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Showing posts with label Article. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Article. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Article from the Examiner

Bohemian Brewery masters beer and food

  • November 3rd, 2009 9:36 am MT
Bratwurst and pirogies
Photo: Nick Johnson

I have eaten my way through nearly every item on the Bohemian's menu and cannot get enough of this place. Serving German and other European specialties, as well as standard American pub fare, there is sure to be something on the menu that will not just fill you, but satisfy your taste buds thoroughly.

If you are a bratwurst lover like myself, you will be happy to see several ways to enjoy the popular sausage. A unique option is called the Philly Brat, served on a toasted hoagie roll with honey mustard, caramelized onions, apples, and swiss cheese. The menu is quite extensive, everything from light snacks to hearty steaks and goulash. Great wood-fire pizzas and one of the finest garlic burgers made anywhere.

Their beer deserves special mention, as they are all brewed on-site with the finest ingredients, and according to German Purity Law. All the lagered style beers are allowed to ferment for a minimum of eight weeks to provide a crisp, perfectly balanced finish with full-flavor. There is no compromise on flavor here.

The atmosphere is classy, yet casual. Appropriate for a casual date as well as a night out with a large group of friends. It is also a great place to watch a game, there is bar-seating to casually enjoy. Bohemian also has free wifi, so you can get a little work done while enjoying amazing garlic fries and beer.

Bohemian Brewery is open 7 days a week for lunch, dinner, and they serve Sunday brunch.

Located at 94 east Fort Union Boulevard (7200 south)

Wednesday, April 12, 2006

Bohemian is heady and hearty



From: The Salt Lake Tribune Dining Guide

By Mary Brown Malouf


“Brew pubs can present a reviewing challenge. I try to judge a restaurant by how well it accomplishes what it sets out to do. It is often hard to tell what a brew pub is trying to do. Is the menu conceived entirely in terms of beer or is it meant to stand on its own? Can you enjoy the food if you drink wine instead? Is the place a brew pub/restaurant or is it a brew pub/sports bar? Often, brew pub menus seem to be just an attempt to fill in the blank after beer, as in beer "n" pizza, beer "n" burgers, beer "n" wings.

I have no such qualms about Bohemian Brewery & Grill, a broken-mold bastion of beer and food pairing, a brew pub that takes food seriously, a restaurant that happens to make and serve really good beer. We discovered Bohemian's menu one holiday afternoon a few years ago. We stopped in for a beer and, after perusing the menu, we were seduced into ordering dinner. Each dish on the menu has a recommended beer; at Bohemian, beer and food pairing is taken as seriously as food and wine pairing.

I am not saying there is no pizza on the menu -- there is a whole section of it. But these pies ($12 for a 10-inch) are topped with what some would call "fancy-schmancy" ingredients: goat cheese, artichokes, sun-dried tomatoes, pesto and spinach. You also can build your own, four toppings cost $14.

Diners can choose from the pub or sandwich menu, including a classic reuben sandwich ($8; recommended beer: Czech Pilsener), beer-battered fish and chips ($12; Bavarian Weiß) and a garlic burger ($8; Viennese lager) that made it into the Elite Eight in The Tribune's recent Burger Madness story. Starters include the requisite wings ($8) and nachos ($8).

But the heart of Bohemian's menu goes straight to the roots of brew: hearty Czech fare that complements sturdy beer. One buxom plate held a half-pound pirogi stuffed with dill-seasoned potatoes and cheese beside a plump grilled bratwurst, sauerkraut with bacon and onions and sour cream ($13). Bohemian goulash, a delicately seasoned but serious beef stew in a sweet paprika sauce came with a baseball-size bread dumpling ($10; Bohemian's Cherny Bock).

Dumplings are frequently misunderstood. There are baked dumplings, raised dumplings, even fried dumplings. Bohemian's bread dumpling (you only get one bohemoth, thank goodness) is made from leftover bread, molded together sort of like stuffing and then simmered until it swells and softens. The same dumpling comes with the Old World roast pork ($14). The meat is cooked until fork-tender and the fat of the meat and weight of the dish is balanced by the tang of sauerkraut. Correctly made, Eastern European food can be much lighter than expected.

Bohemian's division of dishes into pub fare and entrees seems a bit arbitrary; dishes from either list are enormous in size. Schnitzel ($14), from the entree list, is a disk of pork (or chicken) pounded out to plate size, quickly fried to form a crust and served with mashed potatoes and vegetables. I ordered chicken paprikash ($14) solely for the spaetzle, which even in this pasta-crazy age are hard to find. Good spaetzle require immediacy in preparation. They aren't star-quality food, but they are irresistible. Their pillowy blandness has all the comfort of mashed potatoes but with enough substance so your teeth have something to do. The spaetzle also comes as a side for $3, but the pungently fragrant -- not spicy -- paprika sauce gave them the raison d'être that every noodle needs.

Bohemian's décor is charmingly idiosyncratic, instead of the usual sports memorabilia, the high-ceilinged, teutonic hall is filled with lovingly polished vintage scooters. But our server was the real thing, efficient in that barmaid kind of way, expert at managing and navigating a room full of imbibers.

Surprisingly, Bohemian sometimes makes a great American-style chocolate cake -- moist, gooey and dark. If it's on the special dessert list, go for it and have it with ice cream, too. The regular desserts are European style 9 crepes with cream cheese and fruit ($5), terrific, flaky apple strudel ($5) and, you guessed it, another dumpling, this one with made with a fruit of the day and lapped with rich crème anglaise. At this stage of the meal, no beer is recommended.”

Tuesday, August 5, 2003

Fred Ball Speaking on Business




By: Fred Ball


“A good, juicy schnitzel is hard to find. So if a trip to the Czech Republic isn't in your budget this summer, certainly a visit to the Bohemian Brewery and Grill in Midvale is.


This unique restaurant, serving authentic Czech and Bohemian "pub" style cuisine, is the creation of Joseph and Helen Petras, who were born in Czechoslovakia. Salt Lakers may be familiar with the couple's first restaurant — "Helen's" — named after Joseph's wife, of course. Joseph and Helen sold that particular restaurant a few years ago before opening the Bohemian Brewery and Grill on 7200 South, one block east of State Street.


Joseph and Helen know that in the restaurant business, the atmosphere can be just as important as the food. Consequently, there are several things that make the Bohemian Brewery and Grill a fun place to dine — if you go with friends, tell them that the artwork on the walls refers to Jaroslav Hasek's famous "The Adventures of the Good Soldier." (They'll think you're exceptionally well read in world literature.)


During my visit, Joseph gave me a tour of the building and adjacent brewery. He showed me the tanks where the restaurant's specialty beers are aged to perfection, and explained the intricate process by which the brews are made. He also showed me the family's collection of vintage, award-winning scooters, like their 1958 Vespa and 1957 Cushman Road King, known to scooter fanatics as, "the Alligator." Joseph keeps these and several other classic scooter models on display on the second floor of the restaurant.


Throughout this week, the Bohemian will join other Midvale companies in the Harvest Days Small Business Celebration. Drop by the Bohemian or by the Zions Bank Midvale Branches to pick up a promotional "passport," then visit other participating restaurants and shops during the week to get your passport stamped. You'll also receive special discounts and can enter your passport into a grand prize drawing at the Harvest Days Fair Saturday. “


From: http://smallbiz.ksl.com/speak-9140i.php

Monday, December 16, 2002

Bohemian Brewery Thriving




From: http://www.breweryage.com/


“The Bohemian Brewery and Grill in Salt Lake City, UT, has been working to bring a little bit of Czech-style beer culture to the American West. "We're a brewery and restaurant nestled next to the Rocky Mountains in Salt Lake City," says co-founder Peter Petras. "We opened our doors just in time for the Olympics and have been doing great ever since. We're Czech emigrants bringing our love and craftsmanship of brewing to the American Rockies."


The 12-barrel brewery produces a range of four beers. The centerpiece, of course, is a Czech Pilsner. "Our Czech Pilsener is the purest of beers, in our eyes," Petras says. "Clear and golden in color, light and crisp in taste. Our lager is well aged and made from real Pilzen Malt and actual imported Czech Yeast from Branik - Prague, Czech Republic. Only the finest Saaz hops are used to emulated this outside-of-Pilzen, Pilsener."


The brewery also produces a Bavarian Weiss, a Viennese Lager and a Cherny Bock.”