Montreal Gazette

QUIRKY, BEAUTIFUL PITTSBURGH

Take time to visit the Warhol Museum and taste the distinct ethnic food in the Strip District

- JOEL ACHENBACH

“Yes, Pittsburgh,” I was forced to say after telling people where we were heading on a family road trip. Our fancy friends who think a vacation must involve Maine or Martha’s Vineyard, and who think the word “summer” is a verb, found our destinatio­n to be bizarre, as if we’d announced we had decided as a family to learn how to handle snakes and speak in tongues.

But Pittsburgh was an easy choice of destinatio­n. We wanted to get away for a few days from Washington’s sweltering heat. We didn’t want to cram ourselves into an overpriced and undersized New York City hotel room. We love the beach, but at the last minute there weren’t rooms available. So we eyeballed Pittsburgh as a place with a beguiling combinatio­n of natural beauty, urban quirkiness, and the all-important virtue of proximity. It’s closer than you think.

Also, much better-looking, almost like it stole a move from Seattle or Portland. The most striking feature is the rugged topography, which has no obvious equivalent among big cities anywhere in the East. I’ve never seen it look anything but clean and fresh. Where are smokestack­s belching stygian clouds of toxic fumes? Why is there no soot raining from the sky? I guess that image of Pittsburgh is off by a century or two. Now there’s a big Google presence; at CarnegieMe­llon University they do amazing work with robots.

The steel town displays its proud industrial history in the old factories turned into retail strips, and in the bridges that seem to have so much steel in them they might outlast the Appalachia­ns. It has 446 bridges, which I’m told is more than any city in the world.

Pittsburgh has all the amenities that the soft traveller (i.e., someone who goes into a dive bar and asks the bartender for the wine list) demands. You can go up and down the grittiness scale in a place like this. Like so many American big cities, Pittsburgh has decided that the coarse, raw, grizzled urban textures of the industrial era can pretty much double the expense of your salmon entree.

Back to location: Pittsburgh has a sneaky proximity to the big cities of the East Coast. The geological barrier of the mountains creates a psychologi­cal distance.

But even when you find Pittsburgh on a map, it’s hard to describe where it is in relation to the rest of the country. It’s certainly not on the East Coast and it’s not part of the Midwest.

Terms like “Appalachia” and “Rust Belt” are not likely to be embraced by the Pittsburgh Chamber of Commerce.

There was a time, of course, when its location was obvious, providenti­al and economical­ly significan­t. Pittsburgh sits on the rolling terrain below the western flank of the Allegheny Plateau. The city was founded on a point of land where the Monongahel­a and Allegheny rivers converge to form the Ohio River.

We got a big suite at the Courtyard Pittsburgh Downtown, on Penn Avenue, which puts you in walking distance of everything from the Point (where the rivers converge) to the Warhol Museum. There is no joy in an American road trip greater than getting a jumbo hotel room of a size unimaginab­le in, say, Maine and Martha’s Vineyard, where our fancy friends were probably suffering in shoebox rooms in precious B&Bs with sailboats clacking next door and seagulls cawing up a storm while we had a suite large enough for a game of Wiffle Ball.

We did our usual vacation routine, which is eat our way through the city like a herd of goats. We remember our family trips via stomach memory. As in, “Remember that place with the great gelato?”

“Yeah. Rome.” Our favourite place in Pittsburgh is the Strip District, which has a profusion of small grocery stores of distinct ethnic identity. Thus at the Mexican place, Reyna Foods, you can load up on dried chili peppers stored in old-fashioned metal garbage cans.

The Pennsylvan­ia Macaroni Company is where you go for your pepperonis and weird styles of pasta. We went to the upscale Pittsburgh Public Market and got kidchego goat cheese from Wheel & Wedge for a mere $22 a pound.

Then we hauled our bags of exotic and obscure foodstuffs back to the room, laid everything on a shiny countertop, and took photos of what we had achieved as consumers.

Our favourite meal was one of the least expensive: Chicken Latina, a Peruvian place that doesn’t look like much but serves an exquisite chicken quesadilla — crispy and buttery on the outside, stuffed with chicken, beans and cheese. What really makes it is the spicy, garlicky and ever-so-lightly creamy green sauce they serve with it. It’s not a successful vacation unless you come home with an obsession over some kind of sauce.

We did a pub-crawl on the South Side, and the college-age kids nosed around the vintage clothing shops. .

The secret of family travel is that if you are careful about tending to everyone’s needs, and are patient and resilient, and don’t expect too much, you don’t have to have Shangri-La as a destinatio­n.

You’re with people you like, and you’re not on your laptop and you’re not in your cubicle and you’re not on some kind of deadline.

 ?? PHOTOS: JIM JUDKIS/THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Shoppers stroll by Yinzers sportswear shop in the heart of Pittsburgh’s Strip District, which has a profusion of small ethnic grocery stores.
PHOTOS: JIM JUDKIS/THE WASHINGTON POST Shoppers stroll by Yinzers sportswear shop in the heart of Pittsburgh’s Strip District, which has a profusion of small ethnic grocery stores.
 ??  ?? On Saturday morning in Pittsburgh, customers line up along the counter of the Pennsylvan­ia Macaroni Company.
On Saturday morning in Pittsburgh, customers line up along the counter of the Pennsylvan­ia Macaroni Company.
 ??  ?? The sculpture, Point of View, of Seneca leader Guyasuta, left, meeting George Washington, overlooks Pittsburgh’s Golden Triangle, where the Monongahel­a and Allegheny rivers converge to form the Ohio River.
The sculpture, Point of View, of Seneca leader Guyasuta, left, meeting George Washington, overlooks Pittsburgh’s Golden Triangle, where the Monongahel­a and Allegheny rivers converge to form the Ohio River.

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