Skip to main content
Category

Dining Awards

2025 Best Restaurant: Handle

By Dining Awards, Eat & Drink

Chef Briar Handly, Handle. Photo by Adam Finkle.

19 Best Restaurants of 2025—Park City

When Chef Briar Handly emerged on the scene, our initial impression was: how does one human have so much energy? Handly has grown up and his creative inclinations have matured. He is still a child at heart and remains a chaotic force in his kitchen, possessing an untameable attention deficit disorder in his dizzying menu changes. However, what emerges to the table are powerful examples of his admitted perfectionism. Amid the ever-changing chaos of Park City restaurants, Handle remains a shining beacon on Main Street, despite (or perhaps as a result of) Handly’s inability to sit still, handleparkcity.com.


Each year, Salt Lake magazine presents its choices for the best restaurants in Utah. This year, we zoomed in on the individual neighborhoods and fast-growing parts of our state that are emerging as dining destinations. But no matter where they are located—be it a busy downtown block or a charming perch in Southern Utah—by our reckoning, these are the best restaurants in Utah.

Hungry for more? Find all our current and previous Dining Awards winners here! And while you’re here, why not subscribe and get six annual issues of Salt Lake magazine’s curated guide to the best of life in Utah.

2025 Best Restaurant: Table Twenty-Five

By Dining Awards, Eat & Drink

The 19 Best Restaurants of 2025—Northern Utah

Executive Chef James Bradford, Table Twenty-Five. Photo by Adam Finkle.

Effortlessly chic from the menu to the decor, Table Twenty-Five is emblematic of the “new” Ogden—where a fresh, young spirit meets the long-lived culture of the Historic 25th Street area. It’s the dream restaurant of two Copper Onion alumni, Table Twenty-Five owners Justin and Jaimie Buehler. Table Twenty-Five serves both the brunch and dinner crowds, and the tables do fill up during peak hours. Brunch starts with fresh beignets to share before deep-diving into the menu of morning/midday cocktails and entrees that feel classic but never boring (take the Turkish Eggs, for instance). For dinner, there’s no going wrong with housemade focaccia and one of the housemade pastas.


Each year, Salt Lake magazine presents its choices for the best restaurants in Utah. This year, we zoomed in on the individual neighborhoods and fast-growing parts of our state that are emerging as dining destinations. But no matter where they are located—be it a busy downtown block or a charming perch in Southern Utah—by our reckoning, these are the best restaurants in Utah.

Hungry for more? Find all our current and previous Dining Awards winners here! And while you’re here, why not subscribe and get six annual issues of Salt Lake magazine’s curated guide to the best of life in Utah.

Thank You to Our 2025 Dining Awards Sponsors

By Dining Awards

From the Editors of Salt Lake magazine: 

Each year, Salt Lake magazine presents its choices for the best restaurants in Utah. This year, we considered what we enjoyed on the table as well as where the tables of the best restaurants are. 

Utah, as you may have heard, is growing. Amid all that change, new neighborhoods and restaurant scenes emerged. Meanwhile, many of our winners have served to anchor their locales and continue to draw both loyal diners and new fans among the recent arrivals. 

In the 2025 Salt Lake Magazine Dining Awards appearing in our upcoming March issue, we zoomed in on the individual neighborhoods and fast-growing parts of our state that are emerging as dining destinations. But no matter where they are located—be it a busy downtown block or a charming perch in Southern Utah—by our reckoning, these are the best restaurants in Utah (as well as some new hotspots to watch). 

If you’re new in town, let this be your guide to the dining topography of our state. If you’ve been here a minute, let us remind you of greatness in plain sight. Either way, we are once again looking forward to sharing our annual gustatory exploration with you all! 

Meet our panelists for the 2025 Salt Lake Magazine Dining Awards:

Darby Doyle is a food, beverage, and outdoor writer who covers the culinary and natural wonders of the American West. She’s freelanced for a passel of print and digital publications, and her stories featuring Utah’s bar and restaurant scene have won multiple journalism awards. And we sure like her. 

Lydia Martinez is a freelance food, travel and culture writer. She has written for Salt Lake magazine, Suitcase Foodist and Utah Stories. She is a reluctantly stationary nomad who mostly travels to eat great food. She is a sucker for anything made with lots of butter and has been known to stay in bed until someone brings her coffee. 

Stuart is the founder, writer and wrangler at Gastronomic SLC; he’s also a former restaurant critic of more than five years, working for The Salt Lake Tribune. He has worked extensively with multiple local publications and helped consult for national TV shows. Stuart is an award-winning journalist who has covered the Utah dining scene for more than 15 years. He’s largely fueled by a critical obsession with rice, alliteration and the use of big words he doesn’t understand.

DSC_7976

Thank You For Joining Us At Our 2024 Dining Awards Ceremony

By Dining Awards, Eat & Drink

Thank You for Celebrating with Us! 

On February 26th, we celebrated Utah’s robust and growing dining community at our 2024 Dining Awards Ceremony. We’d like to take a moment to shout out all the attendees in raising a glass to our winners and enjoying a night of fun! 


no images were found

Photography by Natalie Simpson, Beehive Photo Video

A special thank you to all our sponsors, without them events like these would not be possible. 

  • Woodbine 
  • Toast 
  • Vinelore
  • Libation
  • Sugar House Distillery
  • Kings Peak Coffee Roasters 
  • Kiitos Brewing 

And a big congratulations to all our 2024 Dining Awards winners! 

Our 15 Best Restaurants of the Year are: 

Our Four Restaurants to Watch Are: 

  • Matteo Ristorante Italiano
  • Mint — Tapas and Sushi
  • Chef Jon Dubois of Pago
  • Chef Patrick LeBeau of Bambara
  • Kita at the Pendry 

Our Five Utah Classics Are: 

  • Valter’s Osteria
  • Cucina Wine Bar
  • The Copper Onion
  • Market Street Grill & Oyster Bar 
  • Silver Star Cafe 

The #RandomPink Award: Margo Provost and the Team at Log Haven

The Golden SpoonFor Hospitality: Drew and Angie Fuller of Oquirrh

The Blue Plate Award for Community Service: Lavanya Mahate of Saffron Valley

The Good Bread Award: Nick Fahs of Table X

The Spirit Award: Francis Fecteau of Libation, LLC

Photography by Adam Finkle


Hungry for more? Find all our current and previous Salt Lake magazine Dining Awards winners here! And while you’re here, why not subscribe and get six annual issues of Salt Lake magazine’s curated guide to the best of life in Utah.

UrbanHillFeature-e1709064092997

2024 Outstanding Restaurant of the Year: Urban Hill

By Dining Awards, Eat & Drink

Last year, we named Urban Hill one of our four restaurants to watch. The Salt Lake outpost of Park City’s Hearth & Hill announced its presence with authority when it opened in the Post District in 2023.

Now it’s an outstanding representation of what can happen when dedicated owners put their money where our mouths are. Owner Brooks Kirchheimer and his family have hired the best in the business, namely, Executive Chef Nick Zocco and a supporting cast of service standouts. The food on the plate is bold, the delivery is educated and efficient without being officious or pedantic and the wine glasses are always full of selections from a daring list. Awards panelist Stuart Melling summed up our thoughts. “Everything they do is so high-end and thoughtful,” he says. “They actually pay their staff a living wage that translates into service quality. Every time I go, I inevitably have some weird question for the server like, ‘Is this preserved lemon in the jus?’ and they ALWAYS know the answer. I have yet to stump them.” 

510 S. 300 West, SLC  |  urban-hill.com


Read our first impressions of Urban Hill from 2023!

Hungry for more? Find all our current and previous Dining Awards winners here! And while you’re here, why not subscribe and get six annual issues of Salt Lake magazine’s curated guide to the best of life in Utah.

SLMMA24_Online-Story

Salt Lake Magazine’s 2024 Dining Awards

By Dining Awards, Eat & Drink

It’s the Eternal Question. “Where Should We Eat?” It’s a query that we ask ourselves as hunger sets in. It’s a question that couples and families text message around wildly as the dinner hour approaches. It’s a question that your out-of-town guests prod you with before arrival (but too late to make a reservation). The answer is often dull, “the usual spot” or “dunno, pizza?” Let’s remedy that. Eating out is about more than sustenance. It’s about company, friends and someone else doing the dishes. Each year, Salt Lake magazine gazes upon the dining landscape and presents its choices for our Dining Awards issue. These are experiences that will enliven your answers to the Eternal Question. They will challenge your palate with thoughtful and local solutions to the riddle. So without further fuss, we present our 15 Best Restaurants of 2024, including our Outstanding Restaurant of the Year, a collection of locales that are such standards that we name them Utah Classics, four restaurants to watch and five superlative standouts in the industry.  

So. Where should we eat? The answers are within.

Click on the images below to learn more about our 2024 winners

Salt Lake magazine Dining Awards

Salt Lake magazine Dining Awards

Salt Lake magazine Dining Awards

Salt Lake magazine Dining Awards

Salt Lake magazine Dining Awards

Salt Lake magazine Dining Awards

Salt Lake magazine Dining Awards

Salt Lake magazine Dining Awards

Salt Lake magazine Dining Awards

Salt Lake magazine Dining Awards

Meet the Salt Lake magazine Dining Awards Panel

Jennifer Burns

Jennifer is a freelance food and beverage writer and content creator. She primarily works with food brands and restaurants and has hosted over 3000 TV cooking and entertainment segments.

Darby Doyle

Darby Doyle is a food, beverage, and outdoor writer who covers the culinary and natural wonders of the American West.

Lydia Martinez

Lydia is a freelance food, travel and culture writer. She writes for Salt Lake magazine, Suitcase Foodist and Utah Stories.

Stuart Melling

Stuart is an award-winning journalist who has covered the Utah dining scene for 15 years. He’s also the founder, writer and wrangler at Gastronomic SLC and a former restaurant critic of more than five years, working for The Salt Lake Tribune.

Side Dishes

Ones to Watch

Often a new restaurant comes on the scene with a splash that catches our attention but, hey, it’s a hard biz at any time, much less at this time. But these five newcomers raised our eyebrows and we’re excited to see what happens next.

  • Matteo Ristorante Italiano
  • Mint – Tapas and Sushi
  • Chef Jon Dubois of Pago
  • Chef Patrick LeBeau of Bambara
  • Kita at the Pendry

Meet the five hot new spots on our radar.

Above and Beyond

Each year we pass out a collection of special awards for individuals and organizations who, well, have done something special, superlative even. (And, also, just because we can.)

  • The #RandomPink Award: Margo Provost and the Team at Log Haven
  • The Golden Spoon For Hospitality: Drew and Angie Fuller of Oquirrh
  • The Blue Plate Award for Community Service: Lavanya Mahate of Saffron Valley
  • The Good Bread Award: Nick Fahs of Table X
  • The Spirit Award: Francis Fecteau of Libation, LLC

Utah Classics

Remind yourself of restaurants that are so good, they never went away.

  • Valter’s Osteria
  • Cucina Wine Bar
  • The Copper Onion
  • Market Street Grill & Oyster Bar
  • Silver Star Cafe

Read more about these Utah Classics.


Hungry for more? Find all our current and previous Salt Lake magazine Dining Awards winners here! And while you’re here, why not subscribe and get six annual issues of Salt Lake magazine’s curated guide to the best of life in Utah.

SLMMA24_Online-Story

2024 Dining Awards: Utah Classics and Restaurants to Watch

By Dining Awards, Eat & Drink

It’s the Eternal Question. “Where Should We Eat?” It’s a query that we ask ourselves as hunger sets in. It’s a question that couples and families text message around wildly as the dinner hour approaches. It’s a question that your out-of-town guests prod you with before arrival (but too late to make a reservation). The answer is often dull, “the usual spot” or “dunno, pizza?” Let’s remedy that. Eating out is about more than sustenance. It’s about company, friends and someone else doing the dishes. Each year, Salt Lake magazine gazes upon the dining landscape and presents its choices for the Best Restaurants in Utah. These are experiences that will enliven your answers to the Eternal Question. They will challenge your palate with thoughtful and local solutions to the riddle.

Here, we offer sidedishes of Utah Classics and new restaurants we’re keeping our eye on.

Ones to Watch

Five hot new spots on our radar

Often a new restaurant comes on the scene with a splash that catches our attention but, hey, it’s a hard biz at any time, much less at this time. But these five newcomers raised our eyebrows and we’re excited to see what happens next

Matteo Ristorante Italiano

439 E. 900 South, SLC
matteoslc.com

Mint – Tapas and Sushi

2121 S. McClelland St., SLC
mintsushiut.com

Chef Jon Dubois of Pago

pagoslc.com

Chef Patrick LeBeau of Bambara

202 S. Main St., SLC
bambara-slc.com

Kita at the Pendry

2417 W. High Mountain Rd., Park City
pendry.com/park-city

Utah Classics

Remind yourself of restaurants that are so good, they never went away

Valter’s Osteria

Valter’s Osteria, the namesake of the dearly departed Valter Nassi, remains a testament to Valter’s hospitality.

Cucina Wine Bar

This is the spot where the coffee service is busy every morning and the wine pairing dinners are at night. It’s also a reliable deli and a true neighborhood spot beloved by its Avenues neighbors. 

The Copper Onion

It’s hard to imagine but The Copper Onion has been around since 2010. Chef Ryan Lowder’s first outpost on his way to building a food empire has never not been good. And yes, the Stroganoff will always be on the menu. 

Market Street Grill & Oyster Bar

Market Street Grill & Oyster Bar was perhaps singlehandedly the dining spot that taught Utahn’s that there was more to life than burgers and fries. We’ll bet you haven’t been there for a while, it’s lost none of its charm and the chowder is still delicious. 

Silver Star Cafe 

Lisa and Jeff Ward are the epitome of hosts. And their restaurant at Park City’s Silver Star Base Area isn’t exactly on the well-beaten paths of Utah’s ski town. Fine by us, it is often the most compelling answer to the question: Where should
we eat in Park City? 


Hungry for more? Find all our current and previous Dining Awards winners here! And while you’re here, why not subscribe and get six annual issues of Salt Lake magazine’s curated guide to the best of life in Utah.

LaCevicheriaFeature

2024 Best Restaurant: La Cevicheria

By Dining Awards, Eat & Drink

Photograph from our On The Table: La Cevicheria article.

La Cevicheria opened in 2023, on the continuingly beleaguered downtown block of 200 South, in the space formerly occupied by the small chain Cancun Cafe. Its owner and chef, Manuel Ortega,  made major renovations and now the building is impossible to miss, with giant blue octopus tentacles splayed on its exterior. The inside is a Mexican playa vacation meets an Insta-worthy Malibu Barbie home (with fish scales). Vibe aside, what comes out of the kitchen has our attention. “No one in the city is doing ceviche like this Chef,” says panelist Lydia Martinez. Ortega offers an innovative approach to the dish he brings from the coastal traditions of Mexico, including a vegetarian option (somehow). The menu offers a rotating and challenging menu from basic to advanced (think: from shrimp to octopus). You’ll also find traditional agua chile, another version of marinated seafood, along with a self-proclaimed “hangover cure” with shrimp, lime juice, and Maggi seasoning mixed with a chiltepin sauce.

123 E. 200 South, Salt Lake City | lacevicheriautah.com


Hungry for more? Find all our current and previous Dining Awards winners here! And while you’re here, why not subscribe and get six annual issues of Salt Lake magazine’s curated guide to the best of life in Utah.

ManolisFeature-e1709074123610

2024 Best Restaurant: Manoli’s

By Dining Awards, Eat & Drink

In January, a pipe broke above Manoli and Katrina Katsanevas’ restaurant on 900 South, a setback that could have shuttered the place. Instead, they took a hiatus and completely retooled, adding enclosed patio space, more seating an expanded bar and storage for their fabulous all-Greek natural wine selection “I am so glad they were able to phoenix from the ashes,” says panelist Lydia Martinez. Reopening in July, Manoli’s didn’t lose a step. The food—traditional Greek dishes with presentation and influence from France, Spain and Italy—is a flavorful tour of Mediterranean cuisine. Manoli and Katrina lead a crew of excellent servers and cooks by example. Most nights you’ll find them on the line or working the front of the house. 

402 E. Harvey Milk Blvd., SLC | manolison9th.com


Hungry for more? Find all our current and previous Dining Awards winners here! And while you’re here, why not subscribe and get six annual issues of Salt Lake magazine’s curated guide to the best of life in Utah.

LaCasaDelTamalFeature

2024 Best Restaurant: La Casa del Tamal

By Dining Awards, Eat & Drink

Cristina Olvera immigrated to Utah in 1999 from Hidalgo, Mexico. A single mother to five children, she always had multiple jobs. And on the side, she would make tamales out of her kitchen at home, explains daughter Salma.  “My mom was a hard worker making tamales on the weekends to support us. As we got a little older, we helped her with whatever we could. She would have us cut cheese or clean corn husks.” Cristina would still make tamales overnight and then, at 7 a.m., deliver them from Tooele to Park City and all around the Salt Lake Valley. As her reputation grew, clients started asking to cater and she began catering quinceañeras and weddings. After moving into a tiny commercial kitchen space, Salma’s older sister started promoting the business on social media platforms right at the start of COVID. And business took off. La Casa del Tamal was born. 

La Casa del Tamal

2843 S. 5600 West, West Valley City  |  lacasadeltamalutah.com


We featured the Olvera’s holiday tamale tradition in our 2023 Nov/Issue! Read it here.

Hungry for more? Find all our current and previous Dining Awards winners here! And while you’re here, why not subscribe and get six annual issues of Salt Lake magazine’s curated guide to the best of life in Utah.