Pages

Friday, July 29, 2011

Artichoke Basille's Pizza: A Downhill Battle

There are a couple of things you should know about my love/hate relationship with Artichoke Basille's Pizza (simply known as Artichoke to most New Yorkers). First off, I've eaten pizza from Artichoke more often than anywhere else in the city since it opened its original location at 328 East 14th Street in early 2008. Secondly, when people ask me where they can find the best pizza in Mahattan, I always mention Artichoke amongsy my favorite places.


That being said, the pies served at Artichoke are often inconsistent. When they're on, their pizza is great. But when something is off, the results can be disastrous. In addition -- when Artichoke first opened, it was at the forefront of the pizza boom in New York City. Now that there are so many other high quality pizza places to choose from, Artichoke is nothing special. The first summer it was open, hour long lines formed down 14th Street. Now it's rare to find more than a dozen people in line.

The story of Artichoke can be told as such. A take-out only store front opened up in 2008 on 14th Street. Blogs raved. Diners flocked. Prices went up. Two more locations opened. The first, at 111 MacDougal Street, generates traffic from tipsy NYU students. I wish I had an Artichoke two blocks from my dorm when I was in college. The second, at 114 10th Avenue, attracts clientele from the meatpacking district. It's no coincidence that Artichoke has been opening up in spots where there is heavy nightlife traffic. Their pizza tastes best when you're drunk.

Although I'm writing this article after hosting a Pizza Club at their 10th Avenue location, my thoughts about the food are based on years of grabbing slices from their 14th Street storefront. The 10th Avenue shop is the only location that has seating, and on an early Sunday evening in April we watched the space converted from a child's birthday party into a trendy pizza joint in a matter of minutes. There's room for about 60 people in the restaurant, which also features a bar, and it was full by the time we left around 8PM. The pizzas are made in the back of the restaurant.



One thing that has always disappointed me about Artichoke's 14th Street location is that the pies are never fresh. They're always pre-made and slices are shoved back into the oven to be reheated. There is no need for this at a place with so much foot traffic. The part of the pizza that always baffles me the most at Artichoke is the crust. Sometimes you'll get a crunchy, crispy completely burnt crust. While other times you'll get a more chewy, foldable crust. To this day I'm not sure what the standard is.


At Pizza Club, we ordered four different pies: a Margherita ($26), an Artichoke ($28), a Meatball Parm ($27) and a White ($26). It's worth noting that there are eight pies on the menu (the others are a Sicilian Pie, a Crab Pie, a Burnt Anchovy Pie, and a Staten Island Pie featuring meatballs and ricotta cheese). The Artichoke storefront on 14th Street only serves four pies: Marghterita, Artichoke, Crab, and Sicilian.

Margherita
(olive oil, plum tomato, fresh basil, an a blend of cheeses)


Artichoke 
(artichoke hearts, spinach, cream sauce, mozzarella, pecorino romano)


Meatball Parm Pie
(homemade meatballs, cooked tomato sauce, and mozzarella cheese)


White Pie
(ricotta, mozzarella, pecorino romano cheeses)

 

The Margherita pizza has always been my favorite at Artichoke. It's like nothing I've ever tasted before. Although I mentioned that it can be inconsistent, the ingredients are always solid. It's thick. It's filling. And you might feel like your arteries are clogging up. But boy is it delicious. They're always generous with their basil which is great. And the mysterious blend of cheeses they use, gives the pie some nice flavor. When I send people to Artichoke, I send them there for this pie.

After that it's downhill. The Artichoke pie, which is their signature pie, is too heavy. It tastes like someone poured a bowl of spinach artichoke dip on top of a thick piece of bread. If someone you're with orders it, take a bite. Or even two. But a full slice is almost too much. It's innovative and you won't taste anything like it elsewhere in the city. But it's hard to imagine that too many people consistently go to Artichoke and order this slice. It's the kind of thing I'd eat once a year.


The Meatball Parm Pie is exclusive to Aritchoke's 10th Avenue location. It's surprisingly solid. It tastes like the Margherita pie, which I love, with high quality meatballs on it instead of basil. I'm usually not a huge fan of pizza with meatballs, but the consensus at our table was that this would be worth ordering again.

The same cannot be said for their White Pie. It was horrifically bad. The ricotta was not flavorful -- and as the main ingredient on this pie -- made it difficult to eat. The mozzarella used at Artichoke is so tasty and fresh that I'd love to see a pie more prominently highlighting it -- instead of ricotta.


It will be interesting to see what happens to the Artichoke brand in the coming years. You can be certain they'll be expanding beyond their three Manhattan locations. Artichoke would work in other cities as well. In fact, I could see it being a nice alternative to Domino's and Pizza Hut in small towns across the country. It's upsetting, that after three years in business, that the place isn't a little more consistent.

When Artichoke first opened on 14th Street they had three pies. It's clear there was a need to expand the 10th Avenue menu since they're now operating a full-fledged restaurant, but the additional offerings don't really live up to pizza I fell in love with back in 2008. But head over to Artichoke and go see for yourself. Hopefully, you'll catch them on a day when their pies are right on the money.

Friday, July 22, 2011

Pequod's Pizza: Authentic Deep Dish Pies In Chicago

Earlier this year, when I was speaking with a friend from Chicago about deep dish pizza there, she raved about a place called Pequod's (2207 North Clybourn Avenue). When I had visited Chicago last summer, I ate excellent pizza at Great Lake, Spacca Napoli, and Lou Malnati's -- but the latter was the only deep dish place I made it to. I thought it was excellent as far as deep dish pies go.

I recently made it back to Chicago (I was passing through on my way to The American Pizza Championship in Milwaukee) and the first and only place on my list of pizza places to try was Pequod's.




I'd been told that while places like Lou Malnati's and Giordano's cater to tourists, Pequod's is where locals go to get their deep dish fill. It makes sense. There are more than 30 locations of Lou Malnati's and 55 Giordano's; they feel like chain restaurants when you walk inside. Pequod's, with only two locations in Lincoln Park and Morton Grove, feels more like a bar around the corner that happens to serve great pizza. And they were completely full at 2PM on a Saturday afternoon.

The pizza at Pequod's is... well... filling. So filling that you almost feel disgusted by every bite you take. But isn't that what deep dish pizza is suppose to do to you? My friend and I ordered one medium pan pizza, half with mushrooms and onions ($15.95). It would have been enough for a least one other person. There was so much cheese on the pie, it was difficult to distinguish between slices. It felt as if I was digging a spatula into the pan and grabbing whatever part of the pie came up.



It definitely didn't hold together as well as the pies at Lou Malnati's. But can you really judge a deep dish pie on that? In fact, I find it hard to judge deep dish pies in general. I stuffed my face with cheese and sauce and dough. It was delicious. But I felt bloated after. Would I rank it among some of the best deep dish pizza I've had? Sure. Do I understand why people eat deep dish pizza in the first place? Not quite. I'd send folks to Great Lake and Spacca Napoli before I'd recommend they take their chances on some deep dish pizza. But if that's what you're looking for, Pequod's is where it's at.

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

The Best Pizza In The Greater (Greater) Boston Area

A few months back, Boston.com published an article featuring the best pizza places in the Greater Boston (which includes New Haven, by the way). Although nothing about this list stands out, I rarely dedicate much space on this site to pizza places north of New York City.

I've heard bad things about pizza within the Boston city limits which is why Bostonians might find this list helpful. It's essentially a list of destinations outside of Boston that it's possible to visit to find good pizza.

See: 10 pies worth every mile

photo via boston.com

Friday, July 15, 2011

New Neapolitan Spot In Williamsburg Featured On Groupon

Although pizza places are featured on Groupon and similar daily deal sites quite frequently, I am surprised that Forcella, a brand new Neapolitan spot in Williamsburg was so quick to jump on the bandwagon. I haven't been yet, but I've heard really good things.

It's tough to resist this deal: $10 for $30 worth of pizza. And until they get their liquor license... it's BYOB.

Click here to check out the deal.


Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Huff Post Writer Claims World's Best Pizza Is In... LA?

Jay Weston -- an actor turned food writer -- recently wrote a Huffington Post article about Los Angeles pizza place Stella Rossa Pizza. The spot opened in April to favorable reviews (as indicated by some Google searches), but generally great pizza in Los Angeles is the equivalent of average pizza elsewhere. So I was surprised when Weston crowned Stella Rossa not just the best pizza in Los Angeles... but the best pizza in the world! He writes the following:

Were these the best pizzas I have ever eaten? Yes, they were. I have had pizzas all over the world, including its birthplace in Naples, and none has ever matched these pies for thin crispness, freshness of ingredients, delicious blackened crust... all in all a flavorful wonder. As I said, it's all a matter of taste and timing. Tonight, in a little place in Santa Monica, I finally had an epiphany. It is possible to be the best at something!

Wow. Although I can't critique the review without having actually tried the pizza, you rarely see a food writer this excited about an establishment. Of the thousands of pizza places I've been to, I might write about Di Fara with such praise. But that's a historic pizzeria where patrons wait hours for a taste of an iconic food made by a legendary pizzaiolo. Stella Rossa pizza is bar that opened three months ago.

I will be in Los Angeles later this month and might just have to swing by Stella Rossa to see if it is, in fact, the best pizza in the world.

photo via huffingtonpost.com

Friday, July 8, 2011

Giuseppe Pizza: Superb Slices In Tel Aviv's Florentine Neighborhood

Over the past few weeks, I've written about my recent experiences at two pizza places in Israel: Green Door Pizza Bakery in Jerusalem's Muslim Quarter (at which an elderly man makes pies from a hole in the ground) and Gusto in Tel Aviv (an upscale pizzeria which serves an array of creative thin crust pies). The two places couldn't have been more different from one another. My third and final pizza stop in Israel was somewhere in between the two places -- a hole in the wall slice joint in the up and coming Florentine neighborhood of Tel Aviv. Although not quite as hidden as Green Door Pizza Bakery, the spot has no signage outside. Yet everyone in the neighborhood seems to know about it.

Giuseppe Pizza (3 Vital) isn't the type of place that I would have stumbled upon on my own. But a friend had been raving about the place since my previous trip to Israel in January 2010. So after more than year of hearing about it, I was excited for him to take me there. It was packed with locals around midnight on a Tuesday evening. Many people were grabbing pies to go, as the place only has about a dozen stools. We were able to grab two spots overlooking the oven and pizza making station. Next to the oven there was a soccer game playing on a flat screen TV, which seemed out of place in the no frills joint.







The pizza place serves a variety of slices and you can also order a full pie, as we did. During the hour we spent there, I don't recall any ordering a Margherita pie or slices. The shop is apparently known for some of it's more creative concoctions. The pie that we ordered contained two halves: one with broccoli and tomato and the other with spinach and a Hungarian like cheese that resembles feta. By the looks of the pies that were coming out, my expectations had been lowered. The toppings appeared to be uninspiring, and to be honest, the pies just didn't look that tasty. The dough was being flatted with a rolling pin and the crust looked like it cooked poorly in the pizzeria's oven.

That being said, I was actually quite impressed with how good the pizza tasted. It didn't change my life, nor was it the best pizza I'd had in Israel... but for pizza that didn't look particularly appetizing, it was quite tasty. Perhaps a little oil had something to do with the extra flavor, and the crust wasn't nearly as tough as I'd anticipated. Considering that most people are probably eating at Giuseppe Pizza after a few drinks (it's surrounded by bars and lounges) it's no wonder that the place was so packed.



Unfortunately, my Hebrew has gone downhill over the years, so I'm having trouble making out the menu details. They do offer more than a dozen types of pizza and a whole pie will run you between $18 and $25 depending on the exchange rate and what you order. I've spent very little time in Tel Aviv's Florentine neighborhood, and the next time I'm in Israel I'd love to check out some of the nightlife there. And when I do, you can be sure I'll be stopping back at Giuseppe Pizza for a late night slice.

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

New York Times: How Not To Make A Pizza

Recently a video appeared on The New York Times dining website in which writer Melissa Clark shows viewers how to make pizza in a video titled Pizza From Scratch. Although I'm sure she has cooking credentials, perhaps this video would have been more appropriately titled: How Not To Make A Pizza.

Everyone has different methods for cooking pizza at home. And a general rule of thumb is that if it works for you... go with it! But there are so many methods she uses which are just wrong. You can watch the video below and decide for yourself what cardinal sins she commits. But a few of the more blatant ones occur at around the 5:00 minute mark when she opts not to use a pizza peel, but rather an overturned baking sheet. As such, she leaves her oven open for at least 20 seconds (probably much longer, as the footage is sliced together), letting all the heat escape. Even the most amateur home pizza makers know that this is a no-no.



Friday, July 1, 2011

Creative Upscale Pies At Tel Aviv's Gusto

During a recent trip to Israel, I had the opportunity to eat pizza at three very different places. Last week, I wrote about my experience at Green Door Pizza Bakery in Jerusalem's Muslim Quarter, at which an elderly man makes pies from a hole in the ground. The spot -- which has no address -- looks like it's been around for hundreds of years.

Although Tel Aviv is just 45 miles north of Jerusalem, the two cities couldn't be more different than one another. Thus, it's not surprising that my experience eating pizza in Tel Aviv did not at all resemble that in Jersualem. I had the opportunity to try two pizza places in Tel Aviv, the first of which was an upscale spot called Gusto (90 Frishman Street). The restaurant overlooks Rabin Square (also known as Kikar Rabin) which is the plaza where former Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin was killed in 1995.

On my last trip to Israel, I'd visited a Tel Aviv pizza place called The Pizza. The Pizza serves Neapolitan style pies while Gusto's pies have a thinner, more cracker-like crust, but the concept at each spot is the same: a sit-down restaurant with outdoor seating in a hip Tel Aviv neighborhood that serves pricey pies with creative and fresh local ingredients.



I was taken to Gusto by a friend who claimed I'd be trying some of the best pizza I'd ever eaten (both at Gusto and a second stop). Although it didn't come close to claiming that title, it was certainly tasty. The creative topping combinations are probably what impressed me most. Although at many pizza places the most simple pie on the menu is listed first, the "classic" pie is at the very bottom of Gusto's menu. In other words, they don't mess around.

The menu starts off with a pie featuring sweet potato cubes, roasted peppers zucchini, eggplants, Jerusalem artichoke, and cauliflower. Don't like that? As you work your way down the menu you'll find pies like the "Tuna and Asparagus" which also comes with peas, olives, and red onions. Or the "Goose and Sweet Potato" pie which also comes with asparagus. We ended up ordering the following three pies:

Antipasti 
Sweet potato cubes, roasted peppers zucchini,
eggplants, Jerusalem artichoke, and cauliflower 
(49 shekels - $13, small; 69 shekels - $18, large)


Jerusalem artichoke and Bavarian Blue Cheese
Artichoke (baked w/ onion and hot pepper) w/ chunks of Bavarian blue cheese 
(54 shekels - $15, small; 76 shekels - $21, large)


Colorodo Chorizo
Slices of chorizo sausage, red onion, asparagus, parmesan and egg yolk 
(52 shekels - $14, small; 74 shekels - $20, large)


The pies are quite filling; our party of four wasn't able to finish all three of them. Although I'm not a huge fan of blue cheese, I think that my favorite pie was the Jerusalem artichoke and Bavarian Blue Cheese. It was an interesting combination and Israel is known for having particularly tasty artichokes. The crust was a bit crunchier than I typically prefer.

Although Gusto will not change you pizza eating life, it is a nice upscale restaurant where you can see and been seen. The best seats are out in front overlooking Rabin Square. Even though I was there in February, it was still warm enough to eat outside. The pies are creative and if you're feeling adventurous, it's hard to go wrong at Gusto.

Related Posts with Thumbnails