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Hopefully not deep dish!From what?
Hopefully not deep dish!From what?
Everybody loves a good casserole.Hopefully not deep dish!
Seems the general consensus is Modern. But can you really go wrong with Sally's and Pepe's either?
From what?
From dominos. Disgraceful.
Got Modern, Pepe's and Sally's. Just a regular cheese pie--she doesn't like any toppings really. Her rating was
1.) Modern
2.) Pepe's
3.) Sally's
Sally's was an off day. really good flavor in the sauce and cheese, dough was just a little wonky. Modern was on--fantastic. Got it well done.
If I were to use the term "breadier" to describe a pizza, that pie would be as far from Roseland's as could be imagined. Roseland's niche is thin and crispy (the rest of my family thinks it's crispy to a fault), and to me, breadier brings to mind a thick, pan baked pie in the Sicilian mold.Roseland is heartier, breadier, traditional with loyal locals & longtimers, and more than just pizza.
Chief no ones ever accused me of being great at math, but I do believe a couple of 6 packs is a 12 pack no?That made an impression on Chief - 2 pizza places from Willimantic out of 8 - a city never known for pizza.
Tony’s has been there for decades and it’s just ok (unless it’s improved recently), especially if you have had a couple of six packs.
That’s true - they are equivalent.Chief no ones ever accused me of being great at math, but I do believe a couple of 6 packs is a 12 pack no?
except you pay more for 2 six packsThat’s true - they are equivalent.
In the context you provided, my bad. I've neither the inclination nor recent exposure to contradict you, and used the word "breadier" with, say, Ernie's in mind, and solely to denote that I've found it less thin & crispy than Pepe's, Sally's, and Modern. I meant nothing like what the word means to you.If I were to use the term "breadier" to describe a pizza, that pie would be as far from Roseland's as could be imagined. Roseland's niche is thin and crispy (the rest of my family thinks it's crispy to a fault), and to me, breadier brings to mind a thick, pan baked pie in the Sicilian mold.
She is the only one of our kids who will knowingly* touch mushrooms. And she can even distinguish real truffles from the fake stuff they try to conjure chemically with some truffle oils.I've always believed that children who eat, and like, mushrooms, are well on their way to developing a healthy lifelong diet. pizza is a great vehicle for introducing kids to new, and often healthful, food options. random saturday morning food thoughts...
Not sure I agree on the green bell peppers. Too burpy. We far prefer red, yellow or orange. I'd take orange bell peppers exclusively over all the others actually.show me a kid who likes mushrooms, and i'll show you an adult capable of eating, and enjoying, fresh (uncooked) green bell peppers. at least, in the last decade or two, the rugrats got the message about yogurt. progress!
You sound like my wife. She won't touch a green pepper in any form, except maybe cubanelle, and she'll complain when eating that. I'll eat any of them, and particularly love red or orange when roasted over an open flame. But raw, on a sandwich or in a salad or slaw, give me green bell peppers!Not sure I agree on the green bell peppers. Too burpy. We far prefer red, yellow or orange. I'd take orange bell peppers exclusively over all the others actually.
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Connecticut Pizza Showdown | Elite Eight
The Connecticut Pizza Showdown has been narrowed to the top 8 pizza places around the state. Vote for your favorite to keep them in the showdown.courant.secondstreetapp.com
What you might expect for the Courant readership area:
Pleasant Pizza - Willimantic
Little City Pizza - Avon
Frank Pepe Pizzeria Napoletana - New Haven
Camille’s Wood-Fired Pizza - Tolland
Modern Apizza - New Haven
Naples Pizza - Farmington
Rossini’s Italian Restaurant - East Hampton
Tony’s Pizza - Willimantic
Get "The Special" at Zuppardis. They are the only place left in the area that still makes their own sausage. The Special is sausage and mushrooms.In the context you provided, my bad. I've neither the inclination nor recent exposure to contradict you, and used the word "breadier" with, say, Ernie's in mind, and solely to denote that I've found it less thin & crispy than Pepe's, Sally's, and Modern. I meant nothing like what the word means to you.
I definitely defer to your being more local, and my only having been there 2 or 3 times since 2010, and about a handful of times in years before that.
My current pizza tour is set to conclude with Roseland and Zuppardi's, and I'll have a better idea what I'm talking about after then.
Meantime, here's picture from last night's Apizza Party at the newly opened Graduate Hotel on Chapel St in New Haven. It was open house and free (plain tomato, cheese only, and pepperoni) View attachment 47435pizza from the "Big Three" that @husky429 visited. Not surprisingly, Modern traveled to the destination the best of the three.
I know that's the 'correct' suggestion, except, like @8893's daughters, I don't knowingly eat mushrooms, so it's always been just sausage for me.Get "The Special" at Zuppardis. They are the only place left in the area that still makes their own sausage. The Special is sausage and mushrooms.
How can a pizza connoisseur not like mushrooms, unless you're allergic to them?I know that's the 'correct' suggestion, except, like @8893's daughters, I don't knowingly eat mushrooms, so it's always been just sausage for me.
MY asterisk is having been completely bowled over by a former next door neighbor's Haitian black rice a decade ago and the following day learning (when I looked it up) that the essential ingredient is black mushrooms. Years later, when a Yale post-doc lived in the house for several years before buying her first home, I would get the same delicious dish regularly enough when she'd return to New Haven from visits to her intergenerational family home on Long Island.
Mushrooms might be my favorite food but never do them on pizza. They could maybe work if sauteed first but raw mushrooms just spoil the pizza because of their moisture.I know that's the 'correct' suggestion, except, like @8893's daughters, I don't knowingly eat mushrooms, so it's always been just sausage for me.
MY asterisk is having been completely bowled over by a former next door neighbor's Haitian black rice a decade ago and the following day learning (when I looked it up) that the essential ingredient is black mushrooms. Years later, when a Yale post-doc lived in the house for several years before buying her first home, I would get the same delicious dish regularly enough when she'd return to New Haven from visits to her intergenerational family home on Long Island.
Place I used to go to I would always order a sausage, anchovy, and green pepper pie. I also like green bells for stuffed peppers.Not sure I agree on the green bell peppers. Too burpy. We far prefer red, yellow or orange. I'd take orange bell peppers exclusively over all the others actually.
Mushrooms might be my favorite food but never do them on pizza. They could maybe work if sauteed first but raw mushrooms just spoil the pizza because of their moisture.
It is no secret that I believe the way to ruin any food is to add green bell peppers.Not sure I agree on the green bell peppers. Too burpy. We far prefer red, yellow or orange. I'd take orange bell peppers exclusively over all the others actually.
Like we need more evidence people are stupid. Talk to any chef....Canned mushrooms absolutely ruin a pizza and that's how most people are getting them. As I said they can work if you sautee fresh mushrooms before putting them on the pie.