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Salt Lake Magazine

Salt Lake is your best guide to the Utah lifestyle. From food to fashion, travel and the arts, Salt Lake magazine has something for everyone. Follow us on Instagram, Facebook and Twitter @SLmag.

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2019 Farm-to-Glass Cocktail Contest – Last Call!

By Eat & Drink

Cocktail contest! Yes, it’s time for Salt Lake magazine’s annual Farm-to-Glass Cocktail Contest. Here’s how it works: Each participating bricks-and-mortar bar will invent a cocktail including at least two seasonal ingredients. (Beets! Berries! Peppers! Tomatoes! Kale! You could be the first to make a parsnip martini!) The cocktail should be reasonably easy to make and should sell for $10 or less.

Sign up here

Respond as soon as possible: Right now, our space is limited, and slots are filling up fast. First come, first served!

Start inventing your winning cocktail. Recipes are due Aug. 28!

Sign up here

During the month of September, Salt Lake magazine will encourage people to come to each of the participating bars, taste the cocktails and cast a vote for their favorite. We will promote the contest on our website, with blog coverage, splash images, Tweets, television spots, magazine ads, etc. 

Salt Lake magazine will also advertise the contest in its September/October issue and announce the winner online and in the magazine. We will also host the online voting and provide marketing materials to every participant.

A portion of the proceeds from the Farm to Glass Cocktail Contest will go to the One Small Miracle Foundation. One Small Miracle is a nonprofit safety net for Utah’s uninsured and underinsured service professionals and their families in the event of a life-altering medical event.

The winner will be announced at a live event, on Oct. 13, 2019 at Publik Kitchen Downtown with open ticket sale to the 21-over public, and participating bartenders present to serve tastes of their contending cocktails. 

Don’t miss out on votes! Get your recipe sent in!

To make sure we have your ballots correct and everyone is represented correctly we need this information, in this format: Consistency helps the voters compare drinks and allows them to make them at home.

• Name of the Cocktail. Every cocktail needs a name.

• List of ingredients and measurements.

Method:

• What kind of glass should your drink be served in?

• Any muddling or pre-prep involved?

• Should it be served up or on the rocks?

• What kind of garnish should be used?

• A hi-res photo of the drink, preferably against a white, neutral background.

Example:

Here’s an example of how we need things to be formatted.

Margarita

1.5 oz. tequila [specify type of liquor if you like)

¾ oz. fresh lime juice

½ oz. agave nectar

Shake together over ice and strain into a stemmed glass.

Garnish with a lime wedge.

 

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Uphill Got You Down? GREENbike Goes Electric

By City Watch

Among the casual cycling crowd in Salt Lake City, there’s a lot of talk about “the flat.” Our city, ringed with mountains, has a lot of hills that make an enjoyable cruise to the farmers market a challenge. “Living on the flat” is one reason bike-minded folks are shopping for homes in Liberty Wells and why more than one “hard-core” bike commuter we’ve known suddenly starts shopping for a Subaru when they move in with their girlfriend who lives above 1100 East.

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Climb Capitol Hill? No problem.

The folks at GREENbike, (yes, the one you have to pedal and doesn’t muck up our sidewalks like those garbage scooters) knows that Salt Lake is a hilly place. When the non-profit rolled out its tidy station system around the valley, it did so with a mind to “the flat” easily biked portions of the valley. Now, however, the non-profit has added 50 pedal-assist e-bikes to its system to help us get off “the flat.”

GREENbike’s new e-bikes are pedal assist, which means the electric assist motor will only engage when riders pedal. The more “pedal power” the rider puts out, the more electric assistance the bike will provide, with up to 250 percent assistance. Basically, you still have to pedal and stuff but you won’t show up for your Tinder date at The Pie sweating like you have a glandular problem.

The new pedal-assist e-bikes started popping up amid the classic Trek-built GREENbikes at stations around “the flat” last week. They cost the same to use: $7 for a 24-Hour Access Pass or $75 for an annual pass.

To find a GREENbike station give the new pedal-assist e-bikes (or a classic) a try download the Bcycle app or visit GREENbikeslc.org.

See all of our community coverage here.

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New Fish on the Block – Kaze Sushi Salt Lake

By Eat & Drink

This is what food and restaurant writers have to do all the time: Eat their words. I just published a rant about a need for more diversity and imagination in the Utah restaurant population. Don’t, I pleaded with would-be food entrepreneurs, don’t open yet another sushi restaurant. Utah, I argued, has hundreds of Japanese restaurants already, most of them in Salt Lake City. The last thing we need, I declared with delicious certainty, is another sushi restaurant.

So here I am, in the very next issue of Salt Lake magazine, extolling the excellence of a new Japanese restaurant.

Well, that’s the number one rule of critical writing: Never be too proud to be wrong.

Kaze Sushi Salt Lake a Japanese/sushi restaurant in the middle of downtown, opened a few months ago and it is excellent. Nevertheless, when I met co-owner Echka Nurzed and chef Peter Dagva, the first question I asked was, why did you decide to open a sushi restaurant in Salt Lake City? Their other restaurant is a sushi burrito place in Orem. In SLC they wanted to appeal to a “more diverse” audience. That’s the first time I’ve ever heard that particular reason for moving to Salt Lake but it makes sense, because Salt Lakers do eat a lot of sushi and tend to be more open to new tastes—compared to the population of, ahem, Orem.

Kaze, designed by Nurzed’s husband, is a great-looking place, with a giant version of Hokusai’s Wave reproduced on the back wall, a lath ceiling and blue lights under the sushi bar. The food presentation is equally handsome—as Nurzed points out, “enjoying food is more complicated than just taste,” you want it to look good and, she adds emphatically, “it has to be absolutely fresh.”

Sashimi platter

Kaze steak

To that end, Dagva orders in fish three times a week and uses several vendors to assure that the fish he gets is absolutely top quality. He changes the menu frequently and it will continue to evolve according to his customers’ tastes. “People here don’t just want rolls,” he says. “They want a variety, nigiri and sashimi, more kinds of bites.”

Kaze Sushi Salt Lake is working with sake experts to develop a sake menu as well, “We’re looking for some that aren’t served in Utah yet,” says Nurzed. He’s also got wine expert Francis Fecteau handling wine list and wine-service training for the staff. In July, the restaurant will be celebrating with a sake and sushi event—check the website for details. In the meantime, keep Kaze in mind. It’s open until 10 p.m. on weekdays and serves food until midnight. That’s right. Midnight.

For more eat & drink, click here.

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Is Recycling Broken?

By City Watch

It’s the disposable diapers that keep her up at night. Stay-at-home mom Crystal Bruner Harris has achieved Salt Lake City’s Master Recycler status and hosts an Instagram feed called “wearegreenertogether” with weekly sustainable living challenges and advice. But still, her 11-month-old daughter’s daily Pampers load is a tickle of guilt at the back of her mind.

Recycling

Crystal Bruner Harris has achieved Salt Lake City’s Master Recycler

“In so many ways, I’ve been able to give up convenience for the good of the Earth,” Harris says. She uses quart-sized yogurt containers instead of Rubbermaid. Chops up clothing for rags. Covers her microwaveables with a glass dome or silicone splatter guard. Ordered a custom-made dining table from a local woodsmith. Fills her dog beds with bits of denim and cloth. Posted her garden plant tubs on KSL Classifieds as “free for the taking” and some anonymous taker took them. She’s researching how to dispose of the polyethylene foam blobs that came as packing material for some mail-order bike parts a few weeks ago because she still refuses to just put them in the garbage.

And yet—the diapers. (It’s a true dilemma—most research indicates both cloth and disposable diapers have equally negative environmental impact.)

Part of what torments Harris is the aspirational concept of “zero waste.” Facebook and Instagram are filled with guilt-inducing feeds like Living Zero Waste in a Non Zero Waste Home, Zero-Waste Student Living, Going Zero Waste, Zero Waste Home and Zero Waste Nerd. These feeds are followed by thousands of aspiring waste-not-want-nots. The Washington Post story featuring an aluminum trash can the size of a Mason jar is posted on Salt Lake City’s recycling website. It’s meant to inspire but is sort of, like, hey, more of a guilt trip.

Jennifer Farrell, director of education and outreach for Salt Lake City’s Waste and Recycling Division, knows the pressure of the “zero waste” obsession that can drive a well-intentioned citizen to lose enthusiasm.

Is Recycling Ruined?

What happens when a greasy pizza box gets put in a blue bin? Is that whole load of recycling just waste? Yep. To try and mitigate inevitable human error (first, blame the teenagers) SLC runs a recycling education team to spot check blue bins for errant pizza boxes and other straight up garbage. But with 40,000 blue bins in SLC the team is only able to tag about 150 cans a week. So they’re also asking residents to educate themselves. But still it’s confusing, right? So we asked Allen Lance from Salt Lake City’s Waste and Recycling Division a few of our burning questions:

Plastics? Does the # really matter? Resin codes (#1 – #7) are used to identify the type of resin used in making the product, not necessarily whether the product is recyclable or not. A better qualifier is just that the product is made from plastic. Any containers with a screw on top, typically used for soap, beverages, etc. are recyclable in any program.

Are beer and soda cans recyclable?  Yes! Aluminum is one of the most recyclable materials on the market today. Nearly 75 percent of all aluminum produced in the U.S. is still in use today.

What about glass? The city has an agreement with Momentum Recycling to collect glass curbside ($9 a month) or at drop off locations. The glass is used for insulation by Owens Corning in Nephi, filtration systems, aggregate in concrete, road base and counter tops and industrial abrasives right here in Utah.

Where does it all actually go? Waste Management in West Jordan processes SLC’s single stream material (stuff in the blue bins). The company is building a new $16 million materials recovery facility (MRF) in SLC. An MRF separates the various commodities into marketable grades. Typically: Aluminum stays in the U.S. to make new aluminum cans; steel (i.e. tin cans) is sold locally to Metro Steel; plastic containers stay in the U.S. and various resins are used for new containers, carpet, carpet pads, etc.; paper stays in the U.S. depending on the grade and some goes to foreign buyers to make tissue paper, paper towels, etc; cardboard mainly stays in the U.S. and used for new cardboard or fiber board.

And there are growing rationalizations for slowing our culture’s nascent green habit. New reports that say 91 percent of the world’s plastic isn’t being recycled anyway. There are giant floating islands of plastic garbage circling the oceans and plastic microparticles suffocating whales. And what’s this? Chinese waste management companies are starting to refuse America’s plastic, cardboard and electronic waste?

It’s a bummer. For years our communities have gotten savvier about recycling. We’ve all dutifully filled our blue bins with everything we figure could be recycled, which it turns out, often can’t be. Paper towels and plastic grocery bags aren’t recyclable, used pizza boxes and un-rinsed milk bottles aren’t recyclable, cloth and styrofoam clamshells aren’t recyclable.

Everything in your blue bin ends up at waste management companies where workers use magnets, screens, gravity and optical sorters to separate streams of recyclables which are packed into bales and sold to whatever buyer can be found, which is getting harder.

“People are getting discouraged,” Farrell says. “We need to think further upstream.”

Farrell says the renewed priority list for environmental stewardship starts with reducing and reusing plastic packaging and non-recyclables and, adding one new “R” word to that trope: “Refuse.” Don’t take plastic lids. Ask your server not to bring you a straw when you order. Refuse plastic forks and spoons when you order take out. Don’t buy bottled water (like really, ever) and so on and so on. After that, way down the line, priority wise, comes recycling.

And it doesn’t have to be nuts. Do just one new thing, take baby steps, be practical. No need to cut up children’s pajamas to make washcloths, or swear off that new outfit. Wear out or repair what you have. Find places to donate. Complete the green commerce circle by buying local and shopping for vintage items.

Recycling

Jamaica Trinnaman, owner of HelloBulk Markets

“Zero waste can be very intimidating,” says Jamaica Trinnaman, owner of HelloBulk Markets, a one-year-old bulk food store recently relocated from Square Kitchen’s incubator warehouse to a new store right by the Union Pacific tracks at 355 N. 500 West.

“We’re always pushing progress over perfection. It’s really just about finding a couple of changes.”

To that end, Trinnaman encourages her customers to re-use the packaging they already have—brown sugar ziplock bags, mayonnaise and jam jars, shampoo bottles, bread bags—to pack up the beans, nuts, detergent and other bulk items she sells at HelloBulk.

“We’ve all been forced to buy excess packaging,” she says. “You can bring all of that. Just use it up until it’s dead.”

Mom Harris compensates for her disposable diaper guilt by using a spray bottle and toilet paper on her toddler’s bottom, cutting up avocados and sweet potatoes instead of buying baby food in jars, and using bar soap instead of pump bottles. She and her husband Josh installed solar panels on their mid-century Holladay home and just bought a Nissan Leaf. She stores foil and paper bags in a big kitchen drawer until they can be used. There isn’t a paper towel or ziplock baggie to be found in her house.

See all of our community coverage here.

 

 

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Discover the Art of Papercutting

By Arts & Culture

Bean sells Scherenschnitte on her Etsy site or you can order custom cuts at cindy@bean-cutter.com; Instagram: @beancutter.

Graphic designer Cindy Bean first saw elaborate papercuts when she visited Mozart’s birthplace in Salzburg in 2006. “The museum shop had some papercuts for sale,” she remembers. “Then I visited my grandparents near Frankfurt and saw more “Scherenschnitte” framed on their living room wall.” Bean was fascinated.
“Scherenschnitte” means “scissor cuts” and  being a graphic designer, “I was already handy with an X-acto,” says Bean. So when she came home, she turned her hand to mastering the old folk art. “At the time, I couldn’t find out a lot about it,” she recalls. “Now, it’s become quite popular. The older artists look down on using an X-acto knife instead of scissors.” That hasn’t stopped Bean. “I start with a drawing, then scan it and cut it on paper that’s black on one side and white on the other.” For this image, which took  four hours to finish, Bean went through four or five X-acto blades. “You have to keep them sharp.”

See all of our arts coverage here.

 

 

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Umphrey’s McGee Melts Faces at Red Butte

By Arts & Culture, Music

If you believe what a crowd wears to a concert is a good indicator of the band’s vibe, then you’ll know why I was pleased to see so much tie-dye at the Red Butte Garden Amphitheater for the Umphrey’s McGee show on Sunday Aug. 5, 2019. Umphrey’s McGee attracted a younger, rowdier than average crowd to Red Butte, with at least three people drunk enough to tear their shirts off (See: “Shirtless Guy” on our Concert Bingo Scorecard) before the music even started. Unsurprisingly, a dopey haze floated throughout the venue as well. (Another Concert Bingo score!)

Play SL Mag’s Concert Bingo!

Concert Bingo

People Watching With Purpose. It doesn’t matter where you get your summer concert-fix—some things are just universal. Bring our handy Summer Concert Bingo Card to your next Red Butte show and play along.

The opening act, Baltimore-based Pigeons Playing Ping Pong (band site here), kicked things off promptly with their funkadelic collection of strong bass lines, danc-ey riffs, and Zappa-esqe vocals. Between the screaming guitar solos and groovy breaks, Pigeons Playing Ping Pong used elaborate melodies and high energy singing to keep things lively. With most of the band giddy and animatedly grooving to their own music it was hard not to dance along and indeed most of the crowd decided to do that very thing.

Singer Greg Ormont wore pajama pants. Photo by Amanda Jones/Salt Lake magazine

It was so hot that Red Butte had decided to start madly fanning mist onto the stage for the bands. In turn, Pigeons playing Ping Pong were totally keeping their cool, linking groovy riffs, elaborate melodies, and funky singing into tight songs.

After a brief intermission, and with both their drummer and percussionist caged in huge arrays of cymbals, their keyboardist ringed by at least six keyboards, and a trippy light show blazing from the rigging above, Umphrey’s McGee launched into a heavy set of guitar solos and thundering rhythms. Guitarists Jake Cinninger and Brendan Bayliss frequently traded bars as the rest of the band grooved on tempo changes and syncopated rhythms. Umphrey’s McGee like to use strong dynamic shifts in most of their songs, mixing stringy rhythmic breaks with heavy head pounding riffage, and this was their style throughout the night as they rocked out. The highlight of it all, however, had to be Cinninger’s ridiculous guitar chops, as he wreaked carnage over his fret board with every screaming solo.

Photo by Amanda Jones/Salt Lake magazine

Umphrey’s McGee is a highly technical band that specializes in lightning fast guitar licks, tight rhythmic kicks, and many overlapping voices. This level of technical precision is hard to pull off live and counts on a great sound engineer at the board. Did it work at Red Butte? Well… not quite. While Umphrey’s McGee did an excellent job controlling the energy of their songs, and while there were more than a couple breathtaking moments, the open-air amphitheater was not exactly conducive to the precise acoustics the band needed. At the end of more than a few songs, I was left feeling the mix was a bit soupier than the band had hoped for.

But the tie-dyed, red-eyed crowd cared not. Umphrey’s McGee gave them the show they wanted. A jam-heavy set with frugal use of vocals, radical light effects, and intoxicating bass lines pulled them (and me) into the groove time and time again. The crowd ate it up, still dancing with enthusiasm even as the band played well into a second hour. At some point, glow sticks and a beach ball started flying through the air (more Concert Bingo scores), and then a final, face-melting guitar solo brought an end to the show and Red Butte unleashed its crowd of drunken students and next-gen hippies onto the upper university campus.

See all of our music coverage here.

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Modern West Gallery

By Arts & Culture

Diane Stewart’s Modern West recently celebrated its first gallery stroll. The official opening of the gallery in its new westside space took place April 19, but the Friday night Gallery Stroll sponsored by Salt Lake Gallery Stroll, is kind of a test. Would the public find their way to an unfamiliar part of town to look at modern art? Well, yes. The gallery was packed with people ogling interpretations of the West—like this ball made from umbrellas, created by Scottish-born Utah artist Jean Richardson. 412 S. 700 West, SLC, 801-355-3383, modernwestfineart.com

 

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Best of the Beehive – Utah County

By Best of the Beehive

Every year the list is different. We don’t do categories, we don’t fill in forms, we don’t count votes. We just pick our brains and everyone else’s for the coolest, newest and unexpected superlatives in the Beehive State. Every year we surprise ourselves and are delighted at the discoveries. You too will be surprised and delighted. And, no doubt, disgruntled. Because we left out one of your favorites. Let us know. 

Rockwell, Ice Cream – Justin and Summer Williams had a Dream about ice cream. Well, who doesn’t sometimes?? But the Williams made their dream come true at Rockwell’s  where they make superpremium flavors every day. Think Biscoff, Snickerdoodle and the traditionals Van/Choc/Straw. rockwellicecream.com

 

Best Workout for Hello! My name is Elder Price!, Rx Fit’s Weekly “Missionary Workouts” – Only a fitness facility in Utah County would think of creating a “missionary workout.” From its two locations, one in Springville and one in Provo, Rx Fit designs 20-minute do-anywhere subscription fitness workouts. Sent via weekly emails, missionary workouts don’t require gym equipment, yip-yipee class instructors, or worrying about wearing dirty P-Day clothes. Created for actual missionaries —because we are all brothers and sisters—these workouts are also available to gentiles. And best of all—they’re free! rxfit.health/index.php/missionary-workouts/

Comedy Clean Enough for Utah County (and the world), Dry Bar Comedy Club – Modern comedy tends to the dark side of dirty. But the jokes at Dry Bar Comedy Club are clean enough that you can bring your 10 kids. It turns out there was a huge hankering for PG comedy not just in Provo but everywhere. Well-produced YouTube videos are rivaling giants like Comedy Central in views (102,307,857 and counting) and Dry Bar has become a must-play venue for touring comedians who usually play blue but will clean up their material to play the club. Oh my heck! 295 W. Center St., Provo, drybarcomedy.com

Best Re-use. Plus, Pancakes, Tru Religion Pancake and Steakhouse – We wept, we wailed, we gnashed our teeth when the venerable Lamb’s restaurant, a Main Street fixture since it opened in 1919, was passed over by SLC restaurateurs and dismantled. What can we say but thank God for Tru Religion? The pancake and steakhouse opened its dark mahogany doors in Orem and revealed the classic booths (with hat racks!) tables, chairs, bars, doors and woodwork hails from the former Lamb’s Grill. 360 S. State St. Suite 158, Orem, trureligionpancakeandsteakhouse.com

Best Hip Family Sport, Ghost Long Boards – Skateboarding has not historically been considered a family sport, but neighbors and business partners Russ Warner and Brent Johnson are on a mission to challenge the stereotypes of skate culture. Their company is Ghost Long Boards. Located in Cedar Hills, it makes plexiglass longboards designed to get the whole family outside and active. 4240 W. Mesquite Way, Cedar Hills, 801-599-7447, ghostlongboard.com

 

Check out more of our Best of the Beehive winners here.

bestofthebeehivesouthernutah

Best of the Beehive – Southern Utah

By Best of the Beehive

Every year the list is different. We don’t do categories, we don’t fill in forms, we don’t count votes. We just pick our brains and everyone else’s for the coolest, newest and unexpected superlatives in the Beehive State. Every year we surprise ourselves and are delighted at the discoveries. You too will be surprised and delighted. And, no doubt, disgruntled. Because we left out one of your favorites. Let us know. 

Best Way to Explore Inner Demons, Red Mountain Resort’s Despacho Fire Ceremony – Okay, so you’ve been watching too many episodes of Sabrina the Teenage Witch and are contemplating worship of the Dark Lord. Yikes. Here’s where can you regain and discover the courage to cast off those inner demons for good. Get your sorry soul down to the Red Mountain Resort and join in a Fire Ceremony. Also, the resort’s heavenly spa amenities like a nature-inspired salt scrub and agave body wrap couldn’t hurt. 1275 Red Mountain Circle, Ivins, 435-673-4905, redmountainresort.com

Best Little-known Champion Sport Arena, The St. George Area Sports Commission – In 2017, Alan Francis captured his 22nd world title, cementing his reputation as the greatest horseshoe pitcher of all time. Francis is from St. George, and he has the advantage of one of the best home courts in the country—the largest (and newest) Horseshoe Pitching facility in the Western U.S. The 30-court complex is in J.C. Snow Park. 300 E. 900 South, St. George, stgeorgesports.com

Best Art Residency in a Ghost Town, Shamble, Cisco, Utah- Cisco really is a ghost town, a classic Western railroad relic. Eileen Muza, an artist and the only resident, lives in a Winnebago parked by the shambles near Canyonlands. She’s gradually restoring the place with found objects. And she’s offering it as an artist’s residency. The artists will be provided with a $500 stipend, a private outdoor kitchen, and studio space in an old Winnebago camper with skylights and a private deck. Check out eileenmuza.org

Best Restaurateur Relocation, Kathie Chadbourne Goes to Kanab – The beloved eccentric restaurateur who brought us Avenues Bistro and created the Avenues Bistro on Third, has moved her unbridled enthusiasm to Kanab. Kanab is becoming an interesting destination (see p. 50); part of it is Chadbourne’s Peekaboo Canyon Wood-fired Kitchen. Chadbourne’s new place is vegetarian, but cocktails and a cool patio provide their own spiritual umami. 233 W. Center St., Kanab, 435- 689-1959, peekabookitchen.com

Best Street Food Without a Street, Magnolia Street Food – It’s a food truck going nowhere. Parked in Boulder, Utah, the blue bus offers all kinds of locally sourced picnic foods—breakfast, sweet potato, picadillo, mushroom and all kinds of other yummies stuffed into burritos, plus sodas and sides. Eat at the picnic table or take it on the road. Anasazi State Park Museum, 460 N. Highway 12, Boulder, 801-643-3510, magnoliasstreetfood.com

St. George Pistachios – Who knew? The warm, high desert climate in Southern Utah is perfect for pistachio trees. The Red Rock Pistachio Orchards—20 acres of trees—are in Hurricane, just west of Zion National Park. Harvested, sun-dried, salted and roasted, the nuts are packaged and sold directly. rpistachios.com

For more of our Best of the Beehive winners click here. 

 

bestofthebeehiveparkcity

Best of the Beehive – Park City

By Best of the Beehive

Every year the list is different. We don’t do categories, we don’t fill in forms, we don’t count votes. We just pick our brains and everyone else’s for the coolest, newest and unexpected superlatives in the Beehive State. Every year we surprise ourselves and are delighted at the discoveries. You too will be surprised and delighted. And, no doubt, disgruntled. Because we left out one of your favorites. Let us know.

Most Scenic Ski Run, Stein’s Way at Deer Valley – Some skiers are in it for the steeps, the deeps and the thrills, but a lot of us are just here for the views. Stein’s Way traces its way down the ridge of Bald Mountain, overlooking the Jordanelle Reservoir and surrounding mountains. You’ll enjoy the immaculate grooming too. There’s no better place to get lost taking it all in. 2250 Deer Valley Dr, 435-649-1000, deervalley.com

Best Boot Fitter, Cole Sport Resort Center Park City Mountain – Ski boots can be either vice-like instruments of torture designed to give you frostbite or the single most important piece of equipment to help you ski better. The difference is in finding and crafting the right fit, and nobody does that better than Cole Sport. Their boot fitters are trusted and recommended by ski instructors and patrollers—you know, the people who spend all day every day in ski boots. Go where the pros go. 1385 Lowell Ave, 435-649-4600, colesport.com

Best Way to Stay Current on Beehive Film Culture, Park City Film Series Made in Utah – Park City has been tangentially associated with the film industry ever since Sundance came to town, but more homegrown talent and local projects hit the  screen each year. The Park City Film Series Made in Utah program puts on local showings of Utah-made films so you can stay up to date with what the Beehive state’s creatives put on the big screen. parkcityfilm.org

Best Parking Space for your Sundry Wellness Needs, Bonanza Drive in Prospector – Ditch your car in Prospector Square—there are numerous public lots off Bonanza Drive—and explore the bewildering mixture of new age and traditional wellness establishments populating the area. You can therapeutically freeze yourself at Cryo Lodge or warm yourself in a sensory deprivation float pod at Float Park City in the very same building! You’ll be walking distance from three different acupuncture facilities—Longevity Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine, Stillpoint Healing Center and Mountain Sage Natural Health and Acupuncture—and four different chiropractors—Phillips Chiropractic, Namaste Chiropractic, Park City Chiropractic and Chiropractic Works of Park City! Leave your peer-reviewed concerns at home and come seek your own path to wellness.

Best Recovery Breakfast After A Long Night, Biscuits and Gravy from Woodland Biscuit Company – Park City is as well known for its après scene as it is for its mountain-based adventures. Combine those good times with high elevations, however, and you’re in for some rough mornings. Nothing alleviates the ill-effects of irresponsible choices quite like biscuits and gravy from Woodland Biscuit Company. 2734 E State Hwy 35, Francis, 435-783-4202, woodlandbiscuitcompany.com

Best Mountainside Dinner Entree, Mushroom Stroganoff at Silver Star Cafe – Silver Star Cafe has elevated roots cuisine, a patio with inspiring mountain views and live music Thursday through Saturday evenings, but nothing tops eating their wild mushroom stroganoff with balsamic cipollini onions and house-made späetzle on a pleasant evening. It’s one of those rare instances in which the gluten-free, vegetarian option is the best on the menu, regardless of your dietary inclinations. 1825 Three Kings Dr., 435-655-3456, thesilverstarcafe.com

Best Artsy Bang for Your Buck, Kimball Art Center – The galleries lining Main Street have some gems to be sure, but the eye watering price tags attached to bland artwork destined for the vacuous interiors of mountain-contemporary palaces makes the Kimball Art Center all that much more important to Park City’s community. Where else can you see Warhol’s artwork free of charge in a podunk ski town? 1401 Kearns Blvd, 435-649-8882, kimballartcenter.org

Best Brunch Spot For Your Out-of-Town Big-City Friends, Harvest – Looking for a spot to take cosmopolitan visitors who are convinced Utah is some uncultured backwater? Harvest has the minimalist-chic atmosphere, elaborately-crafted coffee drinks and avocado-based menu options to make even the most cynical urbanites feel like they’re dining in Williamsburg. In all seriousness, it’s the best pre-lunch meal you’ll find near Main Street. 820 Park Ave, 435-604-0463, harvestparkcity.com

Soul Poles – Now that old-school, fluorescent one pieces have been commoditized and rendered un-ironic, the idiosyncratic skier needs a new way to stand out. Soul Poles let you customize your pointy sticks with personalized laser engraving, artistically painted bamboo shafts and colorful grips and baskets. Plus they’re made right here in Park City from super durable, sustainably-harvested bamboo. 1490 Munchkin Rd, 888-612-7685, soulpoles.com

Best Shear Indulgence For Her: Lunatic Fringe – With cutting edge cuts, coloring and styling, personalized, attentive service and a hipper-than-it-should-be vibe, Lunatic Fringe is the place to be for luxury hair care. Throw in a complimentary beverage, and what more could you ask for? 4343 UT-224, 435-658-0298, lunaticfringesalon.com

For Him: Billy’s Barber Shop – Come for the old-timey barber chairs, classic aesthetic and excellent, modern haircuts. Stay for the life-changing satisfaction of a hot shave. There’s nothing better. 509 Main St, 435-901-2475, billysbarbershop.com

Check out more of our Best of the Beehive winners here.