The festival showcases "all things
pickled," including pickle-flavored
beer and
cocktails, pickle
ice cream, and other pickled foods such as
dilly beans and
kimchi.[2][4][5] It also features live music, children's activities, and an annual
pickle juice drinking competition, the winner of which is crowned the "Mayor of Picklesburgh".[3] The festival's centerpiece is a 35-foot-long (11 m)
Heinz pickle
balloon.[6]
Picklesburgh was voted the "best specialty
food festival in America" in USA Today readers' polls in 2021, 2022, and 2023.[7]
History
The inaugural Picklesburgh festival took place on July 17 and 18, 2015, on the
Rachel Carson Bridge in
Downtown Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania.[2] Organized by the Pittsburgh Downtown Partnership, a non-profit organization, and sponsored primarily by Pittsburgh-based
Heinz (now
Kraft Heinz), the festival was inspired by Pittsburgh's rich history of
pickling.[8][9] Pittsburgh Downtown Partnership president Jeremy Waldrup explained that pickles "speak to the ethnic, cultural history of Pittsburgh, as a
melting pot for
Eastern European ethnic communities",[10] although numerous countries of
Western culture with significant diasporas in the United States, like
Germany and
Poland, also employ pickling in their national cuisines. According to Waldrup, the festival was also inspired by the growing
farm-to-table movement and the trend of
urban homesteading.[8]
At Picklesburgh 2016, the second annual festival held at Rachel Carson Bridge, Heinz debuted their first new pickle flavors in over 50 years.[11] The 2017 festival was held at the nearby
Roberto Clemente Bridge, where it also took place in 2018 and 2019, gradually taking up more abutting street space each year.[12][13] Starting in 2018, the festival expanded to a three-day schedule, up from the original two days.[14] Picklesburgh was canceled in 2020 due to the
COVID-19 pandemic, but it returned in August 2021 with additional safety precautions on the
Andy Warhol Bridge.[15]
In 2022, the festival returned to its original locale on the Rachel Carson Bridge, with food vendors along the neighboring 10th Street Bypass.[16] Picklesburgh 2022 drew 90,000 attendees, leading organizers to periodically close the Rachel Carson Bridge to prevent
overcrowding.[17] Pittsburgh Downtown Partnership director Jack Dougherty remarked, "At times, especially during our peak hours, it would get very crowded and just kind of become a little uncomfortable for everyone in attendance."[18]
In response, for its 2023 installment, the festival was relocated to a larger venue occupying three blocks of the
Boulevard of the Allies between
Stanwix Street and Smithfield Street, and along
Market Street into
PPG Place.[6] Even with its larger location, Picklesburgh 2023 still saw enormous shoulder-to-shoulder crowds, with attendance more than doubling to 200,000 visitors.[19] Amid mid-summer heat and huge crowds, 16 attendees were hospitalized due to
heat exhaustion and other ailments.[20]
Pickle juice drinking competition
Since its founding in 2015, every Picklesburgh festival has featured a
pickle juice drinking competition as its headline event.[21] In the competition, contestants race to drink a
quart-sized
jar of pickle juice without regurgitating, spilling, or leaving any juice in the jar.[9][21] The winner is dubbed the "Mayor of Picklesburgh" and receives a belt and a $500 cash prize, as of 2023.[9][22]
The 2023 champion and reigning "Mayor of Picklesburgh" is Pittsburgh native Dan Koba, who drank the jar of pickle juice in 7 seconds.[21] The all-time record was set at Picklesburgh 2022, when
Wisconsin-based
TikTok content creator Jalen Franko won the competition by drinking the quart of juice in 4.5 seconds.[23]
^
abcSheridan, Patricia (23 July 2023).
"A brine time in Picklesburgh". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
Archived from the original on 1 November 2023. Retrieved 1 November 2023.