OT: - Best Pizza in CT | Page 178 | The Boneyard

OT: Best Pizza in CT

Is it time to get rid of the pizza thread?

  • Yes. It's past it's useful time here.

    Votes: 10 14.1%
  • No. I can't live without it.

    Votes: 50 70.4%
  • Move it to another board.

    Votes: 11 15.5%

  • Total voters
    71
I just fired up my pizza oven, so I know where the best pizza in Tahoe will be tonight.

You actually have a pizza oven? Is it used for anything else?
 
I went to a bridal shower last Sat. They had pizza on the buffet. Thick crust which I detest and really lousy tasting. Lots of people did not finish their slice. New London/Groton is sure a long way from New Haven.

Sometimes I really crave a pizza and my son works at night( I don’t drive at night). So I bought 2 Red baron thin crust everything on 1 and just pepperoni on the other, I must say not bad at all. I know! I know.

2 Wives, Recovery Room, NY Pizza, and Fireside (under new ownership), even Illiano's are all decent in that area.
 
2 Wives, Recovery Room, NY Pizza, and Fireside (under new ownership), even Illiano's are all decent in that area.

Since moving to Eastern CT from the NH area 5 years ago I will say the good pizza places are few and far between and the good places prices are usually really out of whack. Illiano's is one that I have found to be decent.

I have resorted to getting a pizza oven and coal firing it to get that apizza feel back. Not quite up to true NH standards yet but I do feel I make better much cheaper pizza than all the local places to me (totally biased opinion).
 
Since moving to Eastern CT from the NH area 5 years ago I will say the good pizza places are few and far between and the good places prices are usually really out of whack. Illiano's is one that I have found to be decent.

I have resorted to getting a pizza oven and coal firing it to get that apizza feel back. Not quite up to true NH standards yet but I do feel I make better much cheaper pizza than all the local places to me (totally biased opinion).

Good pizza places are few and far between virtually everywhere. That's what makes them preferable over the mediocre places.
 
Does anyone know who the owner was of Dino's Pizza in Bishops Corner in the late 70's and 80's? Not the Dino's in WH now. Completely different owners. I want to know the answer to this question before the "fat lady sings".

In all seriousness wish I could even give a prize for the correct answer. I spent some of my most memorable moments there as a kid.

Thank You & Sincerely Always,
BDH
 
So, I did the unfathomable and ordered pizza from Zuppardi's by mail. 6 personal pies came for $60. They were a little bigger than personals actually, somewhere between personal and small. Since we pay $20 for 1 cruddy pizza up here, it was well worth it. I didn't tell the kids what they were eating, and they knew immediately that it was quality.

Sad that pizza by mail (sent overnight) is better than fresh local pizza.
 
Is the Rendezvous still a quality pie?
I would like to know , too. Haven't had theirs in 10 years.

Tried Grand Apizza in downton Madison Friday night. Place was jamming but the pies were okay. Their 4 Cheese has American cheese in the mix. It doesn't work. Adds a creaminess that makes this pie too rich.

And then there is Brickside Pizza in Ivoryton. Picked up a pie after work two weeks ago. Got home and popped it in the oven for 5 minutes and it was fantastic. Very thin crust with tasty toppings. A hidden gem.
 
So, I did the unfathomable and ordered pizza from Zuppardi's by mail. 6 personal pies came for $60. They were a little bigger than personals actually, somewhere between personal and small. Since we pay $20 for 1 cruddy pizza up here, it was well worth it. I didn't tell the kids what they were eating, and they knew immediately that it was quality.

Sad that pizza by mail (sent overnight) is better than fresh local pizza.

I had been debating this. Sounds like I should go for it. Which ones did you order?
 
Is the Rendezvous still a quality pie?

It was when I went there in October 2015:

What a classic joint. Like it's been frozen in time for 40 years.

I heard from a friend who is a big fan of LR and he said that his favorite pie from them is their plain pizza, with only sauce and grated cheese, with thin crust (they have thickness options there, from thin through double dough, and their "traditional" is not very thin).

I figured that was a high-risk proposition and that I would still be wanting to try something with more flavor as well, so I also ordered the sausage pie (thin crust).

I ate half of each, which was easily three slices too many. For some reason (hmmmm...maybe gluttony?) no matter how many times it happens, I simply don't wait long enough most of the time to let the pie cool down, so I end up singeing my mouth on the first couple slices and then I overeat because I really don't start to taste how great the pie is for a couple more slices, when it starts to cool down. And the guy even warned me that it was scorching hot. Of course, I waited; but I'm sure what I thought was five minutes was more like 30 seconds, because I was starving.

I am glad I got both pies. The plain was cool to experience and it tastes good enough, but that's not the way I like my apizza. I need more cheese than just grated, for starters. But it is a cool pie.

The sausage was very good. He said it gets it from Hartford, the same place they've been getting it for over 40 years. They crumble it, which I like.

The crust was thin and crisp, but a bit too try for my preferences. I like a slightly chewy crust, at least around the outside. They do theirs very thin and short around the outside, so you really don't even have much of a crust at all when you get to the end of a piece. Nice char though--could use a touch of olive oil imo.

Funny, there were only two other customers the whole time I was there, one of them who looked like he, too, was frozen in time for the last 40 years. He may have been wearing a Chess King jacket. He asked if they were the only coal or wood-fired pizza place left in Meriden (yes); and then he asked about--yep, you guessed it @mauconnfan --Verdolini's. I think what I heard the LR guy say was that they got closed down several years ago (early 90s?) because they had no insurance so they lost their lease, or something like that. He said that LR is closest in style to Verdolini's.

Of course, I had to ask him about the Spooker then. He had never heard of it, but he said that the guy from whom he bought LR probably did, because he was around when Verdolini's was in its heyday. He said that the signature, old school Meriden-style pie from places like LR and Verdolini's is the plain, like my buddy told me to get.

Glad I checked it out. Would stop again.
 
Is the Rendezvous still a quality pie?
I would like to know , too. Haven't had theirs in 10 years.

Tried Grand Apizza in downton Madison Friday night. Place was jamming but the pies were okay. Their 4 Cheese has American cheese in the mix. It doesn't work. Adds a creaminess that makes this pie too rich.

And then there is Brickside Pizza in Ivoryton. Picked up a pie after work two weeks ago. Got home and popped it in the oven for 5 minutes and it was fantastic. Very thin crust with tasty toppings. A hidden gem.
It tailed off when Paul sold it to his family back in 2008 (I think at least...) but since then they moved to Florida and sold to another person more recently, either last year or the year before. The pies are great again, just like when Paul was cranking them out in the 90s.
 
Tried Grand Apizza in downton Madison Friday night. Place was jamming but the pies were okay. Their 4 Cheese has American cheese in the mix. It doesn't work. Adds a creaminess that makes this pie too rich.
Grand, Amato's, Red Tomato and Bradley & Wall are all pretty much on par with each other imo. Grand delivers--including delivering to the beach if you want--which is a bonus. Stick with the basics; none of the "4 cheese" nonsense. Red Tomato doesn't travel as well as the others for some reason, but they will do a "half-baked" pie if you ask, and you can finish it off in your own oven at home.
 
It tailed off when Paul sold it to his family back in 2008 (I think at least...) but since then they moved to Florida and sold to another person more recently, either last year or the year before. The pies are great again, just like when Paul was cranking them out in the 90s.

Thanks good to hear. Paul was great!
 
Grand, Amato's, Red Tomato and Bradley & Wall are all pretty much on par with each other imo. Grand delivers--including delivering to the beach if you want--which is a bonus. Stick with the basics; none of the "4 cheese" nonsense. Red Tomato doesn't travel as well as the others for some reason, but they will do a "half-baked" pie if you ask, and you can finish it off in your own oven at home.
I think that’s exactly right. There are several serviceable options on the shoreline, they are all decent. Carpanzano’s in Guilford is similarly good, but has better pasta dishes. Centro on the Guilford green is bad. Bradley and Wall’s pizza is ok, terrible after refrigerated. It does have the best chicken cutlets in town, though, imo. If you’re hankering for a chicken parm grinder you’d be hard pressed to find a better one.

But as we both know, these places all exist for one reason: to get pizza when Bufalina is closed, or you are trying to save money. Otherwise, you will just be sad thinking about what could have been.

Bufalina’s winter menu’s potato pie is terrific by the way.
 
I think that’s exactly right. There are several serviceable options on the shoreline, they are all decent. Carpanzano’s in Guilford is similarly good, but has better pasta dishes. Centro on the Guilford green is bad. Bradley and Wall’s pizza is ok, terrible after refrigerated. It does have the best chicken cutlets in town, though, imo. If you’re hankering for a chicken parm grinder you’d be hard pressed to find a better one.

But as we both know, these places all exist for one reason: to get pizza when Bufalina is closed, or you are trying to save money. Otherwise, you will just be sad thinking about what could have been.

Bufalina’s winter menu’s potato pie is terrific by the way.

Roccos off Wooster is better then carpanzonos imo
 
Does anyone know who the owner was of Dino's Pizza in Bishops Corner in the late 70's and 80's? Not the Dino's in WH now. Completely different owners. I want to know the answer to this question before the "fat lady sings".

In all seriousness wish I could even give a prize for the correct answer. I spent some of my most memorable moments there as a kid.

Thank You & Sincerely Always,
BDH
Possibly/maybe.

I grew up walking distance from Bishop's Corner, so I know Dino's well. However, my time frame is mid-60s-to-early-70s.

Dino's love has a presence on a "You Know You Grew Up in West Hartford..." Facebook page. I seem to recall a childhood neighbor once saying that his uncle was the owner of Dino's AND Goldstein's Delicatessen, both located in the lower rear of Crossroads Plaza. If you think we're talking about about the same place, I can inquire further. The guy I mentioned was in my first grade class, and we're FB friends.
 
I think that’s exactly right. There are several serviceable options on the shoreline, they are all decent. Carpanzano’s in Guilford is similarly good, but has better pasta dishes. Centro on the Guilford green is bad. Bradley and Wall’s pizza is ok, terrible after refrigerated. It does have the best chicken cutlets in town, though, imo. If you’re hankering for a chicken parm grinder you’d be hard pressed to find a better one.

But as we both know, these places all exist for one reason: to get pizza when Bufalina is closed, or you are trying to save money. Otherwise, you will just be sad thinking about what could have been.

Bufalina’s winter menu’s potato pie is terrific by the way.
Agree re Carpanzano's. That's @David 76 's local go-to iirc. Also agree Centro no bueno. We don't do pizza from BWall very often, but when we get it I note that their sauce is sweet, like San Marzano sweet, not sugar sweet, and I like that difference; but yeah it's probably a touch below the others overall. My kids love the sandwiches there but I usually get the hot table stuff like the cajun broiled salmon, green beans and broccoli.

Thanks for the heads up re the Bufalina potato pie from the new menu. We haven't been there since they switched to the winter menu and tbh none of the new pies sounded particularly great to me, but I know they almost always surprise me once I try them. The Arrabbiata sounds interesting, but I wonder if the ricotta makes it richer than I'd like.
 
So, I did the unfathomable and ordered pizza from Zuppardi's by mail. 6 personal pies came for $60. They were a little bigger than personals actually, somewhere between personal and small. Since we pay $20 for 1 cruddy pizza up here, it was well worth it. I didn't tell the kids what they were eating, and they knew immediately that it was quality.

Sad that pizza by mail (sent overnight) is better than fresh local pizza.

So do these come frozen? How does that work?
 

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