Matters of Taste: Cloth & Flame brings unique desert-dining experiences to northern Arizona

AZ Daily Sun, Mountain Living, August 2023

Written by Gail G. Collins

Jean and Courtney O’Connor pointed at the Red Rocks and sighed before sitting on a comfortable lounge set under the trees. They toasted and began a conversation with guests. The mother and daughter from Boston had visited Arizona before, but it was their first encounter with this stunning Sedona backdrop.

“It was so beautiful, I nearly cried,” said Courtney. “We can’t wait to explore the area.”

Dressy couples in collared shirts and chiffon dresses mingled with glasses of wine, their light laughter carried on the evening breeze. A guitar player strummed bluesy tunes as people posed against majestic monoliths.

In prelude to a meal, teasers were proffered on boards—cantaloupe with crème fraiche and meatballs with shaved parmesan—causing conversation about what dinner would entail. The sky caught fire, silhouetting guests in the last rays of the day as all were invited to dine at one long table stretching toward the view.

A lanky Matt Cooley warmly welcomed guests to the sold-out event hosted by Cloth & Flame. Co-founded with wife Olivia, Matt explained, “The outreach exercise in pop-up dining is built on years-long relationships with properties in a multi-faceted approach to broaden the community using spaces in a responsible way. The core thing is to build a frame and people will fill it—they are the experience and bringing them together is the platform.” The venture’s aim is experiential engagement with iconic places.

Dinner commenced as staff gently nudged between diners to deliver salads of rocket, charred beets, Mineola orange slices and goat cheese, dressed in BBQ vinaigrette, topped with puffed corn.

Appetizers of roasted garlic gnocchi with smoked Vidalia onion, hard cheeses and pickled herbs followed. The entrée, achiote-rubbed skirt steak, was served with heirloom fingerling potatoes, grilled alliums and peppers as salsa verde, and the meal concluded with mesquite chocolate cake, capped in salted vanilla bean Chantilly and cocoa nibs.

“These ticketed community dinners are our favorite,” Cooley said. “Our goal is to create legacy with locations while management maintains control—whether it’s a private owner or NGO—and the broader component is the blueprint on how not to change the spaces forever.”

Read more: Matters of Taste: Cloth & Flame brings unique desert-dining experiences to northern Arizona

Phoenix Union Train Station is an urban example. The owner bought the property with Cloth & Flame in mind to preserve the historic site. Still, an upscale city location needs a business model to maintain it. Events held on the property can provide passive income while upholding its original nature.

Cloth & Flame began as a hot air balloon company with destination desert dining, but their culinary talents and attention to detail surpassed the flight factor. Guests enjoyed ballooning, but raved about the dining, so the Cooleys evolved the culinary component solely in 2019.

“We wanted to create something together at the intersection of community and experience—to scratch that itch,” said Cooley.

He offered context. What began as premiere pop-up dining, now encompasses three things:  a gastronomic aspect, working with public and private collaborators, like restaurateurs, artists and entertainers; an experiential agency, mostly company or brand events, like Chanel, Google or Bentley; and a revenue side, managing land or spaces as a lessee in a peer to peer marketplace. Cloth & Flame executes the promotional face in a unique venue.

Their capabilities are undergirded with a robust kitchen team and front of the house, commissary spaces and licensing, while incorporating the likes of celebrity chefs, wild and beautiful elements plus people.

“We understand culinary techniques, can prep and make anything possible,” Cooley said.

To generate more accessible events recently, Cloth & Flame organized a small fee wine and dance party for 1,000 guests and a free art exhibit, plus an add-on dinner, both held at the Ice House in downtown Phoenix.

Cloth & Flame is based in Arizona, taking advantage of their roots and relationships, but their adventurous exploits extend from Arizona to Austin and Amsterdam for an upcoming affair. They operate nationwide, but concentrate their efforts in California, Nevada, Utah and Arizona, where reliable weather prevails. Still, bets are hedged with banked insurance to tent an event while conserving the view.

On Friday, Sept. 29, Cloth & Flame will debut a five-course prix fixe dinner to kick off Flagstaff Fadeaway at High Country Motor Lodge. The event benefits restoration of Glen Canyon with the chance to meet and greet music festival talent.

Secretly, Cloth & Flame is the second-largest venue operator in the US. To expand its reach and vision, the company has plans for movie nights, ceramics classes, land art experiences and more. Also, watch for a platform coming to connect niche venues with a wider range of collaborators. AZDSun

Matters of Taste: Ambiente, a Landscape Hotel, redefines sustainable hospitality

AZ Daily Sun, Mountain Living Section, August 4, 2023

Written by Gail G. Collins

No matter what it is we hunger for or what ails us, we’re best served when nurtured by nature. Daily, we’re tethered to technology and ignore the wider outdoors. Whether we hike a trail or simply stroll a garden, wonderful things begin to happen within us. Our attention becomes focused again, and stress falls away lifting our mood. Nature acts as a balm for our busy-ness, creating emotional and mental space for the priorities in our lives. Basically, we get outside to allow room inside of us for what matters most.

Given the chance to connect with our natural surroundings, most of us still crave some indulgence. And in Northern Arizona, the superior choice lies just beyond our backyards. Tucked among the red rocks on three rugged acres, Ambiente, A Landscape Hotel, which opened on February 1, is uniquely designed to blend with Sedona’s desert, offering guests an intimate, intrinsic experience in a stunning locale. The first of its kind in North America, Ambiente exemplifies elegant minimalism as luxury accommodation for adults only.

According to resort manager Nic Pigati, “A lot of attention, time and detail went into paying honor to the landscape. The atriums have only four points of contact with the Earth, and no heavy machinery was used in its construction—all manpower. Building took place around the existing trees and plantings, and to lay down the main arteries, plant life was scooped up and replanted.”

Buildings are modern and sleek amongst rustic nature, merging with the topography in color and form. Seeming to float above the ground, forty cube-shaped guest atriums are elevated and angled for privacy, yet afford views of iconic monoliths. Bronzed glass and metal exteriors with contemporary, elemental interiors produce a dramatic property built amongst nature.

Four tiers of rooms showcase an ultimate experience in the 576-square-foot landscape room. Gaze beyond the king bed, drop-down television and motorized blackout curtains through a floor-to-ceiling glass outlook for integration with the outdoors. Details, like live-edge juniper counters, sourced locally, are sensual alongside a Japanese soaking tub, dual shower heads, heated towel racks and more. Indulge in a Firecreek coffee pour-over with complimentary treats and step up to a private, 360-degree rooftop roost for unstoppable sunrise viewing or star gazing. It’s classy camping at its best.

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With sustainability in mind, an ancient waterway was restored to flow through the grounds. In fact, four creeks cross the property, spilling into a lagoon, providing a burbling, clean water source. “It’s the same nanotechnology used to purify water in streams—no chemicals required to keep it clear,” says Pigati. “Wildlife still drink from the creek as always.”

A split-rail fence borders Coconino National Forest, past where cyclists careen down paths and hikers tramp on a trail to find inner peace. Exclusive escapes include wine tours, balloons rides, off-road jeep adventures, and of course, spa treatments.

Restorative and rejuvenating aspects incorporate singles and couples rooms, sound immersion therapy, a hyper-oxygenated soaking room and more utilizing custom-blended scents, personal playlists and the sunset swirl of color in virtual Antelope Canyon ambience. Renew the senses.

Property amenities include a pool—heated by rooftop solar—and a Jacuzzi. Pool and lunch fare are served by The Drifter, a converted Airstream trailer with a full, working kitchen. Adjacent, Forty1, the destination’s signature restaurant, serves breakfast and dinner, led by executive chef Lindsey Dale.

The menu is modern American cuisine, and Chef Dale showers an endearing appreciation for the spirit of the West plus a steadfast commitment to showcasing its abundance. The aim:  Sumptuous dishes geared toward those with a refined, yet adventurous palate, centered on seasonal ingredients sourced from the surrounding region and beyond. Referring to the understated excellence and attention to detail at Ambiente in general, she explains, “We are creating food and creating memories.”

Dale had a hand in those details, from advising on the logistics of a space that best suits staff and guests to choosing glassware, china and the bar back. The matte black façade, chic interior and invigorating atmosphere feels earthy, yet polished at Forty1.

Sustainable tourism was always the hotel’s goal. Chef Dale works closely with Blue Bird Farms, an organic, intentionality-driven holding located in Rimrock for produce, and coordinates to provide composting services for the entire property. This guarantees that all compostable materials, whether restaurant waste or coffee grounds, will be recycled into their soil source, culminating in a farm-to-fork cycle.

The menu is both standard and seasonal in turns. The most popular dish is speared prawns in green curry, creamy with coconut milk. Prawns perch over fried forbidden rice with chili oil, herb and peanut salad. Served on an ebony stone plate, it’s gorgeous in every way. The duck duo of seared breast and confit leg, parsnip puree, baby turnips, Swiss chard and purple yam gnocchi are circled with lavender blackberry gastrique and Earl Grey foam forming a masterpiece for the palate.

The venison rack on red lentil and turnip with red current gastrique, asparagus and maitake mushrooms boasts balanced flavors, while the pomegranate and pink peppercorn poached pear is light and luscious with Greek yogurt and cardamom panna cotta, sesame cashew crumble, orange and basil.

Alongside decadent food pairings pulling from a 130-bottle wine list, Chef Dale worked with lead bartender Breann Anzar to create a robust cocktail program that will rotate with seasonal offerings. Try a spirited dessert—combining a cocktail and treat—as a tease.

Central to the boutique property, the multi-functional food and event space invites guests to come for dinner, enjoy a movie poolside and stay for guided stargazing on the upcoming, custom 16-foot screen. “The restaurant is upscale, yet cozy; masculine, yet sexy,” Pigati says. There is complimentary breakfast with casual caffeine flowing, fine dining with spirits flowing, a wine tasting room, group buyouts available for events—everything feels connected.”

Ambiente is operated by Mike Stevenson with his two daughters Jennifer May and Colleen TeBrake. The five-year labor of love became the premiere project of Two Sisters Bosses, a high-end development and management company focused on crafting an extravagant encounter harmonious with the environment. It’s no wonder, Ambiente made Condé Nast Traveler’s 2023 Hot List. This collection of the world’s best new hotels, cruises, restaurants, cultural destinations and transportation projects sets new standards for hospitality balancing style, ethos and service.  

Such standards arise from hand-in-glove teams. Chef Dale can’t say enough complimentary words about her hand-picked crew. “The team we have is incredible—the best of the best and proud to be part of this amazing hotel. We work hard, go home and love coming back to work.”

Ambiente, a Landscape Hotel, is a tranquil, lavish hideaway just waiting to boost your health and your mood. AZDSun