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Tryed it a few times. Food is not bad but the service is beyond terrible.Joeys garlic in farmington is not bad
Tryed it a few times. Food is not bad but the service is beyond terrible.Joeys garlic in farmington is not bad
At some point here we debated how good Cumberland Farms pizza was. Pres just gave it a 0.8 for what it’s worth.
Barstool Pizza Review - Cumberland Farms (Nantucket) Barstool Sports
He's a huge jagbag but did you just try and compare a hard seltzer bro drink to IPA's? And why would anyone drink a Michelob Ultra?Pretty funny. Four people in the store, the three in front of him were all there to get pizza. One in a million.
Can't believe he walked out with a 20oz can of Truly. What a db of a man you have to be to grab one of those. Even the worst IPA dbags will at least drink a Mich Ultra on the beach.
He's a huge jagbag but did you just try and compare a hard seltzer bro drink to IPA's? And why would anyone drink a Michelob Ultra?
He's a huge jagbag but did you just try and compare a hard seltzer bro drink to IPA's? And why would anyone drink a Michelob Ultra?
For the next time someone says “you can find good pizza anywhere”
And why would anyone drink a Michelob Ultra?
Because it tastes like bowling.
1 hr · As a recent transplant to Niagagra county you folks definitely need to try Frankie's pizza for a double dough chicken finger pizza, and pizza oven for a plain old cheese pepperoni pizza. The cheese pep/ from pizza oven is a sweet sauce but out of this world. They cut the pie a little different, and your first bite will have you wondering if it was cooked through, but trust me, for fans of char b que wings this pizza will open up your taste buds. Try it out
- Ps for frankies, you must order double dough (approximate cook time 45 minutes, for pizza oven do not order well done, trust me, it is perfect the way they do it!
This is the kind of thing that drives me mad about pizza outside Connecticut. A recent transplant to my area (Buffalo/Niagara) posted that he loved the pizza at one spot. He wrote:
Where does one begin with this?
He makes a virtue out of everything I despise in pizza.
1. Sweet sauce
2. Chicken fingers on pizza (if I want chicken fingers while I'm eating pizza, I'll eat chicken fingers while I'm eating pizza--I don't need you to put them literally ON the pizza).
3. Double dough. What the freak is that? "You will wonder if it was cooked through." What? It's not even cooked through? And maybe the yeast opens up your taste buds?
4. "Do not order well done." Yeah, the bread is more moist this way!
But it's not only the clueless transplants that like things this way. Read this from a local who somehow does food reviews for big media outlets:
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Is America’s Pizza Capital Buffalo, New York?
In his new book, ‘Buffalo Everything,’ Arthur Bovino makes the case that the Nickel City is the ultimate pizza destination.www.thedailybeast.com
Again, he takes the worst of it and makes it a virtue:
"Buffalo-style pizza is typically a cup-and-char pepperoni pizza, one with a slim, sometimes non-existent crust coastline with ingredients out to, and sometimes even over the edges, a thick, airy undercarriage with little to no structural integrity that’s topped by a sweet sauce and enough cheese to nearly always guarantee a cheese pull."
He's right.
1. Cupped, char pepperoni style started in Buffalo because of one particular pepperoni maker
2. Can't see the crust because it's covered in cheese
3. Thick "airy" bread [but really not airy, just thick, very bready]
4. No structural integrity (this means the whole thing flops and separates as soon as you pick it up).
5. There's a thick carpet of cheese on top that is barely in contact with the tomato sauce
6. Again, a very sweet sauce.
And this is why there is no New York style pizza up here (other than first 2 places he mentions, a food truck and a high end restaurant that only makes personal pizzas); because the people wouldn't even want to eat it.
Give them sweet sauce, thick, double uncooked dough, a half inch of unseparated cheese, all of which falls apart instantly, and they're happy.
(I do like the cupped, charred pepperoni though).
Domenick and Pia's in downtown Waterbury. Old school family run city slice joint, Domenick and Pia are both in their 90's and still always there with their son running it. Some of the best pizza in the state. I'll be there next month.Gonna be in Cheshire/Waterbury by Blackies for the next few hours. Need a pizza reco, I don’t trust my brother-in-laws taste.
Domenick and Pia's in downtown Waterbury. Old school family run city slice joint, Domenick and Pia are both in their 90's and still always there with their son running it. Some of the best pizza in the state. I'll be there next month.
Go to Rossini's in Cheshire right on West Main St/Route 68/70. It's not New Haven; but, its generally regraded as the next tier down just behind Roseland (Derby) and Bufalina (Guildford). Cheshire Pizza & Ale on Route 10 in Cheshire is another step down in pizza, though still way better than most places outside of the Northeast, and has a wider-range of food and drink choices as it more of a spotys bar than a pizza joint.
Should have let me know id have dragged the kiddo there for dinner!Just tried little rendezvous in Meriden for the first time. Really really solid pie.
My sister worked there ages ago!We were having a discussion about Palm Beach Apizza yesterday, from Grand Avenue in Fair Haven... way back in the day. Anyone else remember dining there?
It is very good pie I agree on the assessment. They owned the log cabin in Farmington too on Rt 6 until they sold to Joey Garlics I believe. A solid pie would like to stop in at Cheshire next time around and have some.
Pffft nerdFrom this thread I have determined that you people eat and like pizza a lot more than I do. I have pizza once or twice a year. Usually at a party hosted by someone else. At my rate, it would take me 760 years to try every pizza place in this thread.