CONCEPT — ABOUT PAGE · built from published interviews & press
CALOZZI'SCHEESESTEAKS Order
Real Philly · Made in Seattle

The Guy Behind
the Grill

How a Philadelphia kid turned a beach umbrella and a rented propane grill into Seattle's most argued-about cheesesteak.

The Story

It Started in Philly

Al Calozzi, arms crossed in front of the Georgetown mural

Al Calozzi grew up in Philadelphia. When he was ten, his uncle stood him up on a milk crate in front of the grill at the family restaurant, put a metal spatula in each hand, and taught him to make his very first cheesesteak. He was instantly mesmerized — and he's been fueled by that same obsession ever since.

In 2006 he moved to Seattle and noticed the obvious: the city didn't have a real one. So in 2008 he did something about it — a rogue street cart in Belltown, a rented propane grill, and a beach umbrella to keep the rain off the steaks. He fed the late-night bar crowd a real alternative to whatever else was open, one sandwich at a time.

Word got around. The cart moved indoors at Belltown Billiards, then to Pioneer Square, then downtown — and finally found its home in Georgetown, a little shack near Boeing Field where the planes roar overhead and the line forms at lunch.

Al's story, in his own words.

The Road Here

Cart to Institution

'06
Philly to SeattleAl moves west and clocks that the city is missing a real cheesesteak.
2008
The Belltown cartA propane grill, a beach umbrella, and the late-night bar crowd. Calozzi's is born.
'09
Belltown BilliardsThe cart moves indoors, serving out the side window.
Pioneer Square & downtownThe cheesesteak keeps climbing, building a following across the city.
Now
Georgetown flagshipA permanent home near Boeing Field — and now a first franchise on Capitol Hill.
The Press Agrees

Don't Take Our Word

"Nothing comes close to Calozzi's."

— Men's Journal

"The little shack on the side of the road will take care of any craving to visit Philadelphia."

— The Infatuation

"A piece of Philly heaven... a melt-in-your-mouth sandwich."

— The Seattle Times
"Gotta Love It."
— Al Calozzi
Come Get One

Taste the Story