OT: - Best Pizza in CT | Page 248 | 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 11.4%
  • No. I can't live without it.

    Votes: 64 72.7%
  • Move it to another board.

    Votes: 14 15.9%

  • Total voters
    88
Sorry if already posted. Esquire names Mystic establishment best new restaurant 2021 ...pizza


I have not been there yet. Williams Ave. is Rte 1 on the Stonington side. Nana's is behind The Sea Swirl. Same folks who own Oyster Club
Engine Room and Grass & Bone.
Visited Nana's the other day. Orderd the New England, Bolognese, plus a cheese sheet pizza for the grandkids. IMO New Haven area pies are better. However if you plan on visiting Mystic this would be the place to go for pizza. Parking in summer could be an issue. There are several small business in that block and there will be Sea Swirl traffic too.
Larger parking lot in back of the building. All sheet pizza is Scicilian style and not my preference. Will try their bakery items soon. I have heard good things about a place in Westerly(which has better pies than Mystic) called Mr. Pizza. They are open limited hours in a small space which I am told affects the amount of dough they are able to produce? They are looking for a bigger place.
 
So I was in Telluride last week and needed to find a place to watch the game on Tuesday night because our condo TV had no cable and only played DVDs, and there was no wi-fi for streaming. Did some googling and asking around for good sports bars and settled on Brown Dog Pizza, which has hundreds of stellar reviews. Of course we were skeptical, but digging deeper we saw that the owner/pizza maker Jeff Smokevich won various national and international pizza-making contests with his Detroit-style pizza. Come to find out he is from Detroit and played football at Michigan (on the same team as Tom Brady).

Anyway, I am happy to report that my first experience with Detroit-style pizza was a smashing success. We got a large and split it half “Brooklyn Bridge” and half “Parma Italia” at the bartender’s suggestion; he said they were the two most popular pies there (and both had won international pizza-making awards). It looked like Sicilian pie, which worried me, because I am not a fan of that style. But whereas Sicilian is thick and dense, this was remarkably light, crispy and tasty. Oh, and their chicken wings were also top notch (and bonus points for finding the game immediately when I asked and putting it on the TV right in front of us at the bar; nice beer and cider selection, too):

 
So I was in Telluride last week and needed to find a place to watch the game on Tuesday night because our condo TV had no cable and only played DVDs, and there was no wi-fi for streaming. Did some googling and asking around for good sports bars and settled on Brown Dog Pizza, which has hundreds of stellar reviews. Of course we were skeptical, but digging deeper we saw that the owner/pizza maker Jeff Smokevich won various national and international pizza-making contests with his Detroit-style pizza. Come to find out he is from Detroit and played football at Michigan (on the same team as Tom Brady).

Anyway, I am happy to report that my first experience with Detroit-style pizza was a smashing success. We got a large and split it half “Brooklyn Bridge” and half “Parma Italia” at the bartender’s suggestion; he said they were the two most popular pies there (and both had won international pizza-making awards). It looked like Sicilian pie, which worried me, because I am not a fan of that style. But whereas Sicilian is thick and dense, this was remarkably light, crispy and tasty. Oh, and their chicken wings were also top notch (and bonus points for finding the game immediately when I asked and putting it on the TV right in front of us at the bar; nice beer and cider selection, too):

I’ve posted before the Detroit style at Joeys in WH has skyrocketed up my charts lately. Definitely worth trying.
 
So I was in Telluride last week and needed to find a place to watch the game on Tuesday night because our condo TV had no cable and only played DVDs, and there was no wi-fi for streaming. Did some googling and asking around for good sports bars and settled on Brown Dog Pizza, which has hundreds of stellar reviews. Of course we were skeptical, but digging deeper we saw that the owner/pizza maker Jeff Smokevich won various national and international pizza-making contests with his Detroit-style pizza. Come to find out he is from Detroit and played football at Michigan (on the same team as Tom Brady).

Anyway, I am happy to report that my first experience with Detroit-style pizza was a smashing success. We got a large and split it half “Brooklyn Bridge” and half “Parma Italia” at the bartender’s suggestion; he said they were the two most popular pies there (and both had won international pizza-making awards). It looked like Sicilian pie, which worried me, because I am not a fan of that style. But whereas Sicilian is thick and dense, this was remarkably light, crispy and tasty. Oh, and their chicken wings were also top notch (and bonus points for finding the game immediately when I asked and putting it on the TV right in front of us at the bar; nice beer and cider selection, too):

Jeff Smokevich needs to open a BBQ restaurant.
 
ED0BEA5F-5D88-4848-ACB3-FD32756729A4.jpeg
01DB6C0A-A0C6-4001-B7AA-402909B6BEF3.jpeg
A few pies I made this week in the Wolf with smoked mootz, which really adds much more depth of flavor. Plain and a broccoli/caramelized onion.
 
So I was in Telluride last week and needed to find a place to watch the game on Tuesday night because our condo TV had no cable and only played DVDs, and there was no wi-fi for streaming. Did some googling and asking around for good sports bars and settled on Brown Dog Pizza, which has hundreds of stellar reviews. Of course we were skeptical, but digging deeper we saw that the owner/pizza maker Jeff Smokevich won various national and international pizza-making contests with his Detroit-style pizza. Come to find out he is from Detroit and played football at Michigan (on the same team as Tom Brady).

Anyway, I am happy to report that my first experience with Detroit-style pizza was a smashing success. We got a large and split it half “Brooklyn Bridge” and half “Parma Italia” at the bartender’s suggestion; he said they were the two most popular pies there (and both had won international pizza-making awards). It looked like Sicilian pie, which worried me, because I am not a fan of that style. But whereas Sicilian is thick and dense, this was remarkably light, crispy and tasty. Oh, and their chicken wings were also top notch (and bonus points for finding the game immediately when I asked and putting it on the TV right in front of us at the bar; nice beer and cider selection, too):

But did they show the game?
 
After cocktails and apps at The Tavern at Graybarns (we had a gift card from our nieces), we picked up two pizzas from Colony in Norwalk: a stinger and a salad pizza (I'm ready to take on the heat, that salad pizza was exceptional!!! :)) For some reason, we haven't ordered pizza there in months, and I'm so grateful it's a five minute drive away from us.

Reflecting back, I love the idea of drinks and apps at a nice restaurant followed by ordering take out pizza to eat at home.
 
After cocktails and apps at The Tavern at Graybarns (we had a gift card from our nieces), we picked up two pizzas from Colony in Norwalk: a stinger and a salad pizza (I'm ready to take on the heat, that salad pizza was exceptional!!! :)) For some reason, we haven't ordered pizza there in months, and I'm so grateful it's a five minute drive away from us.

Reflecting back, I love the idea of drinks and apps at a nice restaurant followed by ordering take out pizza to eat at home.
No heat here. Nice!
 
View attachment 72308Has anyone tried the pizza from Atticus Market in New Haven? They don’t make pizza every day and I think they only sell 50 pies when they do. An acquaintance told me he had a spectacular pie from Atticus. Lots of chatter in CT pizza circles about them. I pulled this pic from their website….
I still hate the “get it before it sells out , limited time” you can get angelo‘s & patsys in nyc anytime and it’s some of the best
 
I still hate the “get it before it sells out , limited time” you can get angelo‘s & patsys in nyc anytime and it’s some of the best
Some places like to have the best freshest ingredients made that day and don’t have the kitchen and cooler space

Bufalina is the same and one of the best pizza in any state anywhere once they’re out for the day they are out
 
I just tried Good Old Days Pizza in Newtown; fantastic! If you are down this way give it a try. Another great pizza is from The Hub in Naugatuck.
 
Some places like to have the best freshest ingredients made that day and don’t have the kitchen and cooler space

Bufalina is the same and one of the best pizza in any state anywhere once they’re out for the day they are out
Great point, and I would add that some places—like Bufalina—simply don’t have the manpower to produce any more than they can produce. A big part of the reason why they are so good at what they do Is that Matt and Melissa are making 99% of the pies. But to your point, they also couldn’t fit another person in that space.
 
@8893 can you fly directly into Telluride or have to fly into Denver/ Phoenix or something and drive into it? Went once in the summer a few years back. Was a beautiful place, expensive, but very pretty.
 
@8893 can you fly directly into Telluride or have to fly into Denver/ Phoenix or something and drive into it? Went once in the summer a few years back. Was a beautiful place, expensive, but very pretty.
Yeah this was my second time there and I think it's one of the most visually stunning and majestic places I've ever seen. The Epic pass includes up to seven days at Tellluride, and I got it on sale several months ago for around $700, so that alone was a huge savings: the five days I skied last week would have cost me $1,000 otherwise, and I still have unlimited skiing at Mt. Snow, Stowe, Sunapee, etc.

In theory you can fly directly into Telluride but very few flights do, and once you see the runway you won't want to. If the wind is more than 20 knots they will not land there. It's a very short strip surrounded by mountains with a sheer wall at the end of it (with some kind of foam or something in front of it so that you don't catch on fire and die if the plane runs off the end...).

Montrose is the closest regional airport and it's around an hour and 40 minutes away. Most flights connect to there from Denver, DFW or Atlanta, but there is one direct flight between Newark and Montrose every Saturday and Sunday. That's what we took because I didn't want to deal with changing flights and the increased risk of losing luggage. Last time I went I flew through Denver and connected from there to Montrose. There are two main transportation companies that provide service between Montrose and Telluride: Telluride Express and Mountain Limo. I've used both and they are both fine; around $55 to $80 per person before tip, depending on how many people and what type of vehicle, etc.
 
Yeah this was my second time there and I think it's one of the most visually stunning and majestic places I've ever seen. The Epic pass includes up to seven days at Tellluride, and I got it on sale several months ago for around $700, so that alone was a huge savings: the five days I skied last week would have cost me $1,000 otherwise, and I still have unlimited skiing at Mt. Snow, Stowe, Sunapee, etc.

In theory you can fly directly into Telluride but very few flights do, and once you see the runway you won't want to. If the wind is more than 20 knots they will not land there. It's a very short strip surrounded by mountains with a sheer wall at the end of it (with some kind of foam or something in front of it so that you don't catch on fire and die if the plane runs off the end...).

Montrose is the closest regional airport and it's around an hour and 40 minutes away. Most flights connect to there from Denver, DFW or Atlanta, but there is one direct flight between Newark and Montrose every Saturday and Sunday. That's what we took because I didn't want to deal with changing flights and the increased risk of losing luggage. Last time I went I flew through Denver and connected from there to Montrose. There are two main transportation companies that provide service between Montrose and Telluride: Telluride Express and Mountain Limo. I've used both and they are both fine; around $55 to $80 per person before tip, depending on how many people and what type of vehicle, etc.

That's great! How was the snow out there? I might try and get out to Salt Lake while my friend is still living there. It's way easier to get into the mountains than in CO fighting on I-70. I ended up getting the indy pass this year. I try and hit up Catamount a handful of times and do a few Magic days. If you go for a week long trip out west its an absolute no brainer to get an Epic or Ikon or live out there. However some of the photos i've seen of some of the mountains on the East Coast like Sunapee yesterday, the lines are insane. They'll have to figure out a reservation system or something. Vail did a great marketing job selling the season passes but unfortunately the weekends are a nightmare at a lot of the resorts on the weekends.
 
That's great! How was the snow out there? I might try and get out to Salt Lake while my friend is still living there. It's way easier to get into the mountains than in CO fighting on I-70. I ended up getting the indy pass this year. I try and hit up Catamount a handful of times and do a few Magic days. If you go for a week long trip out west its an absolute no brainer to get an Epic or Ikon or live out there. However some of the photos i've seen of some of the mountains on the East Coast like Sunapee yesterday, the lines are insane. They'll have to figure out a reservation system or something. Vail did a great marketing job selling the season passes but unfortunately the weekends are a nightmare at a lot of the resorts on the weekends.
Unfortunately there was no fresh snow until a few inches on Friday morning, but the mountain was in pretty impressive condition nonetheless. And every day other than Friday was a bluebird day so no complaints here. They got some good snow right before and after Christmas that must have given them a decent base, and I had no idea how extensive their snowmaking and grooming operations were. There is so much terrain that we had no problem finding sweet spots every day, and we skied straight into the chairs with no lines 99% of the time so we typically skied around four to five hours between 10 am and 3 pm, with a nice lunch, and averaged around 15 to 17 runs a day. And good-sized runs at that. We could walk from our condo to both the chairlift and town, so no car needed at all. Very chill scene. Remarkably attitude-free, especially as compared with the likes of Vail and Aspen.
 
Yeah this was my second time there and I think it's one of the most visually stunning and majestic places I've ever seen. The Epic pass includes up to seven days at Tellluride, and I got it on sale several months ago for around $700, so that alone was a huge savings: the five days I skied last week would have cost me $1,000 otherwise, and I still have unlimited skiing at Mt. Snow, Stowe, Sunapee, etc.

In theory you can fly directly into Telluride but very few flights do, and once you see the runway you won't want to. If the wind is more than 20 knots they will not land there. It's a very short strip surrounded by mountains with a sheer wall at the end of it (with some kind of foam or something in front of it so that you don't catch on fire and die if the plane runs off the end...).

Montrose is the closest regional airport and it's around an hour and 40 minutes away. Most flights connect to there from Denver, DFW or Atlanta, but there is one direct flight between Newark and Montrose every Saturday and Sunday. That's what we took because I didn't want to deal with changing flights and the increased risk of losing luggage. Last time I went I flew through Denver and connected from there to Montrose. There are two main transportation companies that provide service between Montrose and Telluride: Telluride Express and Mountain Limo. I've used both and they are both fine; around $55 to $80 per person before tip, depending on how many people and what type of vehicle, etc.
My family used to rent a house with another family right in town in Telluride when I was a little kid, it was a totally different place back then. I would never be able to recognize it today. It was a sleepy little mining/ghost town with an amazing ski mountain, it was still Colorado's little secret. My dad's friend wanted to go in with my dad on buying property there. He wound up buying solo because my dad thought it was a crazy idea. Looking back that was a horrible decision but the place was so hard to get to (we flew into Grand Junction back then) and he wasn't looking at it as an investment, had no idea it would become arguably the most exclusive mountain town in the West.

The place is incredible and where I learned to ski, glad you loved it.
 
More Atticus hype from CTbites. Now I really need to find myself in New Haven on a Thursday evening…..

 
@8893 Do you remember trail names? I'm wondering if they have any of the same names. Spiral Stairs was a double black mogul run with K2 next to it, The Chute or the Plunge can't remember, it was off the map. See Forever was a long blue with great views. Ajax Alley, Silverado.

There was an older kid we all knew and my older brothers hung out with who was a much better skier than everyone else, he went by Rocket. Years later I'm going through my friend's snowboarding magazine and I see the name Rocket Reeves. Turns out he's the same guy and became kind of legendary in the snowboarding world.
 
@8893 Do you remember trail names? I'm wondering if they have any of the same names. Spiral Stairs was a double black mogul run with K2 next to it, The Chute or the Plunge can't remember, it was off the map. See Forever was a long blue with great views. Ajax Alley, Silverado.

There was an older kid we all knew and my older brothers hung out with who was a much better skier than everyone else, he went by Rocket. Years later I'm going through my friend's snowboarding magazine and I see the name Rocket Reeves. Turns out he's the same guy and became kind of legendary in the snowboarding world.
Spiral Stairs is still there; right next to Plunge. My tracker says I skied them both but I thought I only skied Plunge, Bushwhacker and See Forever/Look Out off the Plunge Chair (Lift 9). Loved all of those; great, long runs with steep pitches and incredible views.

There are lots of trails with ”chute” in the name but I don’t recall one just called “The Chute.” Likewise, lots of names with “silver,” but I don’t recall “Silverado.” Silvercloud off Revelation Bowl was quite a thrill though.

There is an Allais Alley and an Apex, but I don’t remember Ajax Alley. Nor K2 that I recall.

Saw lots of amazing skiers there, and fewer snowboarders than at most mountains these days, which was good with me. I don’t like skiing around a lot of snowboarders. Their moves are less predictable and they usually take up a lot more of the mountain (and push a lot more snow off it). And they lie down everywhere. Love watching them compete at the highest levels though.
 

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