In which two lifelong Easterners packed up their entire lives, complete with their crazy dog, and headed to the mountains of Salt Lake City
Friday, January 11, 2013
double italian
Tuesday was my birthday and to celebrate I was taken out for both lunch and dinner - which is rather more eating out in one day than I am accustomed to doing. For lunch, I went with some co-workers to the Cinegrill in downtown SLC. The Cinegrill is a venerable institution, established in the early 1950s, and has very loyal and longtime regulars. It's old-school, red sauce Italian, decent but not fabulous food. They're known for their liberal hand with the garlic, particularly the house salad dressing which is tasty but extra potent. I was in the mood for soup and had the minestrone, which is quite good and chock-full of veggies; my dining companions had the sausage sandwich (made with sausage patties, not links) and lasagna (free-form, made to order) respectively. With the red booths filled with cronies and the traditional food, stepping into the Cinegrill is like stepping back in time.
For dinner H and I went to the Cottonwood location of Cafe Trio, stopping in at the adjoining but separately owned martini bar for a drink first. The cocktails are expensive - $7.50 - $9.00 for martini variations - but they do have about five beers on tap too. The bar also serves the full menu from the neighboring restaurant with no mark-up: if you're comfortable where you're sitting, there's no need to get up for dinner. We did go into the restaurant, however, which was surprisingly busy for a dark and cold Tuesday night, sitting at a little booth and waited on by a pleasant server. We each had a green salad with mixed greens, blue cheese, grapes and candied walnuts, then for dinner I had the pasta special (kale-stuffed raviolis served with a kale pesto and brown butter sauce) and H had the sausage rigatoni. We split a bottle of wine (don't remember what we had - the wine list is not particularly expansive) and even splurged on dessert: an enormous creme brulee for me, which was really too big, and a "chocolate budino" for H, which was sort of an Italian pudding-cake. Our dinner was fine but we've decided that we don't LOVE Trio. The food is good but not great and it seems a little expensive for what you get; the space, which is in a brand new building, seems a little sterile despite the colorful abstract art on the walls. I think next time we have a special occasion type dinner we'll give someplace else a try - there certainly plenty of options in the SL valley.
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