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Modern New American

Google: 4.6 · 703 reviews

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Price≈$60
Dress CodeSmart Casual
ServiceUpscale Casual
NoiseConversational
CapacitySmall
James Beard Award

Oquirrh occupies a considered address in Salt Lake City's downtown dining corridor at 368 E 100 S, placing it among the city's more deliberate restaurant choices. In a market where ambitious dining has been expanding steadily, it represents the kind of reservation worth planning around. Expect to do some advance research before your visit, as practical details remain curated rather than widely published.

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Oquirrh restaurant in Salt Lake City, United States
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Planning Around Salt Lake City's More Deliberate Dining Tier

Salt Lake City's downtown restaurant corridor has shifted considerably over the past decade. What was once a market defined almost entirely by hotel dining rooms and casual fare has developed a second tier of restaurants that require advance planning, where the reservation itself signals something about the experience ahead. Oquirrh, at 368 E 100 S, sits inside that tier. Its address places it within walking distance of the city's cultural core, and its presence in conversations about where to eat seriously in Salt Lake City has grown without the restaurant broadcasting itself loudly through conventional channels.

That quieter profile is itself worth understanding before you try to book. In cities like New York or San Francisco, the restaurants that are hardest to discuss in practical terms, those with no published phone number and a website that surfaces minimally, tend to be operating on a model that assumes word of mouth will carry them. Salt Lake City's dining culture has not historically produced many venues with that posture, which makes Oquirrh an interesting case to track. The planning logic that applies to booking at Lazy Bear in San Francisco or Atomix in New York City, where the reservation requires research and timing, has a local analogue here, even if the scale and competitive context differ.

The Booking Picture: What You Need to Know Before You Go

Given the editorial angle that Oquirrh invites, the booking experience deserves more attention than it typically gets. Confirmed practical details for this restaurant are sparse in public-facing channels. There is no published phone number in the standard directories, and website information has not been widely indexed. This is not unusual for a restaurant operating in a format that prioritises a specific dining experience over broad accessibility, but it does mean that prospective diners need to approach the reservation process differently than they would for, say, Bambara Salt Lake City or Avenues Proper, both of which maintain more conventional booking infrastructure.

The practical advice here is to begin with third-party reservation platforms, which are the most reliable entry point for Salt Lake City restaurants operating in this format. Searching Oquirrh's name directly on Resy or OpenTable, cross-referenced against its address at 368 E 100 S, will confirm current availability windows and lead times. In the broader American fine dining market, restaurants with this booking profile tend to fill two to four weeks out during peak periods. Salt Lake City's dining calendar concentrates demand around Sundance Film Festival in January, the ski season running from December through March, and the summer outdoor season, so timing your reservation attempt outside those windows gives you more flexibility.

Where Oquirrh Sits in Salt Lake City's Restaurant Scene

Salt Lake City's restaurant development has followed a pattern common to mid-sized American cities that experienced a wave of culinary investment in the 2010s. The city now has enough serious restaurants to create genuine internal competition, and diners with exposure to coastal markets have raised expectations accordingly. Oquirrh operates in this environment as one of the addresses that local food conversations return to, alongside venues like Arlo Restaurant, Adelaide, and Blind Rabbit Kitchen.

The restaurant's name references the Oquirrh Mountains, the range visible to the west of Salt Lake City across the valley, which suggests a deliberate orientation toward place. Whether that translates into sourcing philosophy, menu structure, or aesthetic approach is something that requires a visit to assess properly, since confirmed details about cuisine type, signature dishes, and format have not been published in verifiable public sources. What can be said is that a restaurant choosing a geographically specific name in this manner is making a statement about identity that goes beyond branding. In American fine dining more broadly, that kind of rooted naming convention has been associated with farm-to-table and regional sourcing commitments, from Blue Hill at Stone Barns in Tarrytown to Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg. Whether Oquirrh operates in that tradition in any formal sense, the name alone invites the comparison.

Reading the Signals: Awards, Recognition, and What They Imply

No confirmed awards or ratings data appears in the public record for Oquirrh at the time of publication. That absence should be read carefully rather than reflexively. In Salt Lake City's dining market, Michelin has not established a formal guide, which means the usual benchmark for formal recognition does not apply here. The James Beard Foundation has recognised Utah chefs and restaurants at the nomination level in recent years, which signals that the broader culinary community has begun paying attention to the region, even if Oquirrh specifically has not been confirmed among those recipients.

For context, the American restaurants that operate with the clearest formal recognition at the highest level, places like Le Bernardin in New York City, Alinea in Chicago, The French Laundry in Napa, or Addison in San Diego, operate in markets where external validation frameworks are well established. Oquirrh's context is different: it operates in a city building its fine dining infrastructure without the scaffolding of a Michelin guide, which means reputation travels through different channels, and the restaurant's standing in those conversations matters more than a star count that doesn't exist.

Restaurants in analogous positions in other mid-sized American cities have tended to build their reputations through consistent execution, a clear point of view on the menu, and the kind of guest experience that generates sustained word of mouth. Where Oquirrh falls on those measures is a conclusion that requires either a visit or access to a deeper body of verified guest accounts than currently circulates publicly. Our full Salt Lake City restaurants guide maps the broader field and provides a framework for understanding where any given restaurant sits in the city's current hierarchy.

Practical Planning Notes

The address at 368 E 100 S places Oquirrh in the section of downtown Salt Lake City that is walkable from most central hotels and accessible via TRAX, the city's light rail network, which reduces parking friction significantly for visitors. Downtown Salt Lake City is compact enough that combining a dinner at Oquirrh with visits to nearby cultural institutions or a pre-dinner drink at another address on the same corridor requires minimal transit planning. For visitors arriving during the winter ski season, the restaurant is positioned to function as a city-side dinner option on a non-mountain day, when the itinerary naturally turns toward downtown Salt Lake City rather than the resort base areas up the canyons.

Price range, hours, and dress code have not been confirmed through verifiable public sources. Given the restaurant's profile and the planning logic described above, contacting the venue directly through a reservation platform query is the most reliable way to confirm current operating hours and any format-specific requirements before your visit. Comparable Salt Lake City restaurants in a similar tier tend to operate dinner service from Tuesday or Wednesday through Saturday, with Sunday and Monday closures common in this market, but that pattern should not be assumed to apply to Oquirrh without direct confirmation.

Signature Dishes
House Sourdough BreadConfit Chicken Pot PieSpicy Rigatoni
Frequently asked questions

Nearby-ish Comparables

A compact peer set to orient you in the local landscape.

At a Glance
Vibe
  • Cozy
  • Elegant
  • Modern
  • Intimate
Best For
  • Date Night
  • Special Occasion
Experience
  • Open Kitchen
Drink Program
  • Craft Cocktails
Sourcing
  • Farm To Table
  • Local Sourcing
Dress CodeSmart Casual
Noise LevelConversational
CapacitySmall
Service StyleUpscale Casual
Meal PacingLeisurely

Cozy and inviting with modern art on the walls, comfortable lighting that can be dim, and a lively main dining room atmosphere.

Signature Dishes
House Sourdough BreadConfit Chicken Pot PieSpicy Rigatoni