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A Day at St. Regis Deer Valley’s Remède Spa

By From Our Partners

I think we can all agree that 2020 has been an incredibly stressful year. Every month seems to bring something new to worry about and the winter season is slowly creeping in, bringing with it shorter days and triggering seasonal depression. There’s been a lot of weight on our shoulders and I for one have been feeling run down.

So I was pleasantly surprised when St. Regis at Deer Valley reached out to me to experience their Remède Spa, which has implemented innovative COVID-friendly ways to keep their guests feeling safe, secure and most importantly, relaxed.

Spa Director, Benjamin Donat

Upon arrival, I spoke with the new Spa Director, Benjamin Donat. “It’s funny,” Benjamin said, “cleanliness has always been a huge priority. But we never wanted to be seen by the guests. Things are different now. We want guest to know how important cleanliness is to St. Regis and the Remède Spa. And guests are happy to see us sanitizing and wiping every surface down.”

I’ll be honest, I was a bit apprehensive about getting a spa treatment. So I asked Benjamin how the spa has been dealing with COVID-19. He explained that St. Regis follows guidelines set forth by the CDC and the World Health Organization and continuously monitor and evolve their solutions to ensure a continued sense of caution and security for guests and associates.

Solutions include consistent mask wearing by all hotel and spa employees, temperature checking, sanitizer is easily accessible throughout the hotel and spa, spa guests must wear a mask during their spa treatments, deep cleaning of all spa rooms and spa amenities and spa services require an appointment that must be booked in advance.

After hearing about all the guidelines Remède Spa is following I was ready for my treatment. I decided to go with the hot poultice massage. (I took up running in the midst of the COVID-19 lockdown and frankly haven’t been doing the correct stretches after my runs, so this treatment was perfect.) The poultice combines herbs wrapped in cloth and a customized oil which is then steamed and used to massage fatigued muscles. The heat of the poultice relieved soreness and penetrated muscles I had been neglecting for quite a while. This treatment completely rebalanced my body. And while I wore a mask the entire treatment, I was so relaxed that I forgot I had it on.

My massage therapist, Angelica, said it best. “We all need to take small moments for ourselves. Away from the news, away from the current worry of the world. We all deserve self care, it just takes making the time for ourselves.” Now more than ever we need to take breaks. Whether that’s treating yourself to an 80 minute massage, or just sitting in a quiet room, make sure you take small moments for yourself to decompress.

Remède Spa is currently offering Utah residents 20% off massages and facial treatments and complimentary enhancements when you book any massage. (Enhancements include Soothing Shae, a hydration treatment; Cold Therapy, a treatment for pain; or a CBD enhancement.)


To learn more about Remède Spa or to book an appoinment, click here.

To find emotional wellness and support services, click here.

For more on health and wellness, click here.

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Masked GREENbikers Ride for Charity

By Community

On Wednesday, October 30, 2020, under a fading fall sunset, masked business leaders, bike aficionados, political types and a few random media folks, gathered (more like sensibly fanned out) at the GREENbike station on Rio Grande Street and 300 South to prove that yes, you can ride bikes when it’s cold. More importantly, the bike share donated a pile of winter clothing to Volunteers of America’s Utah Homeless Youth Resource Center (VOA).

GREENBike Winter Clothing Ride

GREENbike Executive Director Ben Bolte presents to a crowd of local leaders including (from left to right): Colmena Group Development Executive Aabir Malik, SelectHealth Risk Adjustment Coding Auditor Anji Lefler, Downtown Alliance Executive Director Dee Brewer, GREENbike Board Chair / Stadler Rail Director of Sales Matt Sibul, Salt Lake Magazine Managing Editor Jeremy Pugh, VOA Marketing & Communications Director Savannah Young, Utah Transit Authority (UTA) Trustee Beth Holbrook, UCAIR Executive Director Thom Carter, Azure Gaskill Quality Consultant at SelectHealth, Salt Lake City Council Member Darin Mano, 02 Utah Executive Director David Garbett, Salt Lake City Council Member Dan Dugan, Giv Group Executive Director Chris Parker, and Jordan River Commission Executive Director Soren Simonsen.

Who were those masked GREENbikers?

• Utah Transit Authority (UTA) Trustee Beth Holbrook
• Salt Lake Tribune Columnist Robert Gehrke
• Salt Lake City Council Member Amy Fowler
• SLUG Magazine Editor-in-Chief Angela H. Brown
• Salt Lake City Council Member Andrew Johnston
• FOX13 News Reporter Ben Winslow
• Salt Lake City Council Member Darin Mano
• Salt Lake Magazine Managing Editor Jeremy Pugh (I WAS!)
• Salt Lake City Council Member Dan Dugan
• UCAIR Executive Director Thom Carter
• 02 Utah Executive Director David Garbett
• Downtown Alliance Executive Director Dee Brewer
• Give Group Executive Director Chris Parker
• Jordan River Commission Executive Director Soren Simonsen
• Colmena Group Development Executive Aabir Malik
• SelectHealth Risk Adjustment Coding Auditor Anji Lefler
• Ray Quinney & Nebekar Attorney Pat Reimherr
• GREENbike Board Chair / Stadler Rail Director of Sales Matt Sibul

“We’re so grateful that all of these community leaders were willing to participate in tonight’s ride,” said GREENbike Founder and Executive Director Ben Bolte. “The goals of the ride are to remind people that you can bike in the winter, that SLC has great bike infrastructure and that the Volunteers of America is an amazing organization that we should all support.”

GREENBike SLC Director Ben Bolte

Out on the town: (From left to right): Ray Quinney & Nebekar Attorney Pat Reimherr, Colmena Group Development Executive Aabir Malik, SelectHealth Risk Adjustment Coding Auditor Anji Lefler, GREENbike Executive Director Ben Bolte and 02 Utah Executive Director David Garbett.

On behalf of the riders, GREENbike purchased 192 beanies, 192 pairs of adult gloves, 240 pairs of adult socks, 156 pairs of children’s gloves, 120 pairs of children’s socks, and 200 rain ponchos to donate to the Homeless Youth Resource Center.

“Because of the support of our amazing community, homeless individuals will stay warm this winter,” Kathy Bray, President of VOA Utah said. “Cold weather items go fast during the winter months.” Many of the youth served by VOA Utah, use GREENBike as a method of transit, Bray said, and the donations will help keep them warm as temperatures drop. The VOA has urgent need for more donations and has set up a wishlist on their website where you, your family or your organization can learn more about the specific needs and donate.

“Consider holding a charitable drive for our greatest needs,” Bray asked the gathered riders. To find out more visit: voaut.org/in-kind.

The riders set off in a gaggle across town, using the protected bike lanes of 300 South (The Becker Bike Highway, we like to call it) ending at one of GREENbike’s newest stations on the corner of 700 East and 300 South, Papa Murphy’s adjacent. From there, they dispersed into the twilight.

See more of our Citylife coverage here.

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Oquirrh & Local SLC Restaurants Need Our Help

By Eat & Drink

We last spoke with Oquirrh in early June for an article we did on restaurants coping with COVID. We had chatted with Angie Fuller. With her husband and chef, Drew, she owns and runs Oquirrh, one of the most exciting new restaurants in the city.

Today, through a press released shared by friends of the owners, we received the heartbreaking news that Oquirrh is at risk of shutting down due to the impacts of COVID-19.

Oquirrh is known for innovative fare that inspired Chef Drew and Angie to open their own restaurant in the first place. The signature presentation of carrots, for example, for which carrots of several colors are roasted, cured in miso or braised, then planted vertically in a ground of carrot-top pesto with a brown rice chip to add back in some crispness, is a time-consuming, multi-handed dish to prepare – a dish that isn’t very suitable for curbside pick-up.

“We’ve been offering salmon or steak for two or four. But our curbside business is dying off severely.” Angie stated in early June.

Dedicated friends and customers are hoping to help save Angie and Drew’s dream of owning and running an incredible restaurant. They’ve created a GoFundMe page for the community to donate to.

DONATE HERE

COVID-19 has taken a toll on so many of our local restaurants. It takes dedicated customers like you to support these businesses we love so dearly. So eat local. Curbside pick-up, get delivery or take-out. Donate if you can. Support the small businesses that make our city so unique.

For more food and drink, click here.

To order dinner from Oquirrh, click here or call 801-359-0426.

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Salt Lake Mag’s Cocktail Contest Starts November 1

By Eat & Drink

It’s time once again for Salt Lake mag’s annual Cocktail Contest. Eight of the city’s best bartenders have created special celebratory cocktails in honor of the season. Your job: Taste and vote. The contest runs through the month of November.

Salt Lake magazine has altered its annual cocktail contest to suit the times. All of these bars are doing their utmost to keep you safe and stay in business.

So taste all the cocktails, tip big and vote on your favorite. Part of the money goes to Be One Small Miracle, a charity that benefits those in the service industry. 

If you’re not going out, make the drinks at home. You can still vote on your favorite. And you can still donate. In either case, the contest winner gets a big prize, you’ll be doing several good deeds at once—contributing to a worthy cause and helping keep our artisanal cocktail bars in business—and having fun into the bargain.

Yes, it’s a win-win-win situation. Go to saltlakemagazine.com for details.

And be of good cheer.

For more Bar Fly, click here.

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Utah Dance: Why is Utah a Hotbed for Dance?

By Arts & Culture

Robbie Fairchild has achieved rockstar status. Even for someone who leaps for a living, he couldn’t have anticipated how his jump from principal dancer with the New York City Ballet to a starring role on Broadway would change his life. Doors have opened not only on stage but on every conceivable screen, from Hollywood to Netflix to morning shows and Instagram.

During a recent guest solo performance with Ballet West, his lightning speed footwork resembled a stone skimming water, his jaw- dropping leaps suspended gravity and his dazzling smile underscored his athletic, old-school swagger. Eclipsing the polite applause usually reserved for ballets, the crowd’s roar implied an even deeper level of devotion. Fairchild, after all, is a hometown hero—another dance celebrity born, raised and professionally trained in Utah.

A Desert Dance Mecca

That dance would take root in Utah’s desert soil and become a wellspring for the art form has long baffled industry insiders. “The first time we came here, we thought: what is going on in this state?” TV personality Mary Murphy told reporters during a 2012 interview when explaining why her top-rated reality show, “So You Think You Can Dance” frequented Salt Lake City. “We don’t know, but we love it here.” It’s understandably startling to outsiders that Utah is a dance hotspot. We’re relatively small, yet boast a top-tier ballet company, the nation’s first repertory dance company, the first school of ballet at an American University, the world’s largest ballroom dance program and multiple powerhouse studios that crank out more pro dancers than Dirty Diet Cokes at a Utah soda chain.

The National Endowment for the Arts says Utah creates and performs more art than any other state, and ranks third in the nation for attendance at live music, theater and dance performances. Seems we not only create an abundance of dance—we consume an abundance of dance, too.

Fertile Ground: So, Why Utah?

“Utah has a unique history that nourished dance,” Repertory Dance Theatre (RDT) Artistic Director Linda Smith says.

“The Native Americans established a long tradition of dance followed by the Mormon pioneers, who built a theater before they built their temple.”

Mormon settlers, Smith says, didn’t reject the body and didn’t see dance as sinful. In fact, they saw it as divinely interconnected with the mind and spirit—unlike many austere puritanical communities at the time. Singing and dancing were used to mark all special occasions, and every church member was expected to participate.

A progeny of those settlers, Ballet West’s Bruce Caldwell, current Ballet Master and Company Archivist, recalls growing up amidst a continual stream of ‘road shows,’ plays and festivals within the church during his 1960’s childhood. “People threw their lives into these things—the programs had a real showbiz feel.”

A Modern Prodigy & Vaudeville Star

Riding the community’s arts-loving tide, it was during the 1960’s that Utah’s reputation as a hotspot for dance crystallized.

Modern dancer Virginia Tanner and ballet dancer Willam Christensen didn’t have much in common—other than that they both hailed from Utah, refined their art with dance pioneers in New York and returned to their hometown as builders.

“She was a magician-queen…with technique born of skyrockets and mud puddles, of butterfly wings and kangaroo jumps,” a former pupil, Rosalind Pierson, wrote when describing Tanner and her first-of-its- kind dance curriculum for kids.

Celebrating unshackled, nature- based movement, Tanner’s newly formed Children’s Dance Theater garnered national attention, touring extensively and putting Utah on the map for dance. She was a ‘magician- queen’ in many respects, as it turned out. Upon learning that the Rockefeller Foundation sought to decentralize the arts in America, she convinced it to set its sights on Utah’s nucleus of talent for the foundation’s great experiment.

“I’ll never forget that moment when I realized I would be paid a living wage as a dancer—a 52-week contract,” says Smith of the seed money granted to Tanner for the creation of America’s first repertory dance company, RDT. “The foundation felt that to pay dancers was to dignify the profession.”

Around the same time, Christensen, a former vaudeville star from Brigham City who founded San Francisco Ballet, moved back to Utah and created a full-fledged ballet department at the University of Utah—another first of its kind. Encouraged by Tanner’s success, he approached the Ford Foundation in hopes of securing a grant for a professional ballet company, and the genesis for Ballet West was formed.

The Covid-19 pandemic has slammed Utah’s dance organizations due to event closures and postponements…

Unable to offer audiences
its scheduled programming, companies are finding other ways to present dance:

Ballet West: Virtual classes for healthcare workers and virtual library of works

Ririe-Woodbury: Free virtual classes for the community

Repertory Dance Theatre: Online courses for teachers and virtual classes

Wasatch Contemporary Dance Company: Online viewing of past performances

SBDance: Free “curbside” performances by appointment

Dance on Every Corner

A flood of professional companies have followed—from Ririe-Woodbury to Odyssey Dance Theatre to BYU Ballroom Dance Company to Ogden’s Imagine Ballet Theater.

With a statewide push for dance exposure in K-12 curriculum—thanks to strong voter support for the Zoo, Arts, and Parks tax—interest from incoming students remains high, fueled when kids see their favorite dance celebrities as framed alumni on studio walls. Salt Lake’s Ballet West Academy has launched hundreds of dance careers. Companies such as Dance Impressions in Farmington and Creative Arts Academy in Bountiful have seen students turn into overnight TV celebrities—but none more so than Orem’s famed Center Stage and The Dance Club.

Feeding the reality TV dance craze for nearly a decade on “So You Think You Can Dance’ followed by ‘Dancing With the Stars,’ Orem- native Chelsie Hightower trained at Center Stage, as did many other DWTS celebrities including Derek and Julianne Hough. Her decision to return home in 2013 to pursue a career in teaching and choreographing allows her to mentor the next generation and continue the legacy of top-notch training in Utah.

COVID-19 and the Future of Utah Dance

With the uncertainty in the performing arts created by the COVID-19 pandemic, will Utah’s dynamic dance scene survive?

“We have been encouraged by the amount of folks buying season tickets for next year,” says Ballet West’s artistic director, Adam Sklute. “We’ll get through this.”

RDT’s Smith agrees, but says if Utahns want to keep seeing great dance, their support is paramount during the crisis.

“If you can, keep your season subscriptions and be flexible about start dates. Donate if possible means,” she says. “It’s up to us to keep this legacy alive.”

For more A&E, click here.

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Salt Lake Mag’s 2020 Cocktail Contest

By Eat & Drink

The holidays are a traditional gathering time—families get together, friends reconnect, strangers become friends. That’s what hospitality is all about and this is its high season. Salt Lake City has a talent for kind-heartedness. And despite all the difficulties, we’re going to celebrate that. So Salt Lake magazine has altered its annual cocktail contest to suit the times. Eight of the city’s best bartenders have created special celebratory cocktails in honor of the season.

Be safe, but we encourage you to taste them all, tip big (part of the money goes to charity) and vote on your favorite. If you’re not going out, make the drinks at home. You can still vote on your favorite. In either case, the contest winner gets a big gift, you’ll be doing a good deed and having fun in the process. Yes, it’s a win-win-win situation.

Produced by Libation – Thanks to Sugar House Distillery

Be sure to vote for your favorite cocktail in this years cocktail contest and be of good cheer!

VOTE  THROUGH THE SURVEY BELOW:

Create your own user feedback survey


The 2020 Cocktail Contest Contestants: 

Photos By: Natalie Simpson

 

  1. Salt Lake Mag Cocktail Contest

Crystal Daniels – Takashi Sushi
Daniels garnished her cocktail with banana leaves and an edible begonia from Red Butte Garden—if you can’t get the begonia, another colorful edible blooms will do. In the September/October issue of Salt Lake magazine, you’ll find an article on using edible flowers.) takashisushi.com

RED DIRT GARDEN
1.5 oz. Amaro Bilaro
.5 oz. Sugar House Distillery Barrel-strength Rye
.75 oz. lemon juice
1 oz. red rice orgeat made with Red Butte Garden botanicals Pinch of Jacobsen Salt
from Caputo’s


2. Salt Lake Mag Cocktail contest

Frank Mealy – The Copper Group
Like many, Mealy says he started bartending to help pay for college. “Then I realized I loved the specialty aspect of making drinks. There is such a wide range of flavors and textures that makes creating an exciting process.” Now he is a full-time bartender for the Copper Group. “Inspiration for this drink came from the expectation that we’re going to be running our outdoor patio season longer because of Covid.” People are more comfortable sitting outside, Mealy says, “So I wanted to make a hot drink for the colder months.” thecopperonion.com

NOT TODAY SATAN
1.5 oz. Sugar House Distillery Bourbon
1.5 oz. pear shrub (Champagne Vinegar/Earl Grey simple 2:1)
.75 oz. lemon juice
Preheat glass with hot water. Mix ingredients, pour into the hot glass, top with hot water and garnish with cinnamon stick, star anise and dried pear.


3.

Clif Reagle – Alibi Bar & Place
“My goal for this drink was to make it with as many local ingredients as possible,” says Reagle, “and seeing as the farm scene is pretty quiet in November I decided to go with a classic method of fruit preservation: the shrub. I think most people forget the luxury that we enjoy now with our produce options during the winter months, and it wasn’t that long ago that your only means to enjoying fruit mid-winter was in the form of a preserve, jam, jelly, or in our case, a shrub. The Akane apples were harvested in September and will be stored in vinegar until November and a batch of apples has been sliced and dehydrated to use as garnish. Both of these techniques will en- sure a genuine Utah “farm to glass” experience incorporating spirits distilled and bottled in the Salt Lake Valley. I started bartending six years ago, and have had the privilege of work- ing with some of the finest food and beverage professionals in Utah. I continue to do it for the same reason I started: you’ll never know everything there is to know about food and drink. My career would not be possible without the people around me and I am blessed because of them.” facebook.com/alibislc/

FAR FROM THE TREE
1.5 oz. Sugar House Bourbon
1.5 oz. Utah Honey and Akane Apple Shrub
.25+ oz. Waterpocket Snow Angel .25 oz. lemon juice
Barspoon of simple syrup
2 dashes Regans Orange Bitters
Combine in shaker over ice, shake and strain into a footed glass. Serve with dried apple garnish.


4.

Christopher Stevenson – Lake Effect Bar
“I’ve been bartending for a little over 15 years in Salt Lake City,” says Stevenson. “I cut my teeth at Squatters Pub downtown when Scott Evans was managing the pub. He really sparked my interest in spirits and wine beyond just my knowledge of beer. Learning the history of wine and spirits from Scott just made me want to learn more. Since then I have made my way into craft cocktails working as head bartender at Avant Groove, Grand America and Ho- tel Monaco. I’m currently behind the beautiful and elaborate Lake Effect bar. Lake Effect encourages originality and creativity—plus we have the largest variety of spirits in the state. I love fall/winter cocktails with spice, cook- ing herbs and an earthy undertone. I chose the Shochu for its nutty rice flavor and funk. The rum helps bump up the proof of this cocktail. Beet brings in an earthy flavor and gives it a really appealing burgundy color. I wanted to keep the cocktail easy to make for the average home bartender. Yet the cocktail still presents complex and well rounded flavors.” lakeeffectslc.com

ELLIE SATTLER
(Don’t remember who this is? Google it.)
1.5 oz. Holystone Distillery Tsunami Shochu
.5 oz. Sugar House Silver Rum
.5 oz. Toadstool Boxed Death Amaro #3 4 dashes Cry Baby Fruit Punch bitters .75 oz. lemon juice
.5 oz. beet simple syrup (equal parts beet juice to simple syrup)
.25 oz. cinnamon simple syrup
4-5 fresh sage leaves
sage bouquet (garnish)
Shake all ingredient together, pour over crushed ice in a large snifter. Garnish with fresh sage bouquet.


5.

Ian Hasselfeld – HSL
Hasselfeld began bartending because a friend of his was doing it. “He started teaching me all these ways and methods of why or how to make drinks and I found it very interesting. Not long after that I got my first bartender gig working with him. I was lucky to get into such a amazing line of work at the age of 21.”  In Utah, peach season is late—early
fall. “Fall has always reminded me of my grandma,” says Hasselfeld. “She had a peach tree when I was growing up.” Before fall winds blew the fruit off the trees, Hasselfeld remembers “a bunch of farmers plucking peaches before the storm wiped them out. That gave me the inspiration for the fallen peach.” hslrestaurant.com

THE FALLEN PEACH
1.5 Sugar House Distillery Silver Rum
.75 peach-coconut simple syrup (Mix coconut simple syrup with peach puree.)
.75 lemon juice
.5 Holystone Shochu
.1 Holystone Oread liqueur
Shake all ingredients together and fine-strain into a rocks glass. Top with pebble ice and smoked salt and garnish with a locally farmed flower.


6. Salt Lake Mag Cocktail Contest

Natalie Hamilton – Under Current
“I began bartending in the city nearly six years ago. I never imagined bartending would turn into a passionate form of art and creativity for me, but six years later, I’m still happy to be learning,” says Hamilton. “My favorite part of bartending is creating a space where people from many walks of life can feel safe and can be brought together over drinks and the fabulous community of this city; I love creating thoughtful and inventive drinks for that experience.
At Under Current, we’ve leaned in to our nautical roots and gone with more inspiration from flavors of the ports across the world. We have many southeast Asian spices and influences, using complex spirits such as agricoles, mezcal, amari, aquavit, Japanese whiskeys, and spirits not fitting into the “classic mold.” The Open Sesame fits the holidays with its deep red color and warm spices. We created a signature syrup using black rice, toasted black sesame, cinnamon, anise and clove. The syrup is the backbone of the cocktail, giving it both a rich texture and exotic flavors. Water Pocket Distillery created Temple of the Moon Gin, and with its hints of ginger and citrus, we found this to be the perfect base spirit. We added locally made Bar Daddy Orgeat to add notes of floral rose and orange blossom and add to the creamy texture of the cocktail. For depth and bitterness, we added Ramazzotti amaro. The cocktail is deep and complex in flavor, color and character. It also highlights one of my favorite local distillers and orgeat by craftsman and friend, Ryan Manning. It’s topped with grated coffee and laphroig to bring out the earthy and smoky notes found in all the ingredients. undercurrentbar.com

OPEN SESAME
1.5 oz. Temple of the Moon Gin
.5 oz. Forbidden Syrup (black rice, black sesame)
.25 oz. Bar Daddy Orgeat
.5 oz. Ramazzotti liqueur
.75 oz. lemon juice
Mix and add two dashes chai bitters. Top with orchid flowers, grated coffee and a laphroig spritz.


7.

Adam “Scoop” Kaessner – Water Witch
“Scoop” says, “My goal was to utilize ingredients in the bar that often went to waste and combine them into a unique twist on a well-established classic cocktail. At Water Witch we are constantly working on reducing food waste and reusing ingredients that haven’t been fully exploited. After a wine is opened, it starts to deteriorate and is no longer servable after only a few days. So I take that dead wine and boil it with spices, add sweeteners like sugar infused with orange and lemon peels, and use that syrup as the sweet element
in a cocktail. For this drink I added spices that I felt added warmth and complemented the Sugar House Bourbon Whiskey. Because we use lots of orange peels to garnish drinks in the bar we are left with quite a bit of orange juice that doesn’t get used so we regularly come up with creative solutions to feature cocktails with orange juice. Adjusting the acid levels in the juice is one way to make it fill the place of another citrus like lemon or lime juice but still get orange flavor without over-diluting the drink. By adding malic and citric acid we achieve a tartness similar to lime juice. Then all the juice is clarified with agar, a jelly-like substance, obtained from red algae. That way the juice keeps for longer and can be carbonated. To carbonate the drink I use the Perlini Cocktail Shaker which makes it so the drink can be carbonated, chilled, and diluted all in the same step.” waterwitchslc.com

BOROS CHARM
1.5 oz. Sugar House Distillery Bourbon Whiskey
2.5 oz. clarified acid-adjusted orange and ginger juice (described above)
.5 oz. Riff Pinot Grigio wine syrup aromatized with Vietnamese black tea, vanilla, coriander, orange peels CO2
Mix the drink and pour over the biggest ice cubes that will fit the glass. Carbonate the drink and garnish with a dehydrated orange wheel, pickled ginger slices and Verjus rouge, ginger and orange caviar (made with agar.)


8.

MaryKate Garland – SLC Eatery
MaryKate started bartending weddings and events at a yacht club before mov- ing to the busy downtown nightlife on the East coast. She moved to SLC two years ago and started flexing her craft cocktail muscles in this blossoming bar and restaurant scene. “SLC Eatery uses a lot of Japanese fusion with our food, so we loved the idea of using the local Holystone Shochu as our main spirit with yuzu behind it. We also loved the idea
of creating a more “elegant” cocktail be- cause although we are a male chef-driven restaurant, we’ve got a lot of girl power behind it as well.” slceatery.com

3:10 TO YUZU
1.5 oz. Holystone Shochu
1 oz. Elena Gin
1 oz. yuzu juice
.75 oz. jasmine flower orgeat Egg white
Bitters Labs Blueberry- Cardomon bitters
Mix in a cocktail shaker over ice and strain into glass.


For more food and drink, click here.

Wolf-of-Snow-Hollow

Film Review: “Wolf of Snow Hollow” Terrorizes Wasatch Mountains

By Arts & Culture

Tis the season for spooky movies, and a locally shot film recently made available for purchase on several streaming services is here to save us from coronavirus-induced boredom by scaring us while we’re glued to our couches. Wolf of Snow Hollow—the second film from writer, director, actor Jim Cummings after 2018’s acclaimed Thunder Road—is a moody horror film about a series of brutal murders in a small ski town ostensibly committed by a werewolf. While that setup would hint at a campy romp, Wolf of Snow Hollow is more of a deft tonal balancing act, vacillating between terror, comedy and interpersonal drama.

Cummings stars as a police officer whose mental health unravels as he deals with the stresses of addiction, a father with failing health, rocky relationships with his family and a rising body count in the isolated mountain town. Complicating things, his father also happens to be the town’s obstinate sheriff, gamely portrayed by the late, great Robert Forster in his final role. It isn’t difficult to imagine how the plot develops. Without spoiling much, some murders happen, some crappy police work gets done, some fingers get pointed and there are a few twists and turns along the way.

It isn’t the procedural aspect of the movie which makes it compelling but is instead what happens between the moments of violence and gore. Marshall’s anger management issues manifest with eccentricity and hilarity in a way that will perhaps feel familiar to those who have seen Thunder Road, but are nevertheless fun and affecting. There’s a tacit acknowledgement of the perpetual horror wrought by misplaced masculine ire, and the varying levels of obliviousness characters bring to that reality underscore both the film’s lightest and darkest moments.

Cummings isn’t shy about his influences. There are obvious nods to Cohen brothers’ classics like Fargo—Ricki Lindhome’s dry competence amid systemic police ineptitude as Officer Julia Robson is a terrific homage to Francis McDormand’s Marge Gunderson—and any number of clever horror films you’ve seen. That familiarity isn’t necessarily a bad thing. Any film that can make you laugh and recoil in equal measure should be applauded, and Wolf of Snow Hollow feels undeniably original. In the “your mileage may vary” department, supporting characters go relatively unexplored. I was unbothered by the lack of background development, feeling it contributed to the taut pacing and crisp 83-minute runtime, which serve the slow-burn story well.

Even if I haven’t convinced you to watch Wolf of Snow Hollow on its merits as a deadpan horror-comedy, it’s worth watching for the gratuitous Utah scenes alone. The credits begin with a sweeping shot Mount Timpanogos before cutting to a shot of Park City Mountain’s Jupiter Peak. The film’s action opens with a visiting couple from Los Angeles getting into verbal altercation with some local ruffians at The Notch Pub in Kamas. Someone meets a truly gruesome fate in Solitude’s parking lot right in front of the Moonbeam Express chairlift, and the Summit County Courthouse in Coalville is home to the fictional Snow Hollow Police Department.

Long story short, the writing and performances in Wolf of Snow Hollow are top-notch. Cummings’s dialogue is acerbic and witty, and the film is a fitting sendoff to a beloved actor in Forster while being a welcome opportunity for Lindhome to shine. I give this the film 3.5 mangled corpses out of four. Happy Halloween, everyone.

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Embark on your Halloween adventure at Evermore

By Arts & Culture

Utah has a wide range of outdoor, COVID-19-aware Halloween attractions to choose from — think haunted forests and corn mazes — but Evermore Park is the only one we can think of where you can wear your Robin Hood or Daenerys Targaryen costume and fit right in.

Halloween comes to Evermore Park

Of course, one of those bird-beaked plague doctor outfits might be more in line with the state of the world. You could also opt for something scary, or just go as yourself.

Evermore Park during the Halloween (Lore) season is like a mix between A Knight’s Tale, Game of Thrones and the Halloween Town in The Nightmare Before Christmas.

While there, you can join in archery or axe throwing (which had the longest lines on our visit), or fight your kids in the arena with foam shields, swords and spears. This season, you can also enjoy the park’s haunted adventure, bird and reptiles shows, train ride, vendors, musical performances, fire dancers, fortune tellers and character actors.

fire dancers

A fiery performance at Evermore Park

“We help our actors through a unique style of method acting and prepare them with tools to be able to exist as a different person for up to 40 hours a week,” said Chance Le Prey, Project Director at Evermore Park. “Evermore is a strange space where, depending on the season, our actors may have to exist as someone else longer than they live as themselves. We keep a focus on long-form training styles of improv, method acting transitional tools and focus on customer service interactions and performing to large crowds.”

Long story short, the actors are well-trained and committed to their craft.

A character from the haunt section of Evermore

When you purchase your Evermore Park pass, you can bundle it with a ticket for the Haunted Adventure. With the theme “Facing the fear we manifest,” the haunt tells the story of a diabolical circus that has come to spread fear. You’ll make your way through buildings and outdoor areas that cover much of the park. With jump scares and a lot of creepy stuff, the haunt is recommended for those 13 and older. It does have clowns.

As you enter the park, grab a a trifold map. Along with being able to see where everything you want to do in the park is located, you can follow the map’s guide for first-timers to get to know the different areas, as well as Evermore’s guilds.

The guilds are the clubs that characters are part of. You can join a guild, or multiple guilds, by proving your worthiness by accomplishing a handful of tasks. Actors will tell you the benefits of joining their guilds and membership requirements, which may include learning something, participating in park activities or performing good deeds.

Coven Witch

A character in The Coven, one of the guilds you can join at Evermore Park

The park has six guilds: Black Heart Hunters, The Coven, Roaming Bards, Pirates, Knights and Rangers. From what we saw, the Pirates have the most fun.

Before starting your journey, however, it’s recommended to grab a bite to eat.

On our trip, we ordered the churro donut topped with ice cream, candied pecans and whipped cream, along with a Virgil’s root beer (though the atmosphere had us craving a dark English ale).To warm up as you stroll the grounds, head over to the food stand near the exit to the haunted attraction for a hot pumpkin-spice horchata.

Virgil's Root Beer and a donut churro

Sweet treats at Evermore Park

If you’re worried about visiting due to the aforementioned plague, Chandler Jensen, public relations team lead, hopes to ease your mind. “We are complying with all local and federal regulations, including the requirement of masks for all guests and employees,” he said. “We have hand sanitizer stations throughout the park and high-touch areas are being disinfected between each use. We have reworked how the park works, so, until further notice, we are not using our previous gold ‘currency’ for quest rewards, and we are not allowing any trading to happen between guests or employees.”

Keep in mind that some salty guests may try to break the rules. Consider your health and use your best judgement before setting forth on your adventure.

Find info on tickets, attractions and COVID-19 safety at evermore.com.

Read more of our family content in our Kid-friendly blog roll.

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Halloween During Covid-19

By Community

Halloween, the best holiday in my opinion (mostly because I love having a reason to dress up as Mia Wallace from Pulp Fiction and eat endless amounts of Twix), will unfortunately be a lot different this year due to covid-19. Classic door-to-door trick or treating has been altered to be covid-friendly and those annual Halloween costume parties will have to be reimagined or canceled.

According to the CDC the safest way to trick or treat is to:

  • Stay at least 6 feet apart from other trick or treaters
  • Wear a mask. Costume masks DO NOT COUNT. Make a cloth mask a part of your costume!
  • Sanitize hands before and after handling treats
  • If you’re giving out Halloween treats, be sure to do it outdoors
  • Set up a station outside with individually bagged treats for trick or treaters to take
  • Wash your hands with soap and water for 20 seconds before eating any treats

Not feeling comfortable taking your kids trick or treating? Hide little treats around the house or yard and have a Halloween scavenger hunt! Instead of indoor Halloween parties/typical Halloween activities, try these alternative ideas:

  • Carve pumpkins outside with your friends – 6 feet apart
  • Do a corn maze
  • Have a spooky Halloween movie night with the people you already live with and/or tell your friends to join a “watch party” and watch scary movies together while apart.
  • OR go see a scary drive-in movie at SLFS Motor Cinema (buy tickets in advance, they sell fast!)
  • Host a virtual costume party
  • Have an outdoor costume contest

These precautions might not sound as thrilling as our traditional Halloween festivities, but they are the best substitutes we have to keep everyone safe and healthy while still celebrating one of the best holidays of the year.

Have a safe and spooky Halloween and remember to shop local for all your Halloween treats and treasures and support small businesses:

For more health and wellness, click here.