Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Varied cuisine, drinks, music lure diners Downtown

- By Polly Higgins Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Downtown has no shortage of restaurant­s. Longtime institutio­ns (Chinatown Inn, The Original Oyster House), Italian standards (Vallozzi’s) and numerous chain steakhouse­s rub real estate with spots new and old, serving Thai, Venezuelan, pizza, high-concept mashups and much, much more.

With all these options, however, the area is still waiting for the full return of patrons post pandemic shutdowns. As Con Alma general manager Aimee Marshall told us, “Downtown’s still getting there.”

Here are four excellent reasons to get there, and get there often. Three more Downtown restaurant­s are online at post-gazette. and will be featured next Sunday.

A note: As all restaurant­s are feeling the impact of COVID-19-related challenges (staffing, sourcing, inflation), many places have temporaril­y altered hours, seating and menu items.

The Speckled Egg Expansive brunch | stunning setting | coffee and cocktail bar |$

Sometimes, a restaurant’s atmosphere and its food just work seamlessly. The Speckled Egg is that restaurant. Situated in the lobby of the formidable, Flemish-Gothicstyl­e Union Trust Building, its patrons pad across custom violet-andblue carpeting to order what coowner Jacqueline Schoedel describes as Pittsburgh-meets-California

cuisine. Co-owner and husband Nathan is from South Park.

“My husband, he grew up here, he’s a yinzer, and he brings the fried chicken biscuit on the menu,” she says. “I’m from Ohio, but I like California dining, the light food. I like food that’s bright.”

By design, this is a place where you want to hang out, grab a cold brew (coffee or beer) and nosh on an inventive menu while sitting at the bar or one of numerous tables placed on that dramatic, plush carpeting.

The couple, who met as culinary students at the Art Institute of Pittsburgh, opened The Speckled Egg in February 2020. Its rare concept sees them serving brunch until 3 p.m. every day they’re open, currently Wednesdays through Sundays. At 4 p.m. weekdays, the menu shifts to a curated happy hour menu.

“I tell [Nathan] all the time, this

concept could be done, obviously, but the way that we melded together our personalit­ies and what we like in food, it’s what makes this work. We complement each other.”

The food: The menu offers that fried chicken-biscuit sandwich, sweetened with honey and dressed with pimento cheese. Similarly filling fare includes brownbutte­r French toast with strawberry-cardamom jam, and a two-patty patty melt with American and Swiss cheeses and caramelize­d onions. Lighter items include the Aloha Puddin’ (coconutchi­a seed pudding with granola and fruit) and a turmeric chicken salad sandwich, with added crunch from almonds and celery.

A small Toasts section offers an avocado smash (named the Millennial, but of course) and the beet-andricotta You Gotta Ricotta, while healthy-hearty salads include one with greens, quinoa, butternut squash and bacon lardon (up the protein by adding grilled or fried chicken). More traditiona­l first-meal-of-the-day items: the two-egg Hen’s Hash is veggie-heavy with Brussels sprouts, broccolini and mushrooms, and the goat cheese omelet incorporat­es seasonal vegetables as well.

Happy hour is geared toward shareable bites — duck fat popcorn with Parmesan and peppercorn, hamwrapped plums, beet tartare, a cheese plate — although you can also get a burger.

The drinks: A solid list of espresso beverages (you can’t order a cortado everywhere), Pittsburgh Juice Co. cold-pressed juices, kombucha, cocktails (mimosas, espresso martinis, the house Old Fashioned with bourbon and rum), wines and plenty of local beers.

501 Grant St.; thespeckle­deggpgh.com

Talia

Rustic Italian | small plates | wines from throughout Italy | $$-$$$

Italian dining doesn’t always have to be the traditiona­l hours-long feast — the antipasti, the pasta, the meats, the digestif. Talia has that option when you want it, but you can also pop in for a quick, casual meal. Choices. It’s all about choices.

Talia is the second Downtown location for Julian Vallozzi, whose namesake restaurant in Market Square is itself an offshoot of the decades-old original Vallozzi’s in Greensburg. But this kid has gone its own way. Occupying an airy space in the former Alcoa Building, Talia offers diners the choice of a nip and a nosh at the marble-topped bar or following the dark hardwood floors to the main dining room and a view of the open kitchen, overseen for the past six months by chef Nick Senske (Shannopin Country Club, Lucca Ristorante), and have that leisurely meal. Or something in the middle.

It’s a matter, general manager and events director Melissa Maffel says, of responding to customers. The restaurant’s custom-made rotisserie was an anchor feature when the spot opened in 2017, and is still very much in use (current: rotisserie duck), but it’s not the star of the show. “When we first opened, that was going to be our No. 1 focus,” says Maffel. But, people like the pastas — “those are the favorites.” So the homemade rigatoni, orecchiett­e, etc. get the main spotlight.

The food: Antipasti and other small plate options allow for a focused bite before the half-mile walk to see the Penguins or slightly shorter journey to the convention center. A handful of pizzas, built on sourdough crust made in-house, accomplish the same. Thoughtful options for fall include pork shank and braised cabbage, cauliflowe­r fritters with pear, and a pie topped with rotisserie chicken, fresh mozzarella and Calabrian chili. Pastas range from gnocchi with short rib ragu to a tagliatell­e with rock shrimp, corn, poblano peppers and cream.

If you do want to sink into a cushioned booth and really feast, well, then, go for a nice chunk of porchetta, slowcooked on that rotisserie, or strip steak with mushrooms and leeks. “We try to play on classic Italian dishes,” Maffel explains. “We do a lot of research on what people are actually eating in Italy, and kind of put our little twist on it.”

Also popular is Tuesday Lasagna Night, which Senske seems to view as a culinary challenge: In some 36 weeks, with offerings from classic (sausage and meatballs) to kooky-clever (cheesestea­k-themed), the chef has yet to repeat a recipe.

Open solely for dinner in these pandemic times, Talia will likely hold off bringing back lunch hours at least until springtime, Maffel says.

The drinks: Now that’s Italian: numerous aperitivo (negroni, aperol spritz), and wines representi­ng the 20 regions of Italy.

611 William Penn Place; taliapgh.com

Arepittas

Venezuelan | Quick takeout | Arepas | $

The family behind Arepittas — husband and wife Carlos Antela and Danielle Figueroa; her brother, Daniel Figueroa; and nephew, Jonathan Rosas — want to introduce Pittsburgh­ers to their native cuisine. Key to that, Danielle explains (in Spanish, translated by her nephew), are arepas. It’s a dish so ubiquitous in their homeland, she says, that there’s a saying: “Venezuelan­s are born with an arepa under our arms.”

Arepas get their grit from corn flour, and the flatbread is either eaten alone or used as tasty packaging. “It’s very versatile,” Danielle notes. “You can put anything inside it.” Arepas are eaten both as a side dish and a full meal. “It identifies our idiosyncra­sy. It is part of our culinary culture and it is our letter of introducti­on as immigrants, and we share it with great pride with the whole world.”

Opened in January 2019, several years after the family immigrated to Western Pennsylvan­ia from Caracas, Arepittas was born, Danielle says, of the need many Venezuelan­s feel when “they move from our country, they always try to show the good food that we have.”

While the restaurant marks a career shift for all four — Danielle was a lawyer in her home country and her brother a teacher — the food remains personal. Carlos’ parents ran restaurant­s in Venezuela for decades, while Daniel gave cooking lessons. “And Danielle, she has all the recipes from her grandmothe­r, so we decided to mix all that together. And we have Arepittas,” Jonathan says.

The food: The national dish of Venezuela, Pabellon Criollo, is absolutely represente­d: shredded beef meets rice, black beans, sweet plantains and cheese, and comes with one arepa.

The very portable arepas have fillings to satisfy most diets. Go breakfast-y with chorizo and egg or keep it pescataria­n with the Marinera, stuffed with shrimp, squid, scallops, octopus and mussels. Go full-carnivore with three pork choices or four red meat options, such as the grilled steak, avocado and white cheese Llanera. Or make it meatless with one of several vegetarian options.

Most everything is crafted from scratch, Danielle notes, from those flatbreads (made with P.A.N. flour) to the slow-cooked meats. That extends to the rest of the menu, which includes 10 varieties of empanadas, several tacos, tostones (fried green plantains, served with or without meat), cachapas (a corn pancake), tequeños (fried white cheese) and cachitos, a traditiona­l bread filled with chopped ham.

The drinks: Check out the Typical Drinks of Venezuela, which include Chila Criolla (rice, whole and condensed milks and spices) and Coffee Lemonade (sugar cane, coffee syrup, green lemons).

412 Cherry Way;com arepittas.

Con Alma

Latin fusion | Jazz lounge | Creative cocktails | $$-$$$

Con Alma co-owner Aimee Marshall took a glass half-full approach to the pandemic, using restrictio­ns as a chance to experiment at the Latin fusion restaurant’s Downtown location. “We used to change four times a year, for the seasons, but once we went to paper menus for COVID times, we took that as an, ‘Oh, now we can really experiment with food more.’” The menu changes frequently, and so do the cocktail offerings.

As Downtown’s older sibling shifted (it’s now all-vegetarian) and thrived in Shadyside, the younger (but bigger) version was born in June. The trio behind it — general manager Marshall, chef Josh Ross and music curator John Shannon — took over the Roosevelt ground floor space that once housed Peter’s Allen Italian, expanding into a restaurant with a kitchen, Ross notes, “that’s like the entirety of [the space in] Shadyside.”

The food: Ross’ background in pan-Latin food (including time at rum-centric, now-closed Pirata, Downtown) informs much of the menu, and includes a staple entree, Lechon Asado (Cuban roast pork), bacalaitos (codfish fritters) and moqueca (a fish stew). Count on finding plantains in the mix regularly, Marshall notes.

Ross and Marshall met working at now-shuttered Asian-fusion PAN in Lawrencevi­lle, and Asian-inspired dishes and flavors rotate in and out of the menu here. Marshall fondly recalls waffles paired with kimchi. The restaurant has a wok range, so Ross fires up pad Thai and fried rice, too.

“We love creating every week. It’s something we have in common with these jazz musicians. You’re going to hear them do standards, and it’s going to sound way different than another musician doing that standard. You’re also going to hear original compositio­ns here,” Marshall says.

The drinks: Classics and originals hang out side-byside on the cocktail menu, which Marshall oversees. You can order the Old Cuban (with spiced rum from Pittsburgh’s Kingfly), or go for a jazz-inspired beverage like Satchmo’s Sipper, a nod to Louis Armstrong with rye whiskey, absinthe, cinnamon and Chinese five spice. Marshall also curates a wine list with sips from Argentina, South Africa and Mexico.

“Here, it’s so much a mix of old and new. Some are classics that have been around forever, because they should, like a standard. And then there’s brand-new stuff that we just came up with,” she says.

The music: Finding talent in Pittsburgh is “not at all” difficult, Marshall says. If Con Alma is open, there’s jazz that evening. $10 per person during live music.

613 Penn Ave.; conalmapgh.

 ?? ??
 ?? Tom O'Conner ?? The Speckled Egg serves brunch until 3 p.m.
Tom O'Conner The Speckled Egg serves brunch until 3 p.m.
 ?? Emily Matthews/Post-Gazette ?? Roger Humphries, left, Bob Insko and Frank Cunimondo play jazz while customers eat in September at Con Alma in Downtown.
Emily Matthews/Post-Gazette Roger Humphries, left, Bob Insko and Frank Cunimondo play jazz while customers eat in September at Con Alma in Downtown.
 ?? Adam Milliron ?? Con Alma’s food largely draws from Latin American and Asian cuisines.
Adam Milliron Con Alma’s food largely draws from Latin American and Asian cuisines.
 ?? Steve Mellon/Post-Gazette ?? House-made rigatoni with vodka sauce, sausage and peas at Talia.
Steve Mellon/Post-Gazette House-made rigatoni with vodka sauce, sausage and peas at Talia.
 ?? Emily Matthews/Post-Gazette ?? Arepittas serves Venezuela’s national dish, pabellon criollo.
Emily Matthews/Post-Gazette Arepittas serves Venezuela’s national dish, pabellon criollo.
 ?? Steve Mellon/Post-Gazette ?? Glazed beets with fig mostarda, candied walnuts and yogurt at Talia.
Steve Mellon/Post-Gazette Glazed beets with fig mostarda, candied walnuts and yogurt at Talia.
 ?? Tom O ‘Conner ?? The Speckled Egg serves an array of cocktails.
Tom O ‘Conner The Speckled Egg serves an array of cocktails.
 ?? Emily Matthews/Post-Gazette ?? Arepittas’ Reina Pepiada arepa, with shredded chicken.
Emily Matthews/Post-Gazette Arepittas’ Reina Pepiada arepa, with shredded chicken.

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