I did a 46 hour jaunt to Pittsburgh to goof around and to test my body out. I had some major surgery last fall, and was just cleared to carry a suitcase in January, and wanted to see how my stamina was doing some sightseeing and touring without an automobile, as I'm going to Europe for 10 days at the end of April.
That being said, my weight isn't where I want it to be, so I couldn't just go into a full foodathon mode. So my plan was to hit one restaurant and one microbrewery each day. I was going to hit a second microbrewery on Saturday, but the weather wasn't conducive for walking, my stamina was starting to flag, and Tessaro's is on the 87 bus line that goes downtown so two $10 Ubers for a second beer seemed wrong. So I had carrot cake instead.
Food stops:Wholey - Friday 1:30pm: I have photos on my phone, I'll edit the post once I get them cleaned up. I've been in Wholey before, but it was after eating at DeLuca's, so I didn't buy any food that time. The idea of going to Wholey for lunch on a Lenten Friday seemed perfect to me. I was going to walk over from my hotel (the Kimpton Monaco downtown) but the winds were gusting over 40 mph so discretion was the key and I popped for an Uber. The line was about 20 minutes long to get cooked food, but it moved steadily. One of the staff was passing out samples of smelts. I picked up a 1/2# cod sandwich, and I'm pretty sure it was closer to 10-12 oz, two really nice pieces on a Mancini roll. I also picked up a small lobster bisque, and a 65 cent piece of cornbread. Got it to go, and leisurely ate it at East End Taproom two blocks away, washed down with a Monkey Boy Hefeweizen. It was a great sandwich, and it reminded me of the old Deluxe that used to be in the UIUC campustown.
Tessaro's - Saturday 3pm: I put a longer review on the Tessaro's thread. My third time there, my third outstanding meal. One of my favorite hamburgers in America, and an excellent value.
Coffee Stops:Allegheny Coffee - Strip District: Mostly roasting, but they'll make you a coffee drink while you wait. A very rich mocha, high quality chocolate. Also had a coconut "biscotti" which didn't have the texture of one but was a very good cookie.
Crazy Mocha - Liberty Ave. : A full place on a Saturday afternoon, all locals except for me, lots of high school and college students. Friendly vibe, mocha was good not great, carrot cake was a soild B.
Beer Stops:East End Taproom: Not their microbrewery, but a little taproom in the Strip District. I was there around 2pm on a Friday, and there was a steady stream of mostly couples playing hooky on a Friday afternoon and wanting to take a break from shopping. Hefeweizen was a B.
Grist Mill: A bit out of the way, but I'm glad I went. I got there right as they opened at 2pm on a Saturday. The weather wasn't conducive to strolling the neighborhood, but if I have a car next time, I'd like to go back. Their Kolsch was an A-, their coffee Porter a B.
Sightseeing:Warhol Museum. Half price ($10) on Friday from 5-10pm. I wasn't an enthusiast because I'm of an age where I associate him with his late 70s work and the work right before his death, and as a teenager I wasn't much of a fan. But I was curious to learn more about him. It was an excellent museum, and I gained an appreciation of his early commercial work, and I quite liked his drawings for newspaper advertisements and the like from the 1950s and early 1960s. He was a heck of a businessman.
Heinz Museum. Way more than I thought it was going to be. A very diverse set of exhibitions. My favorites were the French/British/Indian War exhibit, and the Pittsburgh Illustration Society exhibit. The only installment which fell flat was the Western PA Sports Museum, which was a big blah and I'm a sports fan. Virtually nothing on Roberto Clemente, for example. Overall, I spent more than two hours at the Heinz, and if I didn't have a schedule to keep I probably could have lingered for a full third hour.
TransportationThe 28x bus from the airport runs every half hour and takes you downtown for $2.75 each way exact change, or $2.50 if you pay at the machine inside the airport (and you can buy your return ticket there as well.) There are many major hotels within a three block walk of one of the downtown stops.
Tessaro's is on the 87 bus from downtown. Uber and Lyft were frequently on a surge, anywhere from 1.2 to 2.2x. I had to check both programs each time, as sometimes there was a 50% difference between the two. But somebody in good shape could easily walk in good weather between the Strip district, the downtown hotels, and the Warhol and PNC Park.
"Fried chicken should unify us, as opposed to tearing us apart. " - Bomani Jones