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Show C-4 Sat/Sun/Mon/Tues, November 2-5, 2019 The Park Record R o CREATING COMMUNITY THROUGH FILM PARK CITY FILM.ORG NANCY DREW AND THE HIDDEN STAIRCASE HONEYLAND Not Rated NOV 1 Fri 8pm NOV 2 Sat 8pm NOV 3 Sun 6pm Rated PG NOV 2 Sat 4 pm Part of the Book 2 Movies series presented with Park City Library. Admission is free. Feature film underwritten by Gardner Group JIM SANTY AUDITORIUM 1255 PARK AVE PARK CITY • 435.615.8291 TANZI PROPST/PARK RECORD T Xania V. Woodman, Alpine Distilling’s corporate mixologist, heats up a slice of Auntie Em’s maple-bour- A bon pecan pie at the Alpine Pie Bar on Main Street. w r Continued from C-1 Sergent said. “We started off by partnering with her a while back on private events. Then we told her what we were thinking, and here we are.” All the pies are served warm and include a slice of Gold Creek cheddar cheese, Woodman said. The Alpine Pie Bar opened in July, and Woodman knew the drinks she created needed to refresh those who had been out in the summer sun. The establishment is exploring tweaking the menu as winter approaches. “Now that we’re moving into the colder months, we are looking at cocktails that will serve as winter warmers, including hot toddies and apple ciders,” she said. Sergent said once the winter season starts, the Pie Bar will open seven days a week. The Alpine Pie Bar space opened two years ago when the Sergents began offering Alpine Distilling’s Gin Experience, which has been spotlighted in Forbes, Travel + Leisure and Hotels magazine, Sergent said. “The Gin Experience is an educational program where people can come in and make their own gin on site,” she said. “They learn about the history of gin and how its made, while they select their own botanicals, and taste the gins as they come off the stills in the different processing stages.” At the end of each session, clients get to take home a bottle of their custom-made gin. “We do the experience as a private event, and are planning to open it up to public scheduling soon,” Sergent said. The space is decorated with antique Sergent family photos. Pie bar raises spirits Alpine Distilling Alpine Pie Bar When: 3-10 p.m., Wednesdays through Sundays Where: 350 Main St., basement Web: alpinedistilling.com legacy cocktails into the menu, so I built the new ones around them,” Woodman said. The challenge of creating the drinks was to find a balanced offering, she said. “We wanted people to have the opportunity to experience the full line of the Alpine portfolio,” she said. “Of course we took the pies into consideration. And since we are only serving cocktails and pies, they really better go well together.” The pies served in the bar are made by Emily Burney, owner of Auntie Em’s Pies, a local bakery located in the Kimball Art Center, said Sara Sergent, who cofounded Alpine Distilling with her husband Robert. “We have been fans of Emily’s for years, and wanted to find a way to work with her,” HOW SWEET IT IS! 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 “We’re working on a legend that will explain who is in the photographs, because people are always asking me about the photos,” Woodman said. “People want to learn about the individuals and stories that led to Sara and Rob and AlpineS Distilling.” T Sergent said her husband is a fifth-generation distiller, and the first in his family tree to doc it legitimately. i “Those who came beforec him were moonshiners and bootleggers,” she said. “One off his grandfathers was a moon-c shiner for Al Capone, and theyw had distillation on the family’sS farm in Kentucky.” l In addition to the photo-f graphs, one wall is adornedt with the doors of Rob’sf great-grandmother’s pie safe. t “The safe has been fallings apart because it’s so old, so wew put the doors here,” Sergentu said. “And that just plays into the idea of serving pies anda cocktails.” t The Sergents founded Al-a pine Distilling in 2016. r The distillery has won aw number of awards, including the 2019 LuxeLife Magazinei award for Best Craft Distillery,t the 2018 Utah Distillery of thev Year award from the New Yorka International Spirits Competition and the 2017 Most Inno-h vative New Whiskey awardt at the International Drammiep Awards. S Sergent said opening a pied bar was a way to complementF Park City’s culinary offerings. n “We have some amazingM restaurants, and we wanted to offer something differentf before you went to dinnert or something after you arey done with dinner to finish the night,” she said. o p No. 1103 t w T a r 13 14 15 16 17 18 t j f a o a j BY MICHAEL PALEOS / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ 19 Michael Paleos, of Oyster Bay, N.Y., is chief of staff at a major investment bank. He started solving crosswords at a young age, but got hooked on them only after discovering the archive of puzzles in the New York Times app. ‘‘After doing enough of them, I started wondering what it would take to make one, and down the rabbit hole I went.’’ This is Michael’s second crossword for The Times, and his first Sunday. — W.S. AC R O S S 50 Infomercial imperative 1 Iraq War concern, in brief 52 Pill bug, biologically 4 An earl outranks him 54 Intake suggestion, briefly 9 Billiards maneuver 55 Unlock, to 14 Exclaim “@#%!” Shakespeare 19 Tilling tool 56 Third-longest river 20 QB defenders, in Europe, after the collectively Volga and Danube 21 Relating to a certain 58 Tear to shreds arm bone 59 Partner of 46-Down 22 ____ Kenyatta, in the frozen-food president of Kenya business starting in 2013 60 Brown seaweeds 23 Something set by a stove 63 U.S. island owned almost entirely by 25 Year of the final flight the billionaire Larry of the Concordes Ellison 26 French-speaking 65 Manic-looking, in a African nation way 27 Eyedropper, 67 Neutral response essentially from a therapist 28 Submission to a 68 Pattern once used for record label, once hospital volunteer 30 Rodeo loop uniforms, with a 31 Accessory with a hint to this puzzle’s bass drum theme 32 Major fuss 70 Loser of a beauty 33 Wedding bands? contest, in myth 34 Way out there 71 Birds known to mimic 38 Hand over car alarms and human speech 39 Take a mulligan on 73 Graduate’s “honor” 40 “<<” button: Abbr. 74 Carousel mount, to 41 Ricochet like a a tot hockey puck 75 Mark of a scam artist 43 To a certain extent, colloquially 76 Hooked on 45 Ad phrase indicating 77 Laura of “Big Little higher pricing tiers Lies” 49 Amtrak stop: Abbr. 78 Emulate Johnny Appleseed Online subscriptions: Today’s 79 H, to Hellenes puzzle and more 80 “Ya dig?” in more than 4,000 past puzzles, modern slang nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). 82 Get up in the face of 85 Emma Stone’s role in “La La Land” 88 Protagonist in Toni Morrison’s “Beloved” 90 Skate-park features 92 Place for regulars 93 Handel’s “____, Galatea e Polifemo” 94 Glenn Frey’s “The Heat ____” 96 Bad thing to come up in a title search 98 Total failure 100 Important members of the community, so to speak 103 Where menisci are found 105 What socks usually do 106 Bitter green 107 Regards covetously 108 Display piece for tchotchkes 110 Virtual sticky 111 Battling it out 112 Boondocks 114 One of 11 in a Christmas carol 115 Provide an address 116 French novelist Zola 117 Bit 118 Company that once offered “the Thrift Book of a Nation” 119 Excited, with “up” 120 Foil alternatives 121 Meditative syllables 5 Stopped a flight 6 Frosty encrustation 7 Its square equals its square root 8 Types who think school is too cool 9 They’re kept under wraps for a long time 10 Nut extract used in skin care 11 Derisive chuckles 12 Didn’t just hint at 13 Verdi’s “____ tu” 14 Gold digger’s goldmine 15 Alma mater of Tesla’s Elon Musk 16 Jazzman Blake 17 Like a crowd when the headliner takes the stage 18 Pipsqueaks 24 Like some servings of Scotch 29 “You get the idea” 30 New Guinea port that was Amelia Earhart’s last known point of departure 33 Large, purple HannaBarbera character 35 Campaign … or a campaign topic 36 Original N.Y.C. subway line 37 Nonpro 42 Heaps 44 Steamy DOWN 46 Partner of 59-Across 1 Big fat lies in the frozen-food 2 Where you might need business to get a grip 47 Dairy sources 3 In one’s heart of hearts 48 Biweekly occurrence, 4 Pop covers for many 20 23 24 27 28 31 32 34 35 40 41 49 50 36 37 61 26 30 38 39 43 51 62 63 72 75 76 79 80 88 101 45 57 65 74 106 82 91 103 83 84 85 92 97 93 98 99 104 105 107 108 109 110 111 112 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 51 Actress Fay of the original “King Kong” 53 Neuf + deux 55 Abbr. between * and # 57 Separation at a wedding? 60 What x’s sometimes represent 61 Executor’s charge 62 Pounce on, as an opportunity 63 The “two” in “two if by sea” 64 Portuguese-speaking African nation 65 What lettuce lends to a sandwich 66 Popular D.I.Y. site 68 Endeavor recognized by the César awards 69 Reid of “The Big Lebowski” 72 They come through when you need them most 74 Total stunners 77 Sketch out 78 W-2 IDs 87 70 78 81 102 86 66 77 96 48 59 69 95 47 54 58 64 90 46 53 73 89 94 S 44 52 68 71 100 25 33 56 67 22 29 42 55 60 21 113 81 Its closest neighbor is Andromeda 83 Mr. Wrong 84 All-vowel avowal 85 Carry some relevance for 86 Mode, on a menu 87 Scatterbrains 89 Neon marker 91 Is blinded by rage 95 Cent : euro :: ____ : krona 97 Modern, in Munich 99 Epic narrative 100 Tiny objections 101 What many a navelgazer gazes at 102 Treatment for Parkinson’s 104 Jag 107 Word repeated in “____ ou ne pas ____” 108 Lake bordered by four states and a province 109 Yarn 111 Just ducky 113 Person who might call you out |