Head-to-Head · Las Vegas
Sparrow + Wolf vs The Black Sheep
Two off-Strip chef-owned tables: book Sparrow + Wolf for Brian Howard's wood-fire ambition, The Black Sheep for Jamie Tran's Vietnamese-American soul.
The Verdict
Sparrow + Wolf is the more ambitious kitchen. Brian Howard left the Strip in 2017 to open his own room on Spring Mountain Road in Chinatown, and the cooking roams from wood-fired octopus with harissa to oxtail hummus, hand-rolled pasta and roasted duck with soba. Howard was named a 2026 James Beard finalist for Best Chef: Southwest, and the room scores 9.5 for food, 9.1 for the room and 9.2 for value. It is the off-Strip table that reads like a destination dinner without the tasting-menu formality.
The Black Sheep is the warmer, more personal meal. Jamie Tran, a Top Chef alum, runs a modern Vietnamese-American room in the southwest valley off the Strip, where almost everything is made from scratch: the pho dumplings, the Ham-Bao-Ger, the imperial rolls stuffed with duroc pork and shrimp, the glass noodles in gochujang. Eater named it Las Vegas Restaurant of the Year in 2017, and Tran was a 2026 James Beard semifinalist for Best Chef: Southwest. It scores 9.2 for food, 8.5 for the room and 9.1 for value.
The split is ambition versus comfort. Sparrow + Wolf is the wood-fire, globally roaming kitchen and the bigger statement; The Black Sheep is the heritage-driven neighborhood room you return to. Both are chef-owned, both are off the Strip, and both prove that the best cooking in Las Vegas left the casinos years ago.
Scores, Side by Side
| Score | Sparrow + Wolf | The Black Sheep |
|---|---|---|
| Food | 9.5 / 10 | 9.2 / 10 |
| Atmosphere | 9.1 / 10 | 8.5 / 10 |
| Value | 9.2 / 10 | 9.1 / 10 |
Which One for Which Occasion
| Occasion | Editorial Pick |
|---|---|
| A creative dinner out | Sparrow + WolfBrian Howard's wood-fire menu of oxtail hummus and harissa octopus is the more adventurous kitchen. |
| Dinner with visiting friends | The Black SheepJamie Tran's shareable Vietnamese-American plates and pho dumplings suit a relaxed, generous group table. |
| A relaxed first date | The Black SheepThe warm neighborhood room and gentler pacing leave room to talk away from the crowds. |
| Impress a visiting client | Sparrow + WolfA James Beard finalist kitchen on Spring Mountain Road makes the stronger Chinatown statement. |
| Best value weeknight | The Black SheepMade-from-scratch Vietnamese-American cooking at neighborhood prices is the easy midweek call. |
Price and How to Book
Both sit in the same bracket, roughly 60 to 90 dollars a head before drinks, well below Strip tasting-menu prices. Sparrow + Wolf takes reservations through OpenTable and its own site at 4480 Spring Mountain Road, and weekend tables go first; the full picture is in the Sparrow + Wolf review. The Black Sheep books through OpenTable too, and its smaller room fills fast on weekends; the detail sits in the Black Sheep review. Both anchor our Las Vegas dining guide.
For cuisine context, weigh The Black Sheep against the best Vietnamese restaurants worldwide, and for occasion fit see our picks for a first date, a birthday and to impress a client. More Las Vegas match-ups sit on the compare index, including Jaleo vs Lago.