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Snowbird’s SeventyOne Celebrates One Groovy Year

By Eat & Drink

The year is 1971. Frazier knocks out Ali; Kissinger goes to China; Lennon’s “Imagine” tops the charts alongside Marvin Gaye’s “What’s Going on;” Willy Mays hits his 638th home run; Disney World opens in Florida; McCartney forms up Wings and Manson uses “Helter Skelter” in his defense.

And, here in Utah, Snowbird opened the lifts, racing to the finish line that December with crews battling a problem that would become the resort’s trademark: Too much snow.

Last year, Snowbird gutted the restaurants in the base of The Cliff Lodge and replaced them with the light and airy SeventyOne in homage to the ’Bird’s earliest days. It’s a welcome change from the wooded darkness of El Chanate and the Keyhole. The new bar and restaurant is retro fabulous, featuring throwback photos on the walls, groovy banquet seating and plenty of year-round patio space (thanks to high-BTU heaters).

Snowbird’s Executive Chef, George Lackey, explains SeventyOne is family-friendly and was conceived as a place where guests can return for several meals.

“El Chanate was great and everybody loves Mexican food but you only eat it once on a trip,” he says. “SeventyOne offers something for everyone at every mealtime.”

Making the menu Lackey says he tried to think back to the hot food trends of ’71.

“I was just getting out of culinary school back then,” he says. “So we’re doing French onion soup and pressure-fried chicken, even meatloaf with Spanish sauce.” Wait. This “meatloaf” is meatless with 2020 flair featuring Beyond Burger “meat.” 

“SeventyOne is a touch of the old made new again,” he says. Think nachos. Only modernized with ahi tuna—a popular first-course nibbler.

Indeed the SeventyOne menu is clearly built for variety, with small plates for sharing around après drinks, and heartier fare for fully coursed lunch or dinner. Food at Snowbird has always been a little spotty. We still think the Steak Pit, which is so old we can’t even call it a throwback, is the best spot to dine at the resort while the-wants-to-be swanky Aerie has been hobbled by playing the “Y’all come!” role that SeventyOne now fills.

“Now, the Aerie can be the Aerie like we want it to be,” Lackey says. “The high-end dining experience on the 10th Floor for a special night, and SeventyOne can keep folks fed the rest of the time.”

Dust off those bell-bottoms!

For more information on SeventyOne, click here.

For more food, click here.

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Italian Restaurant Osteria Amore Replaces Aristo

By Eat & Drink

To judge from the plate, Italy is taking over Utah. Every time a restaurant closes, an Italian restaurant takes its place.

Yes, I’m exaggerating. Yes, you’ve likely read my complaints about this before. But imagine how dismal it feels, after 35 years of extolling and promoting creative regional cuisine, to be faced with so few new choices: a fast-casual restaurant, an Italian restaurant or a combination of the two. Food should be satisfying. Food should be comforting. Food should never be boring. Authentic Italian cuisine isn’t. But by the time Italian dishes reach Utah kitchens, they have usually been altered to suit the middle of bell curve’s palate and we end up with overcooked lasagne and over-cheesed pasta.

So, when one of the best Greek restaurants in town closed, I was not surprised to see that an Italian restaurant was taking its place: Osteria Amore opened up the interior space beautifully, established a bar area to the right of the entrance and my friends and I didn’t get any further than that. We sat at the bar, ordered a bottle of Italian white and didn’t leave for several hours after consuming antipasti, primi and a secondi and another bottle. It was a great way to dine—and very Italian.

Amore is owned by Marco Cuttai, from Palermo, and Sicilia Mia refugee, Eduardo Daja, and thankfully, he has left a lot of the cheesiness behind. The Sicilia restaurants are friendly and popular and belly-filling, but they verge on the stereotype of heavy, oversauced Italian food that Americans loved in the ‘50s and 60’s.

Sitting at the bar, we ordered items from all over the menu: deep-fried artichoke hearts with shishito peppers, housemade ricotta and toasted bread, fried octopus with potato cream and carpaccio, thin-sliced beef with lots of  arugula and grana cheese. Quibbling, the beef could have been a little thinner, but the unusual addition of pesto and mushrooms brought flavor and texture to the dish. We loved the ravioli with pear, gorgonzola and sage. Carbonara here was made with a good balance of cheese—no fiery show, no tricks, just a lot of style.

For more information about Osteria Amore, click here.

For more food, click here.

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Top Vegan Goodies

By Eat & Drink

Eating vegan requires some thinking: sussing out hidden animal and dairy products, taking your stand about honey, and making sure you get enough protein. But vegan baking is even trickier. It’s hard to substitute anything for eggs, butter and cream. We suggest you leave sweet baking to the pros, like the French often do. Salt Lake is lucky to have a number of vegan bakeries turning out gorgeous pastries. Fool your carnivorous friends. Here are our four top picks for vegan goodies:

  1. Passion Flour Patisserie: Vanilla bean shortbread cookie with pomegranate frosting, Croissant aux amandes filled with almond cream and topped with sliced almonds. 165 E 900 South, SLC, 385-242-7040
  2. Eva’s Bakery: Not entirely vegan, but great vegan options. Kouign-amann, a crusty exterior with a soft doughy center, buttery flavors of folded sugar throughout. A dark chocolate cookie topped with powdered sugar. 155 Main St, SLC, 801-355-3942                                      
  3. City Cakes & Cafe: Seasonal fruit tart with a flaky crust, vanilla cream, topped with fresh fruit and powdered sugar. A vanilla layered cake with a sweet vanilla bean frosting. 1860 S 300 W Ste D, SLC, 801-359-2239
  4. The Big O Doughnuts: Blueberry lavender doughnut topped with a housemade raspberry glaze with a tofutti based cream cheese frosting and sprinkled with fresh lavender. 248 W 900 S, SLC, 385-770-7024

For more foodie fun, click here.

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Silent Night comes to the Capitol Theater

By Arts & Culture

By December 1914, the horrific carnage and conditions of the World War I, called “the war to end all wars,” was established in a series of hellish trenches occupied by troops along The Western Front, an area including parts of Belgium, north-eastern France and Luxembourg. The warring armies were separated by “no man’s land,” an area of scorched earth only 250 yards wide criss-crossed by barbed wire and water-filled shell holes where men were dying by the 1,000s among piles of decaying corpses.

“When you begin to see your enemy as a human being, then war becomes unsustainable.”     – Mark Campbell

Leaders on both sides rejected the idea of a Christmas truce, but the warring soldiers had another idea and on Christmas Eve 1914, joined together in an informal night of peace culminating in a multilingual spontaneous singing of the beloved carol, “Silent Night.” Winner of the 2012 Pulitzer Prize for Music, Silent Night is an American opera based on the 2005 screenplay, Joyeux Noël. In January of 2020, Tomer Zvulun will make his Utah Opera debut directing the acclaimed production, sung in English, German, French, Italian and Latin with English supertitles. Librettist Mark Campbell says, “In the midst of a devastating war, these soldiers demonstrated beautiful audacity as they put down their guns, shared personal pictures, whiskey and played music with each other.”

For more information visit utahopera.org

For more A&E, click here.

eatdrinkslc

Resolutions for 2020: SLC, please.

By Community

It’s 2020, and we’re all over those New Years’ resolutions. You know, the “be better” list: eat less sugar, drop social media, join a gym, no boyfriends… What else could be better? We want our city to listen up and get better too. Welcoming in a new Mayor, 20/20 vision also means seeing things with more clarity. And why not add a few resolutions for our very own SALT LAKE CITY? We may not be perfect, but we continue to dream better for our city.

Free Public Transportation

That’s right, no fares, period. While the UTA does offer free passage inside a finite downtown area known as the “FREE FARE ZONE” and a FAREPAY system is a start, not having to deal with fares at all would be ideal. With Utah’s population boom and our number of AQI (Air Quality Index) action days which boast air pollution levels unhealthy to everyone, why is this even debatable?

Bag the Plastic. 

The list is at three. Park City, Moab and Logan have adopted a plastic bag ban. Being Utah’s big city, the big question is if SLC will join them?

Local Culture vs. Imported Culture

From theatre to dining, we lost some good ones this year (Aristo’s, The Paris, Sea Salt), can we lean a little more to locally-made and locally-owned?

What shall we eat for dinner tonight? The possibilities have shrunk around Salt Lake. BOO! We want more than just another burger joint or pasta tossed around in a cheese wheel. Don’t we?

SLC, yes, we need to see more stuff like this!!

While writing a post about elotes, my mind was blown reading about a menu item at Antojitos Lokos in South Salt Lake called takislokos (yes, those brightly red-colored rolled TAKIS tortilla chips). A TAKIS bag is cut lengthwise and filled with cukes, jicama, Japanese peanuts, pork rinds and hot sauce.

More room for more bikes and pedestrians. 

Sure sure, we’re making progress, but this is right in step to improve our air quality. Let’s make public health and wellness a priority for SLC too.

Support our local publications (we’re kinda partial to print). 

We don’t care who you support but stay informed, big issues (i.e. inland port) will impact our future (and the Great Salt Lake), so read and support local journalists.

What about gardens?

According to Forbes, Utah ranks among the fastest-growing in the Nation, yikes. Along with housing and urban development, we hope that community gardens (Wasatch Community Gardens just turned 30), parks and creating green spaces (including your very own) will become an equally high priority for SLC.

More DIVERSITY.

Getting out of our comfort zones is another ambitious resolution for our city. Let this encourage you. Along with supporting local, seek out the organizations that are doing that and doing good at the same time.

To read more about the issues and aspects that we care about, go here.

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From Mumbai Streets to Utah University

By Community

A few pockets of snow linger in shadowed corners of the Westminster College campus. Salman Sayyed, head covered in a borrowed ski cap, shivers. The 33-degree air is new to the Mumbai native, who has lived in Utah for less than three months.

“I have a heavy jacket in my bag,” he says, nodding to the full pack slung over his shoulder. The library is just a few hundred yards off, and gearing up simply for the short walk from the school cafeteria seems impractical.

But practicality is kind of Sayyed’s thing. It always has been. It was practical when he dropped out of school at eight to help his mother collect trash and resell recyclables to feed his family. It was practical to bundle up their belongings and family home—nothing more than a plastic tarp—and hide it among bushes to keep it from being stolen while they worked. And it was practical to dart between cars at one of Mumbai’s busiest intersections, hawking English-language bestsellers for just more than $3 a day.

Now, in Salt Lake City, Sayyed is farther away from home than he could have ever imagined, considering he first heard the word “Utah” less than two years ago. He came with lofty goals for his return. He wants to help change the system that has kept kids like himself in poverty. To that end, he started a $56,000 Master in Business Administration program at Westminster in August (the tuition alone would cover his parents’ monthly rent and bills for 52 years) and has plans to launch a non-profit focused on Mumbai street kids.

“In India, there are so many poor students who are passionate about studying, but cannot complete [school],” Sayyed says. “My goal is to start a tour company with students to create job opportunities as guides and to support their education.”

Sayyed’s story reminds Westerners of the hit movie, Slumdog Millionaire. But two women replace the role of the film’s game show. Caroline Nagar, whom Sayyed now considers a second mother, met 15-year-old Sayyed as he sold books at the crowded Haji Ali intersection and urged him to go back to school after a seven-year hiatus. Utahn Beth Colosimo helped him get to Salt Lake to earn his MBA.

Sayyed was born on the pavement near the family tent when Hindu-Muslim riots broke out across Mumbai and prevented his mother from getting to the hospital. He had no birth certificate or documented evidence he existed. He dropped out of school after second grade, teaching himself how to read English from the books he sold and the billboards lining the major thoroughfare. Several friends, also booksellers, were hit, some killed, by cars.

Nagar, then a teacher at the Akanksha Foundation, a nonprofit that educates children in urban India, had a hunch Sayyed would do well if he returned to school. She convinced him to give up bookselling. A year later Sayyed was a full-time student—in three years he’d moved through the equivalent of eight grades.

Sayyed had one year instead of the usual 10, to study for the tests necessary to move on to junior college, where he earned back-to-back accolades as Student of the Year. In 2017 he graduated from Kischunchand Chellaram College with a bachelor’s in humanities and arts; his final semester was at Houston Community College via the U.S. State Department’s EducationUSA program.

Back from Houston for two months, Sayyed met Colosimo, executive director of the Goldman Sachs 10,000 Small Businesses program, as he guided a group of Salt Lake Community College and Westminster students and staff visiting India in the summer of 2018. The two started chatting on the long bus ride from into Mumbai.

“He started unraveling this jaw-dropping story,” Colosimo recalls. “He was just super passionate about wanting to change the trajectory of his life, and that was the springboard to overcome so many obstacles without having any real family guidance.”

Sayyed shared his plans to go to graduate school in the United States, and Colosimo left India with a promise to keep in touch about school in Utah. “A lot of people come and say a lot of things,” Sayyed says. “So I was just like, ‘let’s see.’”

They did stay in touch, and Colosimo started planning to bring Sayyed to Utah. “I was sending him information about the University of Utah and Westminster and we just started ticking off all the things that needed to happen,” says Colosimo—all the basic college application requirements plus English language exams, student visas and financial documents. By May 2019, Westminster accepted Sayyed.

Colosimo signed on as Sayyed’s sponsor—she makes sure his tuition is covered, he lives in the Colosimo’s basement apartment and he’s quickly becoming a part of the family. He works the maximum 20 hours a week at two on-campus jobs and to offset expenses, Colosimo has set up “Salman Education Fund” fundraisers at Mountain America Credit Union and on Go Fund Me.

For Colosimo, the reason she committed to bringing a virtual stranger across an ocean and into her home has become increasingly obvious.

“He is not prideful about how he’s overcome circumstance, and he’s super happy to be giving back,” she says. “I think he’ll carry that forward in his career and the social impact he wants to see in his country. He wants to see kids get educated and he wants to help change the course of India. He can be a real role model.”

For more information about Salman, check out his Youtube channel here.

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The Rent is Too Damn High

By City Watch

The thud of the ball against boards and the subsequent clatter of scattering pins is a familiar soundtrack. From the birthday parties of our wistful youth to the Lebowski-esque escapism of adulthood, the bowling alley has served as the quotidian cultural center of our communities. For the past decade Jupiter Bowl’s been that hub in Park City. But after it shuttered its doors last fall in the face of rising rent costs, there’s a void in town.   

“We all bowled as kids. Our parents bowled. Our parents’ parents bowled. It’s just what we did,” says Amy Baker, owner of Jupiter Bowl. “We thought Jupiter Bowl would be really valuable to the community. We would have been happy just to break even. And if we could have, we would have stayed open forever.”

Baker and her partners ran Jupiter Bowl at a loss for 10 years. The third rent hike proved too much, costing Park City a locally owned and operated institution.

The closure contributes to growing anxiety about a cost-driven transformation in Park City that’s threatening the viability of local businesses. A fickle, seasonally dependent resort market is difficult enough, especially when combined with some of the highest lease prices in the state.

“There’s still a small full-time community here, so we rely on three big weeks a year in wintertime. You just can’t survive on that,” Baker says. Baker declined to disclose exact figures, but based on the going rates in Park City, the costs to run the 23,000 square-foot bowling alley, restaurant and entertainment center were likely astronomical.

“Park City is essentially divided into four commercial pods: Main Street, Prospector, Kimball Junction and Silver Creek,” Katie Wilking Clinard, Park City Commercial Division Director for Cushman Wakefield, said. “In all those areas, costs are still going up, though it’s held relatively steady for the past 12 months. People want to be here and there’s lack of vacancy. It doesn’t look like that’s going to change.”

Wilking Clinard provided us with approximate triple net lease fees (NNN) for each of Park City’s commercial pods, which are the annual, per-square-foot costs for rent, utilities, taxes, building insurance and maintenance a tenant agrees to pay. NNN Fees are $65-75 along Main Street, $20-30 in Prospector, $24-29 in Kimball Junction and $17-21 in Silver Creek. Add to that increasing employee costs required to remain competitive in Park City—with its dearth of affordable housing and largely commuter-based workforce—and you begin to understand the difficult calculus business owners are faced with in Park City.

Average Retail Space Cost Per Square Foot:

Salt Lake City

$25.23

vs.

Main Street, Park City:

$70

Average Monthly Cost for 2,500 Square Foot Retail Space:

Salt Lake City:

$5,416

vs.

Main Street, Park City:

$14,583

Average Retail Sales Associate Hourly Pay Rate:

Salt Lake City:

$11.41

vs.

Park City:

$17.56

 

Some Park City businesses get creative to stay ahead. On Main Street, Prospect—a clothing store—Billy’s Barber Shop and Pink Elephant Coffee have created a thriving co-working space in one building. It helps to split costs, and walk-in customers for each separate business complement the other tenants. Other businesses have moved operations to the Salt Lake Valley where costs are lower. Park City Brewery recently moved their production to a shared facility in South Salt Lake with Shades Brewing, which also used to brew in Park City. Park City Brewery, however, is opening a new taproom in Kimball Junction to maintain a presence in Summit County. Boutique bamboo ski pole manufacturer Soul Poles moved out of their facility on Munchkin Road last summer. Though rent prices in that specific area were substantially lower than other areas, the location was not a long-term solution as that property is being bulldozed along with several others in April as part of the upcoming Park City Arts and Culture District.

A town inundated with single-branded shops like Patagonia, The North Face and Lululemon looks like any other. “If all we have are chain stores, you can get everything online. There’s no reason to come to town, and you risk losing all our local charm,” Wilking Clinard says.

A born-and-bred Park City local, she stresses it’s not all doom and gloom. “Communication between parties to find creative solutions that work for everyone is vital. Whether that’s creating unique payment schedules or helping arrange co-working spaces, I’m proud to help keep a local identity in Park City.”

The city hasn’t sat idly by either. In 2017 the City Council passed an amendment which capped the number of chain stores in the immediate Main Street area. Mayor at the time Jack Thomas espoused the need to “balance business and authenticity” in Park City, which is more important than ever as growth and development continue. High commercial rent prices in Park City aren’t going anywhere. The city is doing what it can. Commercial real estate experts like Wilking Clinard are chipping in too. What can we do? It’s simple. Vote with our wallets and support the local businesses that lend Park City its identity.

For more articles on Park City, click here.

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Surviving Sundance

By Arts & Culture

Unless you happen to be tight with some influential key grip’s nephew, it can be difficult to navigate the Sundance Film Festival. Without those sweet, sweet insider hookups, you’ll likely be stuck in line outside the exclusive screenings and hot, popup clubs Sundance is famous for. By following these tips, even those of us outside the Hollywood power vacuum can enjoy the spoils of Park City’s Biggest Little Film Festival.

What Do I Eat?

Let’s be blunt: Stay away from Main Street! Many restaurants in the center of the whirlwind are commandeered for private events. Others have waiting lines measured in eons. Either way, it’s likely your favorite spots may be verboten. Many great nearby options won’t be inundated, like Twisted Fern’s chic natural cuisine in the Snow Creek Shopping Center or Sammy’s Bistro’s high-class comfort food in Prospector. Even easier is to pick up some artisanal Italian food at Bartolos in Kimball Junction or elevated Mexican fare at Billy Blanco’s in Pinebrook before you head to the center of town.

Where Do I Drink?

$20 cover charges at dive bars are borderline offensive, especially when you can waltz in for free the other 50 weeks a year. Don’t succumb to temptation trying to rub elbows with big screen bigwigs. The Boneyard on SR 248 has the same idealized local/visitor melting pot vibe as its Main Street analog, No Name Saloon, and there’s a mirror image of O’Shucks Bar and Grill—schooners, peanuts and all—in Pinebrook that won’t be charging for entry. 

How Do I Get There?

Don’t drive into the heart of Sundance. The roads are a madhouse. The parking is exorbitantly expensive. Someone from L.A. who’s never driven in the snow is going to wreck your bumper with a rental car. Park City’s already robust bus system transforms into a well-oiled mass transit machine that leaves major metropolitan areas envious. Park at the new Ecker Hill park, take the frontage road west of Kimball Junction and enjoy the ride. The army of patient Sundance volunteers will help you get where you’re going with a smile on their faces.

What Movies Do I Watch?

Unless you bought a ticket package long before reading this article, you’re going to have to use the Sundance eWaitlist app to get your tickets. The app is pretty slick and it spares you from the tedious, freezing hellscape of in-person waiting lines of years past, but it’s still difficult to get into high-demand screenings. Shoot for late-night screenings—you’d be shocked how many Sundancers no-show after a few cocktails—or catch a film at the Festival’s excellent venues in Salt Lake City like the Tower Theatre at 9th and 9th or the Broadway on 300 South. 

For more articles on Sundance, click here.

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Explore the Canadian Rockies from a Luxury Train

By Adventures, Outdoors, Travel

“Bear on the left!” a spotter calls out. The guests aboard the train scramble to the left, their eyes to the glass and cameras and cell phones in hand. Those down below on the landing between passenger cars stick their heads out, the wind whipping through their hair as they look for the elusive beast.

“There he is!”

It’s a black bear, sunning himself where the forest meets the railroad tracks, either unaware or uncaring of the 83-ton train passing him. We add him to our list: bighorn sheep, elk, eagles, osprey, and I’m certain I spotted a female moose meandering along the trees.

They’re all breathtaking sights for the passengers aboard the Rocky Mountaineer train, moving eastward 35 miles per hour along the Canadian Pacific Railway. The railways cut through mountain and cross over rivers on the train’s First Passage to the West route, a journey from bustling Vancouver to Kamloops, then finally Banff and Lake Louise.

You’ve probably seen the world by plane, by car. But what about a good old-fashioned iron horse?

All Aboard

Our adventure begins in the luxe Fairmont Vancouver, just steps away from the Vancouver Art Gallery and an easy walk to the waterfront. With an early train departure, we’re greeted at the Rocky Mountaineer station with coffee and a live pianist. As staff, dressed in navy blue vests and slacks, gently ushers us toward the train to board, a bagpiper sends us off into the wilderness.

The first floor is the dining room, where guests take turns indulging in cuisine that Chef Jean Pierre Guerin calls “elevated comfort food” for breakfast and lunch. Until your seating, have no fear: Servers load your tray with drinks, pastries and fruit.

But we’re not here for the food. We’re here for the views. On the Gold Leaf cars, riders have a 180-degree dome window overhead, where tree branches caress the glass like wayward curtains. The mountains crash into the clouds, sprinkled with trees and sugary snow. We pass logging towns, cross the Fraser River, spy strawberries, corn and blackberry bushes thriving in the meadows.

Standing in the open-air landing between cars, you can smell the earthy underforest, green leaves still drenched in morning dew, the thick wall of ponderosa pines. I can’t say how the sun and the wind have a smell, but from that landing, you could breathe it in.

The white heads of osprey and eagles dot the sky, decorating their treetop nests with orange fishing nets. You can spot the emerald flashes of ducks swimming. On the river, the beavers are the engineers, jamming up the waterways with their logs. We pass a bighorn sheep, nature’s Spider-Man, as it looks down at us while clinging precariously to the sides of jagged rock. Each time, spotters call out their discoveries. 

“It’s a fun job,” Train Manager Peter Masejo tells me. “Every trip is so different…even a week ago it wasn’t as green, and the river is lower.”

With our feet propped up, watching Canada pass, one of the last sights before we arrive in Kamloops is the eerie Tranquille Sanatorium. It was originally built in 1907 to treat patients with tuberculosis, then converted into an “insane asylum” in 1959. It’s no wonder that this secluded white building, paint peeling, is rumored to be haunted.

Kamloops

Our first overnight stop is the “cow town” of Kamloops. Three men on horseback greet the Rocky Mountaineer into the station, waving and tipping their cowboy hats.

Chef Guerin invites our group to join him for dinner in town. I ask him, “Is it hard to cook on a train, with the cars rocking back and forth without mercy?” Non. A former airline chef aboard first-class flights, he says you can do so much more on a train.

A guide tells guests about the mountain range before them

“You can’t sauté and flambé in the air,” he explains.

A glass of red wine in hand, Guerin tells us about the ranch he owns an hour outside of town. He’s seen Kamloops, where the Canadian Pacific and Canadian National railways meet, grow from a supply town into a city of 90,000 people. At this busy hub—the city’s name is derived from the Shuswap First Nation word for “meeting of the waters”—people are on their way east to Banff or Jasper, or to the big city of Vancouver.

As indicated by the restaurants, there’s a large Japanese population in town, their ancestors were forcibly moved from Vancouver into internment camps nearby during World War II (not unlike what was happening across the border).

The next day is another trip on the rails. A few hours into the leg, we pass a source of pride for the railroad: Craigellachie, the memorial where the last spike was driven into the tracks, much like Utah’s famed Golden Spike. Take a second to look down, and there’s a story behind the scenery: the sweat, blood and dynamite that built the Canadian Pacific Railway.

After Canada became independent in 1867, the nation’s first prime minister, Sir John A. Macdonald, was determined to not let the western territories join the United States. He hatched a plan to connect the land from coast to coast, a huge feat requiring that his men survey millions of acres of Canadian wilderness.

Once a pass was found in 1881, the next four and a half years were a race to the Pacific. Railway workers battled blizzards, raging rivers, cliffs, rockslides, mishandled dynamite, hunger and disease. More than 10,000 Chinese men were brought in from California, earning less than half what their white colleagues were making.

In 1885, the Last Spike was smashed into the railroad, completing Canada’s first transcontinental railroad—six years ahead of schedule.

Banff & Lake Louise

On the second night of the trip, we arrive in the burgeoning tourist hub of Banff, a snowy playground where visitors ski, hike and escape to the hot springs. Here, the lakes are frozen over and the mountains are truly snow-capped.

A view of the Cascade Mountain over Banff

After checking into the hotel, I wander the mountainside town and pop into local shops—I buy a wedge of bourbon chocolate at Mountain Chocolate, organic soaps and lotions at Rocky Mountain Soap Company, and a wooden bear ornament at The Spirit of Christmas. For dinner, we dine at Grizzly House, a wacky fondue restaurant serving up shark, alligator, rattlesnake, buffalo, venison and more. We follow dinner with a tour of Park Distillery and a tasting of its vodka and gin—be sure to try the spirits infused with espresso and vanilla.

But a trip to Banff without stopping at Lake Louise is a travesty. En route to the lake we make a stop on the side of the road to take in the grandeur of the Castle Mountains, named for their flat-topped peaks. While taking photos, a long, rumbling freight train goes by. I see trains differently now.

To access Lake Louise, we stop at the Fairmont Chateau Lake Louise, an elegant hotel with floor-to-ceiling picture windows framing a postcard view of the lake set against the mountains. I learn it’s named for Princess Louise, the fourth daughter of Queen Victoria, and I also learn it’s not an exaggeration to call the waters Tiffany blue. After taking a romp around the lake, grab a drink or lunch at the hotel’s picturesque Fairview restaurant or Lakeview Lounge.

Alas, my journey across the Canadian Rockies had to come to an end. Getting up before the sun rose, I took an airport van to Calgary, where I flew back to the United States and sunny South Florida.

An Elk spots tourists rafting on the Athabasca River in Jasper

After spending days on a locomotive, being rocked back and forth as I took in the sights and smells of the wild, I said goodbye to the mighty mountains. 

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Poutine, Canada’s Gut-Warming Mess

By Eat & Drink

Not that long ago, Americans didn’t know what poutine was and if they did know, the reaction was simple: “That sounds gross.” It does sound gross—a pile of french fries topped with cheese curds and gravy, a dish that defies garnish and prettification and seems to have been invented as a cold person’s desperate need for as many hot calories as could be consumed at once. Or maybe it started as a Quebecois dare.poutine

Actually, maybe all that is true. Nevertheless, Utahns have fallen in love with poutine and lots of different restaurants serve their own versions of it.

The one pictured here is from Avenues Proper. 376 8th Avenue., SLC, 385-227-8628

For more foodie fun, click here.