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California style pizza is quite good w/ more creativity of toppings than one normally finds elsewhere in the U.S. Generally more vegetables & thinner crust but also different cheeses & tasty toppings like chicken or lamb & fruit are served in pizza parlors in Los Angeles & elsewhere in California.
Variety is fine... As long as it goes together. California style pizza is horrible and it doesn't go together.
Typical California style pizza toppings:
-bean sprouts
-peanut sauce
-sour cream
-guacomole
-artichokes
-scrambled eggs (if it's a "breakfast pizza")
I don't think Italian influence even matters anymore. These days everybody is a mutt and you can never tell who's Irish, Italian, Swiss, German, Russian, French, Norwegian, Greek, or Polish. My friend looks Italian, but he's also Irish, Scottish, Welsh, German, and Swedish.
As more generations continue to come, heritage will become more and more meaningless.
I'm a fan of NYC pizza all the way!!!! Most of the great pizza places are in NYC and the surrounding areas. Most of the other great pizzas I have had around the nation were from Italian restaurants, not necessarily pizza parlors.
Personally, I find Chicago style pizza disgusting.
Variety is fine... As long as it goes together. California style pizza is horrible and it doesn't go together.
Typical California style pizza toppings:
-bean sprouts
-peanut sauce
-sour cream
-guacomole
-artichokes
-scrambled eggs (if it's a "breakfast pizza")
The "California" style pizza I have eaten had none of this stuff on it. Though the Mariachi pizza with sour cream on it is amazing. If that is Cali style, I had no idea. I don't care what some snooty New Yorker says, I love my Mariachi pizza!
The "California" style pizza I have eaten had none of this stuff on it. Though the Mariachi pizza with sour cream on it is amazing. If that is Cali style, I had no idea. I don't care what some snooty New Yorker says, I love my Mariachi pizza!
Al Forno's (emeril lagasse's favorite pizza and restaurant) and Casserta's in Federal Hill, Providence. World known proper italian mobster pizza at its best!
Also Rhode Island is home to the Pizza Strips and Wimpy Skimpy's
Boston and New Haven have plenty of good places as well.
the problem with listing the other big cities, is sure... you can probably find a couple places where they might make a big pizza...
in nyc, chicago...and to a lesser extent, philly... pretty much EVERYWHERE u go is going to have an AWESOME pizza.
Quote:
Originally Posted by coog78
Personally, I find Chicago style pizza disgusting.
I'm curious which restaurant you are referring to...there are several styles of Chicago pizza... you have basically, the deep dish, the stuffed, and the thin crust, they are ALL regionally specific and different from others. Also have you eaten it IN chicago... its different if you eat "chicago style" outside the city, not the same at all...they don't get the same sauce/mozarella/meat suppliers... it is very important.
I have eaten at a "new haven" style pizza place and it was quite good, so if its the same all through New Haven, then it is probably good.
I actually had the best tortellini I ever had in a restaurant around Yale Campus.
Pretty much any decent sized city in NY State considering we have more people of Italian decent than any other state. Heck, where I live is named after a city in Sicily and Pizza here is a dime a dozen. If you come here, check out Pavone's, Luigi's, Pizzaz, Acropolis, Twin Trees and Original Italian Pizza, among many others.
Last edited by ckhthankgod; 12-22-2008 at 07:09 PM..
Variety is fine... As long as it goes together. California style pizza is horrible and it doesn't go together.
Typical California style pizza toppings:
-bean sprouts
-peanut sauce
-sour cream
-guacomole
-artichokes
-scrambled eggs (if it's a "breakfast pizza")
Okay where the hell have you seen any of these toppings? I've lived in CA my entire life and I've NEVER seen any of the above toppings on a pizza, w/ the exception of artichoke hearts. These toppings are anything but "typical" in any pizzeria I have ever been to. The artichoke hearts I've seen on Greek-style pizzas out here. Scrambled eggs I have seen on frozen Red Baron breakfast pizzas (like you mentioned), which should be considered a separate category really IMO. Are you maybe thinking of the chain CPK (CA Pizza Kitchen)? I don't really eat there, but they definitely have some funky toppings. I don't personally count that as pizza though; to me its more of a pizza-like substance.
Personal pizza preferences vary from taste bud to taste bud. Some swear by the Chicago Deep Dish style, others drool over the thin crust. Some like heavy cheese and others want just a sprinkling.
Some want lots of meat and others want vegetarian. Some ache for anchovies and others sneer in disgust.
How in this pizza-loving world can one recommend a personal pizza to anyone else who hasn't walked a mile in that particular person's pizza preference shoes??
Now here on the NC coast, you might not appreciate my new personal favorite--a pesto pizza with fresh shrimp on a medium thick crust--but I find it just dandy. Untraditional but oh so tasty
We've also got a place nearby that makes what I think of as a Sicilian kind of pizza--it's quite oily, with a thinner crust and highly spiced, lots of oregano--sometimes I want that kind of pie--it's more NY to me...
Maybe it depends on what kind of pizza you were raised on, as to your personal favorite?
Now me, I was raised in Phila. area and pizza wasn't my family's junk food growing up--no, I was more cheese steak/hoagie kind of gal...so my pizza favorites are wide-open...just don't give me a whole lot of rubbery, cheap cheese...
Vive la pizza--but not too much, don't forget, it's fattening and high cholesterol...
Your scribe,
LittleDolphin
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