Most Popular

  • Pain Management
    Cancer patient Tim Thomason didn't think he could feel any worse. His Denver jailers showed that he could.
  • Denver's Own Royal Tenenbaums
    The late Timber Dick's children are carrying on a brilliant family legacy that includes Nancy Dick and Tom Lantos.
  • Gospel Journey Teens Dare 2 Share
    Greg Stier is raising an army of adolescents to help save your soul.
  • Curtain Call
    Denver mourns the loss of its favorite bipolar, one-armed comic/poet/playwright.
  • The Lords of Payback
    Jefferson County officials show Mike Zinna that what goes around comes around.

National Features >

  • Village Voice

    HUD Games

    How Andrew Cuomo gave birth to the subprime-mortgage crisis that threatens to bring down Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

    By Wayne Barrett

  • Houston Press

    Hostages of Houston

    Inside the world of "stash houses," where smugglers use torture to extort illegal immigrants.

    By Chris Vogel

  • Phoenix New Times

    Me and McCain

    Here's the John McCain some Arizonans know--and loathe.

    By Amy Silverman

Grand Lux Cafe

What happened in Vegas should have stayed there.

By Jason Sheehan

Published on May 01, 2008

I'm supposed to be anonymous in this job, and while I don't always perform with perfect super-spy cool and élan in the dining rooms and back alleys of this city (my own private Berlin, the secret agent's Valhalla), I do recognize a few hard and fast rules.

First, never do anything to draw attention to yourself. Never make reservations in your own name. Always use the names of dead character actors, characters from The Simpsons or local chefs. You can get away with almost any kind of bad behavior if the floor staff think you're, say, one of Sean Yontz's sous chefs on the tail end of a three-day tequila bender — because the waiters and waitresses and hosts will have dealt with their own kitchen overlords and will know what to expect.

And never, ever take notes. Do that, and you may as well wear a T-shirt that says ANONYMOUS RESTAURANT CRITIC in big white letters. You may as well whip out a stack of business cards and start demanding free drinks and back rubs from the owner. Taking notes (or worse, cell-phone pictures of the food) is a surefire giveaway.

Still, there are exceptions to every rule. And there are some restaurants that are exceptions to all rules. Grand Lux Cafe, for example. Waiting for my second massive flight of food to arrive on a recent Saturday evening, I felt I had to set down my initial impressions of the place before I lost them — before they were blown clean out of my head with shotgun severity by the next outrage. So there I was, hunched up against the wall, frantically scribbling on the back of an old check:

This is not a restaurant, I wrote. This is a time-warp trip back to the Rome of the Caesars...a gilt-edged and bejeweled palace filled with polished marble, fire, lacquer, iron and gold with glowing lamps and statuary and fiery angel choirs singing from atop massive pillars...

Laura had ducked out for a minute, gone clopping across the marble floor in her spike heels to check out the bakery in the lobby, the towering bar. I'd sat, walled in by the wreckage of our first course — by half-eaten double-stuffed potato spring rolls, the gnawed ends of flautas as thick around as small burritos, and mini hot dogs made (allegedly) of Kobe beef, buried in chili and cheese and mounted, like the offering in some freaky church of meat processors, atop the altars of their outsized, precariously tall buns — before I'd escaped to a corner to scribble.

Here, all the world's cuisines have collided, the place itself standing like a massive edifice against all that is good and decent in the world, a giant, marbled and sculpted Fuck You to generations of cooks and chefs and every small advance we've made.

After we sat down, our waitress had rushed her way through a rehearsed spiel with all the passion of a museum docent fifteen minutes before quitting time: "As you can see, the menu is very large..." The floor was busy and she'd already had her eyes on her next table, just being sat, as she robotically warned us that portions were big. But we didn't pay much attention, and wound up ordering enough fried starch and weirdness to amply feed a party of ten.

If there is a hell for line cooks — a place where they must go after sloughing off this mortal coil to work off their sins of the grill — then I am sure now that this is it. This is where food comes to die.

1   2   3   Next Page »

Westword Insiders

  • Local food, music and news blasts
  • Free Stuff
Backpage.com