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Pittsburgh: Burgatory (October 2016)


My spouse and I dined at Burgatory on the North Shore for lunch on a Saturday in early October 2016. The restaurant’s logo illustrates its amusing name “Purgatory, which features a halo on top and a fiery bottom. The company’s goal is to provide “helluva burgers” and “heavenly shakes”. The restaurant is open daily for lunch and dinner. Burgatory’s owners operate several other restaurants in the Pittsburgh area including Uncle Sam’s Submarines and Fuel & Fuddle (and the now-closed Joe Mama’s Italian Deluxe). Other Burgatory locations include Fox Chapel (at the Waterworks, their first location, which opened in 2011), Robinson Township (at The Pointe), Homestead (at the Waterfront), Murrysville (Blue Spruce Shoppes), McCandless Crossing/North Hills, the Consol Energy Center (now called the PPG Paints Arena), and Heinz Field.
Burgatory on the North Shore opened in fall 2015 on the street level of a commercial building amidst other bars and restaurants. It occupies a corner location that allows for outdoor sidewalk dining in front of the building and semi-alfresco dining on the side beneath a canopy enclosed with clear-plastic roll-down sides. Staff can roll up huge garage doors on the side of the building to allow outdoor access. Indoor seating at booths, tables, and a large bar is available. The restaurant decor features concrete, metal, and wood that blend with gray, brown, red, and yellow paint. A clever flowchart on one wall helps you make food decisions.
Burgatory serves casual American cuisine, including burgers, salads, fries, and milkshakes. Whenever possible, they use organic, all-natural, and local ingredients. Besides ordering from the pre-designed burgers, you can create your own using paper order sheets and pencils located on each table. You choose every element of your burger, including bread (brioche, wheat, pretzel, gluten-free, focaccia), meat (their beef is a proprietary blend of sirloin, chuck, brisket, and short-rib, but you can also choose chicken, bison, wagyu, crab, elk, vegan), rub (jerk, Cajun, onion, mushroom, peppercorn), cheese (cheddar, American, provolone, gorgonzola, gruyere, gouda, brie), sauce (bourbon BBQ, habanero, aioli, sriracha, wasabi, horseradish), toppings (bacon, guacamole, savory jelly, ham, onion straws, chili, fried egg), and cooking instructions (red, pink, no pink). The menu at the North Shore location features a few different items than the menus at other locations, such as ribs and a PB&J burger. Keeping with the burger theme, the restaurant delivers most burgers with a small red plastic pitchfork in the center. Each burger comes with crispy house-made potato/sweet-potato chips, but you can upgrade to the house-cut thin rosemary fries, or spicy baked beans (other sides include cole slaw, potato salad, and side salad). Portions are large, and prices are reasonable. Burgatory has won awards for their burgers including in the national A1 Steak Sauce Burger Bracket and at the World Food Championships.
To craft their custom milkshakes, Burgatory uses cream from local Titusville Dairy Products to make their own ice cream daily. Shakes are available in either child-friendly or adult versions. We ordered the non-alcoholic salted caramel shake (vanilla ice cream, caramel, and pretzel bits for a salty-sweet combination), to which our server suggested adding a shot of caramel vodka. The shakes are generously portioned (nearly 18 ounces, with the overflow arriving in an icy metal shaker with a long spoon), topped with whipped cream and then garnished with something appropriate (such as a mini pretzel, in our case).
In order to provide excellent service, Burgatory staff has attended seminars held by the Union Square Hospitality Group from New York City (owned by restaurateur Danny Meyer of Gramercy Tavern, Union Square Café, and Shake Shack). Our server was friendly, patient, and informative, so her training paid off.
We enjoyed our lunch at Burgatory – particularly the milkshake varieties – and we will return.









Pittsburgh (October 2016)


My spouse and I visited Pittsburgh for two days in early October 2016. We were in town to attend the Pitt vs. Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football game at Heinz Stadium; Pitt won the game 37-34 in the last second! The city was very busy because besides the Pitt game, there was a Penguins hockey game, and a Steelers football game. The only missing event was a Pirates baseball game, and then all professional sports teams in the city would have played on the same weekend. The weather was rainy on our drive from Allentown to Pittsburgh, but as predicted, it was dry (although cloudy and gloomy) at game time. We tried four new restaurants (Burgatory, Proper Brick Oven and Tap Room, tako, and G+G Noodle Bar) on this trip – a record for us! It is great to see the growth downtown, as well as on the North Shore. Because we tailgated on the river at the September game, we did not see all the new buildings and restaurants on North Shore Drive. But on this visit, we saw the location of the new Holiday Inn Express and Suites, and for new restaurants Burgatory, Bar Louie, Tequila Cowboy, Wanna B’s, Little Red Corvette ‘90s Kitchen, and The Foundry, and where Burn and Southern Tier Brewing Company will eventually be located when construction completes. If we could find jobs equitable to what we do now, we would consider moving to Pittsburgh, because it is a manageable and livable city!
Hotel:
·       Doubletree by Hilton Pittsburgh Link to my review
Restaurants:
·         Burgatory Link to my review
·         Proper Brick Oven and Tap Room Link to my review
·         tako Link to my review
·         G and G Noodle Bar (Grit and Grace) Link to my review

Pittsburgh (October 2019)



My spouse and I visited Pittsburgh for the weekend in late October 2019 to attend the Pitt-University of Miami football game (Pitt lost 12-16). We stayed at the Residence Inn by Marriott North Shore, giving us another opportunity to try out a North Shore hotel. On Friday night, we ate a dinner of Hungarian comfort food at Huszar, whereas on Saturday evening after the game, we tried Cioppino for some seafood. On the way to the game, we ate some burgers and milkshakes at Burgatory. And on Sunday on our way out of town, we stopped for an early lunch in Lawrenceville at SMOKE Barbecue Taqueria (which we had originally visited for drinks in early September). It was another great weekend in the ‘burgh!

Hotel:
Restaurants:




Pittsburgh: Heinz Field (September 2016)

My spouse and I attended a college football game at Heinz Field on a Saturday afternoon in early September 2016. We have attended many sporting events at Heinz Field since it opened in 2001. Prior to that, both the Steelers and the Pirates shared Three Rivers Stadium, which was torn down in 2000. Afterwards, the teams moved to separate new venues, with the Steelers at Heinz Field, and the Pirates at PNC Park. The University of Pittsburgh Panthers also play football games at Heinz Field.
The stadium is located on Pittsburgh’s North Shore on the bank of the Ohio River, near its confluence with the Allegheny and Monongahela Rivers. Many hotels (Marriott Residence Inn, Hyatt Place, Marriott Springhill Suites, Holiday Inn Express), bars/restaurants (Jerome Bettis Grille, The Foundry, Tilted Kilt, Bar Louie, Burgatory, Little Red Corvette ‘90s CafĂ©, Hyde Park Prime Steakhouse, Clark Bar), and entertainment venues (Stage AE, Tequila Cowboy, Wanne-Bee’s) are nearby, as well as the Carnegie Science Center and the Rivers Casino. You can arrive at the stadium by ferry (from Station Square), water “limo”/taxi, T (subway to the Allegheny Station stop), by boat, on foot, Uber, taxi, pedicab, or by car (however, most of the nearby parking is pre-sold with ticket packages).
Heinz Field holds about 70,000 fans in a variety of seats, club boxes, luxury boxes, and standing room spots. Additional seats were added in 2015 below the clever scoreboard towards the river; the scoreboard features 35-foot-high Heinz ketchup bottle replicas that open up and “pour” ketchup down the scoreboard when the team is in the “Red Zone”. Some seats enjoy views of the Pittsburgh skyline. Most regular folding seats are made of a bright yellow molded plastic, with backs and small armrest dividers. Cupholders are attached to the seat in front of you. Metal bench seating exists in the high upper end zone. Some lower-level seats are positioned under the overhang of the upper levels, which offers protection on rainy (or hot and sunny) days. Escalators, elevators, and ramps are available to transfer between levels. Due to security measures (metal detectors, bag checks), you are advised to use the gate printed on your ticket. Be sure to leave large backpacks or handbags at home. Because this is an NFL stadium, you must adhere to the clear-bag policy; check the website for details. If you bring a bag that is too large, you will be refused entry with it.
Stadium tours, which last about two hours but are not available on game days, include access to the field, locker room, press box, luxury box, club suites, security office. Heinz Field does not limit the number of people who can take a tour, but they break larger groups up so that the tour is manageable for both guide and participants.
The stadium contains souvenir stands/shops and many counter-service food outlets (branded food includes Burgatory, Quaker Steak & Lube, Primati Brothers, as well as other vendors). Alchoholic beverages are served at both college and NFL games. Sometimes vendors are instructed to remove and retain the screw-top caps of water and soda bottles (presumably so that fans cannot throw either the caps or full bottles). Many TVs (800 of them!) are available in the access and concession areas of the stadium so that you do not miss the action. Officially, smoking is prohibited, although it is more of a “don’t ask-don’t tell” policy, and sometimes smokers congregate toward the backs of the decks. The stadium has many restrooms, and it is rare to wait in line at most of the larger facilities.
The stadium features the FedEx Great Hall (of fame) that contains Steelers photographs, memorabilia, and six Lombardi trophies from their Super Bowl victories. Past football stars like Tony Dorsett, Joe Namath, Joe Montana, Mike Ditka, Terry Bradshaw, Lynn Swann, and Mean Joe Greene are featured. Some University of Pittsburgh mementos are also displayed.
If you have the chance, be sure to visit Heinz Field, either for a game or just a tour.

















September 2018: