Skip to main content
Category

Eat & Drink

Discover Salt Lake Magazine’s Utah Restaurant Coverage. Here you’ll find reviews of the Best Utah Restaurants in Salt Lake City, along the Wasatch Front and Back, and around Utah to help you discover amazing Dining and Nightlife Experiences at Utah Restaurants. And check out our Dining Guide, for an online collection of reviews and information about Utah Restaurants from the editors of Salt Lake Magazine. Each year Salt Lake Magazine presents its coveted list of the Best Restaurants in Utah in the Salt Lake Magazine Dining Awards. View our archive of winners and discover the Best Dining in Utah.

Salt Lake Magazine

2014 Dining Awards

By Dining Awards

The best restaurants never rest on their bay leaves. They don’t stay the same; they get better. Salt Lake magazine’s list of Dining Award winners this year includes many familiar names, but the menus have changed, the service has improved, the décor is updated. In short, they’re better than ever. Until next year. (Click here for a quicker list of the Dining Awards winners, and here for the 2014 Dining Awards Readers’ Choice winners.)

Best Restaurant: Salt Lake City
Pago
878 S. 900 East, SLC, 801-532-0777

Scott Evans’ Pago has been great from its get-go, back in 2009. But his artisanal-based, farm-to-table ethos and high standards inadvertently made the restaurant a quasi training ground for high-profile–higher, literally–resort restaurants. Phelix Gardner’s steadiness in the executive chef position for the past few years finally gave Pago the continuity that allows it to soar to the top and stay there. When it opened, Pago was cutting-edge; now it’s on its way to becoming a classic, with a menu that features tried-and-trues, like the nationally famous Pago Burger with pickled onions, to the unexpectedly edgy, including a carrot tasting which features the common vegetable five ways–raw, a confit, pickle, chips and a luxurious carrot mascarpone.

Red Carpet Interview

Best Restaurant: Park City
J&G Grill
2300 Deer Valley Dr. East, Park City, 435-940-5760

J&G Grill at the St. Regis Deer Valley has always been a top-tier restaurant–it just hadn’t seemed like part of the Utah scene. It’s named after a chef who’s rarely in the kitchen and, at first, it catered more to visitors than residents. But the restaurant’s chef de cuisine, Shane Baird, makes a point of exploring Utah foods and embracing locals. Besides the often-Asian-tinged constructs that come out of the kitchen–sautéed snapper with spaghetti squash in soy-yuzu broth–diners can choose from a simple list of deluxe proteins like Shetland salmon, Paisley Farms pork or Clark’s Farm lamb and luxurious sides. Despite its star-struck name and glam digs, J&G has become a Utahn. One of the best Utahns.

Red Carpet Interview

Best Restaurant: Northern Utah
Hearth on 25th
195 Historic 25th Street, 2nd Floor (#6), Ogden, 801-399-0088

This quirky upstairs restaurant which has been introducing Ogdenites to fine flavors for years has reinvented itself as Hearth. The centerpiece is a wood-fired oven, and lots of the menu is inspired by that–the pizzas, the flatbreads and the hearth breads. The menu also features several elk dishes, including medallions, raspberry red, the flavor deepened by a wild mushroom risotto. And locally grown yak. Even if you don’t dessert, try the “chocolate Italian souffle.” It was not, as we had feared, just another molten chocolate cake, though it wasn’t really a souffle, either. It came in a ramekin and whatever you called it, it was the essence of barely sweetened dark warm chocolate.

Red Carpet Interview

Best Restaurant: Central Utah
Black Sheep Cafe
19 N. University Ave., Provo, 801-607-2485

How cool for a restaurant to illuminate one of Utah’s native foodways. Black Sheep chef Mark Daniel Mason brings a sense of haute cuisine to the heritage flavors of Navajo, Pueblo and Hopi cooking. The result is hearty, humble food with an earthy elegance unique among local restaurants: Indian “three sisters”–beans, corn and squash-–meet Italian bruschetta. The classic wedge gets some soul from cotija cheese and chipotle. Green chili stew and posole are given serious kitchen consideration, balanced but hearty, rich but not greasy. Even fry bread becomes a star made with Blue Bird flour.

Red Carpet Interview


Pago, J&G Grill, Hearth on 25th, Black Sheep Cafe

Best Discovery
Del Mar al Lago
310 Bugatti Dr., SLC, 801-467-2890

Del Mar al Lago was everyone’s favorite secret until this year. Now it’s just everyone’s favorite. The modest restaurant has been given a boost in style and scope, making dining here a comfortably exotic experience. Our ethnic food-scape is pretty sparse so Peruvian is a fairly novel cuisine to most Utahns, but the savory and citrusy variations of cebicha, or ceviche—not to mention the pisco sours—have won the hearts and minds of Utah diners, even to the point of embracing skewered beef heart. Don’t be afraid, timid diners: Plenty of rice and pasta dishes are on the menu, along with fried foods and even a Peruvian version of paella.

Red Carpet Interview

Best Wine List
BTG Wine Bar
63 W. 100 South, SLC, 801-359-2814

BTG stands for “By the Glass” and while some may consider this restaurant a trifle young to win a big award, the tenacity with which Fred Moessinger (owner of Caffe Molise next door) pursued the audacious-in-Utah idea of a true wine bar deserves kudos. There are craft cocktails and specialty beer, and you can order food from Caffe Molise, but the pieces des resistances are the more than 50 wines by the glass. You can order a tasting portion or a full glass, allowing you to sample vintages you might not be inclined to buy by the bottle.

Red Carpet Interview

Community Service Award
Steven Rosenberg, Liberty Heights Fresh
1290 S. 1100 East, SLC, 801-583-7374

Steve Rosenberg does our city a great service just by being in business. He opened Liberty Heights Fresh 21 years ago, before there was such a thing as a Certified Cheese Expert, before local food became a buzzword. In other words, Rosenberg gambled on Salt Lakers’ sense of taste. Now, besides the stellar cheese selection and shelf goods, Liberty Heights caters, makes terrific sandwiches and offers its own CSA. Plus Rosenberg is at pretty much every food consciousness-raising event, from Feast of Five Senses to the Downtown Farmers Market. The list of local businesses he supports goes on and on.

Red Carpet Interview

Best New Restaurant
Best Mexican Restaurant
Alamexo
268 S. State Street, SLC, 801-779-4747

Matthew Lake’s four-day transformation of Zy into Alamexo was one of the neatest tricks performed this year and one of the smartest moves. Don’t be dubious about a gringo in a Mexican kitchen: Lake’s a thorough pro and his previous experience running Besito and Rosa Mexicana in New York and working with Southwest culinary legend Mark Miller has given him a golden palate and a passion for South of the Border flavors that shows on the plate at Alamexo. His salsas–the backbone of Mexican cuisine–are ever-changing and dependably addictive, as good salsa should be. Lake pulls flavors from many regions of Mexico; classics like enchiladas Suizas–roast chicken seasoned with epazote, baked in tomatillo cream and sprinkled with cilantro–and flautas are as carefully rendered as more ambitious creations like slow cooked salmon with crispy bananas, pineapple pico de gallo and Oaxacan mole manchamanteles. If you believe all Mexican food should cost less than $10 a plate, please note: twenty bucks is not too much to pay for entrees like this.

Red Carpet Interview


Del Mar al Lago, BTG Wine Bar, Steven Rosenberg of Liberty Heights Fresh, Alamexo

Best Chinese
J. Wong’s Asian Bistro
163 W. 200 South, SLC, 801-350-0888

In Utah, Chinese food, like Mexican food and many other non-white culinary traditions, suffers from a perception that it is supposed to be cheap and unlovely. The Wong family’s insistence on elegance in the dining room and on the plate flies delightfully in the face of this expectation. With a grace, serenity and eagerness to serve that many more (and less!) expensive restaurants would do well to emulate, J. Wong’s staff makes a meal the relaxing, sustaining experience it should be. Plus, the potstickers are terrific. The Wong brothers’ frequent trips to Taiwan and Hong Kong mean the menu benefits from authentic flavors married to American proportions–like the chef’s special filet mignon with Thai chili, garlic and oyster sauce. A new sommelier means the wine and beer lists are receiving the same attention as the food. And bonus: The Wongs’ twin heritage of Thai and Chinese mean that the pad Thai here might be the best in town, even though the menu stresses Chinese dishes.

Best Mediterranean
Layla
4751 S. Holladay Blvd., SLC, 801-272-9111

Confetti’s was a family-run Holladay institution for 16 years. Like most restaurants, it ran its course, but instead of closing, the Tadros family put their considerable talents together and reinvented the family business. Layla, a Mediterranean grill and mezze cafe, is based on the Tadros’ Lebanese/Egyptian heritage, and since it opened, the food at the redecorated, re-imagined restaurant has gotten better and better. Start with the merguez-style sausages. Because they’re ridiculously good and because they represent the care the Tadros family is putting into the food at Layla. The recipe and spices come from an old family recipe and the lamb comes from Morgan Valley. Layla features a variety of Middle Eastern dishes–you could call this “Mediterranean Rim” cuisine–hummus, moussaka, kabobs, shawarma. Layla is once again the heart of Holladay.

Red Carpet Interview

Best Indian
Saffron Valley East India Cafe
26 E. Street, SLC, 801-203-3325

Lavanya Mahate’s Saffron Valley edges in front because of its breadth. Sometimes it can be a mistake for one kitchen to attempt too much, and Saffron Valley touches on a whole subcontinent of cuisine, from Indian street food to southern dhosas to Chino-Indian dishes. The remarkable thing: It’s all good. Add to that Mahate’s sense of occasion, her emphasis on food as celebration—restaurant events this year included a Diwali dinner, a kebab festival, the annual Indian street food festival—and you have a star. Even the lunch buffet is special, never featuring the same lineup twice. Explore the map of food here, but if you want to stick with the familiar, this may be the best tandoor in town.

Red Carpet Interview

Best Japanese
Naked Fish
67 W. 100 South, SLC, 801-595-8888

Naked Fish has already raised the bar beyond other Japanese restaurants for kushiyaki, sushi and kobe; investing in new equipment and more chefs and painstakingly procuring absolutely pristine products. Proving the best can always get better, owner Johnny Kwon upped the standards again, introducing great ramen at lunch, inviting star chef Viet Pham to play in the Naked Kitchen and bringing in Certified Sommelier Christian Frech as well as a sake sommelier. The result is innovation within tradition, one of the hardest restaurant tricks to pull off. For example, the jidori chicken breast with roasted potatoes and a vanilla-honey teriyaki sounds like it belongs on a PF Chang menu, but its subtle balance is thoroughly Japanese and suited for the American appetite.

Red Carpet Interview


J. Wong’s Asian Bistro, Layla, Saffron Valley East India Cafe, Naked Fish

Best Italian
Fresco Italian Cafe
1513 S. 15th East, SLC, 801-486-1300

Even great restaurants wax and wane according to the energy and imagination of the chef and the interest and teamwork of the staff. Once again, Fresco is riding high. In the kitchen, Logan Crews is layering flavors, temperatures and textures, and turning out food infused with Italian soul. For example: a simple soup featuring the veg of the year comes to the table as a white bowl centered with a cauliflower floret and a scoop of cool goat cheese. Your server pours the creamy white lentil and cauliflower soup around the vegetable. The result is a white-on-white interplay of crunchy vegetable, rich broth and cool cheese, surprisingly complex and perfectly orchestrated.

Red Carpet Interview

Best Comfort Food
Silver Star Cafe
1825 Three Kings Dr., Park City, 435-655-3456

Jeff and Lisa Ward’s mountain cafe is so high you may need a blanket if you’re dining outside in the summertime. Not to worry–they’ll bring you one. These hands-on owners go to extra lengths to make sure Silver Star is welcoming and cozy and as a result, the cafe is one of the most popular spots in Park City, especially when there’s live music on the patio. Meanwhile, David Bible follows through in the kitchen with hearty pork osso buco, braised shortribs and wood-fired pizza. One of the single best dishes ever was the speck and fig pizza with Snowy Mountain Strawberry Peak cheese, a special on the menu this summer.

Red Carpet Interview

Best Breakfast
Caffe Niche
779 E. 300 South, SLC, 801-433-3380

Urban and mellow aren’t terms that usually marry happily, but Caffe Niche manages to make their bistro both. This corner cafe shines especially at breakfast, when the emphasis is on what we all know we like for breakfast, because morning is no time for experiments. So we’re not talking special-occasion strata concoctions, or ginormous brunch extravaganzas–we’re talking about eggs and bacon, toast and muffins. But chef-owner Ethan Lappe gets his eggs from Tifie Ranch, the English muffins are housemade and the salmon with the bagel is house-smoked. Everyday excellence is the rule and that’s how we should all start the day.

Red Carpet Interview

Best Lunch
Feldman’s Deli 
2005 E. 2700 South, SLC, 801-906-0369

Sandwiches are the basis of lunch, and delis are the sandwich source. Foodies have long bewailed the absence of a proper Jewish deli in SLC, but the reason there hasn’t been one is obvious: As of 2008, only about .5 percent of Utah’s population was Jewish. So Feldman’s is good news. Mike and Janet Feldman know their knish–and their matzoh ball soup. The only disappointment is the midday opening time. So, no morning bagels. That’s why it’s getting the Best Lunch award.

Red Carpet Interview


Fresco Italian Cafe, Silver Star Cafe, Caffe Niche, Feldman’s Deli

Best Bakery
Eva’s Bakery
155 S. Main St., SLC, 801-355-3942

Once again, we have a memory of a mother to thank for this bakery. In this case, Charlie Coomb’s great-grandmother, Eva, is immortalized “with love and butter.” But let’s be clear: Baking bread and making pastry are two distinctly different enterprises. Here in Utah, we’re not so picky as a rule, and the staff of life and the sweet stuff often come from the same hands. Not at Eva. The baker and the pastry chef rule their domains, one with an appropriately heavier hand than the other. Breads here, made with local flour, are crusty without, moist within and don’t last long, as befits good bread. Be prepared for French toast. Pastries, on the other hand, are light and flaky, ephemeral. Time your stop for lunchtime, so you can have a bowl of onion soup before taking your loaves and tarts.

Best Neighborhood Restaurant
Avenues Bistro on Third 
564 E. Third Avenue, SLC, 801-831-5409

A series of peripatetic chefs, a slightly bohemian staff and management, a name no one can get right and on-going zoning struggles over a patio and bar haven’t dimmed neighborhood enthusiasm for this tiny and undeniably charming cafe. Owner Kathie Chadbourne revels in the local, and approaches her businesses in an unorthodox fashion, but part of the charm at Avenues Bistro is its eccentricity. For example, the controversial postage-stamp speakeasy and the original tiles under the bar and the menu, which has changed so often since the bistro’s opening that it’s hard to go back for favorites. Never mind, you’ll find a new one.

Red Carpet Interview

Salt Lake magazine’s Dining Awards Hall of Fame

Six years ago, we instituted the Salt Lake magazine Dining Hall of Fame to honor restaurants that not only achieved excellence but maintained it. These are places that set—and then re-set—the bar for Utah cuisine. They serve as an example of the level of quality other places should strive for. This year, we asked several Hall of Fame restaurants to serve as the panel of judges for the Dining Awards. Thanks to Red Iguana, Squatters Pub Brewery, Log Haven and Aristo’s.

2008
Red Iguana
736 W. North Temple, Salt Lake City, 801-322-1489
866 W. South Temple, Salt Lake City, 801-214-6050
Red Carpet Interview

Mazza
1515 S. 1500 East, Salt Lake City, 801-484-9259
912 E. 900 South, Salt Lake City, 801-521-4572
Red Carpet Interview

Cucina Toscana
300 W. Broadway, Salt Lake City, 801-328-3463

2009
Log Haven
6451 E. Millcreek Canyon Road, Salt Lake City, 801-272-8255
Red Carpet Interview

2010
Takashi
18 W. Market St., Salt Lake City, 801-519-9595

2011
Squatters
147 W. Broadway, Salt Lake City, 801-363-2739
1900 Park Avenue, Park City, 435-649-9868
Red Carpet Interview

2013
Aristo’s
224 S.1300 East, Salt Lake City, 801-581-0888

Hell’s Backbone Grill
20 N. Highway 12, Boulder, 435-335-7464
Red Carpet Interview

Photos by Adam Finkle

2014 Dining Awards Winners

By Dining Awards

 


Read more about our award winners in the March/April issue of Salt Lake magazine. Print this out and keep it in your wallet for future reference the old school way, or visit our online dining guide.

Click here to see the 2014 Dining Awards Readers’ Choice winners.

Click here to see the full article on 2014 Dining Awards winners running in our March/April 2014 issue.

2014 Dining Awards Winners

Best Restaurant: Salt Lake City
Pago
878 S. 900 East, SLC, 801-532-0777
Red Carpet Interview

Best Restaurant: Park City
J&G Grill
2300 Deer Valley Dr. East, Park City, 435-940-5760
Red Carpet Interview

Best Restaurant: Ogden/Northern Utah
Hearth on 25th
195 Historic 25th Street, 2nd Floor (#6), Ogden, 801-399-0088
Red Carpet Interview

Best Restaurant: Provo/Central Utah
Black Sheep
19 N. University Ave., Provo, 801-607-2485
Red Carpet Interview

Best Discovery
Del Mar al Lago
310 Bugatti Dr., SLC, 801-467-2890
Red Carpet Interview

Best Wine List
BTG
63 W. 100 South, SLC, 801-359-2814
Red Carpet Interview

Community Service Award
Steven Rosenberg, Liberty Heights Fresh
1290 S. 1100 East, SLC, 801-583-7374
Red Carpet Interview

Best New Restaurant/Best Mexican Restaurant
Alamexo
268 S. State Street, SLC, 801-779-4747
Red Carpet Interview

Best Chinese
J. Wong’s Asian Bistro
163 W. 200 South, SLC, 801-350-0888

Best Mediterranean
Layla
4751 S. Holladay Blvd., SLC, 801-272-9111
Red Carpet Interview

Best Italian
Fresco Italian Cafe
1513 S. 1500 East, SLC, 801-486-1300
Red Carpet Interview

Best Indian
Saffron Valley East India Cafe
26 E. Street, SLC, 801-203-3325
Red Carpet Interview

Best Comfort Food
Silver Star Cafe
1825 Three Kings Dr., Park City, 435-655-3456
Red Carpet Interview

Best Breakfast
Caffe Niche
779 E. 300 South, SLC, 801-433-3380
Red Carpet Interview

Best Japanese
Naked Fish Japanese Bistro
67 W. 100 South, SLC, 801-595-8888
Red Carpet Interview

Best Lunch
Feldman’s Deli
2005 E. 2700 South, SLC, 801-906-0369
Red Carpet Interview

Best Bakery
Eva’s Bakery
155 S. Main St., SLC, 801-355-3942

Best Neighborhood
Avenues Bistro on Third
564 E. Third Avenue, SLC, 801-831-5409
Red Carpet Interview

Hall of Fame

Cucina Toscana (2008)
307 W. Pierpont Ave., SLC, 801-328-3463

Mazza (2008)
1515 S. 1500 East, SLC, 801-484-9259
912 E. 900 South, SLC, 801-521-4572
Red Carpet Interview

Red Iguana (2008)
736 W. North Temple, SLC, 801-322-1489
866 W. South Temple, SLC, 801-214-6050
Red Carpet Interview

Log Haven (2009)
6451 E. Millcreek Canyon Road, SLC, 801-272-8255
Red Carpet Interview

Takashi (2010)
18 W. Market St., SLC, 801-519-9595

Squatters (2011)
147 W. Broadway, SLC, 801-363-2739
776 N. Terminal Dr., SLC, 801-328-2329
Red Carpet Interview

Aristo’s (2013)
224 S. 1300 East, SLC, 801-581-0888

Hell’s Backbone Grill (2013)
20 N. Highway 12, Boulder, 435-335-7464
Red Carpet Interview

Click here to see the 2015 Dining Awards winners.

2014 Dining Awards Winners

By Dining Awards

 


Read more about our award winners in the March/April issue of Salt Lake magazine. Print this out and keep it in your wallet for future reference the old school way, or visit our online dining guide.

Click here to see the 2014 Dining Awards Readers’ Choice winners.

Click here to see the full article on 2014 Dining Awards winners running in our March/April 2014 issue.

2014 Dining Awards Winners

Best Restaurant: Salt Lake City
Pago
878 S. 900 East, SLC, 801-532-0777
Red Carpet Interview

Best Restaurant: Park City
J&G Grill
2300 Deer Valley Dr. East, Park City, 435-940-5760
Red Carpet Interview

Best Restaurant: Ogden/Northern Utah
Hearth on 25th
195 Historic 25th Street, 2nd Floor (#6), Ogden, 801-399-0088
Red Carpet Interview

Best Restaurant: Provo/Central Utah
Black Sheep
19 N. University Ave., Provo, 801-607-2485
Red Carpet Interview

Best Discovery
Del Mar al Lago
310 Bugatti Dr., SLC, 801-467-2890
Red Carpet Interview

Best Wine List
BTG
63 W. 100 South, SLC, 801-359-2814
Red Carpet Interview

Community Service Award
Steven Rosenberg, Liberty Heights Fresh
1290 S. 1100 East, SLC, 801-583-7374
Red Carpet Interview

Best New Restaurant/Best Mexican Restaurant
Alamexo
268 S. State Street, SLC, 801-779-4747
Red Carpet Interview

Best Chinese
J. Wong’s Asian Bistro
163 W. 200 South, SLC, 801-350-0888

Best Mediterranean
Layla
4751 S. Holladay Blvd., SLC, 801-272-9111
Red Carpet Interview

Best Italian
Fresco Italian Cafe
1513 S. 1500 East, SLC, 801-486-1300
Red Carpet Interview

Best Indian
Saffron Valley East India Cafe
26 E. Street, SLC, 801-203-3325
Red Carpet Interview

Best Comfort Food
Silver Star Cafe
1825 Three Kings Dr., Park City, 435-655-3456
Red Carpet Interview

Best Breakfast
Caffe Niche
779 E. 300 South, SLC, 801-433-3380
Red Carpet Interview

Best Japanese
Naked Fish Japanese Bistro
67 W. 100 South, SLC, 801-595-8888
Red Carpet Interview

Best Lunch
Feldman’s Deli
2005 E. 2700 South, SLC, 801-906-0369
Red Carpet Interview

Best Bakery
Eva’s Bakery
155 S. Main St., SLC, 801-355-3942

Best Neighborhood
Avenues Bistro on Third
564 E. Third Avenue, SLC, 801-831-5409
Red Carpet Interview

Hall of Fame

Cucina Toscana (2008)
307 W. Pierpont Ave., SLC, 801-328-3463

Mazza (2008)
1515 S. 1500 East, SLC, 801-484-9259
912 E. 900 South, SLC, 801-521-4572
Red Carpet Interview

Red Iguana (2008)
736 W. North Temple, SLC, 801-322-1489
866 W. South Temple, SLC, 801-214-6050
Red Carpet Interview

Log Haven (2009)
6451 E. Millcreek Canyon Road, SLC, 801-272-8255
Red Carpet Interview

Takashi (2010)
18 W. Market St., SLC, 801-519-9595

Squatters (2011)
147 W. Broadway, SLC, 801-363-2739
776 N. Terminal Dr., SLC, 801-328-2329
Red Carpet Interview

Aristo’s (2013)
224 S. 1300 East, SLC, 801-581-0888

Hell’s Backbone Grill (2013)
20 N. Highway 12, Boulder, 435-335-7464
Red Carpet Interview

Click here to see the 2015 Dining Awards winners.

2014 Dining Awards Readers’ Choice Winners

By Dining Awards

We always want to know what our readers think, and after tallying more than one thousand votes, it’s clear they have very good taste. (Click here to see the 2014 Dining Awards winners chosen by our panel.)

Best Restaurant: SLC
Pallet
237 S. 400 West, SLC, 801-935-4431

Best Restaurant: PC
Silver Star Café
1825 Three Kings Dr., Park City, 435-655-3456

Best Restaurant: Provo/Central Utah
Communal
102 N. University Ave., Provo, 801-373-8000

Best Restaurant: Ogden/Northern Utah
Plates & Palates
390 N. 500 West, Bountiful, 801-292-2425

Best Restaurant: Moab/Southeastern Utah
Hell’s Backbone Grill
20 N. Highway 12, Boulder, 435-335-7464

Best Restaurant: St. George/Southwestern Utah (tie)
The Bear Paw
75 N. Main St., St. George, 435-634-0126

The Painted Pony
2 W. St. George Blvd, St. George, 435-634-1700

Best New Restaurant
Pallet
237 S. 400 West, SLC, 801-935-4431

(Note to readers: Pallet won this award last year and is not a new restaurant. Second place by a close margin was Alamexo.)

Best Japanese
Takashi
18 W. Market St., SLC, 801-519-9595

Best Lunch
Silver Star Café
1825 Three Kings Dr., Park City, 435-655-3456

Best Southeast Asian
Plum Alley
111 East Braodway #190, SLC, 801-355-0543

(Note to readers: By the time you read this, Plum Alley will be closed.)

Best Coffee Shop (tie)
Coffee Garden
878 E. 900 South, SLC, 801-355-3425

The Rose Establishment
235 S. 400 West, SLC, 801-990-6270

Best Chinese
Sampan
675 E. 2100 South, SLC, 801-467-3663
10450 S. State St., Sandy, 801-576-0688

Best Quick Eats
Caputo’s Market & Deli
314 W. 300 South, SLC, 801-531-8669
1516 S. 1500 East, SLC, 801-486-6615

Best Indian
Bombay House
2731 Parleys Way, SLC, 801-581-0222
7726 Campus View Dr. #120, West Jordan, 801-282-0777
463 N. University Ave., Provo, 801-373-6677

Best Italian
Fresco
1513 S. 1500 East, SLC, 801-486-1300

Best Mediterranean/Middle Eastern
Mazza
1515 S. 1500 East, SLC, 801-484-9259
912 E. 900 South, SLC, 801-521-4572

Best Mexican
Red Iguana
736 W. North Temple, SLC, 801-322-1489
866 W. South Temple, SLC, 801-214-6050

Best Breakfast
Pig & A Jelly Jar
401 E. 900 South, SLC, 385-202-7366

Best Comfort Food
Pig & A Jelly Jar
401 E. 900 South, SLC, 385-202-7366

Best Undiscovered
Pallet
237 S. 400 West, SLC, 801-935-4431

Best Wine List
Bistro 222
222 S. Main St., SLC, 801-456-0347

Best Desserts (tie)
Pallet
237 S. 400 West, SLC, 801-935-4431

Silver Star Café
1825 Three Kings Dr., Park City, 435-655-3456

Chocolate

By Eat & Drink
Fine chocolate is one of Utah’s secrets—along with powder snow, great microbrews and a vibrant gay culture. But, it’s time to let the cat out of the reusable shopping bag. Forget what you’ve heard about Utah’s low-brow sweet tooth—Salt Lake City is all about making and appreciating exceptional chocolate.

Amano Chocolate of Orem was the first local chocolate-maker to hit the big time. Founded in 2006 by Art Pollard and Clark Goble, within three years it was named one of the top eight bean-to-bar chocolate companies in the world by Martin Christy, founder of both SeventyPercent.com and the Academy of Chocolate. Before it burst onto the American fine-chocolate scene, Amano Chocolate debuted on Caputo Market’s shelves in downtown SLC.

Founding chocolate artisan Pollard is a bit of savant when it comes to beans and sourcing. His were the first American-made bars to be taken seriously, outranking (and ruffling the feathers of) French, Belgian and Italian powerhouses in competitions. It’s because of that single-minded dedication that Pollard has produced some of the most talked about bars in the chocolate world, including Dos Rios (Dominican Republic beans)–a chocolate taste that hits the tongue with blueberries and cream, some woodsy spices, and a wallop of white blossoms like honeysuckle. He just says, “Utah always has had an affinity for chocolate. When we started we were the only bean-to-bar company but now there’s a couple new small ones. We’re honored to be the ones who paved the way.”

Now, Utah also has Mill Creek Cacao, coffee roaster turned cacao roaster; The Chocolate Conspiracy, makers of organic raw chocolate; Mezzo Chocolate, which takes it from beans to brew, and, most recently, Solstice Chocolate, a single-origin producer. To celebrate these and fine international chocolate, Caputo’s hosts a Chocolate Festival every year, inviting local pastry chefs to dream up desserts inspired by chocolate.

But we’re not talking Mars Bars here.


Art Pollard of Amano Chocolate

What’s the diff?

“Chocolate” on the label doesn’t always mean chocolate–one of the major points of enlightenment on the road to becoming a chocolate snob. The snob’s term for what we grew up thinking was chocolate is “mockolate,” meaning candy products made with cocoa solids, but no cocoa butter. Instead, this stuff is made with vegetable oil or some other fat. Legally, it can’t even be called “chocolate;” it has to be labeled “chocolate candy.” When a cacao bean is crushed, the butter and solids are separated. In fine chocolate, they’re mixed back together, along with sugar and vanilla. And even though you may like the flavor of mockolate just fine, remember it doesn’t have any of the health properties associated with true theobroma.

Genuine fine chocolate is made with cocoa solids and cocoa butter from beans from a single country, district or even farm. Depending on its origin and who makes it, the same high-quality bean can yield vastly different flavors.

Yes, we’re talking terroir, a concept fundamental to the wine business and equally important to chocolate.

One of the growing concerns of fine chocolatiers is the chocolate plant itself. As the Fine Chocolate Industry Association says on its website, “The best tasting chocolates in the world are poised for extinction.” Their point is, growers are removing and replacing rare cacao trees with higher-yielding, disease resistant but less flavorful hybrids. When he first started Amano, Pollard says, “Bad cocoa was everywhere. But there was great cacao to be had–fine quality stuff. To get it and use it you had to pay way more than even fair trade and have a personal relationship with the farmers. We always try to have that personal relationship and to be involved. Most of these farmers who make great cacao have never tasted the final product, so I make it a point to bring the finished bar to these producers and have them taste it.”

Pollard recalls, “After working side by side all day with these farmers, I had a bunch gathered and I had them taste the Amano Cuyagua farm. One crusty old farmer came up and told me one of the most profound things. He said, ‘This chocolate is like a river–the flavor of the chocolate goes on and on, it take you to all these wild and wonderful places.’”

The chocolate makers transform the raw beans into gorgeous bars through tricks of science, sweat and possibly, alchemy. It’s usually dark (no milk products, 50-100 percent cocoa), but never bitter. The texture is usually fine (with some exceptions, especially among raw chocolate makers). The chocolate section at Caputo’s Market dazzles emerging chocolate snobs and is a key source for established ones. It’s also the headquarters from which Matt Caputo conducts chocolate-tasting classes and hosts meetings for the Chocolate Society. Here, you can browse, taste and be bowled over by the flavor of something as simple as ground cocoa beans, sugar and vanilla. The young staff is freakishly knowledgeable. Caputo has curated one of the foremost fine chocolate selections in the world according to his peers, i.e. national chocolate experts and the National Association for the Specialty Food Trade which cited Caputo’s chocolate as one of the reasons they named the store one of its “Outstanding Retailers” in 2009.

Utah is also forging ahead in another category: drinking chocolate. Topher and Shannon Webb of Mezzo Chocolate have created a luscious, rich drinking chocolate that puts the insipid instant stuff to shame. Their secret: They make shavings from single-origin bars they’ve crafted themselves. The result is drinking chocolate that is as interesting and fruity as a well-made Spanish Rioja wine.

Like other fresh foods, chocolate has a season, and we are in the middle of it. Granted, the season doesn’t have to do with Mother Nature. It’s determined by human appetite and the mail. From Halloween through Easter is chocolate season, from cool to cool. When the weather warms, chocolate melts quickly and quality is compromised. Of course, the zenith of chocolate season is February 14.

Next>>>Where to get your local chocolate, and why to be a chocolate snob

Make it a Mule

By Eat & Drink

The American cocktail revolution has spawned all kinds of new concoctions, but thankfully it has also sparked the renaissance of old favorites including the Moscow Mule, a ginger-spiked refresher traditionally served in a copper mug.

UTAH MULES
You can order a Moscow Mule at Bar-X and The Green Pig Pub in Salt Lake City or at Park City’s Stein Eriksen Lodge and the Bistro at Canyons.

THE RECIPE
Squeeze the juice from half a lime (about 1/2 ounce) into a copper cup; drop in the lime shell. Add ice cubes, then add 2 ounces of vodka and fill the cup with ginger beer. If you must substitute ginger ale for the ginger beer, mix in a small amount of fresh, grated ginger to give it a little burn.

THE NAME
“Buck” and “mule” are old-fashioned names for mixed drinks using ginger ale or ginger beer, cirus juice and liquor.

THE MUG
The complicated, contradictory and mostly uninteresting stories about the Moscow Mule’s origin have one thing in common: the celebrity favorite Cock ‘n’ Bull restaurant on Sunset Boulevard in L.A., whose proprietor was Jack Morgan, president of Cock ‘n’ Bull, a brewwer of ginger beer. The original Cock ‘n’ Bull was an English pub, which traditionally served beer and ale in copper mugs, so presumably one was handy.

You can find copper mugs online, but they’re quite expensive, which explains why many bars require a deposit on the mug when you order.


GET ‘EM HERE
Sertodo hammered copper mugs, $116/set of four, amazon.com

 

WHAT’S THE DIF? GINGER BEER vs. GINGER ALE
Ginger beer was originally a fermented alcoholic beverage made from ginger and water. Now it gets its bubbles from carbonization. It is much stronger, darker and spicier in flavor than mild, sweet ginger ale, and sometimes it’s less fizzy.

FeverTree Ginger Beer, $6 per 4-pak, Harmons, SLC

This post was originally published on utahstyleanddesign.com.

Honeygate: Is Slide Ridge Honey Selling a Myth?

By Eat & Drink

SSlide Ridge Honey has been one of Utah’s local food heroes, a genuine mountain honey literally unique to Northern Utah. Honey’s flavor, body and aroma, like wine and cheese, is directly related toterroir–the land it comes from. Honey aficionados prize particular honeys, like New Zealand anuka, Tuscan chestnut, Hawaiian white and Ghanaian honey, because they can only come from one place.

Slide Ridge has been touted as Utah’s elite honey–made by local beekeepers in our high arid mountains. It says so on their website:

“At Slide Ridge, we start with pure, unfiltered raw wildflower honey, produced in our own sustainably managed beehives. Gathered from wildflowers in the pristine, high mountain valleys of Northern Utah, our bees produce a delicately flavored, elite-quality raw honey. From this honey, we produce a rare Honey Wine Vinegar that is a treat to the palette [sic] and the body. Try them both today and you will never settle for second best again.”

But what if it’s not?

Slide Ridge Honey Wine Vinegar sells for $50 a 750-ml bottle. So yes, it’s elite. You can find it at Caputo’s, Whole Foods, Liberty Heights Fresh and in the pantries of many local chefs. But recently, questions have been raised about Slide Ridge.

Matt Caputo was one of the earliest local champions of the honey, the wine and the wine vinegar. I remember going into the downtown store one day and running into Matt. He had that fanatical fire in the eye he gets when he’s excited about a new food, and I had to stop and taste everything. But this week, Caputo’s sister distributing company A Priori sent out a letter to its customers:

“Dear ____________,

At A Priori, we distinguish our product mix by selling the best of the best. Our “Local Gold Standard” collection, of which Slide Ridge was a part, is based on foods that are not only local, but world class. Our focus is on products which are not merely manufactured here, but have ingredients with intrinsic roots to Utah.

From the time we started working with them, Slide Ridge helped us to build a narrative of their product based on their families’ own beehives in Mendon, Utah, and Martin James’ outlier ability to produce one of the highest quality honeys in the world. We developed a story of how their products beautifully conveyed the terroir of Utah’s Cache Valley, etc., etc.”

“Unfortunately, in mid-March, it came to our attention that Slide Ridge has been sourcing Canadian honey to produce at least its Honey Wine Vinegar. While they have tried to put a positive spin on it for us, we have concluded that we cannot do the same. We cannot stand by and knowingly continue to distribute an adulterated product. Once we found out, and after some soul-searching, we determined that it is in the customer’s best interest to know and that it was A Priori’s ethical obligation to keep you informed of such changes, when they occur. “

I called Slide Ridge to hear their side of this story and spoke to business owner Elmer James. He said, yes; Slide Ridge has been buying Canadian honey. “The drought had a tremendous effect on our bees and we’ve had tremendous bee losses. We’ve been buying from other Utah producers and bought all that up; otherwise we would have had to limit production. There’s no way we could produce enough product anyway, we’re in a desert. You got one arm tied behind your back.”

Sounds reasonable. (And sad, if you’re worried about the declining bee population.) But the narrative about the sustainably raised high mountain honey on Slide Ridge’s packaging and website doesn’t say anything about Canadian honey. Or even other Utah honey.

Elmer clarified. “We’ve only used the Canadian honey in the wine vinegar and the Cacysir <honey wine>.” A few hours later he called back to further clarify, “We’ve never used any of the Canadian honey in our products.”

Caputo’s and Slide Ridge are in a contract dispute concerning distribution. They have bones to pick with each other.

But I’m interested in a question that has larger ramifications—for foodies, for health nuts, for environmentalists trying to reduce their carbon footprint, for anyone who finds Slide Ridge’s Utah story compelling enough to pay $50 for a bottle of honey wine vinegar. As all of us become more concerned about where our food comes from and how it was raised and not just how much it costs, we become more susceptible to being duped. Is a product real or fake? Organic or not? I think most of us believe we can safely trust the word of local producers. Our neighbors. So when the question becomes, is it local or not, it gets a little more personal.

This is not a new problem. The French have been accused of substituting Algerian wine for their own. We all know about Ikea’s meatball recall. Kim Angelli, who runs Salt Lake City’s Downtown Farmers Market, has to check up on participating farmers to be sure they’re selling their home-grown produce and not something trucked in from California.

When it comes to honey, there are certain healthful properties attributed to honey that comes from the area you live in. Utahns don’t need to be acclimatized to pollen from Ghana. Or Canada. If you’re trying to be truly conscientious about buying locally for the sake of the environment, it matters whether product is trucked in from another country or harvested up the road.

But it becomes a bigger problem as we place more value on the source of our food. The more we understand about the food we eat, the more complex the ethical questions surrounding it.

When you start out selling a highly specialized and rare artisanal product, you have automatically restricted your business’ growth in advance. Scarcity equals value, just like quality is supposed to. There’s not going to be an ever-expanding supply of high desert Rocky Mountain honey because only so many wildflowers flourish in those growing conditions and that short season. You have no guarantee, or even likelihood, of expanding your product to fill the demand you create.

This is part of what “sustainable” means.

Ambrosia: A Southern Staple

By Eat & Drink

I was born in Georgia and raised in, Texas but I never tasted Ambrosia until I was over 40. It was a staple on all my friends’ feast tables, Thanksgiving and Christmas, and guests often generously brought it to our house, but I wouldn’t touch it. A food snob from conception, I guess.

I’m assuming you know what Ambrosia is: a mixture of fruit and coconut and pecans, served in the South as a salad on Special Occasions.

My parents, neither of them born in the Deep South, eschewed it, although we never had roast turkey without oyster gravy and sauerkraut, so we did have our own idiosyncrasies. But really, in the sixties, Ambrosia was usually made with canned Mandarin oranges, sweetened coconut, cherries from a jar…what was to like? Many recipes call for heavy cream and mini marshmallows. (Of course, Food Network’s Alton Brown’s recipe calls for homemade mini marshmallows.

But when I was old, and worked at Central Market in Texas, I discovered what Ambrosia could be. That’s where this recipe was dreamed up, I think. Not bad. I’m still not a fan of sweet salads, or even fruit salads, usually, but this recipe would be good served between courses, like a sorbet, or as a dessert with a tuile-like cookie. In Utah, where folks think salad is a first-course dessert, this might be really popular. And of course there may be a Utah version I’m unaware of. Chances are, though, that the Utah version would NOT have a shot of brandy in it and I’m the first to admit that the brandy may be just the ingredient that disperses my ambrosial skepticism.

AMBROSIA

Serves 6-8

Ingredients

1 ripe pineapple

3 medium blood oranges

4 clementines

2 Ruby Red grapefruit

2 cups freshly grated coconut

½ cup chopped, toasted pecans

½ cup powdered sugar

1/3 cup brandy or fruit flavored brandy (optional)

 

Instructions

1. Toast the coconut in a 350 degree oven until it is a light, golden brown.

2. Peel and core the pineapple. Slice into thin rings, reserving the juice.

3. Peel and section the blood oranges, clementines and Ruby Red grapefruit Be sure to remove all of the white pith and reserve the juice. Keep each fruit in a separate bowl.

4. Toss each fruit with some of the sherry or brandy (if you are using the optional liquors).

5. In a clear glass, straight sided bowl, layer the pineapple slices, the blood oranges, the clementines, and the grapefruit, lightly dusting each layer with sifted powdered sugar.

6. Combine any remaining fruit juice and liquor and pour evenly over the layered fruit. The recipe can be made to this point and refrigerated for several hours until you are ready to serve.

7. Top the fruit with the toasted coconut and sprinkle the coconut layer with toasted pecans.

Utah’s Famous Breakfast Stops

By Eat & Drink
Salt Lake magazine editor Jeremy Pugh and ABC-4’s Brian Carlson have teamed up to bring you on a tour through Utah’s famous breakfast stops. Check back to catch the latest foods being served up for breakfast throughout Utah. Stops along the tour include Salt Lake magazine Dining Award Winners, restaurants Food Network has named Best Breakfast in Utah and others we’ve listed as Utah’s Best Diners.

Featured tour stops: