was calling me. Wednesday marked the grand re-opening of Jack Binion’s Steakhouse inside the Horseshoe, which has just completed about $10 million of renovations.

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(And about time, too: before the remodel, Binion’s was a bit of a cave, an old-timey place where the heavy décor matched the heavy cuisine. Was there really a thick cloud of cigar smoke, or am I just imagining that?)

Anyway. Forget what you know. Executed in deep red, the new Binion’s is a breath of fresh air, a wide-open space that balances big-city cool with a certain Southern charm. The portions are lavish, and the staff are friendly and professional.

The changes are most evident in the lounge. Over the course of the evening, I heard several people say that it has a distinctly Vegas vibe, and I have to agree. This is the kind of chill, sophisticated space that’s hard to find in Memphis, let alone Tunica.

I especially liked the bar itself, executed in chunky slabs of translucent onyx. Lit from below, they glow molten yellow like the Sankara Stones from Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom. Honestly, the pictures don’t do it justice.

Because this was a media event, I was handed a menu and given carte blanche. Order what you want! said the cheerful staff. And oh by the way, don’t forget about cocktails and hors d’oeuvres. And I thought, you know, life’s really not that bad after all.

Before wading into the appetizers, I made sure I was sufficiently primed to enjoy the experience with a Knob Creek Manhattan. All right, yes, there are loads of fancy cocktails on the menu, but you know what? Bah humbug. I’ll have the bourbon.

Feeling dandy, I moved right on to the food. And let me just say, executive chef Bruce Ford knows what he’s doing. Over the course of the night, I didn’t take one bite that wasn’t carefully thought-out and well-executed. Ford has also introduced a number of lighter menu items—fish, vegetables, small plates—that are designed to help Binion’s appeal to a wider audience. I’ll just quickly fire off a few favorites.

I recommend starting with with the chipotle grilled shrimp ($14). It’s definitely got some bite to it, but it’s beautifully balanced by the sweet tang of the mango salsa.

From there, move on to the heirloom tomato salad ($10). No joke, this was maybe my favorite thing on the menu. It comes with Maytag blue cheese, a roasted garlic vinaigrette, and ribbons of shaved cucumber—but the real showstoppers are the tomatoes themselves, big honking things from Ripley, TN.

For a main, I say stick with steak. There’s lots of wonderful fish on the menu, but come on—aren’t you craving some red meat this evening? I had the 14 oz. prime New York strip steak ($48), which was so tender that you probably wouldn’t need a knife to cut it. Pair that with the decadently cheesy scalloped potato gratin ($9), and you’re good to go.

After dinner, it was time to make some money. Now on my third (third?) Knob Creek manhattan, I felt pretty confident in my ability to pay off—or at least make a sizable dent in—the outstanding balance on my college loans. So I screwed my courage to the sticking place and stumbled out onto the floor of the Horseshoe.

Forty dollars later, it was time to call it a night. Media event or no, the Horseshoe Casino is not in the business of subsidizing the minor gambling habits of impoverished freelance writers. Oh well, I thought. I drifted upstairs to my hotel room and crawled into bed, while visions of Ripley tomatoes danced in my head.

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Categories
News News Blog

Magician To Make Armored Truck Appear Out of Thin Air

Rob Lake

  • Rob Lake

Money doesn’t grow on trees, but it can appear out of thin air. At least, when award-winning magician Rob Lake is in town.

Lake will be in Memphis on Friday night to make an armored vehicle appear out of nowhere in front of the FedExForum. It’s the kickoff for a promotion by Caesars Entertainment — parent company of Harrah’s Tunica, Horseshoe Casino, and Tunica Roadhouse — that will award one person with a $1 million prize every Saturday night beginning in April.

To enter the Millionaire Maker giveaway, one must be a Total Rewards player. But signing up for Caesar’s Total Reward program is free. Total Rewards members get discounts on dining and hotel rooms, as well as better seats for concerts at the casinos.

Sign-up for the first weekly giveaway begins this coming Monday, April 1st, and the first drawing will take place on Saturday, April 6th. The giveaways will happen every week in Tunica throughout the summer, and there is no set date for when the campaign will end. To enter, you must swipe your Total Rewards card in a kiosk inside one of the Caesars Entertainment casinos in Tunica each week.

“The million dollars has to make it to the casino somehow, so this armored truck is what delivers the million dollars. A millionaire appears out of thin air every week, so I’m making the delivery vessel appear out of thin air,” said Lake, who, in 2008 at age 25, became the youngest person to ever win the prestigious Merlin Award for stage magicians.

“The Merlin Award is the magic industry’s equivalent of the Oscar or Tony or Grammy. It’s the highest honor a magician can receive,” Lake said.

Lake says it’s the first time he’s made such a large vehicle appear in an open, outdoor setting.

“Normally, we’re in a theater, where we have the audience on one side. So we can control the elements, like the lighting and if there’s a draft or wind,” Lake said. “But here, we’ll be in the elements, in the daylight, with people literally all around us on all sides. It’s the most challenging and impossible of conditions to present the illusion, especially with such a large and heavy apparatus. It weighs about 50,000 pounds.”

The armored truck act will take place between 6:15 and 6:45 p.m. on Friday, March 29th in the outdoor entrance courtyard of the FedExForum. The event is free to the public.

Categories
Book Features Books

Joseph Finder At Horseshoe Sunday

In The Moscow Club, he described a fictional coup in the Kremlin, and six months later, an actual coup in the Kremlin was attempted. In Extraordinary Powers, a high-level CIA mole was exposed, and shortly after, CIA mole Aldrich Ames was exposed. And in The Zero Hour, terrorists attack lower Manhattan, and several years later there was 9/ll.

Now there’s Power Play (St. Martin’s Press), Joseph Finder’s new thriller about the abduction of top corporate executives, who are held for the largest ransom in history. Real history in the making?

Anticipating top stories: That’s best-selling novelist Joseph Finder’s track record, and what John Grisham did for lawyers, according to Fortune magazine, and what John Le Carre did for spies, according to Malcom Gladwell (author of The Tipping Point and Blink), Finder now does for top businessmen. Find him in Tunica, when he signs Power Play at Horseshoe Casino on Sunday, August 26th, at 4:30 p.m.

Categories
Food & Wine Food & Drink

Dishing the Delta

When we last checked in with Jimmy Gentry a year and a half ago, the former chef de cuisine at Erling Jensen was using his classical French training and his taste for Asian cuisine to inject a bit of ethnic creativity into the dishes at Grand Casino’s LB’s Steakhouse. During Gentry’s tenure, LB’s received an award of excellence from Distinguished Restaurants of North America and Wine Spectator.

Now it appears that with his new gig at Horseshoe Casino’s Magnolia — A Delta Grille, Gentry’s cooking has gone South.

The newly opened Magnolia serves Southern comfort food that’s a step up from down-home but not entirely upscale. You can start off dinner with a grown-up version of Southern sweet tea, made with peach-flavored vodka and sweet iced tea, before you move on to “Chicken Livers Three Ways” (blackened, fried, and sautéed), buttermilk fried frog legs in a butter sauce, or “Arkansas Mushroom and Chicken Gumbo.”

Among the entrées are the usual suspects — bass, strip steak, Gulf red snapper, filet of beef, and rack of lamb — as well as some unusual ones, such as fried chicken and waffles (buttermilk fried chicken with toasted waffles and warm maple syrup) and ham hocks that are braised and served with white beans and sweet cornbread.

Southern favorites dominate the dessert menu — lemon ice box pie, sweet potato pie, white chocolate bread pudding — but surely you won’t be able to resist ordering the “Chocolate Pepsi Cola Cake,” a chocolate cake made with layers of peanut-butter mousse and served with Jack Daniel’s ice cream.

Magnolia — A Delta Grille, Horseshoe Casino (1-800-303-7463)

If you’re interested in Southern food, you shouldn’t wait to register for this year’s Southern Foodways Symposium at the University of Mississippi in Oxford, October 25th through 28th.

This year’s symposium is its 10th anniversary, and it looks like it’s going to be one hell of a party. California cuisine guru Alice Waters is flying in for the event. Other participants include the Kitchen Sisters (Davia Nelson and Nikki Silva) and chef Frank Stitt.

This year’s symposium will examine the state of Southern food, both the present and the future. On Friday and Saturday, cooks, chefs, food writers, scholars, and curious eaters will ponder the diverse food cultures of the South, focusing on topics such as the “Creolization of Southern Foodways”; “20th Century Farm Policy”; and “Class and Consumption.”

Also part of the symposium is its annual sidetrip, the Delta Divertissement, on October 24th. This overnight trip to Greenwood, Mississippi, will take in all things porcine.

Led by Southern Foodways Alliance oral historian and “Delta champion” Amy Evans (along with Pluto Plantation native Martha Foose), the group will “break down” a pig with the help of sausage man Bruce Aidells, learn to stuff boudin and fry gratons with chef Donald Link, and gather for a breakfast of artisanal bacon and creamy grits.

Naturally, you will not go hungry during the symposium. On the menu this year during the event’s various lunches, brunches, and snacktimes: whole-hog barbecue doused with vinegar sauce, pig ears in mustard sauce, tacos pollo frito, refried black-eyed peas, and boiled-peanut cotton candy.

For more information about the Southern Foodways Symposium and the Delta Divertissement or to register, visit

www.southernfoodways.com.