Tuesday
February
8
2005
12:52 AM
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PizzaGanza™ 2005, Seattle Edition, tasted on February 6, 2005
— It's becoming a bi-annual tradition that we try to find the best
pizza a city has to offer on
Debbie's birthday. Two
years ago we traveled to New York City to do it right.
We toured the city in a limo going from pizza place to pizza place
and judging slices in 5 categories: Crust, Sauce, Cheese, Ingredient
Balance, and Foldability. Needless to say there was a ruckus over
the ill-conceived foldability category with people arguing over its
meaning and its relevance as well as
some people trying to
game the system by using those points to advantage their favored
pizza place independent of the foldability of their slices. Having
one stupid category that requires us to calculate the results with
and without it is now a tradition in its own right. This year it was
"holdability" which seems a little more well-defined but probably of
as little relevance. One other important tradition that's happened
two out of the last three years was also upheld this year - the
Patriots won the Superbowl...
again!!! OK. Enough
gloating. Back to pizza.
We didn't have a limo this year as I
wasn't planning on leaving the house and missing the game. So
instead we hired taxis to bring us our pizzas as most of the places
didn't deliver. This felt decadent but actually worked quite well.
The one pizza I brought (before the game started) I placed gently on
the heated passenger seat of my car to keep it warm. None of the
pizza's were eaten immediately out of the oven, but none of them
waited for more than 30 minutes so that felt fair. The basic rules
were the same as last time. Cheese pizzas only. Everyone votes in
five categories. Debbie's votes count twice as she has some weird
intimate relationship with pizza that none of us understand or want
to get in the middle of. This time we did make one improvement; of
the 12 sets of votes cast, 10 were cast blind. Only
Alex and I knew the
origin of each pizza as we had to distribute to everyone, but nobody
else knew what they were eating. It made Allie crazy to not know,
but we held our ground. (BTW, Debbie was able to correctly identify
many of the pizzas blind. This amazed me. Allie came pretty close as
well.)
Before we get to the results, lets be
clear - there's still no world class pizza in Seattle. We're picking
from the best of the bunch here and our expectations have been
conditioned to be low after living for years in Seattle with its
poor pizza population. We picked the list of pizza places based on
what we thought were representative of the best in town. A couple of
traditionally popular places (like
Pudge Brothers) we dismissed as we'd been there and were not
impressed. Also
Tutta Bella and
Post Alley Pizza were closed on Sunday. Not sure how a pizza
place is closed on Superbowl Sunday but what the hell do I know.
The pizza came in two waves, first in the
1st quarter, and then in the stressful 3rd quarter which was
followed by
what was about to be a 10 point Patriot scoring run. First, the
losers (not Philadelphia).
Stellar Pizza & Ale was recommended by Michael and I had high
hopes for this place. Their pizza smelled and looked great, but when
we ate it, the sauce was too strong in terms of the herb flavor, and
just our of balance with everything else. I'd be inclined to try
them again just to see if this was an anomaly.
Piecora's was greasy and not good. I always walk by
Belltown Pizza on my way to Lampreia and the pizza always smells
really good. Unfortunately, this pie didn't live up to its aroma and
it had some weird black dust (charcoal?). While Tutta Bella was
closed, the other hyper-authentic Neapolitan pizza place in town was
open -
Via Tribunali. Unlike Debbie I actually prefer a more authentic
pizza, but this thing was kind of soggy and not great. To be fair to
them, they don't offer delivery. But then again, we did eat the
pizza 20 minutes after it left their establishment. Here are the
results:
Get
all the data from
PizzaGanza.
As you can see,
A New York Pizza Place (recommended by a friend of Allie's) and
local chain
Pagliacci took the day. Since the holdability category was under
such debate, the only fair thing to do is to count the scores
without it - which leave these two pizzerias in a tie. The bottom
line for me is this: Seattle is still not a town with fantastic
pizza in my opinion. Pagliacci is a very decent local pizza. But for
me, if I'm looking for something that tastes like I bought it at a
pretty good pizzeria in New York, I'm going to A New York Pizza
Place. Nothing comes closer.
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