Moderators: Jenise, Robin Garr, David M. Bueker
Carrie L.
Golfball Gourmet
2476
Thu Oct 12, 2006 8:12 am
Extreme Southwest & Extreme Northeast
Carrie L.
Golfball Gourmet
2476
Thu Oct 12, 2006 8:12 am
Extreme Southwest & Extreme Northeast
John Tomasso wrote:Olives? On a pizza?.
Jenise
FLDG Dishwasher
43588
Tue Mar 21, 2006 2:45 pm
The Pacific Northest Westest
Rahsaan wrote:if you are having problems finding salad on pizza, you should come down South because it's quite common in the Bay Area. Pizza with nettles is one of the staples at the Chez Panisse cafe. (It's also a staple Chez Rahsaan, when nettles are in season)..
Jenise wrote:I would have no idea how to deal with them--are these the same nettles that sting? What part do you use?
Jenise
FLDG Dishwasher
43588
Tue Mar 21, 2006 2:45 pm
The Pacific Northest Westest
Rahsaan wrote:Jenise wrote:I would have no idea how to deal with them--are these the same nettles that sting? What part do you use?
Yes, they do sting. And I've heard of that nettles soup as a traditional East European dish although I've never had it and can't quite imagine what it is like?
What I like about nettles is their deep woodsey green flavors, which seem to come out best when only briefly warmed, so they lose the prickle yet don't lose the sublety. So in that sense pizza is a great dish for them for me.
The stems seem to have more of the prickles than the leaves, so I usually just pluck off the leaves, wash and cook. In our local farmer's market there are several people who bring nettles, and some are less prickly/easier to handle than others.
John Tomasso wrote:I can't come up with a "best" pizza but there have been many, many memorable ones.
Rahsaan wrote:John Tomasso wrote:Olives? On a pizza?.
Sounds traditional to me, at least in the Italian sense.
Maria Samms
Picky Eater Pleaser
1272
Thu Dec 28, 2006 8:42 pm
Morristown, NJ
Jenise
FLDG Dishwasher
43588
Tue Mar 21, 2006 2:45 pm
The Pacific Northest Westest
Jenise - The local pizzeria my parents frequent has an arugula topped pizza. I think it's ok, but I don't think that their actual pizza is very good...too much cheese, gets soggy with the arugula and vinegarette, etc.
When I lived in Chicago, I really enjoyed the pan/stuffed crust pizza. The best I ever had was hands down from "Chicago Pizza". And I ate at all the "great" Chicago pizza places...waited for 2 hrs to have a pizza at Gino's East, and still think that Chicago Pizza beat them all.
John Tomasso wrote:If it was even nodding in the direction of Italian tradition, there would be a few chopped olives of good quality strewn around the pizza.
Come to California, order a pizza, with olives, and see if that's what you get.
Jenise
FLDG Dishwasher
43588
Tue Mar 21, 2006 2:45 pm
The Pacific Northest Westest
Ray Juskiewicz wrote:Jenise, I love to make pizza, and one of my favorite combinations is arugula and prosciutto. They go together like salt and pepper. I have found by trial and error that it is best if I add the prosciutto about half way through cooking, and the arugula after it comes out of the oven. I always let pizza sit for about 3 minutes or so before slicing, and that is the perfect amount of time for the arugula to wilt. No dressing for me.
I feel a pizza night coming on.
By the way, Jenise, I got an invite to a winemaker/chef dinner at the Willows Inn on Lummi Island. What's it like?
John Tomasso wrote:Rashaan, sometimes I wonder if your questions are genuine, or if you're trolling.
But I don't know you, so I'll assume the former.
I am talking about cheap, crappy quality olives, usually from Spain, but they could be from elsewhere, that are processed and chopped into very small bits, so that they really don't look anything like an olive(known as pizza olives in the trade) and packed into cans...The pizza appeared to be crawling with small black insects.
You, fortunately, came to live in California much later than I, when pizza sensibilities had been elevated a few notches. Consider yourself lucky.
Keith M
Beer Explorer
1184
Sat Jan 06, 2007 2:25 am
Finger Lakes, New York
Rahsaan wrote:John Tomasso wrote:If it was even nodding in the direction of Italian tradition, there would be a few chopped olives of good quality strewn around the pizza.
Come to California, order a pizza, with olives, and see if that's what you get.
I live in California, and when I get pizza with olives (whether at home or in restaurants) there are always a few chopped olives of good quality strewn around the pizza.
How else would you incorporate olives on pizza?
Jenise wrote:Which winemaker/chef? Are you considering going?
John Tomasso wrote:Rashaan, sometimes I wonder if your questions are genuine, or if you're trolling. But I don't know you, so I'll assume the former.
... The pizza appeared to be crawling with small black insects. You, fortunately, came to live in California much later than I, when pizza sensibilities had been elevated a few notches. Consider yourself lucky.
Keith M wrote:I actually developed my initial taste for olives (which I had disliked previously) when I lived for a time in Buenos Aires...So I had a lot of pizzas with whole olives (pits and all) plopped on top of a cheese pizza..
Max Hauser wrote:I testify (having dined with him and others here -- and traded wit, which is more important -- Rahsaan is a gentleman and a scholar, a sportsman at repartee, and one of the more flavor-conscious people I've met.
Frank Deis wrote:I have always been impressed by Rahsaan..never a troll.
Users browsing this forum: ByteSpider, ClaudeBot and 0 guests