The Future

As we are still very much in the early stages of this pandemic, my heart goes out to all of those involved in the restaurant/hospitality industry. For years, I (and many others) have been touting the ever-growing food scene in Salt Lake. In the past 10 years, our dining scene has seen growth and transformation that I don’t think anybody could have fully imagined. So it pains me to think of what the state of the industry in our salty city will look like a year or two from now.

Gabrielle Hamilton

This piece in the New York Times, written by Gabrielle Hamilton, is a heartbreaking glimpse into what is going on in the industry right now. Even more disheartening is that Hamilton is an award-winning chef and author—someone who you would expect to be able to financially able to weather a financial storm such as this. And if Prune may not survive after all of this is over, what is going to happen to all of the mom-and-pop shops out there that don’t have the sizzle and star power of a James Beard award-winning chef? Here’s an excerpt from the piece:

It would be nigh impossible for me, in the context of a pandemic, to argue for the necessity of my existence. Do my sweetbreads and my Parmesan omelet count as essential at this time? In economic terms, I don’t think I could even argue that Prune matters anymore, in a neighborhood and a city now fully saturated with restaurants much like mine, many of them better than mine — some of which have expanded to employ as many as 100 people, not just cooks and servers and bartenders but also human-resource directors and cookbook ghostwriters.I am not going to suddenly start arguing the merits of my restaurant as a vital part of an “industry” or that I help to make up 2 percent of the U.S. gross domestic product or that I should be helped out by our government because I am one of those who employ nearly 12 million Americans in the work force. But those seem to be the only persuasive terms — with my banks, my insurers, my industry lobbyists and legislators. I have to hope, though, that we matter in some other alternative economy; that we are still a thread in the fabric that might unravel if you yanked us from the weave.Everybody’s saying that restaurants won’t make it back, that we won’t survive. I imagine this is at least partly true: Not all of us will make it, and not all of us will perish. But I can’t easily discern the determining factors, even though thinking about which restaurants will survive — and why — has become an obsession these past weeks. What delusional mind-set am I in that I just do not feel that this is the end, that I find myself convinced that this is only a pause, if I want it to be? I don’t carry investor debt; my vendors trust me; if my building’s co-op evicted me, they would have a beast of a time getting a new tenant to replace me.But I know few of us will come back as we were. And that doesn’t seem to me like a bad thing at all; perhaps it will be a chance for a correction, as my friend, the chef Alex Raij, calls it.

Tip Your Server Hospitality Support Fund

Salt Lake City, in conjunction with actor Ty Burrell, and the Downtown Alliance, have launched the Tip Your Server initiative, which aims to provide grant money to employees of the Salt Lake hospitality industry who have lost their jobs as a result of the pandemic.

So far the fund has raised nearly $500,000, thanks to individual donations as well as matching donations provided by various organizations.

If you’d like to donate, you can get more information here.

Free online wine pairing from Pago

Here’s a fun event that Scott Evans is putting on this Saturday. See below for more info.

Join us LIVE for a this Saturday, April 25th at 7pm on Facebook for a fun and interactive wine pairing event with Pago Restaurant Group Owner and Sommelier, Scott Evans.

Scott is pairing the Freghino wine from Agricola La Segreta in Umbria, Italy with Pago’s 3-Course Braised Short Ribs + Whipped Potatoes + Roasted Vegetables Meal.  Follow along as Scott talks about why he selected this pairing and shares his tasting notes with you.

Purchase the 3-Course Short Ribs meal from Pago – order online for curbside pickup
Purchase the Freghino wine from the DABC wine stores – search inventory here so you see how many bottles are available at each store (item #906908)

Or just grab a glass of wine of your own and join us for a fun and casual conversation. Scott will answer live questions and give insights into how he selects wine, and what he looks for in wine pairings with food.  Anyone can join in FREE (even if you don’t order a meal)!

Come hungry and with your questions about wine. Hope to see you Saturday!