Pittsburgh: Hyde Park Prime Steakhouse (November 2019)



My spouse and I dined at Hyde Park Prime Steakhouse for dinner on a Thursday evening in late November 2019. We were staying across the street at the Hyatt Place North Shore because we were in town to attend a college football game at nearby Heinz Field, home of the Steelers. (The restaurant is also very close to the Pirates PNC Park.) Hyde Park Prime is open for dinner and drinks daily. We made a booking using the online Open Table reservation system. Other locations of Hyde Park Prime Steakhouse include spots in Ohio, Florida, and Michigan. The Hyde Park Restaurant group also operates four other Ohio restaurants: Jekyll’s Kitchen, ML Tavern, Black Point, and Bull & Bird Steakhouse. 

Hyde Park Prime opened in 2007 on Pittsburgh’s North Shore, on the ground level of the Peoples (Equitable) Gas office building on the banks of the Allegheny River. Valet parking is offered. The street side of the space offers a somewhat circular bar with a few high-top tables on one side and a raised dining platform on the other, and a cozy lounge seating area with a sofa and a double-sided fireplace. The back two thirds of the property offers a semi-open kitchen, with booth, banquette, and table seating. A side dining room offers event space and overflow dining (which was fully occupied the night we visited). The rear of the room offers river and skyline views through its large windows; seasonal al fresco dining is available on a rear patio. The overall look of the space is traditional upscale steakhouse with red velvet drapery, wood paneling, enormous chandeliers, padded chairs, and white tablecloths.

As its name implies, Hyde Park is a traditional steakhouse, with cuts of beef named after local celebrity sports figures and family-style shareable sides. (Seafood options are also available.) However, we chose to go a slightly different route than the traditional steakhouse fare. As we perused the menu, our server delivered a bread basket filled with some yummy choices, along with a slab of butter (one end was dipped in herbs, but the other was dipped in salt that was way too salty to use; in the past, we have seen butter sprinkled with sea salt, but that end of the butter was nearly inedible). We started with two salads: the modern chop salad (which was tasty, although not “chopped” in the sense that we had hoped, where every ingredient is exactly the same size) and the wedge salad. Next, we ordered a cheeseburger (which was served with house-made potato chips but for which we requested fries instead) and the chicken Milanese (which our server said came with some accompaniments: 2 Brussel sprouts, 2 carrots, 2 potatoes, but arrived without them). The chicken was a large portion of lightly-battered chicken cutlets, with a delicious white wine lemon caper sauce. (As it turns out, the early dining [happy hour] portion features the veggies, whereas the normal dinner portion does not.) We also shared a side dish of the gruyere gratin potatoes, which were delicious. We would have loved to order dessert; however, our service team was also assigned to attend to two large tables of 8+ people as well as another table of 5, so our meager two-top was essentially forgotten. At one point, a manager stepped in to deliver our plates from the kitchen because he had noticed that they were sitting there too long. But those plates arrived without the promised veggies and the upgraded fries. 

We will give Hyde Park Prime another try: we thought the food was tasty, and although we experienced some service issues, the restaurant went above and beyond to correct them, contacting us by phone and email to apologize, and even sending us a small gift card to use at a later date.












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