He plays a bumbling dad on ABC's Modern Family, but in Salt Lake City Ty Burrell is trying out for a role as restaurateur.
Burrell has just opened Beer Bar, a beer garden-like eatery that serves 150 beers paired with an array of house-made bratwursts, local breads and Belgian fries.
The restaurant, which has high ceilings and long tables and benches to evoke that Bavarian beer hall feel, is next door to the cocktail bar Burrell co-owns with an equally simple name, Bar X.
"It's a super simple menu, which is what we wanted from the beginning," says Burrell.
"Basic, but well-made and local."
For the menu, the Emmy-winning actor teamed with Viet Pham, an up-and-coming Salt Lake City chef who was one of Food and Wine magazine's best new chefs in 2011.
Burrell met Pham when he and his wife ate at Forage, Pham's Salt Lake City restaurant, and were blown away by Pham's cooking.
It turned out that Pham was a fan of Bar X, and the seeds for the future partnership were planted.
Pham created what has become Beer Bar's signature dish: the Reuben brat - a sandwich stuffed with pastrami, bratwurst, Swiss cheese and pickled vegetables.
The bar and restaurant cement Burrell's roots in Salt Lake City, known less for attracting Hollywood types and more as host of the 2002 Winter Olympics and home to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Though born and raised in Oregon, Burrell says he now feels very much like a "Salt Laker," having lived in the city since 2008.
He and his wife, who was born and raised in Utah, live here part of the year with their two young daughters when Burrell is not in Los Angeles filming Modern Family or working on other projects.
"I loved it from the first time I got here," he said. "It's a very unassuming place, it's a very humble place."
Burrell's mother, brother and a few cousins also relocated to Utah.
His brother, Duncan Burrell, is one of his business partners and part of a team that oversees the day-to-day operations of the new restaurant and Bar X, which are joined by a shared door.
Burrell said he often gets bemused looks from his Hollywood friends when they find out he owns a bar and beer garden in Utah - famous for its teetotaling culture and strict liquor laws.
"There's usually some sort of confusion about why I've opened a bar in Salt Lake," he said.
