American
September 21, 2003
Baum Vivant
5102 Baum Blvd.
(412) 682-2620
$$$$
No Panther Funds
Sooner or… Baum Vivant
5102 Baum Blvd.
(412) 682-2620
$$$$
No Panther Funds
Sooner or later, you are bound to be confronted with an evening that has to be absolutely perfect. Whether it be a birthday, anniversary or first date, you will need to step out and splurge. For these occasions, you may want to visit Baum Vivant.
Make no mistake; this is not a restaurant for those on a tight budget. You don’t swing by for a bite before the game. But it does offer an elegant, intimate atmosphere that is a sure pleaser when you are out to impress. This Shadyside restaurant is owned by Toni Pais, who is also the chef. He specializes in French, Northern Italian, Portuguese and American flavors. Take your next date to Baum Vivant for a romantic evening, but don’t forget to dress up, and be sure to bring some extra cash.
– Eric Miller
Cafe Sam
5442 Baum Blvd.
$$$
No Panther Funds
Finding a nice restaurant with affordable prices can be quite a task these days. Cafe Sam, with its romantic atmosphere, delicious food and reasonable prices, could be just the restaurant you’ve been searching for.
The dimly lit restaurant has a gourmet, classy feel, without being overly formal. The menu includes more than 100 appetizing options, including many steak, chicken, fish and pasta delicacies. Dinners are usually dished out in large portions, accompanied by tasty, optional sides. If big helpings aren’t your thing, Cafe Sam’s lunch menu offers many of the same enticing foods in smaller portions.
Service is prompt and polite, making Cafe Sam a perfect place to take almost anyone. Your date will love the pretty atmosphere and the complementary cookies at the end of the meal, and your parents will love the wide variety and economical prices. Cafe Sam is an appropriate restaurant for almost any occasion.
– Rachael Dizard
Carnegie Museum of Art Cafe
4400 Forbes Ave.
(412) 622-3225
$$$
No Panther Funds
Whether you’re looking for a restaurant to cap off a trip through the Carnegie Museum of Art or are just looking for a place to eat without the hustle and bustle of places closer to campus, the Carnegie Cafe is for you.
Offering a variety of daily specials and regular menu items ranging from dinner-sized salads to sandwiches to “Pittsburgh’s best omelet,” the Carnegie Cafe has something to appeal to everyone.
But it’s the atmosphere that sets it apart from other restaurants. Situated at one end of the museum, restaurant-goers will find the lack of congestion in the dining area of the Carnegie refreshing.
Flanked on one side by the artistic fountains near Forbes Avenue, and facing the entrance to the museum, which includes a piece of modern art, patrons are treated to a unique dining environment that gives culture along with the entree.
– Dante A. Ciampaglia
Mitchell’s Grill
4632 Centre Ave.
(412) 681-8450
$
Panther Funds
South Oakland has Uncle Sam’s, Primanti Brothers and the Wing Pitt – and North Oakland has Charlie’s. Located smack in the middle of North Oakland, at Melwood and Centre avenues (just behind Mitchell’s Tavern), Charlie’s has the low-key decor of a place where the focus is good, greasy food. In particular, their cheesesteaks are the best this side of Harrisburg – as Philly emigres will be happy to hear. No deli-style meat and evenly applied cheese slices here – we’re talking beef or chicken, sliced and diced, smothered in gooey cheese perfection. Whether you’ve got the beer munchies or a case of eastern Pennsylvania homesickness, any night’s a good night to stroll on over and treat yourself to a good, old-fashioned sandwich, North Oakland style.
– Heather Bowlan
Duranti’s Park Plaza Restaurant
128 N. Craig St.
(412) 682-1155
$$
No Panther Funds
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The decor at Duranti’s is large, comfortable and reminiscent of something out of your grandfather’s study. The rich carpeting and the dark, wooden bar in the corner of the room suggest the use of hushed voices and best manners.
Order a cup of tomato soup and a grilled cheese sandwich to go with your cup of tea. Entrees such as fish and chips, and roast beef and mashed potatoes can be found on the menu as well. Order a cup of tea and a slice of lemon meringue pie to top it all off.
Sit, talk and relax, letting the outside drift by – it’s OK, you’re warm and cozy, drinking your spot of tea.
– Leslie Hoffman
Foster’s Bar ‘amp; Grill
At the Holiday Inn Select – University Center
110 Lytton Ave.
(412) 682-6200
$$
No Panther Funds
For a drink and some dancing, Foster’s Bar ‘amp; Grill is a relaxing place to visit.
Located at the Holiday Inn, just off Lytton Avenue, Foster’s is the hotel’s restaurant and bar. The well-decorated, classy restaurant is a quiet place to get some American-style food at the restaurant, or a glass of wine at the bar.
The Pittsburgh Jazz Society also meets here on Sunday nights, and it’s not uncommon to see members of the city’s jazz community show up to scat. One a rare night, it’s possible to hear the amazing vocals of Etta Cox in an impromptu performance.
Foster’s is definitely a place for cool cats.
– Leslie Hoffman
Fuel ‘amp; Fuddle
214 Oakland Ave.
(412) 682-3473
$$
Panther Funds
The menu of the restaurant defines “fuel” as something that is consumed, or something that heightens or maintains the level of activity, and “fuddle” as a state of confusion usually associated with intoxication. Fuel ‘amp; Fuddle definitely provides adequate amounts of all of the above.
With a large range of selections on the menu, featuring names like Rosemary’s Breasts and Heartburn Heaven, the restaurant offers unique combinations that fit almost any person’s desire for fuel. The drink selection also echoes the name, with sufficient varieties of alcohol to get even the hardiest drinker “fuddled.” There are 10 types of beer on tap and more than a hundred types of beer, from around the world, offered by the can or bottle.
If food cravings strike you late at night, the extensive half-price menu is always an option between 11 p.m. and 1 a.m. The atmosphere of casual chaos with brick walls and loud crowds is upped on Tuesday nights, when a live band performs in the restaurant, and on Saturdays, when the feature is a live, acoustic guitar performance.
– Lauren Unger
Hemingway’s
3911 Forbes Ave.
(412) 621-4100
$$
Panther Funds
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For the college student on a limited budget, Hemingway’s is the perfect place for both food and alcoholic relief. A recently expanded half-price food menu is available twice during the day – first from 11 a.m. to 11:45 a.m. and then from 9 p.m. to midnight. Hemingway’s also offers drink specials with a different option for each day of the week. On Fridays, a Yuengling draft is just a buck.
Another popular choice is any of the 20-ounce mixed drinks, such as the Jolly Rancher and Bahama Mama, that come adorned with a candy necklace or ring pop. Hemingway’s is also appealing because, with its spacious back room, it is one of the few places in the area that can accommodate a large group.
– Karen Bielak
Ladies Hospital Aid Society Coffee Shop
UPMC Montefiore, 7th floor
3459 Fifth Ave.
(412) 648-6725
$
No Panther Funds
When you were a kid, getting bug-bitten and sunburned at summer camp, didn’t you love the biweekly tomato soup-and-grilled-cheese sandwich lunch extravaganza? Whenever you try to make grilled-cheese sandwiches at home, they just aren’t as satisfying as the ones you devoured at camp.
Short of driving back to Maine or Maryland or Montana, order the delectable sandwiches from the LHAS Coffee Shop at UPMC Montefiore and recapture a bit of your youth. If you love the crunch of a well-grilled grilled-cheese sandwich and the most exquisitely crispy, delicious fries, the Montefiore coffee shop will not disappoint.
But the Montefiore coffee shop doesn’t just make fantastic grilled-cheese sandwiches. There are also fresh salads of all kinds, a selection of soups every day and a number of hot entrees, if you aren’t a grilled-cheese kind of person.
But you really should have a grilled-cheese sandwich.
– Clare Perretta
More Restaurant
214 N. Craig St.
(412) 621-2700
$$$$
No Panther Funds
While walking along North Craig Street, it’s not hard to miss the small awning jutting out from below a tall, white-faced building. This unassuming location, however, belongs to More Restaurant, a hidden culinary treasure of Pittsburgh. More caters to a variety of tastes with plates such as filet mignon, chicken marsala, veal romano and a wide variety of pasta dishes, prepared by More’s chef. In addition to these entrees, the dessert menu is equally enticing with cannoli, pecan balls and several varieties of cheesecake. The atmosphere is pleasant for a dinner with friends or family and perfect for a romantic meal with someone special, as you sit surrounded by wood paneling, Italian statues and dim lighting.
– Mike Boyles
Pamela’s Country Kitchen
3703 Forbes Ave.
(412) 683-4066
$
Panther Funds
Often voted best breakfast in the ‘Burgh, Pamela’s is sure to have a line outside on weekend mornings. Famous for their eggs, potatoes and pancakes, Pamela’s is worth the wait – even as the wind blows down Forbes Avenue on a cold winter morning.
Pamela’s is open for breakfast and lunch seven days a week. Beyond the egg and potato standard, Pamela’s offers some of the best pancakes in town – both traditional-style and crepe-style. Served with a huge dollop of butter, the crepe-style ones are not to be missed by any pancake fan.
Pamela’s also serves a variety of lunch foods, including soups, salads and sandwiches. As one looks around the restaurant, though, it’s no surprise that Pamela’s is a breakfast joint – even well after noon, the majority of customers will order eggs and potatoes or pancakes.
Certainly, Pamela’s caters to this reputation, even serving a platter called “the Morning After.” Served with coffee, for around $5 customers can get Pamela’s own hangover helper, a good ol’ greasy breakfast.
Pamela’s regulars know to bring cash, because the restaurant doesn’t take credit or debit cards. But it’s worth the extra stop at the ATM to satisfy a craving for Oakland’s most famous breakfast.
– Megan Smith
Ritter’s Diner
5221 Baum Blvd.
(412) 682-4852
$
No Panther Funds
Ritter’s might be a bit far from campus, but the Baum Boulevard location certainly isn’t too far when a comfort-food craving hits. A short 71A bus ride away, Ritter’s offers customers homestyle foods at cheap prices.
Ritter’s is a traditional diner. It’s the sort of place where grandmotherly waitresses call customers “hon.” It’s the sort of place where caffeine-deficient studiers can set up camp during finals week and always find a cup of hot joe. It’s the sort of place where the smoking section is twice the size of the nonsmoking section.
No matter what the hour – Ritter’s is open 24 hours – someone with a breakfast craving can find satisfaction. Eggs any style and home fries fit the bill any time of day. No wonder there’s always a morning-after contingent on weekend mornings.
More than comfort breakfast foods, Ritter’s serves all the traditional diner fare, from burgers and fries to soups and sandwiches. In a relaxed setting, with low-key service, Ritter’s is Oakland’s diner destination.
– Megan Smith
Union Grill
413 S. Craig St.
(412) 681-8620
$$
No Panther Funds
The Union Grill walks all sorts of lines.
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Settled halfway to Carnegie Mellon University, at the base of South Craig Street, it’s positioned closer to more sedate restaurants like Lucca and Thai Place Cafe. But there is also a healthy dose of college and 20-something bar to the Grill, which has drink specials that rival any in town.
One of the most appealing of those specials is the Guaranteed $10 Wine List, which, as the name implies, features several bottles of wine at little more than one could expect to pay at the state store. Try a bottle of the Columbia Crest Chardonnay with their teriyaki-grilled salmon, or dine outside on a warm evening and have a light bottle of Johannesburg Riesling with one of their Caesar salads.
But the Union Grill also has its share of meat-and-potatoes fare. Any Pittsburgh native will appreciate the pierogies or the steak salad, slathered with onions and meat. The burgers are not to be missed either, as they rank with the best in the ‘Burgh.
– Greg Heller-LaBelle
The Wing Pitt
424 Semple St.
(412) 681-8608
$
No Panther Funds
As the name suggests, The Wing Pitt features tons and tons of wings. With 17 varieties of wings, ranging from Cajun ranch and Jamaican jerk to traditional mild and traditional barbecue, The Wing Pitt provides wings for a range of tastes.
Students can order sizes ranging from a pound of wings to a bucket of 50, with free delivery to most areas. If wings aren’t your style, The Wing Pitt also offers a variety of other foods, many with a Greek influence. There are a number of different gyros and salads that come with warmed pitas.
Although many people opt for delivery from the The Wing Pitt, there is also limited seating inside the restaurant. Patrons can sit at the traditional, red counter with the metal stools covered in red vinyl, watch the grilling, and breathe in the greasy smells of comfort and party food.
– Lauren Unger
Wyndham Garden Hotel
3454 Forbes Ave.
(412) 683-2040
$$$
No Panther Funds
One word that describes the Wyndham Garden Hotel restaurant is “immaculate.” The restaurant is set up to please the customer with beautiful linens and fine china. The menu delights the taste buds with an exotic array of salads, soups and dishes. Close by is a well-stocked bar with a fabulous selection of wines and cocktails.
Start off a meal with appetizers such as shrimp cocktail, calamari and crab cakes. The lunch menu consists of Terra-nova club sandwiches, Wyndham burgers and grilled chicken quesadillas, as well as a variety of salads ranging in price from $7.50 to $10.25. The main meals include a wide selection of seafood, red meat and lighter meals, such as grilled salmon, linguini and New York strip steak. The price range of these mouth-watering choices is from $11.25 to $22.
Wyndham Garden Restaurant will surely win over the heart of anyone you choose to take out to eat.
– Meghan Dowdell