Cuisine Unlimited Catering & Special Events
âWe never do the same event twice. That is what makes Cuisine Unlimited Catering & Special Events so exciting. Every client brings us a new vision to bring to life.â Sitting together, Director of Catering Abby Radtke, and Event Sales Manager Isabelle Caiozzo, share a partnership built on years of collaboration and friendship. Both women found their way to Cuisine Unlimited through different paths - Abby from Nebraska, Isabelle from Salt Lake City - but each carries a story that ties them to the companyâs legacy of excellence.
Croneâs Hollow
âCroneâs Hollow is a place that came from love, and we welcome everyone.â TaMara Sorensen never planned to open a witchcraft store when she arrived in Salt Lake City as a twenty-year-old on vacation in 1979. She simply never left. The mountains and adventure called her, and she built a long career in customer service, working with the Sundance Catalog for over thirty years and teaching customer service courses at Salt Lake Community College. But alongside her day job, she was quietly finding her path in a different world.
One Burton
âIf you love what you do, it never feels like work.â Jason Algaze grew up surrounded by creativity. His mother was an interior decorator, and his grandfather, a civil engineer, built apartment buildings in Brooklyn and Queens. From a young age, Jason was drawn to both the artistry and structure of making things. âI was definitely a very creative kid,â he recalls. âI did a lot of art, but I was also always in that extra class during lunch building bridges or robots. I was obsessed with Legos.â Years later, that creative foundation would lead him - together with his business partner, Daniel Rudofsky - to form Abstract Group, the development company behind One Burton, a stunning new apartment building in South Salt Lake.
Aranya Thai Kitchen
âWe want the people who come in here to feel like family.â Todd Holsten grew up on the east side of Salt Lake City, spending much of his childhood in the mountains. Skiing, biking, climbing - if it was outdoors, he was in his element. After high school, he worked a string of odd jobs before finding his career home at Delta Air Lines in 1996. Nearly thirty years later, he is still there, now part of the aircraft movement team, enjoying the jobâs stability and the flight benefits that have allowed him, his wife, and their family to travel the world. Together with his wife, Aranya, he now owns Aranya Thai Kitchen, a warmly inviting spot known for fresh, meticulously prepared Thai dishes that reflect her passion for getting everything just right.
The Other Side Donuts
âI have spent most of my life in and out of jail, and now I get to run a donut shop. I wake up and get to make people happy. I never thought that would be my life.â Nicholas Smith, General Manager of The Other Side Donuts, was born in San Diego, California, but moved to Vernal, Utah, before his second birthday. The second youngest of six boys, Nicholas grew up in a deeply troubled home. His father, a towering Polynesian man from Fiji, was abusive toward Nicholasâs mother. Nicholas still remembers hiding behind couches, calling 911, and watching the chaos unfold around him.
Tracy Aviary at Liberty Park / Nature Center at Pia Okwai
âI like to say, âOne mission, two locations.ââ Tim Brown smiled as he spoke, the phrase capturing both the scope and the spirit of the organization he leads as President /CEO - Tracy Aviary in Liberty Park and the Nature Center at Pia Okwai along the Jordan River.
The Other Side Village
âHousing alone will never solve homelessness, but community can,â shared Camilla âWinnie,â Vice President of The Other Side Village. From the moment she voiced that conviction, everything began to align. Inspired by what she had witnessed at Community First Village in Austin, Texas, she returned to Utah with a vision - not just for housing, but for healing. âItâs the whole person, first. Housing comes last.â
SaltFire Brewing Co.
âWhy am I working for somebody elseâs dream and not my own?â That was the question Ryan Miller, owner of SaltFire Brewing Co. kept asking himself as he crisscrossed the country doing software support in the early 2010s. A self-described punk rock rebel raised by scientists in Idaho Falls - his father a nuclear physicist, his mother a paleontologist - Ryan had taken a far different path.
Maven STRONG
âI didnât just want to open a studio. I wanted to change the way people feel about moving their bodies, and about themselves.â Tessa Arneson opened Maven STRONG with more than just fitness in mind. The sleek, light-filled Pilates studio was the first brick in what would become the Maven DISTRICT - a hub of women-owned, health-focused businesses in Salt Lake Cityâs Central City neighborhood. But in the beginning, it was simply about creating a space for strength and self-trust, built from Tessaâs own personal transformation.
Bark & Biscuit
âWe need to accept dogs for the creatures they are - different from us but equally deserving of respect and understanding.â Ashley Wolf speaks with the kind of clarity that comes from lived experience. Her journey into dog training was a winding path that began in Santa Cruz, California. It wove through rebellious teenage years, university classrooms, and a series of other careers. Eventually, it led Ashley - alongside her husband, Ryan Heidt - to co-found Bark & Biscuit, a business dedicated to helping dogs and their owners understand one another.
O.C. Tanner Jewelers
âI think what truly makes it special are the people who work here - their passion, their appreciation of beauty, and their love of helping others find the perfect piece to mark a moment in time.â Dominique Anderson was speaking from the heart, seated in one of Salt Lake Cityâs most elegant and storied spaces: the historic O.C. Tanner Jewelers flagship store.
Sugar House Distillery
âIt is all about what you have in your own backyard.â And that backyard for James Fowler is Salt Lake City where he has run Sugar House Distillery since 2013.
Got Old Wood
âI come in every day and still cannot believe this place is ours,â Tammy Barrow said. âIâve never seen anything like it. Itâs the most fascinating place Iâve ever been.â Nestled in a nondescript building, Got Old Wood is anything but ordinary. Step inside and you are instantly transported into history, into craft, into heart. The mother-daughter team of Tammy and Julie Adler-Birch brings reclaimed barnwood back to life, one story and one board at a time.
Three Pines Coffee
âI donât think coffee has to be complicated but it does have to be excellent.â That simple belief sits at the heart of Three Pines Coffee, Nick Priceâs first cafĂŠ, tucked into a narrow storefront on South Main Street in Salt Lake City. Opened in 2015, it is a quiet, focused space - no trendy gimmicks, no bells and whistles. Just really good coffee, done right.
Grove Market & Deli
âHe just canât die. Heâs too needed. I thought he would be with me forever because weâve been together forever,â said Patsy Savas, reflecting on the sudden loss of her husband, Jim. The Grove Market & Deli - built by Jimâs father, Pete Savas, in 1947 - has been a fixture in the Salt Lake City community for generations.
Oquirrh
âThis was always the goal, owning our own place,â said Andrew Fuller. âI just had to be patient enough to wait for the right moment.â For Andrew Fuller and his wife, Angelena, that moment arrived in February 2019 with the opening of Oquirrh, a refined yet welcoming American restaurant nestled in downtown Salt Lake City. At once personal and quietly romantic, Oquirrh reflects their shared story: a love for good food, deep respect for craft, and an unshakable partnership that spans both life and work.
Material
âWe didnât start with a business plan or a brand. We started with trust and respect,â said Jorge Rojas. âAnd a shared belief that artists need each other.â That quiet foundation is what makes Material feel so different. Tucked into a modest building in Salt Lake City, the artist-run space opened with a clear and deliberate mission: to support, exhibit, and elevate other peopleâs work.
Botanika
âUnderneath it all, itâs about community. Thatâs what drove me to take the risk of opening a small business, because thriving cities depend on thriving local businesses. And that doesnât happen without people willing to give everything they have.â Kate Risser did not set out to become the founder of Botanika. The path that led her to this bright, airy, minimalist shop in Salt Lake City was anything but straight-forward. It is a story of reinvention and a deep desire to create something meaningful - not just for herself, but for those around her.
Chappell Brewing
âWeâre much better at making beer than marketing. At the end of the day, we just want people to feel like theyâre hanging out in our living room, enjoying something we love to create.â Tim Chappellâs path to owning his eponymous Chappell Brewing, one of the smallest breweries in Salt Lake Valley, was anything but linear.
Holy Water
"For us, coffee is an important daily practice, it is our holy water. Honestly, it is a religion to us." Erin Butler and Nick Price wanted a name that made people laugh but also made them curious. The name âHoly Waterâ just kind of stuck. That irreverent charm runs through everything at Holy Water, the coffee shop co-founded by the two in June 2023. The name hints at something sacred, but also playful - exactly the kind of balance they set out to strike.