Café Terigo has been a family owned restaurant since it opened its doors eighteen year ago on Main Street in downtown Park City. Ed Axtell, the owner and head chef, and his wife Debbie, have resided in Park City for the past thirty years - and it sounds like they've been feeding people good food that entire time. Ed started his career working in a pizza restaurant before moving to Park City, when the population was considerably smaller (and probably unable to sustain the number of multi-star restaurants that it does today). Debbie saw a need for professional food service and started a catering company. Eventually, their mutual passion for providing good food to the Park City area led them to create Café Terigo.
It's not all fun and games though. Ed works ten to twelve hours a day, confides Debbie. His presence is required almost all the time in the kitchen. In fact, Chef Axtell was so busy on the afternoon that I stopped in (while the restaurant was closed between lunch and dinner), preparing for that evening's dinners and events (and the annual Sundance Film Festival brings a lot of guest with particularly refined tastes), that we barely had time to exchange pleasantries and a hand shake. Debbie, who was also exceedingly busy, took a few minutes to sit down and chat with me about cooking.
The Axtell's focus on Southern French and Northern Italian styles of cuisine. One of their most popular lunchtime dishes is their Risotto containing smoked chicken, sun dried cherries, and tips of asparagus. The dish began as a seasonal special, but has since become so popular that the Axtell's have it available for lunch almost everyday now.
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Debbie let me (and you) in on a bit of a secret. You can make risotto beforehand. Simply cook the risotto as you normally would until the rice is about 3/4 of the way done. Quickly, spread the risotto onto a sheet pan to cool. When the risotto's temperature has dropped, just put it aside into a bowl and refrigerate (to keep it safe from food borne bacteria). When you're ready to finish preparing your meal (or in the Axtell's case, an order comes in), put some into your pot, add a bit of liquid, and finish cooking the risotto. Café Terigo goes through risotto so quickly, the premade batches don't last through the day - but homemade risotto could easily be made up to a week before finishing and serving.
As I mentioned earlier, Café Terigo is a family business. There, I met Ed and Debbie's son Travis who started the Purple Sage two doors down from Café Terigo.
While Café Terigo's interior decoration was sparse and classy, Purple Sage's American Southwest theme let the Axtell's really express themselves with a whole different palette.
Contemporary design with a touch of elegance helps make the comparably smaller Purple Sage feel spacious and relaxed. My favorite design aspect was the hanging drapes between booths. The cloth is translucent so you feel private but not isolated with fading purple and yellow lights passing through different numbers of cloth providing an artist effect that even I can appreciate.
If you ever get a change to visit Park City, make sure you check out Café Terigo or the Purple Sage. Maybe even thank the Axtell's for the risotto tip that they gladly shared with Cooking For Engineers.}?>
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The link in the "Recommended Reading" section is out of date too.
I updated the link.
Thanks for the heads up!
If you're going to the store to buy rice to make risotto look for arborio rice. If you're at home, or can't find arborio, there is a nice summary of possible substitutions here http://www.americastestkitchen.com/TastingLab/1393.shtml
(free regristration required)