Thursday 10 April 2014

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Thursday 27 March 2014



Discounted Pizza In Hackney, London: All Our Pizzas At Knockdown Prices

Name Change Special: Pizza Royale, 240 Graham Road, London, E8 1BP About To Become www.pizzaeastlondon.com 

For More Information And To Order Please Call 020 8985 3778

Friday 14 March 2014

The Story Of Pizza


The Invention of Modern Italian Pizza


Question: What does Christopher Columbus have to do with the modern pizza?
Christopher Columbus
The obvious answer: Columbus came from Genoa, in Italy, which is also home to focaccia, the northern Italian bread that may be a precursor to the modern pizza.
But that's not the answer I'm looking for. The answer is: Tomatoes!
Tomatoes came to Italy from the New World in the post-Columbus 16th Century. Technically speaking, it wasn't Columbus who brought tomatoes to Europe. The first tomatoes to reach European shores came from Peru, which was conquered by Francisco Pizzaro of Spain in 1531.
Honestly though - if I had asked "What does Francisco Pizzaro have to do with modern pizza?" wouldn't you have answered, "Who cares?"
Most Europeans feared that tomatoes were poisonous (they are members of the Nightshade family), but the adventurous (and hungry) poor of Naples found that tomatoes were not only NOT deadly, they were delicious.
And they tasted mighty fine on a hot baked flatbread. With cheese. The first pizza, as-we-know-it.


Pizza popularity grows


For the rest of the 16th and through the 17th Century, pizza grew to be a very popular dish -- first with the local peasants and as time went on, with travelers who had heard of this exotic dish. Travelers would visit the poorer neighborhoods to taste the wares of the men known as "pizzaioli."
Generally regarded as the first Italian pizza restaurant is Antica Pizzeria Port'Alba in Naples (of course). They baked pizzas for vendors as early as 1738, but became a pizzeria in 1830 and are still in operation today.
It wasn't just the poor and the tourists who loved pizza. By the middle of the eighteenth century, pizza in Italy had achieved royal status. Maria Carolina d'Asburgo Lorena, Queen of Naples and wife of King Ferdinando IV, was such a big fan that she had a special oven built at Capodimonte so their chef could prepare and serve pizza.





Queen Margherita di SavoiaBut the modern pizza, the one that was the prototype for both Italian andAmerican pizza was first prepared in 1889. The King and Queen of Italy, Umberto I and Margherita di Savoia, were vacationing in Naples and had heard about the excellent pizzas made by a pizzaiolo (pizza maker) named Raffaele Esposito, of Pizzeria Brandi (which is still open and selling pizza today). As Peter Reinhard tells it in his excellent book, American Pie,
Esposito was invited to prepare the pizza and made, or so it goes, a marinara pizza with anchovies; a bianca, or white pizza, with lard, provolone or creamycaciocavallo cheese, and basil; and a pizza with tomatoes, mozzarella, and basil -- red, white, and green in honor of the Italian flag. The queen flipped for the latter, and when Esposito received a note of thanks from the monarch, he dedicated the pizza to her, calling it pizza Margherita.
The Italian Flag





Pizza makes a move


During the Great Migration to the United States around the beginning of the twentieth century, Pizzaioli from Naples crossed the ocean, hoping along with everyone else that the streets of New York were paved with gold. Upon arrival, they discovered that not only were they not paved with gold, most of the streets weren't paved at all.

White Pizza Lasagne!

Beautiful pizza, the magical powers of your crispy base, garlicky sauce and melting, gooey cheese is incomparable to anything my taste buds have ever encountered. There’s no room for snobbery in our relationship – I don’t expect you to be artisanal, hand-tossed and wood-fired. Whether you were made in Naples or Northampton, I just want you to be you.
Even served cold, right out of the box, the morning after the night before, you’re a dreamboat of flavours and textures. Frozen, you’re always around when I need you most. Folded into a calzone, you sacrifice your own public appearance for my convenience of eating. And for these reasons I love you tenfold.
I just want you to know that it’s not that you’re not good enough in your original form, but that I can’t imagine enjoying a meal without your presence. So I rounded up a list of my favourite pizzafied foods from bloggers around the world. It’s clear to me they respect your beauty so much that they want to be you. And I understand why.
Spotted on: Food Beast