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Featured Bars and Clubs


http://www.hustlerclubs.com Too often the strip-club experience is predictable: anorexic bottle blondes with boob jobs always on the hustle. At Larry Flynt's local lair, things work a bit differently. Bettie Page look-alikes offer you "dollar dances," while up on stage, a woman you swear you saw on www.suicidegirls.com puts on a ridiculously athletic pole dance. And don't forget the attached sex shop, which, besides selling a wide swath of XXX DVDs, features a selection of the metro area's most cutting-age sex apparati. Love Swing, anyone? Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Larrys-Tavern/165112626845822 Located on Manchester Road in Wildwood sits Larry's Tavern, a white clapboard building and gravel parking. Larry's feels like it belongs in south city, with only the occasional Volvo in the parking lot to imply otherwise. Inside the air's ripe with cigarette smoke and the constant sizzle of fresh burgers on the grill. Folks at the bar range from their twenties to seventies, nursing beers and sharing stories. During one visit the bartender talks a customer into letting her use his swimming pool for a party. Streams of patrons pick up carry-out boxes of burgers and fries during the lunch hour, not stopping to imbibe, even though the old guys at the bar are generous with the free beer tokens. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lemmons/103776646343519 Haven't you heard? Lemmons is the new Cheers, where regulars mingle with newbies, hipsters freely embrace an older element, and, of course, everybody knows your name. Lemmons is split into three areas: the music venue, which boasts a raised stage in the back for local and touring acts (and the occasional DJ night); the game area, replete with Foosball, table-shuffle, video games, board games and Lemmons' famous trivia nights; and the basement, which is a haven of billiards and beer. The bar dominates the room, but the surrounding tables provide ample seating to partake in popular Black Thorn pizza. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
http://www.lempmansion.com Upon entering the Lemp Mansion, one enters the history of St. Louis brewing. The mansion, which housed the ill-fated Lemp family, maintains nineteenth-century décor and photographs of the family for guests to peruse. Lunch options include salads, sandwiches and pasta, including Szechuan pasta with broccoli, garlic, cayenne, Provel and Parmesan. Dinner guests can start their meals with appetizers such as a German sausage platter or crab cakes, then, for the main course, feast on seafood, chicken, veal, pork and steak entrèes, including a "carpetbaggers" steak - a butterflied tenderloin medallion stuffed with shrimp, herbs, tomatoes and garlic. On Sunday the restaurant offers a family-style chicken dinner. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
http://www.lestersrestaurant.com It's been a long time coming for Lester's in the Central West End. With a glut of eateries and public houses, the CWE has been missing a dyed in the wool sports bar with an upscale feel. Enter Lester's third location, it follows a similar pattern of the flagship in Ladue, with black and white memorabilia on the walls, excellent food and humming flat screens as far as the eye can see. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
http://www.facebook.com/libraryannex The Library Annex picks up where too-crowded Humphrey's leaves off. Right around the corner from that infamous SLU bar is a new, swankier but still purely college drinkery with a pseudo-educational twist: Books line mahogany shelves in each room of the large bar. There's a dance floor where DJ's spin party hits and collegial touchstone tunes like "Don't Stop Believin,'" multiple bar games and get this: an actual beer pong table. Ladies, don't be surprised if inebriated SLU guys propose marriage; it's a common occurrence, but for the most part they're quite polite when you refuse. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
The Little Bar is no bigger than a one-bedroom apartment, which is just how the third-shifters like it. The bar opens at 6 a.m. everyday, and it's a favorite among brewery and steel mill workers, as well as retirees and blue-haired mall walkers looking to tipple after their early morning exercise. The bar itself is inlaid with bright copper pennies, all face-up, so luck is eternally on your side. There are a few bar games in these cramped quarters, including Golden Tee and darts, but the real entertainment comes from bellying up to the bar and asking if anyone's got a story to tell. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
Livery Company, in the Cherokee Arts District, combines the charms of a dimly lit dive with a vintage speakeasy-style vibe. Utilizing its small stage, the casual chill spot hosts cover-free music events put on by local musicians on most weekends in addition to open mics, karaoke and trivia throughout the week. The bar, built by owner Emily Ebeling's father with materials from an old schoolhouse, accompanies decor and paraphernalia that harkens back to Cherokee's previous heyday in the '40s and '50s. Livery Company uses many small batch liquors, including locally made spirits and beers such as St. Louis Distillery's Cardinal Sin Vodka and Square One Distillery liquors. Plenty of inspiration from New Orleans comes in the form of small batch bourbons, Sazerac made with Herbsaint and Pimm's Cup alongside south city staples of Pabst Blue Ribbon and Miller High Life. South St. Louis Pizza Company offers snacks for hungry bar-goers. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
http://www.llywelynspub.com Over the past few years Llywelyn's has branched out from its original Central West End location to Webster Groves, Soulard, St. Charles, WingHaven and Wildwood. With a wide selection of draught beers from around the world and some of the best pub food in the city it's become a go-to spot for Soulard residents, lover's of fine imported brews and young weekend bar-hoppers alike. Unique features at the Central West End location include an expansive beer garden and the "Loft," a separate bar area complete with a cozy lounge. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
http://www.llywelynspub.com Over the past few years Llywelyn's has branched out from its original Central West End location to Webster Groves, St. Charles, WingHaven, Wildwood and Soulard. With a wide selection of draught beers from around the world and some of the best pub food in the city it's become a go-to spot for Soulard residents, lover's of fine imported brews and young weekend bar-hoppers alike. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
http://www.llywelynspub.com/eventsstcharles.htm Over the past few years Llywelyn's has branched out from its original Central West End location to Webster Groves, Soulard, WingHaven, Wildwood and St. Charles. With a wide selection of draught beers from around the world and some of the best pub food in the city it's become a go-to spot for Soulard residents, lover's of fine imported brews and young weekend bar-hoppers alike. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
http://www.llywelynspub.com An outpost of the longtime Central West End haunt, in the heart (or perhaps more accurately, the kidney) of old Webster. This cavernous, barnlike setting is actually quite attractive, if a bit of an echo chamber on busy weekends. For more info, see listing under "Midtown/West End." Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
http://www.ritzcarlton.com/en/Properties/StLouis/Dining/LobbyLounge/Default.htm Clever, persuasive New American dishes built on a foundation of classics. For a light meal, order a couple of fanciful appetizers in place of an entrée. If you're in the mood for more substantial fare, try one of the superb game dishes, such as rabbit or pheasant. For a finale, order any sweet thing that's red and ripe -- strawberry shortcake, say, or a pear poached in zinfandel. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
http://www.theloftstl.com Olive Street is lined with tricked out Escalades and cruisers on Saturday nights, and men and women shoulder their way into the packed house, looking fly and fresh off a shoot for BET. The Loft is a mid-size club in the burgeoning Midtown strip. Reserved VIP booths line one wall, and Hot 104.1's best DJs broadcast live from the Loft, incinerating the dance floor with the best hip hop, R&B and soul. It may not be the biggest or swank-est club in River City, but the music is bangin' and the scene is too. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
http://www.welovelola.com There's not much they don't do at Lola: live music seven days a week, stellar cocktails, upscale small plates, brunch, crepes. Located just off Washington Avenue, Lola strives to be a joint for downtown denizens that's by the neighborhood, for the neighborhood - balancing loft-district energy with food and drink you actually want. The crêpes are a good bet: the Delilah, stuffed with shrimp, crab and crawfish étouffée, is especially tasty. The lineup also includes sandwiches (these, too, have female names, though not as sexy as the crêpes) and small plates such as polenta fries paired with ratatouille and pan-fried lamb chops with a panko coating. The cocktail list, many of its entries named for downtown buildings, features truly excellent martinis and even mocktails (cleverly named after infamous celebrity rehab facilities) for those on the wagon. You'll never be without live entertainment at Lola, whether it's a hip-hop spin in the Absinthe Bar or up front with the soulful stylings of Mo E or Javier Mendoza. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
http://www.lombardosrestaurants.com Lombardo's history in St. Louis dates back to 1934 with a fruit-and-vegetable stand at Riverview Boulevard and Florissant Avenue in north St. Louis. Today the restaurant family includes Lombardo's Restaurant, Carmine's and Lombardo's Trattoria. The trattoria offers the white linen-tablecloth experience for lunch and dinner. At lunch, Lombardo's menu offers fare such as a turkey club, salmon BLT and a steak burger, while dinner serves up a concise menu of upscale Italian options, with pastas as well as chicken, steak, veal and seafood entrées. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
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