pizza hut



pizza

pizza

A Pizza Margherita made in Naples (Napoli), Italy

Pizza (IPA pronunciation: [ˈpiːtsə]) or Pizza Pie is the name of an oven-baked, flat, usually round bread covered with tomato sauce and cheese with optional toppings, or a savory pie with similar ingredients.

The cheese is usually mozzarella (the traditional Neapolitan pizza uses buffalo mozzarella or fior di latte) or sometimes a mixture of several cheeses such as parmesan, Romano, ricotta or, particularly in the USA, Monterey Jack. Various other toppings may be added, most typically:

  • herbs and seasonings such as basil, oregano, and garlic
  • vegetables such as bell peppers, asparagus, eggplant, broccoli, spinach, olives, onions, and artichoke hearts
  • meat or fish products such as sausage, (especially pepperoni or salami), ham, bacon, ground beef, anchovies, chicken, tuna, and shrimp
  • Other common toppings include mushroom, pineapple and tomato

The crust is traditionally plain, but may also be seasoned with butter, garlic, or herbs, or stuffed with cheese. In some pizza recipes the tomato sauce is omitted (termed "white pizza"), or replaced with another sauce (usually garlic butter but can be sauces made with spinach or onions). Pizza is normally eaten hot (typically at lunch or dinner), but leftovers are often eaten cold for breakfast or as a snack.

Piza or pissa is late Vulgar Latin (9th century) flat bread, and apparently came to mean a flat bread with a cheese topping by the 14th century in some Italian dialects.[1] Pizzo, which means point in Italian, may have been an influence.[2] Many languages around the Mediterranean have similar words meaning flat bread or unleavened bread, see pita. The Italian word for a person with talent for making pizza is pizzaiolo. A restaurant that serves pizza is called a pizzeria (from Italian); the phrase "pizza parlor" is also used in the United States. Pizza can also be purchased in grocery stores or supermarkets (usually, but not always, frozen); in many countries, pizza can also be ordered by telephone (or, increasingly, via the Web) to be delivered, hot and ready to eat, to almost any address within range of the restaurant. The first pizzeria established in the United States was Lombardi's in New York.

Pizza, a local food item originated from a small region of Italy, has become popular throughout the world, and is now a symbol of cultural globalization.

Contents

  • 1 History
  • 2 Crusts and baking methods
  • 3 The sauce
  • 4 Frozen pizza
    • 4.1 Italian and European law
  • 5 Types of pizza
    • 5.1 Pizza styles
    • 5.2 Variations worldwide
    • 5.3 U.S. styles and specialties
  • 6 Health Concerns
  • 7 Records
  • 8 See also
  • 9 Notes and references
  • 10 External links

History

Main article: History of pizza

Crusts and baking methods

Pizza may be baked with a thin bread bottom (Italian or "hand-tossed" style) or with thicker bread (pan pizza, or American pizza).

The crust can be very thick as in Chicago-style pizza or almost non-existent as in the Naples pizza. Some pizzas are now made with a cheese-filled crust.

In restaurants, pizza can be baked in a gas canister (stone bricks above the heat source) oven, an electric deck oven, a conveyor belt oven or, in the case of more expensive restaurants, a wood- or coal-fired brick oven. On deck ovens, the pizza can be slid into the oven on a long paddle called a peel and baked directly on the hot bricks or baked on a screen (a round metal pan that has holes in it like a screen). When making pizza at home, it can be baked on a "pizza stone" in a regular oven to imitate the effect of a brick oven. Another option is grilled pizza, in which the crust is baked directly on a barbecue grill. Greek pizza, like Chicago-style pizza, is baked in a pan rather than directly on the bricks of the pizza oven.

In home-made pizza, there are many variations on the bread used for crust. In some countries, creations such as pita pizza, bagel pizza, and tortilla pizza are popular, especially with children. In Japan, where full-size ovens are a rarity in the home, pizza toast is a popular version. In Australia, Domino's Pizza has introduced the "Puffection" pizza, featuring puff pastry as base.

The sauce

Pizza is often broadly divided into "red" and "white" pizzas, which respectively do and do not contain tomatoes and several other spices. Of the red pizzas, the most common form of tomato topping is a thick, smooth tomato sauce known generically as "tomato paste", which differs from tomato sauces used for pasta in containing less water, reducing the likelihood of a soggy crust. The most common form of white pizza contains a garlic and butter sauce, though ranch or other alternitive sauces would fall under this category. In the most typical style of pizza, the sauce is swirled on in a thin layer using a ladle or similar type of large spoon, with toppings placed on the top. With some forms of pizza, particularly deep-dish, this is inverted, with the cheese and toppings placed directly on the dough and the sauce ladled over the top. Original neapolitan pizzas use only raw, sliced tomatoes.

In New York City white pizza does not have any kind of sauce on it. It is simply topped with mozzarella and ricotta cheeses and sometimes fresh vegetables.

It is not uncommon to use a raw tomato sauce or tomato puree (usually made from canned tomatoes) and fresh herbs such as basil. Similarly, diced or ground tomatoes are often used more or less straight on deep-dish pizza. In both cases, the tomatoes are cooked by the high temperatures of the oven. Some otherwise "white" pizzas also use thinly sliced fresh tomatoes as a topping.

Frozen pizza

Pizza is also found in supermarkets as a frozen food. Considerable amounts of food technology ingenuity has gone into the creation of palatable frozen pizza. The main challenges include preventing the sauce from combining with the dough and producing a crust that can be frozen and reheated without becoming rigid. Modified corn starch is commonly used as a moisture barrier between the sauce and crust. Traditionally the dough is somewhat pre-baked and other ingredients are also sometimes pre-cooked.

More recently, frozen pizza with completely raw ingredients have also begun to appear, as have those with a rising-crust.

Italian and European law

Despite the simplicity of the ingredients used in a Neapolitan pizza, the most authentic versions are made with local ingredients:

  • San Marzano tomatoes, which grow on the volcanic plains in the south of Vesuvio,
  • Mozzarella di Bufala Campana, made with the milk from water buffalo raised in the marshlands of Campania and Latium in a semi-wild state; this mozzarella is protected with its own European Protected designation of origin. [3]

In Italy there is a bill before Parliament to safeguard the traditional Italian pizza, [4] specifying permissible ingredients and methods of processing [5] (e.g. excluding frozen pizzas). Only pizzas which followed these guidelines could be called "traditional Italian pizzas", at least in Italy.

Italy has also requested that the European Union safeguard some traditional Italian pizzas, such as "margherita" and "marinara".[6] This is part of an ongoing trend within Europe, preventing the names of regional foods being commercially exploited. It is illegal to have any pizza without basil and oregano.

Types of pizza

In recent years, pizza has become an international food and the toppings can be extensively varied to meet local variations in taste. These pizzas consist of the same basic design but include an exceptionally diverse choice of ingredients, such as anchovies, egg, pineapple, coconut, sauerkraut, eggplant, kim-chi, lamb, couscous, chicken, fish, and shellfish, meats done in ethnic styles such as Moroccan lamb, shawarma or even chicken tikka masala (India) , and non-traditional spices such as curry and Thai sweet chili. Pizzas can also be made without meat for vegetarians, and without cheese for vegans. Breakfast pizzas are topped with ingredients such as scrambled eggs. "Supreme" pizzas typically include a thick layer of many different toppings.

Pizza styles

  • Italian pizza:
    A "supreme" pizza includes many different toppings, such as pepperoni, green peppers, olives, and mushrooms.
    • Neapolitan pizza (pizza Napoletana). According to the rules proposed by the Associazione vera pizza napoletana and other sources quoted by the BBC,[7] and the legal EU document with the Vera Pizza Napoletana Specification in translation, the genuine Neapolitan pizza dough consists of Italian wheat flour (type 0 and/or 00), natural Neapolitan yeast or brewer's yeast, and water. For proper results, strong flour with high protein content (as used for bread-making rather than cakes) must be used. The dough must be kneaded by hand or with a low-speed mixer. After the rising process, the dough must be formed by hand without the help of a rolling pin or other mechanical device, and may be no more than 3 mm (1/8 in) thick. The pizza must be baked for 60–90 seconds in a 485 °C (905 °F) stone oven with an oak-wood fire. When cooked, it should be soft and fragrant. Neapolitan pizza has also gained in Italy the status of "guaranteed traditional speciality". This admits only three official variants:
      • Pizza marinara: with tomato, garlic, oregano and oil;
      • Pizza Margherita: tomato, mozzarella in fillets, basil and oil;
      • Pizza Margherita Extra: tomato, buffalo mozzarella from Campania in fillets, basil and oil.
    • Lazio style: Pizza in Lazio (Rome), as well as in many other parts of Italy is available in 2 different "flavours": 1) In take-away shops so-called "Pizza Rustica" or "Pizza a Taglio". Pizza is cooked in long, rectangular baking pans and relatively thick (1-2 cm). The crust similar to that of an English muffin and mostly cooked in an electric oven. When purchased, it is usually cut with scissors or knife and priced by weight. 2) In Pizza Restaurants (Pizzerie), where it is served in a dish in its traditional round shape, it features a very thin crust compared to Neapolitan recipe. It is mostly cooked in a wood-fired oven which gives pizza its unique flavour and texture. In Rome a "Pizza Napoletana" is topped with tomato, mozzarella, anchovies and oil (thus, what in Naples is called "Pizza Romana", in Rome is called "Pizza Napoletana"). Strangely enough, there is no "Pizza Napoletana" in Naples and no "Pizza Romana" in Rome.
    • Pizza Romana (in Naples): tomato, mozzarella, anchovies, oregano, oil;
    • Pizza Viennese: tomato, mozzarella, German sausage, oregano, oil;
    • Pizza with Ham and Mushrooms: tomato, mozzarella, ham, mushrooms;
    • Pizza Capricciosa ("Capricious Pizza"): mozzarella, tomato, mushrooms, artichokes, cooked ham, olives, oil (in Rome raw ham is used and half a hard-boiled egg is added;
    • Pizza Quattro Stagioni ("Four Seasons Pizza"): same ingredients for the Capricciosa, but ingredients not mixed;
    • Four Cheeses Pizza ("Pizza quattro formaggi"): tomato, mozzarella, other cheeses;
    • Sicilian-style pizza has its toppings baked directly into the crust. An authentic recipe uses neither cheese nor anchovies. Sicilian Pizza in the United States is typically a different variety of product made with a thick crust characterized by a rectangular shape and topped with tomato sauce and cheese (and optional toppings). Pizza Hut's Sicilian Pizza, introduced in 1994, is not an authentic example of the style as only garlic, basil, and oregano are mixed into the crust.
    • White pizza (pizza bianca) uses no tomato sauce, often substituting pesto or dairy products such as sour cream. Most commonly, the toppings consist only of mozzarella and ricotta cheese. In Rome, the term pizza bianca refers to a type of bread topped only with olive oil.
  • Similar dishes:
    • "Farinata" or "cecina" [8]. A Ligurian (it:farinata) and Tuscan (cecina) regional dish made from chickpea flour, water, salt and olive oil. Also called Socca in the Provence region of France. Often baked in a brick oven, and typically weighed and sold by the slice.
    • The Alsacian tarte flambée (German: Flammekueche) is a thin disc of dough covered in crème fraîche, onions, and bacon.
    • The Anatolian Lahmacun (Arabic: lahma bi ajeen; Armenian: lahmajoun; also Armenian pizza or Turkish pizza) is a meat-topped dough round. The bread is usually very thin; the layer of meat often includes chopped vegetables.
    • The Provençal pissaladiere is similar to an Italian pizza, with a slightly thicker crust and generally a topping of cooked onions, anchovies, and olives.
    • Calzone and stromboli are very similar dishes (calzone is traditionally half-moon-shaped, while a stromboli is tube-shaped) that are often made of pizza dough rolled or folded around a filling.
    • Pizza is sometimes used as a general word for a savory pie; the Campanian pizza rustica and the Italian American pizzagiena (Easter pie) are examples of this more general sense.
A pepperoni pizza

Variations worldwide

  • In Argentina: Pizzas have no more than two toppings, and lots of mozzarella cheese, usually 250 g per pizza (32 cm diameter)
  • In Scotland, a "pizza supper" commonly sold in fish and chip shops consists of a portion of chips (french fries) and a frozen pizza which has been deep fried rather than baked. This is often known as a "pizza crunch", and the pizza may also be coated in batter.
  • In Canada, the topping combination of back bacon, pepperoni and mushrooms is called 'Canadian Pizza' . In Quebec, the same topping combination is called a 'Québécois Pizza'. A pizza with mushrooms, pepperoni, and green bell pepper is referred to as "all-dressed". Also available in Canada are donair pizzas. These pizzas come with donair ingredients (cheese, spiced meat, sometimes onions and tomatoes) and have the tomato sauce replaced by donair sauce. Also in Canada the "Punjabi Style" pizza is popular. With the Punjabi Style pizza the main ingredient added is hot peppers. The most popular is the Vegetarian pizza made Punjabi Style with mushroom, onion, green pepper and fresh tomato with the addition of the hot peppers. A new trend in Canada is dipping the pizza into a variety of sauces e.g. salad dressings like Ranch Dressing.
  • In Australia, a commonly sold style is the Aussie pizza, which is topped with ham, bacon, cheese and egg. "Hawaiian pizza" (ham and pineapple) is the most popular topping combination in Australia, accounting for 20 percent of all sales. In "barbecue pizza," barbecue sauce is poured on top of the cheese, with usually a meat such as chicken or beef. Bases are often offered in both thin or thick (pan), although pan is not nearly as thick as a Chicago pan pizza, being 2-3cm at most. There is no set style regarding a crispy or flexible base - it usually varies shop by shop or even by which chef is on shift in a particular shop. Starting in the mid 1990's a moderate number of gourmet pizza restaurants opened across the country, although the traditional individually owned pizzeria and the major chains (Pizza Hut and Domino's) still outnumber them by far. Most Australian pizzerias use gas or electric ovens although wood fired ovens have become a major feature of the more expensive 'gourmet' pizza restaurants mentioned above.
  • In Japan, pizza toppings may include corn, diced potatoes, scrambled eggs, mayonnaise, Camembert cheese, curry sauce, and various kinds of seafood. Tabasco sauce is often used as a condiment. Salad pizza, a pizza topped with tossed salad, is occasionally seen.[9] Another variation is rice pizza, substituting baked rice for the crust.[10] Squid ink is also occastionally used in lieu of traditional tomato sauce.[11] The Japanese dish okonomiyaki is occasionally referred to in English as "Japanese pizza", although its ingredients, preparation method, and taste are substantially different from traditional pizza.
  • In South Korea, kimchi and bulgogi are used as toppings, as well as many of the toppings used in Japan. In addition, sweet potato puree in a circular ring near the edge of the crust is very popular. Tabasco sauce is often used as a condiment to cater to Koreans' general love for spicy flavor.
  • In Hong Kong, Pizza Hut customers may choose to have their pizzas dressed with Thousand Island dressing instead of tomato sauce.
  • In Mexico, pizza is often enjoyed dipped in ketchup and/or hot sauce. Some pizzas include ingredients such as beans, beef, poblano pepper, jalapeño pepper, corn nibblets, chorizo, onion, etc.
  • In Pakistan, Pizza toppings can have chunks of 'Chicken Tikka' and a super spicy variation with lots of 'Tandoori Masala'. Also, eating Ketchup with Pizza is very common. Many pizzarias also make their pizzas in brick ovens for the crispier crust.
  • In India, pizza toppings include vegetables and other traditional sauces or chunks of tandoori chicken or paneer (cottage cheese). Also Indians like to have a large quantity of toppings on their pizza.
  • In Iran, pizza is sometimes eaten with ketchup. The film Crimson Gold, the story of a disgruntled pizza deliveryman, confirmed to many international filmgoers the existence of pizza in Iran. Pizza restaurants were often opened by expatriates returning home from the United States who had developed a taste for it there. At the end of July 2006 it was reported that "Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has ordered government and cultural bodies to use modified Persian words to replace foreign words that have crept into the language, such as 'pizzas' which will now be known as 'elastic loaves,' state media reported Saturday."
  • In Brazil, especially São Paulo city, pizzas are one of the most profitable items of Brazilian food industry. Among them are traditional Neapolitan style pizzas (brought by Italian immigrants) and sort of "new style" pizzas with chocolate and fruits (banana possibly being the most common), among other toppings. It is so important for the city economics that a Pizza Day (July 10) was instituted, with Pizza Championship being one of the most important events of the day, showing new recipes. One of the products of such championship was the border filling with catupiry cheese. Pizza must also be eaten with a knife and a fork; to do otherwise is considered to be bad table manners. Except in Pizza Hut and other pizza franchises, most pizzerias cook the pizzas on a wooden oven, even the small ones. While outside the city of São Paulo it is common to use condiments such as ketchup on a pizza, it is almost considered rude in São Paulo, where the most traditional Italian pizza is made.
  • In Sweden the Kebab pizza is a popular choice. It is usually topped with tomato sauce, cheese, kebab meat, mushrooms and onions. After being baked, green peppers and kebab sauce is added. The sauce is white (with or without garlic), red (more or less hot), or (most commonly) a mix of red and white. Another popular pick is the beef tenderloin with bearnaise sauce topping and it is often one of the most luxurious pizzas on the menu.
  • In China, pizza is relatively rare. However, with the expansion of Pizza Hut into China's larger cities, pizza is rapidly gaining approval and popularity.
  • In Taiwan, pizza is typically made with ingredients as varied as peach slices and corn, beans, pears, and beef.
  • In the United Kingdom, pizza is most readily available in supermarkets as fresh pizza. The supermarket chain ASDA handmakes its pizza to order, although many people choose to make their own pizza in their own homes. Ready-made pizza bases for topping at home are widely available, as are packets of bread mix specially suited for making pizza dough. There are too many popular toppings to actually document.
  • In Ghana, pizza is widely available and is served at many restaurants.
  • In Kenya, the recently introduced 'cheese-free' variety has been a fantastic success with its inhabitants, especially amongst the Kikuyucitation needed].
  • In Sudan, national efforts in funding and diplomacy have been made in order to make pizza (pronounced [biːdzɑ] locally) available at public restaurants. Currently, pizza can be obtained from certain cafes in private clubs, or via the black marketcitation needed].
  • In the Netherlands, pizza is often hot and spicy.
  • In Northern Ireland pizza made with Soda Bread is becoming popular, similar to a pizza bagel substituting traditional Soda Bread for the usual pizza base. Coloquially know as a "Paddy Pizza"
  • In Colombia Domino's Pizza introduced a 'Colombian' variation made of onions, corn bits, bacon, sausage, and extra cheese.

U.S. styles and specialties

Due to the wide influence of Italian and Greek immigrants in American culture, the United States has developed quite a large number of regional forms of pizza, many bearing only a casual resemblance to the Italian original. During the latter half of the 20th century, pizza in the United States became an iconic dish of considerable popularity, and may have contributed to the decline of the British pie heritage previously common in American cuisine.

  • New York-style pizza is a style originally developed in New York City, where pizza is often sold in oversized, thin and flexible slices. It is traditionally hand-tossed, moderate on sauce, and moderately covered with cheese essentially amounting to a much larger version of the Neapolitan style. The slices are sometimes eaten folded in half, as its size and flexibility may otherwise make it unwieldy to eat by hand. This style of pizza tends to dominate the Northeastern states and is very similar to the basic style common through the United States and known simply as pizza. It is often referred to as pan-style pizza, but note that Pizza Hut's "Pan Pizza" is a thick-crust variety. Many pizza establishments in the New York metropolitan area offer two varieties of pizza: "Neapolitan", or "round", made with a relatively thin, circular crust and served in wedge-shaped slices, and "Sicilian", or "square", made with a thicker, rectangular crust and served in large, rectangular slices.
  • Chicago-style pizza, or Chicago-style deep dish pizza, contains a crust which is formed up the sides of a deep-dish pan. It reverses the order of ingredients, using crust, cheese, filling, then sauce on top. Some versions (usually referred to as "stuffed") have two layers of crust with the sauce on top. Deep-dish pizza was purportedly invented and first served in 1943 at Pizzeria Uno, which is still operating along with its twin restaurant, Pizzeria Due, in the River North neighborhood.
  • Chicago-style thin crust pizza has a thinner crust than Chicago-style deep dish, and is baked flat rather than in a deep dish pan. The crust is is crispier than the New York style, and Chicago-style thin crust pizzas are typically cut into three- or four-inch squares instead of the pie-like wedges. The small size of the squares makes it unnecessary to fold the slices. Chicago-style thin crust pizza is generally heavy on cheese and toppings and is often seasoned with more oregano than other styles. Sauces tend to have a sweetness to them, some more noticeably than others. Chicago-style pizza is prevalent throughout the midwestern USA.
  • St. Louis-style pizza is a distinct style of pizza popular in St. Louis, Missouri and its surrounding areas. It is also sometimes duplicated in other areas of the Midwest. The most notable characteristic of St. Louis-style pizza is the distinctively St. Louisan provel cheese used instead of (or rarely in addition to) the mozzarella common to other styles of pizza. The pizza has a thin, round crust, as opposed to Chicago's deep-dish style or New York's pan-style. The crust of a St. Louis pizza is somewhat crisp and cannot be folded easily, and is typically cut into three- or four-inch squares instead of the pie-like wedges typical of other pizza. It is often salty and seasoned with more oregano than other pizza types. Despite its thin crust, it can be layered deeply with many different toppings. Sauces tend to have a sweetness to them, some more noticeably than others. The two largest St. Louis-style Pizza chains are Imo's Pizza and Cecil Whittaker's Pizzeria.
  • California-style pizza (often termed in the United States gourmet pizza) refers to pizza with non-traditional ingredients, especially those that use a considerable amount of fresh produce. Barbecue sauce is sometimes a substitute for tomato sauce.
  • Greek pizza is a variation popular in New England; its name comes from it being typical of the style of pizzerias owned by Greek immigrants. It has a thicker, chewier crust and is baked in a pan in the pizza oven, instead of directly on the bricks. Plain olive oil is a common part of the topping.
  • Hawaiian pizza has Canadian bacon and pineapple toppings and is especially popular in the Western United States. Ham and pineapple is also a popular topping combination in Australia, but notably not in Hawaii. This type is also common within the EU as Pizza Hawaii.
  • Grilled pizza, invented in Providence, Rhode Island, uses a fairly thin crust cooked on a grill; the toppings are placed on the baked side after the pizza has cooked for a bit and flipped over.
  • English muffin or French bread pizza and pizza bagel is a common convenience pizza made at home in an oven or toaster, usually with a simple topping of spaghetti sauce, sliced or shredded cheese, and perhaps pepperoni. French bread pizza is sometimes available commercially as a frozen meal.


Regional variations include

  • In New Haven, Connecticut, the local specialty is known as apizza. This thin-crust pizza originated with the Frank Pepe Pizzeria Napoletana in the Wooster Square neighborhood of New Haven. The canonical New Haven-style pizza is a white clam pie.
  • In Oneonta, New York, a specialty type of pizza served is known as "cold cheese pizza". It is basically an ordinary pie, or slice, but after being taken out of the oven, cold mozzerella cheese is piled on top of the hot cheese.
  • In the Binghamton/Endicott area of upstate NY, pizza is often sold as "sheet pizza". This style, made popular by restaurants such as Nirchi's and Brozzetti's, is similar to the Sicilian style, but typically comes in a rectangular shape, has a sweeter crust, and sometimes uses non-traditional cheeses.
  • In Arkansas, Wafer thin pizza, with little or no sauce with lots of parmesan cheese, cheese, and pepperoni is preferred.
  • Long Island, New York, where the pizza is glorified by many residents, has its own regional variation, aptly titled the Long Island pizza, which typically has a somewhat thinner crust. It is also the birthplace of the "pizza bagel", which substitutes bread with a half sliced bagel, while still having normal toppings and ingredients. Traditional New York-style pizza varieties are served at local pizzerias by the slice or full pie. The most popular types include regular (traditional round thin sliced pizza), sicilian (square with a thick crust), marinara (no cheese, just sauce), white pizza (mozzarella and ricotta cheese toppings, no sauce), grandma (typically square with a thinner crust than sicilian and the sauce goes over the cheese). There is also a growing choice of gourmet pizza including baked ziti pizza, buffalo chicken pizza, eggplant/chicken parmesan pizza, salad pizza, chicken marsala pizza and shrimp scampi pizza. Small family-owned pizzerias are ubiquitous, as many families traditionally set one day a week as a 'pizza night' when they go to these local family pizzerias on a weekly basis. It is not uncommon for a town on Long Island to have several different pizzerias, each with its own distinct flavor. The Long Island Pizza Festival & Bake-Off is annual competition where mom and pop pizzerias compete to be named best on Long Island.
  • In San Francisco, California, the Indian Pizza (see below) has become a source of pride. Sourdough crust pizza is the type most commonly associated with San Francisco, however.
  • In Baltimore, Maryland, pizza is traditionally served with a thick, doughy crust and a heavy amount of sauce.
  • In Colorado, a type of pizza, called mountain pie, is a regional favorite. Made popular by the originating restaurant, BeauJo's, it is piled high with toppings and kept from spilling over by a large, hand-rolled crust that is often dipped in honey for dessert.
  • In New Mexico, green chile is often used as a pizza topping, especially in combination with pepperoni, local chorizo sausage, or on supreme pizza. This is uncommon elsewhere.
  • In Buffalo, New York, pizza is made with a thicker, doughier crust than traditional New York style pizza, with a slightly thicker and sweeter sauce, mozzarella cheese and (usually) pepperoni cooked until it is burned and crispy on the edges. Buffalo-style pizza can also be found in communities where there is a large population of expatriate Buffalonians, like Charlotte, North Carolina.
  • In Utica, New York and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, a type of pizza called tomato pie is common. This type of pizza is usually served room temperature, always has a rectangular crust, and is by definition only topped with thick tomato sauce and a sprinkling of grated romano cheese.
  • In Dayton, Ohio, the local preference is for pizza with thin crust and a light sauce cut into small squares.
  • Youngstown, Ohio's "Brier Hill Pizza" features a thick sauce topped with a mixture of Parmesan and Romano cheese and green peppers. Brier Hill is the city's historically Italian area. A similar style to Brier Hill Pizza is also a tradition in nearby communities with strong Italian roots, includingNiles, Ohio and Warren, Ohio (the Sunrise Inn in Warren is particularly famous for its "old world-style pizza," also known by some simply as "bar pizza" due to it being served from behind the bar in the restaurant. This pizza also includes red sauce, green peppers, and grated romano cheese).
  • Rhode Island's strip pizza, commonly sold in bakeries, consists of thick, chewy dough and is topped with a very thick tomato sauce. It has a minimal amount of cheese and is served cold. It is usually (but not always) wrapped in individual strips (hence the name). This style also is sometimes called "bakery pizza." A similar product is made in bakeries in Italy.
  • Old Forge, Pennsylvania near Scranton is the self-styled "Pizza Capital of the World" because of its abundance of Italian restaurants specializing in pizza. The crust is thick, crisp, and airy. Depending on the maker, the dough may impart a flavor of beer, which is rumored to be an ingredient in some recipes. A special blend of cheeses besides traditional mozzarella is used, resulting in a less greasy texture and a smoother, sweeter taste. Old Forge Pizza is almost universally rectangular; only a rare few makers offer round pizza. Finally, whereas most other localities refer to it as "a pie" or simply "a pizza", it is ordered throughout northeastern Pennsylvania by the "tray" because of the simple plastic, school cafeteria-style trays on which restaurants serve it.
  • In Southern California, ranch dressing is a very popular condiment on pizza. Many pizzarias carry ranch dressing as a standard condiment for all customers readily available upon request.
  • In Memphis, Tennessee, barbeque pizza is quite popular due to the city's love of BBQ. It usually consists of either BBQ'd pork, chicken, or beef topped with cheddar cheese and barbeque sauce replaces the standard tomato sauce.
  • On the Mississippi Gulf Coast and New Orleans, many people top their pizza with French or Catalina dressing, a practice that began at Hugo's Italian Restaurant, now defunct, in Biloxi.

Health Concerns

Depending on what type of Pizza one eats, Pizza can be either very nutritious or very un-healthy. Those who consume too much cheese for example are at a greater risk of developing cardiovascular disease and are prone to heart attacks.

Records

  • The largest pizza ever made was at the Norwood Pick 'n Pay Hypermarket in Johannesburg, South Africa. According to the Guinness Book of Records the pizza was 37.4 m in diameter and was made using 500 kg of flour, 800 kg of cheese and 900 kg of tomato puree. This feat was accomplished on December 8th 1990.
  • On 22 March 2001, Bernard Jordaan of Butler's Pizza, Cape Town, South Africa, delivered a pizza 11042 km (6861 miles) from Cape Town to Sydney, Australia, to set the world record for the longest pizza delivery. This record was acknowledged in the Guinness Book of Records.
  • In Feltham, London, a new record for the farthest food delivery was achieved by Lucy Clough of Domino's. A vegetarian supreme pizza was cooked on November 17, 2004 and travelled a distance of 10,532 miles to its delivery point at 30 'Ramsey Street', Melbourne, on November 19, 2004. The record will appear in the 2006 version of the book of Guinness World Records.

See also

  • Pizza farm
  • History of pizza

Notes and references

  1. ^ Oxford English Dictionary Online
  2. ^ Dizionario Etimologico, RusconiLibri, Prima Edizione, 2003, Italian language.
  3. ^ http://europa.eu.int/comm/agriculture/qual/it/147_it.htm
  4. ^ Bill for traditional Italian pizza
  5. ^ Permissible ingredients and methods of processing
  6. ^ Più vicina la tutela europea per la pizza, from an Italian government website
  7. ^ Italy mulls pizza protection law, a May 24, 2004 BBC News article
  8. ^ http://fornobravo.com/brick_oven_cooking/brick_oven_recipes/flatbread/cecina.html
  9. ^ cookpad.com (in Japanese), retrieved April 6, 2006
  10. ^ e-recipe.org (in Japanese), retrieved April 6, 2006
  11. ^ http://www.chachich.com/mdchachi/jpizza.html

External links

Find more information on Pizza by searching Wikipedia's sister projects:

Dictionary definitions from Wiktionary
Textbooks from Wikibooks
Quotations from Wikiquote
Source texts from Wikisource
Images and media from Commons
News stories from Wikinews

Wikibooks Cookbook has a recipe for
Pizza
  • [1] — PizzaMaking.com
  • What's Cooking America — History & Legends of Pizza (Linda Stradley)
  • Encyclopizza — Recipes & Guide to Preparing Great Pizza (John Correll)
Search Term: "Pizza"
pizza news and pizza articles

Here's our top rated pizza links for the day:

Hockey-Masked Man Robs Pizza Delivery Driver 

KPRC Click2Houston.com via Yahoo! News - Nov 16 9:08 AM
A man wearing a hockey mask robbed a pizza delivery driver on Wednesday, officials told KPRC Local 2.

Yum Names Taco Bell, Pizza Hut Chiefs 
AP via Yahoo! Finance - Nov 16 8:41 AM
Fast-food company Yum Brands Inc. on Thursday named new presidents of its Taco Bell and Pizza Hut businesses among other executive appointments meant to increase U.S. sales and profit growth.

OP Pizza Hut franchisee reports loss in third quarter 
Kansas City Star - Nov 16 2:26 PM
NPC International Inc., the largest Pizza Hut franchisee, today cited continued soft sales as it reported a net loss in its third quarter.

Thank you for viewing the pizza page pizza. 

piza
pizz
pozza
izza
pizaa
bizza
pizaz
puzza
pazza
pizzza
pizzaa
pizzs

 

Ever wondered what others are searching for in relation to pizza? Now you can see.  Below is a listing of  what everyone else is searching for in regard to pizza.

1. pizza
2. pizza hut
3. dominos pizza
4. pizza coupons
5. dominoes pizza
6. papa johns pizza
7. domino's pizza
8. sausage pizza
9. california pizza kitchen
10. papa john's pizza
11. round table pizza
12. pizza recipes
13. fruit pizza
14. mammas pizza
15. pizza dough
16. pizza hut coupons
17. pizza dough recipe
18. boston pizza
19. pizza sauce recipe
20. domino's pizza coupon
21. pepperoni pizza
22. history of pizza
23. papa joes pizza
24. domino pizza
25. pizza restaurant
26. godfathers pizza
27. pizza dough recipes
28. fruit pizza recipe
29. fat pizza
30. pizza ovens
31. sanpeggio's pizza
32. primo pizza
33. little caesars pizza
34. pizza clip art
35. pizza pie
36. pizza recipe
37. arnolds pizza shop
38. pizza pizza
39. cheese pizza
40. dominos pizza coupons online
41. pizza oven
42. pizza pos systems
43. pizza man
44. pizza day
45. pizza delivery
46. rossi's pizza and sports bar
47. pizza sauce
48. papa johns pizza coupon
49. dominos pizza coupons
50. papa john pizza
51. godfather's pizza
52. chicago pizza
53. pizza hut coupon
54. preston pizza
55. peter piper pizza
56. pizza crust recipe
57. samurai pizza cats
58. pappa johns pizza
59. big johnny's pizza house
60. austin's pizza
61. free pizza coupons
62. marino's pizza and fish and chips
63. pizza stone
64. order pizza online
65. pizza toppings
66. italian pizza
67. pizza menu
68. big pizza
69. papa murphy's pizza
70. sunrise pizza and steak house
71. devinci's pizza
72. jo-jo's pizza and subs
73. homemade pizza
74. donatos pizza
75. pizza crust
76. pizzas
77. vocelli pizza
78. joes pizza
79. pizza hut specials coupons
80. pizza inn
81. who invented pizza
82. star pizza
83. fusion pizza
84. pizza frenzy
85. anzi pizza and pasta
86. pizza pan
87. olympia pizza
88. bilotti pizza garden
89. pizza king
90. pizza fundraiser
91. marcos pizza
92. pizza and subs
93. calories in pizza
94. pizza facts
95. roundtable pizza
96. types of pizza
97. pizza slice
98. breakfast pizza
99. new york pizza
100. pizza hut uk
101. pizza fundraisers
102. little ceasers pizza
103. grilled pizza
104. panago pizza
105. pizza fundraising
106. pizza hut canada
107. recipe for pizza with truffle oil
108. shakey's pizza
109. cicis pizza
110. dominos pizza fundraiser
111. jets pizza
112. make pizza
113. pizza factory
114. pizza fund raisers
115. pizza software
116. idaho pizza company
117. first pizza made in
118. incredible pizza
119. pizza franchise
120. pizza hut online coupons
121. pizza origin
122. recipe for pepperoni pizza
123. big suasage pizza
124. dominos pizza cards
125. make pizza fundraiser
126. pizza 73
127. pizza takeout
128. domino pizza specials
129. pizza clipart
130. pizza hut dough
131. pizza history
132. 100 free tokens with a large pizza
133. westshore pizza
134. big sasuage pizza
135. cottage inn pizza
136. low carb pizza
137. pizza and sports bar
138. round table pizza coupon
139. brick oven pizza
140. frozen pizza dough
141. dessert pizza
142. easy pizza dough recipe
143. papa murphys pizza
144. best pizza sauce recipe
145. picture of pizza
146. pizza peel
147. arnold's pizza shop
148. pizza box
149. first pizza in america
150. white pizza recipe
151. recipe for fruit pizza
152. big sauage pizza
153. italian pizza history
154. pizza pictures
155. pizza restaurants
156. toppers pizza
157. papa johns pizza coupons
158. pictures of pizza
159. mystic pizza
160. amato pizza
161. cold pizza
162. perfect pizza
163. blackjack pizza
164. boston pizza canada
165. pizza dare
166. shakeys pizza
167. california pizza
168. eureka pizza
169. fruit pizza recipes
170. history of pizza hut
171. system of a down pizza pie
172. chocolate pizza
173. ci ci's pizza
174. donato's pizza
175. white pizza sauce
176. barros pizza
177. east of chicago pizza
178. imos pizza
179. ledo's pizza
180. nypd pizza
181. outdoor pizza ovens
182. pizza and pasta
183. pizza and steak house
184. pizza huts dough recipe
185. pizza ingredients
186. vegetable pizza
187. bbqu pizza
188. panago pizza menu
189. pizza pans
190. thin pizza crust recipe
191. uno pizza
192. dominos pizza uk
193. foxs pizza den
194. pizza garden
195. best pizza dough recipe
196. dominos pizza local delivery
197. papa johns pizza specials coupons
198. cartoon pizza
199. list of pizza toppings
200. papa murphy pizza
201. pizza express
202. pizza guy
203. quick pizza dough recipe
204. reheat pizza
205. wood fired pizza ovens
206. cheese pizza recipe
207. chuckie cheese pizza
208. make pizza dough
209. pagliacci pizza
210. pizza franchises
211. take and bake pizza
212. uno's pizza
213. dessert pizza recipe
214. fox's pizza
215. how to make pizza
216. white pizza
217. whole wheat pizza dough
218. whole wheat pizza dough recipe
219. digiorno pizza
220. dominos pizza specials
221. jet's pizza
222. pizza hut specials
223. five star pizza
224. ingredients to make pizza
225. italian pizza recipe
226. marco's pizza
227. outdoor pizza oven
228. popular pizza toppings
229. traditional italian pizza
230. anthony's pizza
231. best pizza recipe
232. dutch oven pizza
233. how to build a pizza oven
234. lisa pizza
235. pappa john's pizza
236. pizza calories
237. pizza company
238. where did pizza come from
239. where did pizza originate
240. dominoes pizza menu
241. easy pizza sauce recipe
242. little caesar's pizza
243. mr jims pizza
244. papa johns pizza menu
245. pizza and fish and chips
246. pizza concession trailers
247. pizza delivery online order
248. pizza hut recipe
249. showbiz pizza
250. wood fired pizza oven
251. barbeque chicken pizza
252. brothers pizza
253. different types of pizza
254. dominos pizza menu
255. dutch oven pizza recipe
256. i love new york pizza
257. i want build a wood fired pizza oven
258. pagliai's pizza
259. pizza angel
260. pizza delight
261. pizza originated
262. pizza photos
263. recipe for pepperoni sausage homemade pizza
264. austin park and pizza
265. big green egg pizza stone
266. damiano mr. pizza
267. domino's pizza coupons
268. eatza pizza
269. first pizza invented
270. foxs pizza
271. free dominos pizza coupons
272. grilled pizza recipe
273. ledo pizza
274. margarita pizza
275. pizza business
276. pizza hut toppings
277. pizza joes
278. print dominos pizza coupon
279. z pizza
280. barbecue chicken pizza recipe
281. beggars pizza
282. brick pizza oven
283. copycat pizza recipe
284. four star pizza
285. gluten free pizza crust recipe
286. italian pizza pie
287. johnny's pizza house
288. pizza song
289. pizza stones
290. pizza timeline
291. recipes for easy homemade pizza
292. the pizza parable
293. tombstone pizza
294. white pizza sauce recipe
295. whole wheat pizza crust recipe
296. bordenaro's pizza and pasta
297. domino's pizza deal coupon
298. instructions on how to make a pizza
299. list all toppings for pizza
300. lou malnati's pizza recipe
301. pizza bolis menu
302. pizza burgers
303. pizza cartoons
304. pizza hut restaurant
305. pizza nova
306. pizza quiche recipe
307. pizza ranch
308. pizza uno
309. venezia pizza
310. buy pizza crust mixes online
311. dominos pizza coupon
312. first pizza made in italy
313. frozen pizza
314. history of pizza in the us
315. indianapolis pizza
316. invention of pizza
317. origin of the pizza
318. pizza and secret and recipe
319. pizza bolis
320. pizza boxes
321. pizza equipment
322. pizza nutritional facts
323. pizza tycoon
324. recipe for whole wheat pizza dough
325. topping pizzas recipe
326. who created pizza
327. aquabats pizza day
328. arnies pizza shop
329. arnold pizza shop
330. avon ohio pizza
331. best pizza crust recipe
332. did pizza originate in china
333. dominios pizza
334. dominoes pizza coupons
335. favorite pizza toppings
336. little cesars pizza
337. mamas pizza
338. pizza hut franchise
339. red brick pizza
340. taylor street pizza
341. zucchini pizza
342. apple pizza
343. arnie's pizza shop
344. breakfast pizza recipe
345. carbs in pizza
346. dominoe's pizza
347. donatos pizza menu
348. dutch oven pizza recipes
349. fox's pizza den
350. home pizza ovens
351. original italian pizza
352. pie in the sky pizza
353. pizza base dough recipe
354. pizza on the grill
355. pizza outlet
356. pizza paddles
357. pizza party
358. pizza picture
359. pizza pie system of a down
360. pizza shops
361. tony's pizza
362. tropicana pizza
363. vegetable pizza recipe
364. was pizza invented in italy
365. canning pizza sauce
366. carbones pizza
367. commercial pizza ovens
368. coupons for papa johns pizza
369. devon pizza menu
370. double daves pizza
371. facts about pizza
372. giordano's pizza
373. healthy pizza recipe
374. imo's pizza
375. invented the first pizza
376. mazzios pizza
377. mellow mushroom pizza
378. mexican pizza
379. online pizza coupons
380. pizza franchise for sale
381. pizza hutt
382. pizza sausage
383. planet pizza
384. roma pizza
385. sicily pizza
386. upper crust pizza
387. abos pizza menu
388. barnaby's pizza
389. broadway pizza
390. cookie pizza
391. giordanos pizza
392. heights pizza darien
393. how to make pizza dough
394. idaho id pizza twin falls id pizza
395. jet city pizza
396. mazzio's pizza
397. mobile pizza ovens
398. monicals pizza
399. pats pizza
400. pizza and business plan and free sample
401. pizza machine
402. rosatis pizza
403. round table pizza coupons
404. sals pizza
405. slice of pizza
406. snappy tomato pizza
407. unos pizza
408. arnold pizza
409. breakfast pizza recipes
410. chocolate chip pizza
411. domino pizza coupons
412. eating pizza
413. homemade pizza dough
414. nicks pizza roast beef subs
415. online menu california pizza kitchen
416. pizza casserole recipe
417. pizza consumption
418. pizza in stillwater mn minnesota
419. pizza inn menu
420. pizza king menu
421. pizza plus
422. pizza restaurant jersey city new jersey
423. pizza roma menu
424. pizza time menu
425. rosati's pizza