Dec 25, 2025
Hill’s Kitchen Park City is leaning into nostalgia and comfort with its latest limited-time pop-up concept: Hill’s Diner. Designed as a casual, approachable extension of the restaurant’s café, Executive Chef Evan LaValley said the dinner service from Friday through Jan. 4 reimagines classic diner fare with a sense of fun. The pop-up is part of an ongoing effort to keep the restaurant’s offerings fresh while responding to how and when guests want to eat, LaValley said, and the idea for the concept emerged during those team brainstorming sessions. “We were just chatting as a group, like, what can we do? What can be exciting?” LaValley said. “Diner kind of just kept making its way through the cuts.” This latest run follows other dinner pop-ups at the Park City location like sushi nights, a noodle house and a recent smash burger series. When the team began throwing ideas at the wall — literally, on scratch paper taped up in the kitchen — the diner theme stuck. It was a natural choice, the chef said, because they’ve all had diner experiences, whether through work or just for fun. For himself, growing up in a small rural town in Vermont meant diners were a fixture of his childhood. Later, diners evolved into his late-night gathering spots during college and years cooking along the East Coast and in the South. “The diner feel — it’s got that comfort feel. It can be family centric, friend centric, usually there’s a little bit of chaos involved with it. There’s nothing that really screams diner like a kid screaming in the background,” he said with a laugh.  From there, the Hill’s Kitchen Park City team further brainstormed for menu development, looking for ways to make it their own.  “Everyone kept throwing up ideas,” LaValley said. “Like, steak and eggs: instead of just doing traditional steak and eggs, someone’s like, ‘Oh, we could do Korean short ribs and eggs.’ So that’s going to be our steak and egg.” Executive Chef Evan LaValley said he emphasizes fun with food at Hill’s Kitchen Park City. Credit: Photo courtesy of Hill Top Hospitality That approach defines Hill’s Diner. Rather than replicating a traditional menu, the kitchen is experimenting with more creative interpretations. Instead of fried chicken, Nashville hot chicken and Huli Huli smoked chicken will be that protein; or, instead of simple fries, why not poutine, LaValley said. Standard potatoes are swapped for Hawaiian sweet potato salad, or a side of latkes.  “Like green beans, right? It’s comfort food. Green bean casserole is something our grandparents or parents probably made when we were always going to Christmas Eve dinner,” he said. “So it’s just one of those things that are very approachable. Just trying to put a fun spin on it.” A build-your-own system stems from the chef’s own experience at diners, where guests can order a main plus one or two sides of their choice. “There’s always something, when I go into a diner, like, ‘Oh, I want part of that. I want some of this.’ So I always order two or three things, and I never finish any of it,” he said.  The format of Hill’s Diner is intentionally quick and casual, designed to serve skiers and locals looking for satisfying food without a lengthy sit-down experience, LaValley said. “What do people want to have when they’re coming off the mountain?” he said. “Those times when individuals are most hungry and trying to find something to eat that’s quick and easy, (and) they don’t really have to get out of their ski gear to do.” Hill’s Diner runs from 4-8 p.m. for dinner service, opening just as the resorts close, and the eatery will continue to operate its usual breakfast and lunch hours.  Beyond the food, the pop-up serves as a creative outlet for the Hill’s Kitchen team. LaValley emphasized that rotating concepts keep long-time staff engaged and learning, and his philosophy as the kitchen lead is all about having fun. “It’s really nice to just see us as a team do new food and do different things and just have fun with it,” LaValley said. “I’m really big about fun with food. We’re not doing brain surgery. It’s fun. It’s just food at the end of the day.”  Hill’s Diner, he added, is one way his cooks can embrace that creativity. “We have one guy, Alfredo, who just does breakfast every day. Burritos, breakfast sandwiches, omelets, all that. To see him get to be a part of something different … it opens up everyone’s eyes to see something new,” LaValley said. “It’s an opportunity to get knowledge from other people if they have other experiences doing it.” Hill’s Diner Menu UpdatedDownload The post ‘Hill’s Diner’ concept serves comfort-centric dinner service at Hill’s Kitchen Park City appeared first on Park Record. ...read more read less
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