The Pittsburgh Dish

Doug Heilman

Do you really know the food scene of Pittsburgh?! The Pittsburgh Dish introduces you to the people, places, and recipes that make our regional cuisine so special. By sharing personal stories, weekly recommendations, and community recipes, we aim to inspire you to connect with local taste makers and experience the unique flavors that shape our city. 

  1. MAR 1

    092 Chef Missy Terrell - Grit To Gourmet

    We sit down with Chef Missy Terrell to trace her arc from a pandemic-era kitchen table to Community Kitchen Pittsburgh, a training program that unlocked professional technique, industry mentors, and a calling to serve. Her story is raw and generous, from turning “apple butter” into Tug Butter, and transforming that love into a catering brand and a toolkit for her autistic son to thrive. Missy shares how real ingredients—think chicken masala with brown rice, bright salads, and fresh berries—can reshape palates, cut stigma in the lunch line, and set kids up for long-term health in Pittsburgh Public Schools. Along the way, Missy talks about learning at scale in commercial kitchens, the power of mentors who “pour in,” and the pride of a child unknowingly loving the meals his own mom helped create. Missy is now an ACF member earning a Harvard certification in culinary physics, teaching students at Allegheny County Jail to earn food handler cards, and returning to CKP as an instructor to break barriers for the next cohort. We celebrate one of the city’s favorite Lenten fish fry—hello, haddock and from-scratch tartar sauce—and the adrenaline of guest-chef dinners that raise the bar for technique and plating.  Hungry for hope, grit, and ridiculously good food? Hit play, subscribe for more stories from Pittsburgh’s kitchens, and leave a review to tell us the dish you want to see go scratch next. Support the show Liked the episode? We'd love a coffee!

    41 min
  2. FEB 15

    090 Chef Ken of KCZ Cuisine

    What happens when homestyle Chinese comfort meets classical technique and a crash course in high-stakes private dining? We sit down with Chef Ken, owner of KCZ Cuisine to find out how family recipes, a quarter-life pivot, and a relentless focus on hospitality has shaped one of Pittsburgh’s most sought-after private chef services. We dive into the dishes that define Ken's style: tomato and egg stir-fry that never leaves a family table, glossy soy-braised pork belly, and dumplings by the hundred for Lunar New Year. Ken breaks down hot pot for first-timers as just one of his in-home experiences, all guided by omotenashi, the Japanese idea of wholehearted hospitality.   Toronto’s food scene igniting a passion that outlived a molecular biology degree, and steered Ken professionally to the culinary arts. After front-of-house work cemented his love of people, culinary school and a rigorous stint at the Rivers Club taught the fundamentals recipes can’t. Then came trial by fire learning: a whirlwind personal chef role for a billionaire in Los Angeles, delivering multi-course lunches and dinners every day. Pressure refined his sourcing, menu planning, and calm under chaos—skills he brought home to launch KCZ Cuisine, serving up personalized meal prep and in-home events today.  Come for the story, stay for the practical tips—and leave hungry to try something new. Enjoyed the conversation? Subscribe, share with a friend who loves food, and leave a review to help others discover the show. Support the show Liked the episode? We'd love a coffee!

    40 min
  3. JAN 18

    087 Grandpa Joe’s Candy Shop

    We sit down with Christopher Beers, the founder of Grandpa Joe’s, to learn the journey from one 900-square-foot Strip District shop to 21 locations across five states. Chris pulls back the curtain on how that magic gets made. From sourcing regional candies that never went national, Japanese Kit Kats and UK Cadbury, the network Grandpa Joes has built is just as astounding.  We dig into craft soda culture and why pinpoint carbonation from Natrona's Red Ribbon feels different, then explore the wild-but-drinkable Grandpa Joe’s soda line—ketchup, pickle, sarsaparilla, even “hot dog water”—engineered to be drinkable and enjoyed, not just photographed. Each store runs local socials to stay neighborly, and cleaver marketing keeps the focus on fun. Whether it's thousands of tiny ducks lining Canonsburg streets or handing out 35,000 bananas at a parade— these stunts keep folks coming back to Grandpa Joe's for more.  We also zoom out to the Pittsburgh food scene with Ana from Ana Eats Pittsburgh, who points wing lovers to Wiggy’s for crispy wings with a pitch-perfect honey habanero sauce and standout onion rings. To warm the week, we revisit Dak Bokkeum Tang, a Korean spicy chicken stew that marries tender chicken, potatoes, and gochujang heat. If you love stories about small makers, and the careful art of preserving candy history, you’ll feel right at home here. Subscribe, share with a friend who hoards vintage sweets, and leave us a review with the one candy you wish would make a comeback. Support the show Liked the episode? We'd love a coffee!

    38 min
5
out of 5
17 Ratings

About

Do you really know the food scene of Pittsburgh?! The Pittsburgh Dish introduces you to the people, places, and recipes that make our regional cuisine so special. By sharing personal stories, weekly recommendations, and community recipes, we aim to inspire you to connect with local taste makers and experience the unique flavors that shape our city. 

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