Pittsburgh: tako (October 2016)

My spouse and I dined at tako for dinner on a Saturday night in early October 2014. The restaurant accepts reservations via telephone or by using the Yelp Seat Me online system. Be sure to make a reservation, because the restaurant gets busy, and waits can be long. tako is open nightly for dinner beginning at 5:00 pm (or 3:00 pm on Sundays). The restaurant sends you a confirmation and a reminder via email through Yelp SeatMe; included in the email, tako suggests a time limit for you to occupy your table: 1 1/4 hour for a party of 2 , 1 3/4 hour for a party of 4, and 2 1/4 hours for 6. We have never seen such an occupancy policy written out before - lucky for us, we didn't spend an extended time there, so we vacated our table before they had to ask us to leave!
Named for the Japanese word for “octopus”, “tako” opened in April 2015. The owners also operate next-door-neighbor Butcher and the Rye, Meat and Potatoes, Poutine House (at the Consol Energy Center – now called the PPG Paints Arena), and the yet-unopened Pork and Beans. tako is located in downtown Pittsburgh’s Cultural District on Sixth Street, across from Heinz Hall.
The first thing patrons notice about tako is it “movie theatre” marquis (a yellow board surrounded by lights that advertises tacos, poke, cold beer, air conditioning, tequila, etc.) above the open kitchen counter window. tako offers outdoor sidewalk dining, but the best seats in the house are the five bar stools mounted beneath the open sidewalk window/counter (which give the feeling of a food truck), allowing diners to become a part of the open kitchen. On the dining room side, the kitchen contains a glass wall so diners can glimpse the chefs at work. The music/noise level is loud, and the lighting is low. Inside by the entrance, colorful children’s alphabet magnets spell out the day's tacos choices on a metal wall. The quirky décor includes chandeliers made from repurposed bike chains, faux boxwood wallpaper on the upstairs balcony, a large painting of the Last Supper, religious candles on each table, and in an homage to the restaurant’s name, octopus tentacle sconces and a mural of an octopus with a pinup girl in its grip decorate one wall. The bar crowd was crowded on the night that we dined; because the restaurant space is long and narrow, both the bar patrons and passing servers bumped us repeatedly. (A long row of high-top tables features one side that shares a raised banquette, and the other side of which uses backless metal barstools.)
Tako serves dressed-up Mexican street food, but its menu references Asia, Latin America, Hawaii, and Korea. When the restaurant first opened, the menu was larger and included non-taco options, but the chefs paired it down to feature mainly tacos and sharable appetizers. Among the choices of starters, the delicious but messy street corn offers three small cobs coated with mayonnaise, chili, lime, and Mexican cheese. The build-your-own guacamole is also popular; you can include ingredients such as shishito peppers, cotija cheese, pineapple, bacon, chorizo, tuna, crabmeat, pork belly, duck, dill, pumpkin seeds; accompanying chips are homemade and served in a high, long, narrow box. The taco menu is protein-centric, including chorizo, pork, beef, al pastor, duck confit, beer-battered fish, octopus; tacos come two to an order served on custom-made wooden boards. Kitchen staff makes the tortilla shells in-house minutes before delivery to your table. Drink option include over 20 margaritas (some frozen), cocktails, beer, sangria, wine, and sake. Tako offers 300+ kinds of tequila, 100 varieties of mezcal, and 100 types of rum.
We ordered the Thai coconut margarita, which was the only disappointing menu item that we sampled. It tasted like a regular margarita, without any coconut flavor at all; in fact, if not for the edible orchid perched atop the mostly ice cube-filled glass, we would not have believed it to be anything but a standard margarita. However, the street corn app was tasty and unique, and we liked our Korean, al pastor (pork and pineapple), and duck confit tacos (the latter was fattier than we generally like). For dessert, we shared the coconut tapioca, which featured tropical diced fruit (kiwi, mango, and papaya) set atop creamy coconut tapioca pudding.
We enjoyed our dinner at tako; next time, we want to sit outside at the chef’s counter.




















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