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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

Midway’s Ice Castle

By Outdoors

A castle is coming to the kingdom of Midway. Ice Castles, LLC will bring a one-of-a-kind to Midway, as it unveils a massive castle made entirely of ice. This ice castle will feature lofty ice towers, shimmering archways, glowing tunnels and glossy walls—all made completely of ice.

Ice architect Brent Christensen started Ice Castles by building small ice structures in his Alpine yard in 2008. Now, his work has been seen by over 300,000 visitors, and he’s built castles in Colorado and Minnesota.

Christensen comes back to his roots this year with his first large-scale Ice Castle at Midway’s town square, next to the ice rink. Christensen patterned his design for Midway’s castle after well-known geological features across the state, like slot canyons, arches and cave-like tunnels. Guests are invited to not only view the beauty of the structures but to squeeze and crawl through parts of the stunning display.

Each castle is created by hand using only icicles and water. Millions of icicles sparkle a glacial blue by day and glow multi-colored at night with help of thousands of LED lights embedded in the ice. “Ice Castles really are one of the most unique and beautiful places on earth,” Christensen says. “Every visitor gets a distinctive experience since the ice is constantly melting, freezing and being reshaped. It’s an amazing, continuously evolving experience.”

Midway’s ice castle began construction in late November and will be open to the public in late December and possibly through March 2014, weather permitting. The Ice Castle will be open from noon to 10 p.m. Monday through Saturday.

Check out their website to learn more. See all our our outoors coverage here.

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

Grand America’s Holiday Window Stroll

By Community

Image courtesy of The Grand America Hotel.

The Grand America Hotel has announced its fourth annual Holiday Window Stroll, just in time to kick off the holiday season. The event features 13 unique, whimsical displays in each of the hotel’s retail window. The stroll will start on Black Friday, Nov. 29 at 8 a.m.

This year’s theme for the Holiday Window Stroll is “Santa’s Workshop.” Guests can take a closer look into the magical world of Santa’s helpers as they prepare for the holiday season. “We’re thrilled to invite the local community, as well as guests from all over, to celebrate the magic of the holidays at The Grand,” says Bruce T. Fery, chief executive officer for The Grand America Hotel. “We hope this year’s Holiday Window Stroll, combined with the many holiday events at the hotel, captures the joy of the holiday season for all to enjoy.”

Each window display is meticulously hand-crafted, and includes an animated component that truly captures the imagination. Stroll attendees will receive a “Ticket to the North Pole” to guide their explorations, as well as a special seasonal chocolate at the end of the stroll.

Guests visiting the hotel for the unveiling festivities will be welcomed with eye-catching holiday decor and a host of events, including a book signing and reading of children’s book “Maurice on Holiday.” The first 10 guests to complete the stroll on the launch day will receive a breakfast buffet for two and access to a meet and greet with author Stephen Wunderli and a signed copy of his book.


Photo courtesy of The Grand America Hotel

On Nov. 29 at 10 a.m., don’t miss executive pastry chef Alexandre Henocq and his team as they unveil an intricately crafted 150-square-foot gingerbread house. The two-story house will be displayed in the ballroom corridor throughout the holiday season.

The Holiday Window Stroll hours will be Sunday–Thursday, 4–9 p.m. and Friday–Saturday 10 a.m.–9 p.m.

The window stroll will conclude on Dec. 31.

Karaoke Night in Utah Valley

By Arts & Culture, Music

Photo courtesy of Rock the Mic Entertainment.

Tired of the usual movie night? Karaoke and open-mic nights proliferate Utah Valley, so snag a hot date or some friends, grab the mic and sing your heart out.

And all you first timers, don’t be shy. Have a little sump’m sump’m first if you need to, but don’t let stage fright keep you from a cathartic, confidence-building experience. You’re going to love it.

Here are the best karaoke nights in Utah Valley, where you can sing to your heart’s content (and some recommendations on what you should eat while you’re building up courage).

Applebee’s Neighborhood Grill
290 W. University Pkwy., Orem (and all locations)
Tuesdays from 9 p.m. to midnight
Quick tips: best time to go is around 9:30 p.m., appetizers are half off during karaoke night
Tasty eats: Marsala mushroom sirloin, all of the appetizers

Callie’s Café & Sports Bar
466 N. State Street, Orem
Fridays and Saturdays from 7 p.m. to 2 a.m.
Quick tips: cash only, a no-frills bar and grill, not a place for yelling a Top 40 song with your hyper girlfriends
Tasty eats: French dip, Pitcher’s Mound with garbage hash browns

Wing Nutz
1054 S. 750 East, Orem
Wednesdays from 9 p.m. to midnight
Quick tips: hosted by Rock the Mic Entertainment, more than 35,000 songs to choose from
Tasty eats: wings, wings, wings and wild wraps

Guru’s Cafe
45 E. Center Street, Provo
Saturdays from 8 to 10 p.m.
Quick tips: people love event host DJ Brady Mac from Rock the Mic Entertainment, karaoke night has been going for four years here
Tasty eats: Marco Polo pasta, sweet potato fries with Southwest fry sauce, cilantro-lime quesadillas

Pizza Pie Cafe
2235 N. University Pkwy., Provo
Tuesdays from 9 p.m. to midnight
Quick tips: the $6 entrance fee covers the buffet, a drink and karaoke; go right around 9 p.m. if you want a good seat, also hosted by Rock the Mic Entertainment
Tasty eats: “Cinnamon Stix” dessert pizza, Hillbilly and barbecue pizzas

More of the open-mic type? Grab your guitar and you can perform your covers and originals at these places.

Velour
135 N. University Ave., Provo
Tuesdays from 8:30 to 11 p.m. (doors open at 8 p.m.)
Quick tips: $3 for general public, $2 for open-mic performers, all ages can sign up at the door to perform (start lining up an hour before), acoustic—no full bands
Tasty eats: candy and snacks available, large selection of canned and bottled sodas

Muse Music
151 N. University Ave., Provo
Wednesdays from 8:30 p.m. (doors open at 8 p.m.)
Quick tips: $1 to get in, 10 performance slots, comedians and poets also welcome, performers get up to eight minutes
Tasty eats: café always open during shows, get the grilled cheese and edamame

The Deerhunter Pub
2000 N. 300 West, Spanish Fork
Wednesdays from 8 to 11 p.m. is open-mic night with Brother Chunky
Sundays from 8 to 11 p.m. is karaoke/open-mic night
Quick tips: this is a 21+ bar
Tasty eats: grill is closed, because they don’t have a cook right now—sorry!

Have You Heard of Stikwood?

By Lifestyle
Have You Heard of Stikwood Yet?

Stikwood is popping up everywhere, from basements to bedrooms to restaurants. It’s a great DIY product, but also a good tool for designers and specifiers. I first saw it this summer at dwell on design, and have been looking for opportunities to use it ever since.

It’s literally a peel-and-stick wood product. It’s easy, affordable, and it’s REAL WOOD!

Here you see it being applied:

I think it’s perfect for the back of a kitchen bar:

Or behind a bed:

Or to spice up a TV/entertainment center area:

The possibilities are pretty much endless!

All images above from the Stikwood facebook page.

Nicole Zeigler, CKBR, Allied ASID, NCIDQ is the owner/lead designer at enzy design, LLC; specializing in kitchen & bathroom design and residential remodeling. enzydesign.com

Family Means Business: The Story Behind Harmons

By Community

Left to Right, Back Row: Mark Hauber, Laurie Harmon, Randy Harmon, Bob Harmon, Jerry Stowe, Brady Harmon, Kristine Harmon. Front Row: Amber Hauber, Alex Harmon, Jamie Harmon, Emily Harmon, Doreen Harmon, Corrine Store, Jenn Harmon, Ashley Harmon.

If you think short term, things will be short term. “But when your family and your business are one and the same, short term is not an option,” says Bob Harmon.

Bob and his brother, Randy—familiar faces in Utah—his mother, Doreen; his sister Jamie and his sister-in-law Laurie are seated around a table at Harmons HQ, a modest building not far from the site of Bob, Jamie and Randy’s grandfather’s first grocery store. A conversation about their family’s business ranges from personal memories to business philosophy—for the Harmons, it’s all one subject.

Taking Root

“We’ve learned more in the last decade than in the previous 25 years. It’s an exciting time in our industry. It’s changed so fast and so much for the better,” says Bob, who, along with Randy, has become the face of Harmons, appearing in print, television and radio ads, as well as in person at store events. That personal, hands-on approach is part of the Harmons legacy.

As Bob tells it, “Grandpa (Jake Harmon) grew up poor.” Born George Reese Harmon in 1912 in Granger (now part of West Valley City), Utah, Jake’s mother died when he was 6 years old and his formal education ended after junior high school. A young man when the Depression hit, he and his wife, Irene, worked in California to make some money. With $325 saved up, the couple returned to Utah and opened Market Spot, a fruit stand, building it from the ground up and investing everything they had. The day of the grand opening, the story goes, Irene turned to Jake and asked “How much money do we have left?” Jake pulled out his pocket lining, chuckled and replied, “Eighty cents.” A man in a garbage truck pulled up and purchased six lemons. So with that sale and 80 cents, Jake and Irene were on their way.

Their son Terry was born in the home behind the store, where Jake and Irene lived until they sold the Market Spot and opened a cafe. But they went back to the grocery business, opening Harmons Market, better known as the Green Store, in Granger in 1945. It was the most modern, best-stocked store in the state—by the ‘60s, grown son Terry and his wife Doreen had moved back to Utah from Arizona to help run things. In 1971, a catastrophe occurred: Fire completely destroyed the Granger store. And the family had no insurance.

With help from vendors, Jake regrouped. He traveled and researched food stores around the country, planning his dream store with Terry’s help. In 1971, they opened Harmons Super Center in West Valley—a big success and thrst of a string of successful stores, the most recent, at City Creek Center, the company’rst urban grocery.

Fresh Values

The American grocery business has changed vastly, just in the last couple of decades. For generations, food shopping in this country was driven by convenience and price—meals were just fuel, after all. When big box and discount stores started to sell groceries at cut-throat prices, a lot of family-owned grocery stores went out of business. They just couldn’t compete with the buying power of the big guys. “We took a look at the whole thing: It was all price driven,” says Bob. “That was the only value. At Harmons, we offer different values, like service. That’s where we can win.”

Americans have changed their food shopping habits, Bob points out, and largely because of information consumers have gathered themselves, not because of marketing information pushed at them. We’re learning that to get the cleanest food, the most avorful food, the locally grown food, we might have to pay a little more.

Bob recalls, “We toured Italy: It made us rethink our business. That food culture is hundreds of years old. The care they took with things. The time. Things like understanding the chemistry of balsamic vinegar. We started reevaluating time and its value. We had to be different.”


Left to right: Randy, Doreen, Jamie and Bob Harmon.

Inspired by foreign food ways and the rising enthusiasm for local products, Harmons changed its emphasis to quality, variety and service. They sent their bakers to the San Francisco Baking Institute to learn about artisan bread. They re-thought their butcher shop, started dry-aging their own meats and hand-cutting their chickens. They made new commitments to buying from local farmers and started cooking schools to teach customers how to use their products. Four Harmons stores are certid organic: Bangerter, City Creek, Station Park and Emigration. The City Creek store has licensed wine educators in its cooking school.

“Unlike large grocery chains, we have the advantage of nimbleness,” Randy explains. We’re able to change quickly. We’re not answering to stockholders. The scale is dierent. We don’t have to worry about knee-jerk reactions to trends; we are able to do more long-term planning.”

“Our business actually grew during the recession,” says Bob. “Instead of cutting back, we decided to re-invest and we didn’t need (to go to stockholders for) permission. We staed up with the goal of providing better service, which is often thrst thing cut in hard times.”

Future Growth

The success rate of third-generation family-owned businesses is about 10 percent.

There’s the founder, who is completely immersed in it. The second generation grows up with it. The third generation enjoys the returns from a successful business. That generation also takes the success for granted and a downward spiral begins.

That third generation is where the Harmons are now. But there’s no downward spiral.

“Instead of looking at our history, we’re always looking ahead,” says Bob. There’s no reverence for “the way we used to do things.”

“But we are building on Grandpa Jake’s example. Arst he was slightly fearful of growth—the founder of a business is there all the time. It’s hard to let someone else run things,” says Randy. “Our dad Terry was the only son, he grew up with the store at the center of family life. It was hard arst for Jake to think of a second store, but he did. He learned to enjoy and take pride in other people’s success. That’s key to managing a family business.”

“It’s about people,” says Laurie, Randy’s wife who is in charge of Harmons human resources, or, as she describes it, “I’m the ‘executive VP for the people.’ We have 16 stores but it feels like one,” she says. “We’re all on the same team, from Bob and Randy to the shelf-stockers.”

Fifteen family members work in Harmons stores now. But according to the family plan, the fifth generation has to work elsewhere until the age of 21. No one is forced or expected to join the family firm.

“Our family is a strength, but it’s also a potential weakness,” says Bob. “We do a lot of family therapy because those family relationships are business relationships, too.”

Four generations of the Harmon family now work in the grocery business Jake and Irene Harmon founded in 1932—the hope is that future Harmon generations will have that opportunity, too. Keeping up with swiftly changing times requires extraordinary nimbleness and close communication—the Harmons have honed both, allowing them to take an optimistic view of their future as Utah’s go-to grocers. To be, as their motto says, remarkable.

Next>>>Harmon’s Outsider on the Inside and their Milepost timline.

Back>>>Read other stories in our December 2013 issue.

Blade Runner

By City Watch

Knifesmith John Ftizen totes a lethal armory of his art. Right: Bowie and  “Frankenstein” knives. Photo by Adam Finkle.

The moment you see John Fitzen, you know this is a guy from another time and place. A time when people shunned lawyers and courts and settled disputes with Bowie knives. A place where Rob Roy or keelboatman Mike Fink would feel right at home.

“Everybody knows me—that guy with the kilt and knives,” shrugs Fitzen, who is built like a tallish dwarf.

That’s the least of Fitzen’s visual impact. Take the accessories. His right hand sports at least three skull rings, plus a skull-motif bracelet; on his left, a couple of Iron Crosses and a knife-fighting wrist band of thick elephant hide.

Fitzen is proud of being a throwback—a master knifesmith who hand-forges Damascus blades that shimmer like a contour map of iron and steel. “It’s my art,” Fitzen says.

It’s an ancient decorative art that requires engraving, wax castings of brass, silver and gold for pommels and elephant ivory (salvaged from old tchotchkes) for handles.

In the folds and recesses of his leather kilt, Fitzen carries a foot-long fighting knife—beautiful in its ferocity, a stubby all-purpose “rhinoceros” blade, a slab-like “Mini Bully” folding knife—and, after rooting around, he dredges up a Goth-black Swiss Army knife, complete with corkscrew.

But Fitzen isn’t a Luddite. Like Indiana Jones, he knows what happens to the guy who brings a knife to a gun fight. Reaching behind his back, Fitzen unholsters an engraved semi-auto pistol. Its slide gleams with dark waves of Damascus steel. If Highlander should happen to appear in Salt Lake, he’ll claim this .45 as his own.

In the unlikely event the .45 jams, Fitzen is packing two stainless-steel .22 magnum derringers and a taser rides on his left hip. On the back of his belt is a telescoping fighting baton.

In all, Fitzen walks around with 13 pounds of fighting steel, and that’s not counting a skull-chain attached to his wallet that could double as a nasty mace.

“I’m not paranoid,” he says, explaining that his personal armory is simply a mobile sample case. “It sells knives for me. People ask me ‘Why do you carry all that?’ By the time I explain it, I end up selling stuff.”

In a Salt Lake shop, Fitzen makes his blades by hand, folding, forging and refolding up to 600 layers of iron and high-carbon steel into feathery layers for strength and a superb edge. His Skull Knives line sell for $200 upwards to $10,000, which makes sense when he shows you a blade forged from an alloy that contains nickel steel from a meteorite.

Above all, Fitzen is a master of sharpening blades—which, as the growing subculture of knife connoisseurs and collectors will tell you, is as important as the blade itself.

“I’m really known for my edges,” Fitzen says, as he sharpens a blade in his cave-like shop. “I get knives sent to me from all over the world to sharpen.”

Fitzen’s business is supported by a convergence of subcultures, including a growing demographic of young guys who are fascinated by blade lore, history and knife combat. They tend to gravitate toward Fitzen’s Bowies (a nasty weapon made famous by Texas legend Jim Bowie) and “Frankenstein” knives (a brutal blade that incorporates bolts reminiscent of the ones in the monster’s neck). Survivalists embrace Bowies as a basic tool: “These knives are like a Roman short sword. You can do anything with these knives—chop a tree down or shave with them,” Fitzen explains.

Another knife market is in the geekdom of Goth and fantasy addicts, who are drawn to the dark glamour of Fitzen’s art. He creates functional beauty that will eviscerate an orc or saber open a champagne bottle.

“A guy came in who said, ‘I’m the King of the Elves. I want to commission a sword from you,’” Fitzen recalls. “I said, sure. Unfortunately, I later found out he didn’t have the elvish magic to pay for it.”

Click here to visit his business, Skull Knives & The Razor’s Edge, online.

WEB EXTRA>>>Watch our video of Fitzen at work.

Next>>>Shoshone teens create a video game to save their language.

Back>>>Read other stories from our December 2013 issue.

Never Stop: The Story of Huntsman Corporation

By City Watch

Next generation: Jon Huntsman Sr., flanked by Jon Jr., left, and Peter. Photo courtesy of Huntsman Corporation.

Lane Beattie, president and CEO of the Salt Lake Chamber of Commerce, was leading a group pushing an idea they believed would put Utah at the cutting edge in high-tech innovation. In the mid-2000s, they hoped the Utah Science Technology and Research (USTAR) initiative, with funding from the Legislature, would allow the state’s universities to commercialize technologies that would seed start-up businesses and create hundreds of high-paying jobs.

But the group had a problem: Community leaders didn’t grasp USTAR’s forward-leaning concept of melding academics and entrepreneurs into a job-creating machine. “We had a difficult time getting the Utah State Legislature and others involved to see why it was so important to our state,” Beattie recalls.

He turned to Jon M. Huntsman Sr.

“I needed to get some business leaders and legislators to Arizona to see what that state was doing,” Beattie says. “So, I called Jon and asked if we could borrow his private jet.”

Huntsman’s response was quick and typical for him: “Great, when are you going?”

“We took a group of 17 to Phoenix, all on Jon’s dime, for a one-day trip, and they were hooked,” Beattie says. “We wouldn’t have USTAR today without his contribution and support.”

Utahns knows of the Huntsman family philanthropy in cancer research and treatment. But it’s only a part of the family’s impact. “They simply don’t get the credit they deserve for all they’ve done,” says Beattie, whose Chamber named Jon Huntsman a “Giant In Our City” a few years ago. “Jon and Karen are the epitome of strength.”

A Life of Determination

In his worldwide corporation, philanthropic endeavors and his Mormon faith, Jon M. Huntsman Sr. has led a life of determination. Adversity has never stopped him, nor diverted him from the goals beyond business success. The patriarch of the Huntsman clan has always considered work an opportunity and a satisfaction. It’s no surprise he titled his best-selling business bookWinners Never Cheat.

On a chilly late spring afternoon, the fire still burns as the 76-year-old entrepreneur-extreme chats from the family-owned Huntsman Springs resort in Idaho, not far from where he was raised near Blackfoot. “I’ve been working on some ideas for four new companies I’m quite excited about,” he says. “You get those motivations in your youth, and you never stop.”

Though most of the day-to-day running of the multi-billion dollar Huntsman Corporation has passed on to the family’s younger generations, its founder and executive chairman has never slowed down—not even when faced with economic or health challenges, and he’s had his share of the latter: prostate, mouth and two skin cancers—squamous cell carcinoma and melanoma. But in his estimation, it was far worse to watch his daughter, Kathleen, succumb to drug addiction at 44.

Much of the family’s legacy (carried forward with the help of his nine children and his wife of 54 years, Karen Haight Huntsman) is based on Huntsman’s early upbringing. “My father was a school teacher in Thomas, Idaho,” he recalls. “He made $99 a month and we lived in a two-room house. No indoor plumbing for the first five or six years of my life.”

When Blaine Huntsman decided to go back to college at age 40, the family moved to Palo Alto where he attended Stanford University. Student housing consisted of World War II-era Quonset huts, which meant an even more cramped existence for a family of five.

“From seventh grade on, it was my job to provide for all the medical and automobile expenses,” Huntsman remembers. “My brother Blaine and I worked jobs after school and on weekends, and all the money went into a family pot. It was never a regular home—it gave me the determination to never raise my family under those adverse conditions.”

Thinking Inside the Box

In 1961, after graduating from the Wharton School of Finance at the University of Pennsylvania, Huntsman joined Olson Brothers, Inc., an egg-producer in Los Angeles. It was at Olson that he first conceived the idea for a Styrofoam egg carton that revolutionized the egg industry. The seemingly mundane change in egg cartons led to the family’s fortune. By 1970, Huntsman had his own company, Huntsman Container Corporation, in Fullerton, Calif. And in 1974, HCC created the famous “clamshell” container used for decades by McDonald’s. The company also invented 30 other products, including the first disposable plastic dishes. Huntsman does not disclose his wealth, but on its 2010 “World’s Richest Persons” list, Forbes put him at 937. “I learned in those first 10 years in the business world that people can selectively determine what they want in life, or take charge,” Huntsman says. “Work was always very serious, but very enjoyable, and the hours didn’t matter. They still don’t.”

An In-House Board of Directors

Huntsman decided in 1970 that his company’s board of directors would be his children. “They learned how to make decisions on buying businesses and making them work,” he recalls. “Each would be asked to speak at family gatherings, and we all participated as a team. From acquisitions to expansions, each was asked to give his point of view.”

Son Peter Huntsman, the CEO and President of Huntsman Corporation, remembers well being on the board. “He was trying instill in us an idea of inclusiveness, self worth, of being a part of what he was doing.”

Outside the Business Box

Jon Huntsman Sr. also led his family in another direction that has defined the family’s legacy.  “I have always felt it’s important to address the needs of the community,” he says. “Karen and I made the decision we’d be consistent in what we’d give—starting small and then every year giving more and more of our income to charities.” At times, that has meant leveraging personal and professional assets to continue to meet and increase those charitable commitments. “You can never pull back from people who are already suffering and counting on you,” Huntsman says. “When you’ve made that commitment, it’s iron-clad.”

The Huntsman philanthropies include the Huntsman Awards for Education, which honor educators; the Huntsman World Senior Games, which provides athletic competitions for over-50 athletes; and the Huntsman Cancer Institutein Salt Lake City. The globally recognized institute is Jon Huntsman’s passion. As a cancer survivor himself, he has worked tirelessly the past 20 years since he started the ball rolling for the HCI with a $10 million donation to the University of Utah in 1993. That was just the beginning, as the Huntsmans have donated $400 million to the project over the years and helped raise an addition $1 billion through grants and other fund raising efforts. That has allowed the development of a state-of-the-art hospital that provides tens of thousands of chemotherapy sessions and radiation treatments annually. “Jon and Karen Huntsman have completely changed the landscape for cancer care in Utah and around the world,” says Mary Beckerle, CEO and Director of the Institute since 2006. “What we’re accomplishing here is unparalleled around the world. It couldn’t have happened without the benevolence of the Huntsmans.”

Next generation 

The third generation of Huntsmans has begun taking roles in the family business. Peter Huntsman Jr. is moving to Singapore to work on business development for the corporation. A son-in-law of Peter’s, John Calder, is working in business development out of the corporate headquarters in Texas. Along with business opportunities, the Huntsman family has passed on its tradition of philanthropy as well. “We grew up knowing that giving back was a given,” Peter Huntsman says. “We’d be involved in all sorts of things, and we still are. Whatever we made, we’d give back to society.”

“You have to surround yourself with people who believe in what you believe in, ” Jon Huntsman says. “We feel very fortunate that each of our children works hard, and each has been successful in their own way. That’s an indicator that our priorities are in the right place.”

Next>>>Huntsman Corporation Through the Years, America’s CEO

Back>>>Read other stories in our October 2013 issue.

Historical Fiction

By City Watch

Photo courtesy of BYUtv.

There are lies and there are damn lies. And then there is American history.

History is, after all, written by the winners. And from settlement to geo-economic dominance, our plucky countrymen have long managed to come out on the winning side of human events. That’s what makes American exceptionalism so alluring—the evidence of God’s favor seems to be everywhere.

Of course, there are all those pesky, less virtuous details to deal with. Slavery and Jim Crow. Carpet bombings and ethnic internment. Proxy wars and puppet governments. That’s where revisionism comes in handy. Sometimes, after all, it is simply easier to tell a story than deal with the truth.

Stan Ellsworth seems to understand this all too well.

The Utah actor and host of BYUtv’s hit history series, American Ride, is an unabashed advocate for American exceptionalism.

“I do believe this nation was founded by Providence,” said the 6-foot-2-inch, 300-pound blonde-bearded biker, a self-proclaimed “Southern boy” who said he grew up idolizing General Stonewall Jackson and other heroes of the Confederacy.

“A lot of people want to run down the great men of American history,” Ellsworth said. “They focus on the mistakes, and they’re all too willing to forget the noble sacrifices.”

But that, Ellsworth said, doesn’t excuse the failings. “People can be proud of this country and they should be proud of this country,” he said. “But they have to be honest, too.”

Indeed, on his show Ellsworth peppers his nationalism with a healthy dose of smack-you-in-the-face reality. And so, when it comes to a war that many fellow Southerners still blame on “Northern aggression,” Ellsworth won’t abide by Dixie revisionism.

Those who say the South seceded over “states rights,” he growled in one episode, have “either checked their morality or their common sense at the door.”

“They have two problems,” Ellsworth went on. “No. 1: Chattel bondage is wrong, there’s no way around it. No. 2: Under the Constitution, states don’t have rights. States have powers, shared powers with the federal government that the people have given them.”

This is what gives Ellsworth’s show—in which the history buff rides a Harley-Davidson Softtail Deluxe across the country as he recounts the battles, booms and busts of American antiquity—its peculiar charm. It’s the seeming honesty of the message. It’s the apparent sincerity of the messenger.

But that’s also why, today, Ellsworth has a problem. Because when it comes to his own history, he’s been significantly more prone to revisionism.

Next>>>Holes in the Story

Back>>>Read other stories from our August 2013 issue