Park City Restaurant Association

Map

Posts Tagged ‘grande table’

Savor the Summit

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009

Park City Jazz Foundation

The Grande Table

Park City’s longest dinner party on Main Street took place Friday, June 20th. Named The Grande Table, as a part of the Savor the Summit weekend, the event was a total sell-out for all restaurants involved.

Over 600 diners joined together to enjoy the beautiful early summer weather, the 5 stages of live jazz music, and the culinary delights of dining OUT in Park City.

Here’s what some participants are saying:

“Thank you so much for including us in the Savor the Summit event on Friday. We had a great turnout, I started with 20, we finished at 66 guests. We are looking forward to next year’s event.”

Regis
Jean Louis Restaurant

“You have done so much for the community! Last night was a huge success. I believe everyone had a fantastic time. You made some awesome selections on the musicians for the venue. I was just in LA last weekend for the 30th annual Playboy Jazz Festival and I believe YOU TOPPED IT!!! GREAT JOB.”
Congratulations!

Jenece Lemon
Redstone Gallery Director

“We had 2 reservations, until we ran a special on our website to coincide with Savor the Summit, and then we were sold out.”

Jean Carlan
Washington School Inn


The Grande Picnic

The easiest, most elegant picnic you’ll ever attend. Bring your friends and a blanket and leave the rest to us. Presented at City Park on Saturday of Savor the Summit, this afternoon event includes 3 hours of live jazz music, unlimited beer and wine, and upscale picnic plates prepared by regional artisanal food producers.

Some of the 2008 producers were: Copper Moose Organic Farm, Morgan Valley Lamb, Amano Artisan Chocolate, Beehive Cheese, Apple Beer, Dolcetti Gelato, Shabu Restaurant, Done to your Taste Catering, and more.

Wine presented by Gallo Family of Wines and beer provided by Wasatch Beers.

Sit at Park City’s Longest Table

Monday, June 8th, 2009

Salt Lake Tribune: Bite by Bite
Kathy Stephenson

Unless you have a HUGE family, you probably will never sit at a longer table than the one being set June 19 in Park City.

For The Grand Table event, 21 restaurants will place linen-covered tables down the middle of historic Main Street, then serve guests a special meal al fresco. The event kicks off the Savor The Summit Food, Wine and Jazz Festival.

Only two of the 21 restaurants are sold out: Deer Valley’s Royal Street Cafe and Riverhorse on Main. So plenty of tickets are still available. Prices vary depending on where you want to eat.

Wasatch Brew Pub looks to be the most affordable option at $36. Price includes beer, but not tip.

The recently opened Bridge Cafe and Grill is offering a four-course meal for $38 (or $45 if you want to enjoy Caipirinha, a Brazilian specialty drink.).

And Cisero’s is serving a three-course meal for $45 plus tax and tip. Wine is additional.

The rest of the restaurants range from $60 to about $100 for dinner. Add $25 to $30 more if you want wine pairings. Here’s a list of participating restaurants. Each one lists the menu, prices and number to call for a reservation.

Table Talk

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009

Deseret News
Compiled by Valerie Phillips

The Park City Restaurant Association has invited Martha Stewart to attend its “Grande Table” during the city’s annual “Savor the Summit” event on June 19. As part of this effort, Park City Mayor Dana Williams and several Park City restaurant officials sent Stewart a video invitation.

The PCRA wants others to visit the organization’s YouTube page and post their own appeal to Stewart here.

Want more information about this event?

Saving a Seat for Martha

Thursday, May 7th, 2009

The Salt Lake Tribune
Kathy Stephenson

Saving a Seat for Martha
It’s a long shot.

But The Park City Restaurant Association has invited Martha Stewart to attend its “Savor the Summit” event on June 19. It sent an 80-second video to the domestic maven last week. No word yet if she’ll accept.

In the video, Park City Mayor Dana Williams talks about the historic mining town’s skiing, food and mountain beauty. Then, with the help of a few restaurant employees and chefs, he invites her to attend the Summit’s “Grand Table.” For the event, restaurants create one long table down Main Street and serve dinner to hundreds of guests all at the same time.

It’s a chance for everyone in Park City, as well as all Utahn, to celebrate the food, culture and beauty of our town,” said Paul Brown, an association board member. “We think it would be wonderful to share the event with someone who is known for celebrating those very same things.”

Utahns can help the “Bring Martha to Park City” campaign. Just watch the YouTube video here, then post a comment letting Stewart know we’re saving her a seat.

Table Talk

Wednesday, June 18th, 2008

Deseret News
Valerie Phillips

Savor the Summit takes place Friday and Saturday as part of the Park City Jazz Summit. On Friday night, the Grande Table will be set up along the middle of Park City’s Main Street, and dinner will be served al fresco with live jazz music in the background. Reservations must be made with participating restaurants: 350 Main Brasserie, Riverhorse on Main, Shabu, Purple Sage, Cisero’s Ristorante, Yuki Arashi, Cafe Terigo, Deer Valley’s Royal Street Cafe, Jean Louis, The Eating Establishment, Bandits Grill and Bar, Done to Your Taste Catering, and Java Cow. Prices range from around $25 for Baja Cantina to $85 for 350 Main Brasserie.

On Saturday afternoon, the Grande Picnic takes place in the City Park. Diners can enjoy picnic fare from local purveyors and enjoy live jazz music. Grande Picnic tickets are $50 each (435-940-1362 or parkcityjazzfoundation.vpweb.com).

Submit announcements to Valerie Phillips, food editor, Deseret News, 30 E. 100 South, P.O. Box 1257, Salt Lake City, UT 84110 or http://vphillips@desnews.com.

Main Street: tasty, tasty

Tuesday, May 13th, 2008

Park Record
Jay Hamburger

Restaurants might serve dinner one night on a huge table on the popular street

Park City restaurants, in what would remind longtime Parkites of the olden-day Taste of Park City events, want to set up a line of tables on Main Street one day this summer and serve people al fresco.

The restaurateurs plan to partner with the foundation that organizes the annual Park City Jazz Festival for what is being billed as Savor the Summit. It is planned June 20-21, a Friday and Saturday, with the Main Street event on Friday. The Park City Council must decide whether to allow Savor the Summit, and a decision will likely be made in late May.

The event would be held a few weeks before the traditional start of Park City’s summertime tourism season, and many businesses on Main Street will probably back the event as a way to draw crowds on a weekend that otherwise might be slow.

Kris Severson, the executive director of the Park City Jazz Foundation, says Savor the Summit would coincide with a convention for jazz musicians planned in mid-June. Musicians would perform during the Main Street event, perhaps on one main stage and four smaller ones, he says.

“This isn’t like a dentist convention. These are performing artists,” Severson says.

The Friday night plans are the most ambitious, with the jazz foundation and the Park City Restaurant Association wanting to close down Main Street to traffic and then put up a row of picnic tables on the street. Restaurants would then serve people sitting at the tables. The organizers want it to become the “worldest longest dinner/banquet table,” paperwork submitted to City Hall says.

Severson says about 15 restaurants have told him they will participate, and he expects more will sign up later. He says the organizers especially want Main Street restaurants participating, but a few others might come from other parts of Park City.

The restaurants would each have about 40 seats at the picnic tables, he says, estimating about 500 diners would be seated during the event. Other people would also visit Main Street that night, Severson expects, bringing more business to the area’s best-known shopping, dining and entertainment strip.

There will not be a charge to be on Main Street that night, but the food will be for sale. Severson plans to put up a wine garden as well. In a release about Savor the Summit, the organizers say a drum circle and street dance are also planned.

The Savor the Summit organizers want to start the Main Street event at 7 p.m., but details have not been decided. Talks continue between the organizers and City Hall, and it is unclear whether the entire length of Main Street will be closed to traffic.

Bill White, a restaurateur with Grappa, Chimayo and Wahso on Main Street, says he may participate, but he says it will be a “difficult task” because he prefers diners enjoy the settings of his places along with the meals.

“When we charge for a restaurant, it’s not just for the food in front of you . . . It’s a complete experience,” White says.

He says Grappa, which is at the southern end of the street, will not be part of the event because it sits too far away.

The event is reminiscent of a long-defunct food festival called Taste of Park City. That started on Main Street in the 1980s and moved to Park City Mountain Resort in the early 1990s before ending in 1994, according to the Park City Historical Society.

Businesses on the street have long been wary of Main Street closures, and the entire length of the street typically is not shut down to traffic except during the annual Park City Arts Festival, which is held in early August. Sales at Main Street businesses are mixed during the arts festival.

Merchants in those cases worry it will be difficult for their regular customers to reach Main Street during closures, and the people at special events like Savor the Summit are not shopping, some say. But the event might win backing from Main Street, says Ken Davis, who leads the Main Street merchants.

Davis says the June timing of the event fits well because there is often a lull in business then. Tourism usually picks up around Independence Day and stays solid through Labor Day.

“It’s a real good time for us because there’s not much going on,” Davis says, adding, “It could be great.”

He says Main Street, with its mountainous backdrop, provides the restaurants with a showcase. Davis says the event could be a “social gathering” for Parkites and “could be a lot of fun” regardless of the street’s closure.

“There’ll be music. There’ll be a lot of people, hopefully, on the street. There’ll be something different,” Davis says.

Meanwhile, the Savor the Summit organizers also want City Hall to allow a food, wine and jazz event in City Park. It would run from 3 p.m. until 6 p.m. on June 21.