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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

Provo’s The Mighty Baker wins “Cake Wars”

By Eat & Drink

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Peter Tidwell, the culinary mind behind The Mighty Baker in Provo, won first place on an episode of Food Network’s “Cake Wars” Monday night. Tidwell took home a grand prize of $10,000.

The episode’s theme was the popular X-box video game “Halo.” Tidwell, a BYU alum, and his assistant competed in three rounds of creating “Halo”-inspired cakes to impress judges Ron-Ben Israel, Waylynn Lucas and guest judge Larry Hyrb, Microsoft’s director of programming.

In addition to earning the title of “Cake Wars” champion and heading home with a hefty cash prize, Tidwell and his cake creation were also featured at the 2016 Halo World Championships in Los Angeles.

Tidwell’s winning cake was a chocolate brownie pound cake with an Italian buttercream. He is selling this flavor cake by-the-slice at his Provo storefront.


The Mighty Baker is located at 50 E 500 N in Provo.

Spencer’s to host wine dinner featuring Wagner Family of Wine

By Eat & Drink
images courtesy Wagner Family of Wines

images courtesy Wagner Family of Wine

Spencer’s for Steaks and Chops is hosting another private wine dinner partnering with Francis Fecteau, proprietor of Libation, and the Wagner Family of Wine, a family-owned Napa wine company. The dinner will be held on Friday, August 26th at 6:30. The cost of the event is $70 for food and $40 for the wine pairing. Seats are limited, so call 801-238-4748 or visit spencersforsteaksandchops.com to RSVP to the event.

The four-course dinner includes wine pairings from the Wagner Family of Wine, including the Emmolo, Mer Soleil, Red Schooner, and Caymus label wines.

Here is the menu for the evening:

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Spencer’s for Steaks and Chops
225 South West Temple
Friday, August 26th – 6:30
$70 for food
$40 for wine pairing

 

DABC software crash hurts bar and restaurant business.

By City Watch, Eat & Drink

Tell me if you’ve heard this one before: Restaurants and barkeeps are being driven crazy by a Utah DABC bureaucracy snafu. But the DABC says everything is awesome. (BTW, SNAFU is an archaic term, but I’ve brought it back because it so perfectly evokes Utah’s liquor situation—Google it.)

On July 5, the DABC fired up new inventory tracking software system. (Try to stay awake, it gets better).

Brand-spankin’-new DABC spokesman Terry Wood confirmed that things, as they say in the computer world, went south. The problem he says was that the code in the program could not list all the digits in the product ID (SKU) for the products.

The bottom line, in non-wonk language, is that shipments of liquor, wine and beer could not be delivered or picked up by restaurants and bars because digital paperwork could not be generated.

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Here’s what a half-dozen bar and restaurant managers told me: (Note: They did not want their names or businesses attached to their information because the DABC is notoriously vindictive when criticized—kinda like Donald Trump.)

“What happens in that kind of situation is that our ability to serve our guests is hindered,” says one beverage director. Because menus had to be changed and guests were disappointed when some regularly served wines weren’t available—not to mention the wasted time of managers futilely trying to pick up orders, “We lost revenue.”

“I could see my order at the club store,” he says. “But the computer couldn’t generate an order, so I couldn’t pick it up.”

If you recall, Gov. Gary Herbert is committed to running DABC on a business basis—a monopoly business.

But Wood, remember he’s just a DABC spokesman, says DABC managers told him the bar owners were “exaggerating” the problem. “[The new software] did have some problems,” Wood says. “The public would never have noticed. There may be special-order restaurants that had a problem—one or two, but nothing that stuck out.”

Because of Utah’s byzantine liquor laws, “special orders” aren’t what you think. Because the state’s inventory no longer has the variety and depth it had under former DABC premium-wine chief Brent Clifford, many liquor buyers have had to establish regular, on-going “special orders” to meet customer demand.

A DABC retail manager says the software reports, for instance, that a store has 16 bottles of a product, when in reality it has none. Employees find it as frustrating as liquor license holders and DABC HQ is not sympathetic, the manager says. 

“IT people have been putting a lot of overtime in due to the problems,” says a DABC employee. “The system is not very user friendly. It should have been tested more before implemented. In fact I wonder why they decided on this system.”

When a bar owner was informed that no problems “ stuck out” with the system, he replied, “Really? Oh, really—no problem?” then laughed ruefully.

The software launch was preceded by test runs and a help line was provided,” Wood says. But restaurant and bar buyers say they were told that the system had not been tested. And, they wonder why—if the system had been tested—why was the failure a surprise that took more than a month to fix.

Current status, Wood says, is that the system is “90-plus percent” fixed. “It’s basically working now.”

But liquor and wine buyers say that’s news to them. The beverage manager says, “No one can tell me where my wine is! I need real-world information. This is a haze that hurts business.”

LaBounty Bourbon Ice Bomb wins PCARA Summer Cocktail Contest

By Eat & Drink

We sure know how to pick ’em. Silver Star Cafe’s “LaBounty Bourbon Ice Bomb” cocktail was featured in our July/August issue, and now LaBounty’s drink has won 1st place in the Park City Area Restaurant Association’s Summer Cocktail Contest.

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Mixologist Jeff LaBounty’s cocktail beat out 20 other drink entries, a big deal in über-hip Park City.

The cocktail is a creative construction of a hollow ice sphere injected with Sugarhouse Bourbon, Bianco Vermouth, Warre’s 10-year port, house-made balsamic syrup and black walnut bitters. A fresh peach slice garnishes the drink. The server presents the drink, taps the ice sphere, and a flavor explosion ensues.

“I hadn’t quite seen anything like this before – it was really cool, and tasty, too,” PCARA executive director Ginger Ries said. “Thanks again to all the restaurants who competed and all the fans who voted online and made this such a big success.”

Jeff LaBounty, creator of the winning cocktail, will be awarded $200 for his creation. He will also be featured in a marketing campaign for the PCARA’s fall “Dine About” event. Oh, and he gets some hard-earned bragging rights.

“Jeff’s cocktail is really just so much fun: it’s whimsical, it’s creative, it’s surprising, it’s totally different than just about anything you’ve seen. This is very cool, and it absolutely deserves the top spot in this year’s competition,” Silver Star Cafe owner Lisa Ward said. “We thank everyone who cast their ballots, the PCARA for hosting another stellar competition, and we can’t wait to welcome folks to try Jeff’s standout creation.”

All entries for the Summer Cocktail Contest can be found at parkcityrestaurants.com

 

Wasatch International Food Festival needs volunteers

By Eat & Drink

The Wasatch International Food Festival needs volunteers to make the event a success. Openings are available for 3-hour shifts for ticket takers, demo stage assistants and clean-up crews. All volunteers receive free admission to the festival as well as drinks and snacks. To volunteer, click here.

The festival will take place on August 19th and 20th at the Utah Cultural Celebration Center Festival Grounds in West Valley City. The two-day event showcases international cuisine in the Salt Lake area. Guests can dine on ethnic foods, shop at the specialty foods market, listen to live music, and participate in a community mural project.

List of vendors:

Tickets start at $5. Kids 12 and under are free. Click here to purchase tickets.


Utah Cultural Celebration Center Festival Grounds, August 19-20, 1355 West 3100 South, West Valley City

Taste of the Wasatch: Help end hunger in Utah

By Eat & Drink
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photo courtesy Taste of the Wasatch website

Here at Salt Lake Magazine, we have a deep love for all things food. But we also realize that not everyone in the Beehive State has enough to eat. In Utah, 1 in 6 people face hunger. Where do we even begin to combat that statistic? Well, we buy tickets for this year’s Taste of the Wasatch. This annual fundraiser’s proceeds go to fight hunger in Utah. Taste of the Wasatch is on Sunday, August 7, from noon – 4 p.m. at the beautiful Solitude Mountain Resort, 30 minutes outside of Salt Lake. The event will offer small plates from 50 of Utah’s top restaurants, as well as beer and wine from over 20 of the best breweries and wineries in Utah and Idaho.

This year, TOTW will be better than ever.

Reserved ticket holders are invited to gather early—at 11 a.m.—for a one hour meet and greet with some of California’s top wine makers and wine reps. This event focuses on small wineries, not just the big Napa tourist attractions (although Caymus will be there) :Zotovich, Honig, Inizi, Donkey & Goat, Carol Shelton, Caymus, Colter’s Creek, Ransom, Jeff Cohn Cellars, Orrin Swift, Sean Miner and other boutique operations will be there.

So eat great food, enjoy the sun, and feel good about helping to end hunger in Utah. It’s a win for everyone.

Buy tickets for Taste of the Wasatch here.

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photo courtesy Taste of the Wasatch website

 

Participating Restaurants:

*- new this year

Aerie Restaurant at Snowbird Ski & Summer Resort
Avenues Proper
Beehive Cheese
Beltex Meats*
Blue Boar Inn
Cena Ristorante
Chaia Cucina Catering
Copper Kitchen
Current
Del Mar al Lago
Deer Valley
Fire and Slice Pizza
Franck’s
Frida Bistro*
Garden Café at Grand America
Glitretind at Stein Eriksen Lodge
HSL*
Harbor Seafood and Steak Co.
LaCaille
LeCroissant Catering*
Martine *
Meditrina
Provisions*
Red Iguana
Riverhorse on Main
Sage’s Café
Solitude Mountain Resort
Stanza*
Stoneground Kitchen
Taqueria27
Tupelo*
Tuscany
Wasatch Brew Pub
Whiskey Street

Dessert:
Deer Valley
Tulie Bakery
Stein Eriksen Lodge
Christina’s Cakes
Petals and Pastries*
Current/Stanza
Carlucci’s
Finca/Pago
Grand America
The Dodo Restaurant*
Red Butte Café*
GR Kitchen
Ramzy Asmar

Beer:
Squatters Craft Beers
Wasatch Brewery
Uinta Brewing
Desert Edge Brewing*
Moab Brewery*

Wine:
2b Ranch distillery
Carol Shelton
Caymus
Colter’s Creek Idaho
Distillery36
Donkey & Goat
Flying Goat Cellars
Honig
Inizi
Jeff Cohn Cellars
Melville / Samsara
Orin Swift / Locations
Ransom
Salvestrin
Sean Minor
Skurnik
Sorting Table
Soter
Zotovich