On the tail end of yet another February snowfall, Pittsburgh sits in that distinctly late-winter pause. The city was spared the worst of the storm, but with sidewalks still edged with slush, everyone is desperately willing the first cheery bulbs to break through. Sunshine feels close enough to imagine, but not close enough to trust.

We’re tired of heavy coats and ready for patio season, but are still in need of comfort. February openings meet the moment.

The city’s newest pizza shops arrive with unusually clear perspective. Cork & Crust brings a hotel-anchored concept led by decorated chef Kristin Butterworth. Lucatino comes from Rico Lunardi of Slice on Broadway fame, translating neighborhood pizza credibility into a more personal Italian restaurant. Vitalia Wood Fired grows out of a widely popular pizza truck, expanding a following built on wood-fired Neapolitan pies into a permanent home.

Elsewhere, Korean barbecue offers built-in heat and communal ritual. Cafés like Haven position themselves as winter’s most dependable third places.

Here’s where to eat as the light is starting to change …

Openings

The Tavern at Hyeholde. Photo by Laura Petrilla.

A short walk through the wooded grounds of Hyeholde leads to the Tavern. It’s tucked inside the property’s historic carriage house and designed as a quieter, more relaxed way into one of the region’s most storied kitchens.

Chef-owner Chris O’Brien created the Tavern to keep Hyeholde’s culinary standards while easing the formality. “We wanted to create a space that upholds the same Hyeholde standard of food and service, but in a more approachable atmosphere,” O’Brien said.

The menu translates signature techniques into simpler dishes. Instead of composed seafood entrées, the Tavern serves smoked cod chowder with potatoes, fennel, cream, onions and parsnips, alongside veal osso buco with creamy polenta, lamb cassoulet with cranberry beans, charcuterie and cheese boards and smoked olives. A Friday Fish Fry-Day special adds a tempura cod sandwich with malt vinegar slaw and truffle chips paired with house beer or wine.

Photo courtesy of Lucatino.

The region’s latest openings point to a clear theme: more pizza.

Located next door to Slice on Broadway in Carnegie, the popular pizzeria also owned by Rico Lunardi, Lucatino shifts the focus from pizza shop to Italian tavern. After a nearly three-year gut renovation of the former bar space, Lunardi returned to familiar territory. “I kept circling back to Italian, because that’s what I know,” Lunardi said, nodding to a family restaurant once run in Beechview. The restaurant is named for Lunardi’s sons, Luca and Santino, and the menu follows that personal thread.

House focaccia is often the starting point before moving into small plates like meatballs, mussels, calamari and fried hot peppers, followed by pastas including Luca’s Vodka and Santino’s Sunday Sauce. The wine list is entirely Italian. The biggest shift from Slice is the pizza: Tonda Romana pies that are thin, cracker crisp and intentionally lighter than typical Pittsburgh styles. “It’s a different style of pizza that’s new to Pittsburgh,” Lunardi said.

Lunardi describes the goal simply: “A nice place to grab something to eat, talk with your friends and have a nice glass of wine.” Early crowds, roughly 300 guests a day, suggest the Carnegie bet is already working.

Photos courtesy of Cork and Crust.

Cork & Crust adds a pizza and wine restaurant to Oakland’s dining mix, led by chef Kristin Butterworth and supported by a strong beverage-forward program.

The menu centers on wood-fired neo-Neapolitan pizzas, from classics like margherita and pepperoni to more composed pies, alongside burrata, charcuterie, vegetable-driven small plates and a concise pasta section that extends the Italian framework.

Butterworth points to the Nonna’s Rebellion pizza as a clear expression of her philosophy. Instead of leaning into novelty, the kitchen focuses on why fruit works on pizza at all. Pineapple is shaved paper thin and layered across the pie, paired with Leoncini herb roasted ham to create what Butterworth describes as “a harmonious blend of salty, herby, sweet and acidic flavors.” It’s a pizza that feels comforting but intentionally chef-driven.

The wine list is designed to make those flavors easier to enjoy, not harder to understand.
Beverage director Amnelis Cruz focused on how pizza actually tastes at the table, from char and tomato acidity to cheese richness and cured meat salt. Italian bottles like Chianti and Valpolicella sit alongside approachable options such as Pinot Noir, while lighter whites like Sauvignon Blanc and Riesling pair easily with burrata, prosciutto and vegetable-forward pies.

Photo courtesy of Vitalia Pizza.

Further north, Vitalia Wood Fired Oven reflects a familiar shift in the Pittsburgh area: a well-loved pizza truck moving into a permanent home.

“We were maxing out on what our mobile unit could physically hold and produce,” said co-owner Francesca Veneziano, who runs the Cranberry shop with her husband Emilio Veneziano. Space, refrigeration and prep limits meant turning down events, something the couple did not want to do if it meant compromising quality. Opening a brick and mortar meant they could serve more people without changing the Neapolitan pies that built their following.

The menu remains centered on wood-fired pizzas like margherita, marinara, white pizza and sweet and spicy pepperoni, all cooked fast at high heat for a soft center and blistered crust. With the added space, the offerings expanded beyond what the truck could handle. Monthly specials rotate more frequently, topping combinations have broadened, and desserts now include tiramisu imported from New York and cannoli filled to order with housemade cream.

For the Venezianos, the shift is less about becoming a full restaurant and more about flexibility. “Do we want to add arancini this month? Sure why not! Do we want to add a hoagie special next month? Sure why not? We can now say yes more often than we say no,” Francesca said.

Food by Senza chefs at a pop-up hosted at Bar Marco. Photos courtesy of Senza.

After closing in 2025, the Etna spot has returned as a neighborhood wine bar from the Bar Marco orbit, shifting away from event-driven dinners toward a smaller, wine-first format.
General Manager Neal Dudash describes the direction as “food inspired by Europe by way of Appalachia.”

The program now centers on low-intervention wines served by the glass and bottle alongside a flexible menu from Chef Alex Brown. Expect small plates, house pastas and shareable dishes designed for pairing rather than coursed dining, with menus changing frequently based on season and availability.

Bedford House brings new life to the longtime Café Allegro space, reopening the South Side address as a bright, all-day modern American restaurant. The kitchen moves between elevated comfort dishes and lighter seafood plates, starting with Steel City burrata, goat cheese tartine and blistered shishitos before moving on to chicken piccata, whole grilled branzino, crab cakes and a charbroiled ribeye.

Burgers remain a through line, including the house Bedford Burger and rotating builds, while an approachable wine and cocktail list supports everything from lunch to date night.

Haven Café opened in Bellevue with a daytime menu built around espresso drinks, lunch-friendly sandwiches, fresh soups and a rotating lineup of house-made baked goods. Early offerings include maple chai scones alongside other scratch pastries, while savory options position the café as both a morning coffee stop and an easy neighborhood lunch spot.

Korean BBQ taps into the interactive appeal of DIY tabletop grilling. The menu centers on Korean barbecue staples such as bulgogi, spicy marinated pork and pork belly, with combination platters designed for groups who want a range of cuts without overthinking it. Banchan quickly fills the table, followed by lettuce wraps, rice and sauces that turn each bite into a small assembly project.

QMNTY (Community) Pantry and Café opened Feb. 19, expanding free meal and grocery access for LGBTQIA+ residents and neighbors in need. Operated by TransYOUniting and Proud Haven, the space is part of the broader QMNTY Continuum, a growing network of services designed to meet basic needs while creating opportunities for youth engagement and community care. The café-style pantry is supported by partners including 412 Food Rescue, community restaurants, the City of Pittsburgh Food Justice Fund and the Office of Violence Prevention.

Café Vivella brings a polished pastry café with a playful specialty latte program. Toasts and sandwiches extend the menu beyond coffee, positioning the café as both a quick pastry stop and an easy daytime lunch destination.

Berry Fresh II brings the self-serve frozen yogurt format to Oakland, opening a second location of the longtime Squirrel Hill shop inside the former Little Asia space. The setup is classic: choose from a dozen rotating flavors like taro, cookies and cream and caramel pretzel, then pile on fruit, cheesecake bites and candy before paying by weight.

Closings

Kingfly Spirits, the Strip District distillery, tasting bar and large events venue housed in a restored historic carriage house, permanently closed Feb. 11 after filing for Chapter 7 bankruptcy the previous day. Opened in 2019, the business evolved from a craft distillery into a major event-driven space hosting weddings, corporate gatherings, live music and cultural programming before abruptly shutting down, canceling future events and issuing refunds.

Slick’s Bar, a longtime Brookline neighborhood tavern owned by John and Mary Rose Louis, will close at the end of February after nearly 19 years under current ownership. The bar is losing its lease as neighboring Fiori’s Pizzeria, which owns the building, expands into the space to meet Allegheny County Health Department requirements for additional restrooms and accessibility upgrades. Owners say the closure is permanent and they do not plan to relocate.