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Las Vegas, United States

é by José Andrés

CuisineMolecular - Spanish
Executive ChefEric Suniga
LocationLas Vegas, United States
La Liste
Opinionated About Dining
Wine Spectator

é by José Andrés occupies a semi-private counter inside the Cosmopolitan's Boulevard Tower, running a molecularly inflected Spanish tasting format through two seatings per evening, Tuesday through Saturday. Ranked #36 in North America by Opinionated About Dining in 2025, it positions itself firmly within the continent's small-format, technically demanding tier. The wine program spans 160 selections with a pronounced Spanish focus and a 2,000-bottle inventory.

é by José Andrés restaurant in Las Vegas, United States
About

A Counter Inside the Strip's Most Deliberate Room

Las Vegas has spent two decades trying to reconcile spectacle with seriousness, and the tension shows most clearly in its fine-dining corridors. The prevailing model remains large-format: celebrity-chef rooms with 200 covers, theatrical design, and menus that read like greatest-hits compilations. Against that backdrop, the Strip's small-counter format represents a genuinely different logic. é by José Andrés, situated on Level 3 of the Cosmopolitan's Boulevard Tower at 3708 Las Vegas Blvd S, operates on the premise that compression produces intensity. The room holds a tight counter; the format is tasting-menu only; the kitchen is visible. Where most Strip dining asks you to look outward at the room, é asks you to look inward at the plate.

The address places é within the Cosmopolitan, a property that has consistently attracted chef-driven concepts requiring more precision than volume. Being embedded in a hotel tower rather than a casino floor has its own editorial meaning in Las Vegas: it signals a deliberate separation from the walk-in, table-turn economy that governs ground-level dining. Reaching Level 3 via the Boulevard Tower elevator is itself a kind of decompression, a physical transition from the noise of the casino into a smaller, quieter register. In cities like New York, that kind of spatial separation is achieved by a second-floor walkup or a reservation-only townhouse. On the Strip, elevation is the equivalent.

Where é Sits in the North American Fine-Dining Tier

Small-format, technically demanding tasting counters have become one of the more consistent categories in North American restaurant criticism over the past decade. Venues like Alinea in Chicago, Atomix in New York City, and The French Laundry in Napa define a tier where the booking window, the seat count, and the technical vocabulary of the kitchen matter as much as the ingredient list. é belongs to that cohort, though it operates within the distinct economic and logistical conditions of the Strip rather than a standalone urban address.

The Opinionated About Dining rankings, which aggregate experienced-diner assessments rather than critic visits, have placed é at #36 in North America in both 2023 and 2025, and at #33 in 2024. That consistency across three consecutive years is the relevant signal: it suggests the kitchen is maintaining a standard rather than coasting on an opening-year burst. La Liste, which draws on a broader international sample of critic scores, placed é in its Leading Restaurants list for 2025 with 75 points. Taken together, these rankings position the restaurant inside the continent's upper tier of technically focused tasting-format rooms, alongside venues like Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, and Le Bernardin in New York City. That peer set is worth naming because it calibrates expectations correctly: this is not Strip-casual with molecular garnishes, and it is not a celebrity-chef spectacle. It is a room operating in a register that prizes restraint and precision.

The Spanish Molecular Format and What It Asks of the Diner

The cuisine is classified as molecular Spanish, a category that carries specific historical weight. The techniques associated with Ferran Adrià's elBulli era, hydrocolloids, spherification, temperature play, have been absorbed into the mainstream of fine dining to the point where they no longer read as avant-garde. What distinguishes the better practitioners is editorial judgment: knowing which techniques serve the ingredient and which merely announce themselves. At é, the Spanish framework provides both a flavour logic and a geographic anchor. Spanish cuisine at this level draws on deep pantry traditions, aged vinegars, cured fats, preserved seafood, and a structural preference for contrast over harmony. The molecular vocabulary, in theory, extends those traditions rather than replacing them.

Chef Eric Suniga leads the kitchen at the counter level, executing a format that José Andrés conceived as a more intimate counterpart to his larger Las Vegas operation, Bazaar Meat by José Andrés. The two venues occupy different positions in the Andrés portfolio: Bazaar Meat is a high-energy, large-format steakhouse with theatrical Spanish touches, while é is the compressed, precision-focused expression of the same culinary lineage. Understanding both helps clarify what each is doing on its own terms.

The Wine Program: Spain First, Depth Second

The wine list at é runs to 160 selections across a 2,000-bottle inventory, with pronounced Spanish strengths. Wine pricing sits in the $$$ tier, meaning the list carries a significant proportion of bottles above the $100 mark. Wine Director Jordi Paronella and Sommelier Chris So manage a program that takes its cue from the kitchen's geography: when the food is rooted in Spanish tradition, a list anchored in Spain's leading appellations (Priorat, Ribera del Duero, Bierzo, Rías Baixas) creates genuine coherence rather than national tokenism. The corkage fee, at $100, reflects the positioning of the room: it permits but does not encourage outside bottles.

A Spanish-focused list of this depth is comparatively rare on the Strip, where wine programs more often default to Napa Cabernet and Burgundy as their prestige anchors. For a diner whose cellar leans Iberian, this is one of the more aligned pairings available in Las Vegas. The inventory depth (2,000 bottles) also suggests the program is maintained with some seriousness rather than bought against each week's covers.

The Practical Frame: Two Seatings, Five Nights

The operating structure deserves attention for anyone planning around a Las Vegas trip. é runs two seatings per evening, at 5:30 pm and 8:30 pm, Tuesday through Saturday, with Sunday and Monday dark. Each seating window closes at roughly two hours, which is compact by tasting-menu standards and reflects the counter format: the pace is set by the kitchen, not by the table's conversation. Cuisine pricing is in the $$$ tier, consistent with the peer set described above, meaning the cost of dinner (before wine, tip, or beverages) sits above $66 and in practice at this level typically climbs considerably higher.

For Las Vegas visitors building a multi-night dining itinerary, é occupies the technical end of the spectrum. The Strip and its surroundings offer a wide range alongside it: Craftsteak for prime American beef, Bardot Brasserie for French brasserie form, Aburiya Raku for Japanese izakaya depth off the Strip, and Bacchanal Buffet at the other end of the format and ambition scale. The fuller picture of what the city offers, across hotels, bars, and beyond, is in our full Las Vegas restaurants guide, our full Las Vegas hotels guide, our full Las Vegas bars guide, our full Las Vegas wineries guide, and our full Las Vegas experiences guide.

General Manager Megan Ulibarri oversees operations for a room that, by any measure of its format and awards trajectory, asks more of its guests than the Strip average. That ask, to surrender an evening to a kitchen's sequence in a room without a view of the casino floor, is exactly the point. Las Vegas has plenty of rooms that compete on spectacle. é competes on something narrower and, for the right diner, considerably more satisfying.

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