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How heavy should the basil be on one of these? I used to order them many
years ago at a Greek restaurant. I do remember there being a basil flavor but it wasn't overwhelming. I recently bought a couple of vegan pizzas (Amy's brand) from Whole foods. They are the only made up pizzas I have found that use the Daiya cheese. It is made of rice and pea protein. Yes, I can make such a pizza at home but I thought it would be handy to have these in the freezer. They do not have very much cheese on them at all which is the way I would do it if I were to make them. While this cheese does share the stretchy quality of a real cheese when melted, there is something of the flavor that is not quite right and I find if I use too much, I don't like it. In fact in most cases I prefer to just go without cheese than to use this. But for pizza? I want a little cheese. And perhaps because there is no real cheese, that could be why the basil is so overwhelming. But it is overwhelming. In fact it is pretty much the only flavor I can taste on there. Another problem perhaps is that they used little chunks of tomato and because it is a frozen pizza, those tomatoes are not fresh. I found that I had to dip the little slices (the pizza is quite small) in a bowl of tomato sauce to tone down the basil flavor. So... How strong should the basil flavor be on such a pizza? When I had it before, I just remember a nice blend of flavors. This seems to be just basil, basil and more basil. |
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In article >,
"Julie Bove" > wrote: > So... How strong should the basil flavor be on such a pizza? When I had it > before, I just remember a nice blend of flavors. This seems to be just > basil, basil and more basil. Seems like the answer is obvious: as much basil as you like. In restaurants, Pizza Margherita can be just about anything. With meat, no meat, added veggies, multiple cheeses, thin or thick crust, etc. I was introduced to it at a little pizza joint called Vinny's in Ithaca, NY. Closed a long time ago. Vinny had the usual extensive menu of pizza toppings. But he was especially proud of his Margherita. He used a medium-thick rising crust, brushed with olive oil, and topped with tomato sauce, mozzarella, and shreds of basil. That's all - just a few high quality ingredients. But it was wonderful. -- Julian Vrieslander |
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![]() Sqwertz wrote: > > On Wed, 6 Mar 2013 17:01:37 -0800, Julie Bove wrote: > > > I recently bought a couple of vegan pizzas (Amy's brand) from Whole foods. > > They are the only made up pizzas I have found that use the Daiya cheese > > ..... In fact in most cases I prefer to just go without cheese than to > > use this. > > It's a good thing you specifically sought out those pizzas with the > cheese you don't like. Life would be pretty boring for you if there > were no walls to bang your head against. For that, she has you. |
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In article >,
Susan > wrote: > Very unusual sounding for a margherita. But maybe each family has its > own recipe. It's always been thin crust IME. With whole basil leaves > usually all over the top. The thin vs thick crust debate rages on. Some of my friends insist that authentic pizza must have a thin (almost cracker-like) crust, because they prefer it that way, or because that's the way it's done in The Old Country. But for most of my life, living and traveling all over the USA, the vast majority of pizzas that I have encountered were made with a medium-thick rising crust. When done well, this makes a nice combination of chewy and toasty textures, with good flavor. I prefer this style to the cardboard-like stuff that some people cite as "authentic". For the purposes of this discussion let's leave out that soggy Chicago deep-dish stuff which is more like a casserole. I did not encounter thin crusts very often until recent years. It now seems to be popular with chain/franchise operations. Is it more suited or more convenient for mass-production low-skill preparation? Cindy thinks it might also be favored by vendors because of quicker bake times, or by consumers who are following the current low-carb diet fads. -- Julian Vrieslander |
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![]() "Julian Vrieslander" > wrote in message ... > In article >, > "Julie Bove" > wrote: > >> So... How strong should the basil flavor be on such a pizza? When I had >> it >> before, I just remember a nice blend of flavors. This seems to be just >> basil, basil and more basil. > > Seems like the answer is obvious: as much basil as you like. > > In restaurants, Pizza Margherita can be just about anything. With meat, > no meat, added veggies, multiple cheeses, thin or thick crust, etc. > > I was introduced to it at a little pizza joint called Vinny's in Ithaca, > NY. Closed a long time ago. Vinny had the usual extensive menu of > pizza toppings. But he was especially proud of his Margherita. He used > a medium-thick rising crust, brushed with olive oil, and topped with > tomato sauce, mozzarella, and shreds of basil. That's all - just a few > high quality ingredients. But it was wonderful. > Hmmm... I have never seen it with meat. Only fresh tomatoes and basil. Obviously the crust could vary. |
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![]() "Sqwertz" > wrote in message ... > On Wed, 6 Mar 2013 17:01:37 -0800, Julie Bove wrote: > >> I recently bought a couple of vegan pizzas (Amy's brand) from Whole >> foods. >> They are the only made up pizzas I have found that use the Daiya cheese >> ..... In fact in most cases I prefer to just go without cheese than to >> use this. > > It's a good thing you specifically sought out those pizzas with the > cheese you don't like. Life would be pretty boring for you if there > were no walls to bang your head against. It's pretty much the only cheese I can eat. I don't do soy. There are nut cheese out there that I could eat but none are available where I live, not that I know of anyway. And I'm not willing to pay the price for shipping on them. Plus I don't know how they would do on pizza. |
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![]() "Julian Vrieslander" > wrote in message ... > In article >, > Susan > wrote: > >> Very unusual sounding for a margherita. But maybe each family has its >> own recipe. It's always been thin crust IME. With whole basil leaves >> usually all over the top. > > The thin vs thick crust debate rages on. Some of my friends insist that > authentic pizza must have a thin (almost cracker-like) crust, because > they prefer it that way, or because that's the way it's done in The Old > Country. But for most of my life, living and traveling all over the > USA, the vast majority of pizzas that I have encountered were made with > a medium-thick rising crust. When done well, this makes a nice > combination of chewy and toasty textures, with good flavor. I prefer > this style to the cardboard-like stuff that some people cite as > "authentic". > > For the purposes of this discussion let's leave out that soggy Chicago > deep-dish stuff which is more like a casserole. > > I did not encounter thin crusts very often until recent years. It now > seems to be popular with chain/franchise operations. Is it more suited > or more convenient for mass-production low-skill preparation? Cindy > thinks it might also be favored by vendors because of quicker bake > times, or by consumers who are following the current low-carb diet fads. When I liven in NY, the crusts were always pretty thin. Not super thin like you can get at some places, but thin enough to fold it. Granted I probably only ordered or got it from 2-3 places. Not being a huge pizza lover. But once in a while I do want some. |
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Julie Bove wrote:
> So... How strong should the basil flavor be on such a pizza? When I > had it before, I just remember a nice blend of flavors. This seems > to be just basil, basil and more basil. One or two basil leaves for one pizza margherita -- "Un pasto senza vino e' come un giorno senza sole" Anthelme Brillat Savarin |
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Julian Vrieslander wrote:
> In restaurants, Pizza Margherita can be just about anything. With > meat, no meat, added veggies, multiple cheeses, thin or thick crust, > etc. In Italy, margherita means just tomato, mozzarella and a couple of basil leaves (basil not everywhere, though). It's the most basic pizza, more basic than that there's only the marinara: just tomato, garlic and capers, but since it's without mozzarella it's not even a real pizza. Margherita is also the base for the dozens of pizzas on the menu of italian pizzerias, take mushroom for example: tomato sauce, mozzarella and mushrooms. -- "Un pasto senza vino e' come un giorno senza sole" Anthelme Brillat Savarin |
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ViLco wrote:
> take mushroom for example: tomato sauce, mozzarella and mushrooms. BTW, that's the only situation where I like mushrooms with tomato. -- "Un pasto senza vino e' come un giorno senza sole" Anthelme Brillat Savarin |
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John J wrote:
>> In Italy, margherita means just tomato, mozzarella and a couple of >> basil leaves (basil not everywhere, though). It's the most basic >> pizza, more basic than that there's only the marinara: just tomato, >> garlic and capers, but since it's without mozzarella it's not even a >> real pizza. > Then I've always had *******ized pizzae marinarae, with fish and > seafood. Lucky me. That would be "Pizza ai frutti di mare" here -- "Un pasto senza vino e' come un giorno senza sole" Anthelme Brillat Savarin |
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![]() "ViLco" > wrote in message ... > Julie Bove wrote: > >> So... How strong should the basil flavor be on such a pizza? When I >> had it before, I just remember a nice blend of flavors. This seems >> to be just basil, basil and more basil. > > One or two basil leaves for one pizza margherita Aha! That sounds about right. I think they put too much on this frozen one. Thanks! |
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![]() >> In restaurants, Pizza Margherita can be just about anything. With meat, >> no meat, added veggies, multiple cheeses, thin or thick crust, etc. No, it can't. If it has all that stuff, it is NOT Margherita. Sauce, mozzarella cheese, basil. Nothing else. |
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![]() "Ed Pawlowski" > wrote in message ... > > >>> In restaurants, Pizza Margherita can be just about anything. With meat, >>> no meat, added veggies, multiple cheeses, thin or thick crust, etc. > > No, it can't. If it has all that stuff, it is NOT Margherita. Sauce, > mozzarella cheese, basil. Nothing else. That's what I thought. Obviously they took liberties with the one I had because it has faux mozzarella on it but... |
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On 3/7/2013 7:57 AM, John J wrote:
> On Thu, 7 Mar 2013 10:39:48 +0100, "ViLco" > wrote: > >> John J wrote: >> >>>> In Italy, margherita means just tomato, mozzarella and a couple of >>>> basil leaves (basil not everywhere, though). It's the most basic >>>> pizza, more basic than that there's only the marinara: just tomato, >>>> garlic and capers, but since it's without mozzarella it's not even a >>>> real pizza. >> >>> Then I've always had *******ized pizzae marinarae, with fish and >>> seafood. Lucky me. >> >> That would be "Pizza ai frutti di mare" here > > This is from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tomato_sauce: > > "Marinara sauce is an Italian-American term for a simple tomato sauce > with herbs—mostly parsley and basil—but, contrary to what the name > might suggest ('marinara' is Italian for "sailor-style") without > anchovies, fish, or seafood. In Italy, marinara refers either to > sauces made with tomato and garlic (as in pizza marinara) or to > seafood-based sauces or foods; in this case, the name does not imply > that tomato is either included or excluded." > > Who would have known that a classic pizza marinara doesn't contain > anything from the mare. > This is what I have understood about Marinara Sauce. I use a marinara sauce from "Bugialli on Pasta" (Giuliano Bugialli; 1988, New York, Simon and Schuster.) In Italy "Marinara" is simply tomatoes and garlic cooked in oil. Supposedly, fishermen made the sauce when they needed something quick and easy. More likely, their ladies put it together when the hungry guys came home after their normal wasted day but the essence of the thing is that it is quick! I think it tastes best if the cooking is not protracted. Nigella Lawson gives a recipe for not cooking the ingredients at all. I've tried it and I think I will stick to the classical recipe. -- Jim Silverton (Potomac, MD) Extraneous "not" in Reply To. |
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On 2013-03-07, Julian Vrieslander > wrote:
> In restaurants, Pizza Margherita can be just about anything. With meat, > no meat, added veggies, multiple cheeses, thin or thick crust, etc. And that's different from a regular pizza, how? nb |
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On 2013-03-07, Julian Vrieslander > wrote:
> seems to be popular with chain/franchise operations. Less materials, less materials cost overhead. nb |
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On 3/7/2013 9:05 AM, notbob wrote:
> On 2013-03-07, Julian Vrieslander > wrote: > >> seems to be popular with chain/franchise operations. > > Less materials, less materials cost overhead. > > nb > Less skill required by the teenagers who work there. Jill |
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On Thursday, March 7, 2013 3:35:19 AM UTC-5, ViLco wrote:
> In Italy, We don't give a shit. |
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John J wrote:
>>> Then I've always had *******ized pizzae marinarae, with fish and >>> seafood. Lucky me. >> That would be "Pizza ai frutti di mare" here > This is from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tomato_sauce: > > "Marinara sauce is an Italian-American term for a simple tomato sauce > with herbs-mostly parsley and basil-but, contrary to what the name There are both marinara *sauce* and *pizza* alla marinara, and we're talking about pizza now -- "Un pasto senza vino e' come un giorno senza sole" Anthelme Brillat Savarin |
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On Wed, 06 Mar 2013 20:52:11 -0800, Julian Vrieslander
> wrote: >In article >, > Susan > wrote: > >> Very unusual sounding for a margherita. But maybe each family has its >> own recipe. It's always been thin crust IME. With whole basil leaves >> usually all over the top. > >The thin vs thick crust debate rages on. Some of my friends insist that >authentic pizza must have a thin (almost cracker-like) crust, because >they prefer it that way, or because that's the way it's done in The Old >Country. But for most of my life, living and traveling all over the >USA, the vast majority of pizzas that I have encountered were made with >a medium-thick rising crust. When done well, this makes a nice >combination of chewy and toasty textures, with good flavor. I prefer >this style to the cardboard-like stuff that some people cite as >"authentic". > >For the purposes of this discussion let's leave out that soggy Chicago >deep-dish stuff which is more like a casserole. > >I did not encounter thin crusts very often until recent years. It now >seems to be popular with chain/franchise operations. Is it more suited >or more convenient for mass-production low-skill preparation? Cindy >thinks it might also be favored by vendors because of quicker bake >times, or by consumers who are following the current low-carb diet fads. The thin crust in modern culture is in response to diet trends. Thin crust equals less dough. Janet US |
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![]() "Julie Bove" > wrote in message ... > How heavy should the basil be on one of these? I used to order them many > years ago at a Greek restaurant. I do remember there being a basil flavor > but it wasn't overwhelming. > > I recently bought a couple of vegan pizzas (Amy's brand) from Whole foods. > They are the only made up pizzas I have found that use the Daiya cheese. > It is made of rice and pea protein. Yes, I can make such a pizza at home > but I thought it would be handy to have these in the freezer. They do not > have very much cheese on them at all which is the way I would do it if I > were to make them. While this cheese does share the stretchy quality of a > real cheese when melted, there is something of the flavor that is not > quite right and I find if I use too much, I don't like it. In fact in > most cases I prefer to just go without cheese than to use this. But for > pizza? I want a little cheese. And perhaps because there is no real > cheese, that could be why the basil is so overwhelming. But it is > overwhelming. In fact it is pretty much the only flavor I can taste on > there. Another problem perhaps is that they used little chunks of tomato > and because it is a frozen pizza, those tomatoes are not fresh. I found > that I had to dip the little slices (the pizza is quite small) in a bowl > of tomato sauce to tone down the basil flavor. > > So... How strong should the basil flavor be on such a pizza? When I had > it before, I just remember a nice blend of flavors. This seems to be just > basil, basil and more basil. here are the Italian government standards: http://usatoday30.usatoday.com/news/...za-rules_x.htm go from there. Dimitri |
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On 3/7/2013 9:55 AM, Janet Bostwick wrote:
> The thin crust in modern culture is in response to diet trends. Thin > crust equals less dough. > Janet US Hmmm. I'm not so sure about that. I grew up thinking thin crust pizza was the norm. This was in the 1960s. I don't think anyone was overly concerned about diet trends at the time. It was just the way pizza dough was made in some places. Jill |
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On Thu, 7 Mar 2013 02:46:45 -0800, "Julie Bove"
> wrote: > > "ViLco" > wrote in message > ... > > Julie Bove wrote: > > > >> So... How strong should the basil flavor be on such a pizza? When I > >> had it before, I just remember a nice blend of flavors. This seems > >> to be just basil, basil and more basil. > > > > One or two basil leaves for one pizza margherita > > Aha! That sounds about right. I think they put too much on this frozen > one. Thanks! > Which is why I dislike pizza margherita so much. It's practically flavorless. I don't want a lot of meat (none for me), cheese (very light and very little to no mozzarella - especially that "fresh mozz" waste of pizza money) or even much tomato sauce (skimpy) - but I do want to taste garlic & herbs. -- Food is an important part of a balanced diet. |
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On Thursday, March 7, 2013 9:51:27 AM UTC-5, ViLco wrote:
> wrote: > > > > >> In Italy, > > > > > We don't give a shit. > > > > We? Do you have a turd in a pocket? BTW: so why do you eat pizza, moron > > -- > > "Un pasto senza vino e' come un giorno senza sole" > > Anthelme Brillat Savarin Suck a dick, wop. |
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On Thu, 07 Mar 2013 08:49:55 -0800, sf > wrote:
>On Thu, 7 Mar 2013 06:35:01 -0800 (PST), wrote: > >> On Thursday, March 7, 2013 3:35:19 AM UTC-5, ViLco wrote: >> > In Italy, >> >> We don't give a shit. > >For once, I agree with you... but it's always interesting to see how >our interpretations differ from others. We call the sauce that was >used as that base for whatever seafood came home that night, not the >final product, "marinara" (I guess that's why it's usually called >"marinara sauce") - which isn't a big deal until someone makes it into >one... something that happens here on a daily basis. You can name items anything you want, but if you want to communicate with others, there has to be some sort of definition of terms. I don't find it quarrelsome to argue back and forth to clarify terms. Janet US |
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Julie Bove wrote:
> > "ViLco" wrote : > > Julie Bove wrote: > >> So... How strong should the basil flavor be on such a pizza? When I > >> had it before, I just remember a nice blend of flavors. This seems > >> to be just basil, basil and more basil. > > > > One or two basil leaves for one pizza margherita > > Aha! That sounds about right. I think they put too much on this frozen > one. Thanks! Can never be enough basil for me ![]() |
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Ed Pawlowski wrote:
> > >> In restaurants, Pizza Margherita can be just about anything. With meat, > >> no meat, added veggies, multiple cheeses, thin or thick crust, etc. > > No, it can't. If it has all that stuff, it is NOT Margherita. Sauce, > mozzarella cheese, basil. Nothing else. I do a lot of homemade pizzas and I've done just that before. I never realized it had a name. You can put anything you want on a pizza. If it's good for you, it's good. G. |
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On 3/7/2013 12:43 PM, Gary wrote:
> Ed Pawlowski wrote: >> >>>> In restaurants, Pizza Margherita can be just about anything. With meat, >>>> no meat, added veggies, multiple cheeses, thin or thick crust, etc. >> >> No, it can't. If it has all that stuff, it is NOT Margherita. Sauce, >> mozzarella cheese, basil. Nothing else. > > I do a lot of homemade pizzas and I've done just that before. > I never realized it had a name. > You can put anything you want on a pizza. If it's good for you, it's good. > I agree with you; there is no need for ethnic purism and decisions about what is or is not a *real* pizza. I've quite enjoyed things as non-traditional as pineapple/shrimp but my usual choice is pretty banal I suppose, pepperoni/cheese topping. I might also be adventurous enough to have some thin sliced onion. -- Jim Silverton (Potomac, MD) Extraneous "not" in Reply To. |
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![]() "Julie Bove" > wrote in message ... > How heavy should the basil be on one of these? I used to order them many > years ago at a Greek restaurant. I do remember there being a basil flavor > but it wasn't overwhelming. > > I recently bought a couple of vegan pizzas (Amy's brand) from Whole foods. > They are the only made up pizzas I have found that use the Daiya cheese. > It is made of rice and pea protein. Yes, I can make such a pizza at home > but I thought it would be handy to have these in the freezer. They do not > have very much cheese on them at all which is the way I would do it if I > were to make them. While this cheese does share the stretchy quality of a > real cheese when melted, there is something of the flavor that is not > quite right and I find if I use too much, I don't like it. In fact in > most cases I prefer to just go without cheese than to use this. But for > pizza? I want a little cheese. And perhaps because there is no real > cheese, that could be why the basil is so overwhelming. But it is > overwhelming. In fact it is pretty much the only flavor I can taste on > there. Another problem perhaps is that they used little chunks of tomato > and because it is a frozen pizza, those tomatoes are not fresh. I found > that I had to dip the little slices (the pizza is quite small) in a bowl > of tomato sauce to tone down the basil flavor. > > So... How strong should the basil flavor be on such a pizza? When I had > it before, I just remember a nice blend of flavors. This seems to be just > basil, basil and more basil. Strong enough to cover the taste of the "cheese." |
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James Silverton wrote:
> On 3/7/2013 12:43 PM, Gary wrote: >> Ed Pawlowski wrote: >>> >>>>> In restaurants, Pizza Margherita can be just about anything. With meat, >>>>> no meat, added veggies, multiple cheeses, thin or thick crust, etc. >>> >>> No, it can't. If it has all that stuff, it is NOT Margherita. Sauce, >>> mozzarella cheese, basil. Nothing else. >> >> I do a lot of homemade pizzas and I've done just that before. >> I never realized it had a name. >> You can put anything you want on a pizza. If it's good for you, it's good. >> > > I agree with you; there is no need for ethnic purism and decisions about > what is or is not a *real* pizza. I've quite enjoyed things as > non-traditional as pineapple/shrimp but my usual choice is pretty banal > I suppose, pepperoni/cheese topping. I might also be adventurous enough > to have some thin sliced onion. I will remind everyone that in N Italy I observed some Italian youngsters dumping french fries on a cheese pizza. |
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Bryan wrote:
> > ...I wonder how to make a crust that is ultra thin, > but holds together under toppings. This has been discussed fairly recently here. Whenever I make pizza, I'll make my dough with a package of yeast. Once it's mixed, I don't let it rise. I immediately stretch it out into the pan, then add toppings, and right into the oven. In just that short amount of time, it will start rising.... even during the first minutes in the oven. I'm thinking that if you use 1/3 to 1/2 of the yeast that your recipe calls for? I would think that would seriously slow down the rising and give you a thinner crust. G. |
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On Thu, 07 Mar 2013 12:01:14 -0500, jmcquown >
wrote: >On 3/7/2013 9:55 AM, Janet Bostwick wrote: >> The thin crust in modern culture is in response to diet trends. Thin >> crust equals less dough. > >Hmmm. I'm not so sure about that. I grew up thinking thin crust pizza >was the norm. This was in the 1960s. I don't think anyone was overly >concerned about diet trends at the time. It was just the way pizza >dough was made in some places. I wouldn't think people on diets (to lose weight) would be wise to choose pizza of any variety... even untopped plain crust is just a lot of empty calories. |
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On Thu, 07 Mar 2013 13:17:03 -0500, Brooklyn1
> wrote: >On Thu, 07 Mar 2013 12:01:14 -0500, jmcquown > >wrote: > >>On 3/7/2013 9:55 AM, Janet Bostwick wrote: >>> The thin crust in modern culture is in response to diet trends. Thin >>> crust equals less dough. >> >>Hmmm. I'm not so sure about that. I grew up thinking thin crust pizza >>was the norm. This was in the 1960s. I don't think anyone was overly >>concerned about diet trends at the time. It was just the way pizza >>dough was made in some places. > >I wouldn't think people on diets (to lose weight) would be wise to >choose pizza of any variety... even untopped plain crust is just a lot >of empty calories. I should have said 'dietary trends.' Janet US |
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On Thu, 07 Mar 2013 07:55:22 -0700, Janet Bostwick
> wrote: >On Wed, 06 Mar 2013 20:52:11 -0800, Julian Vrieslander > wrote: > >>In article >, >> Susan > wrote: >> >>> Very unusual sounding for a margherita. But maybe each family has its >>> own recipe. It's always been thin crust IME. With whole basil leaves >>> usually all over the top. >> >>The thin vs thick crust debate rages on. Some of my friends insist that >>authentic pizza must have a thin (almost cracker-like) crust, because >>they prefer it that way, or because that's the way it's done in The Old >>Country. But for most of my life, living and traveling all over the >>USA, the vast majority of pizzas that I have encountered were made with >>a medium-thick rising crust. When done well, this makes a nice >>combination of chewy and toasty textures, with good flavor. I prefer >>this style to the cardboard-like stuff that some people cite as >>"authentic". >> >>For the purposes of this discussion let's leave out that soggy Chicago >>deep-dish stuff which is more like a casserole. >> >>I did not encounter thin crusts very often until recent years. It now >>seems to be popular with chain/franchise operations. Is it more suited >>or more convenient for mass-production low-skill preparation? Cindy >>thinks it might also be favored by vendors because of quicker bake >>times, or by consumers who are following the current low-carb diet fads. > >The thin crust in modern culture is in response to diet trends. Thin >crust equals less dough. >Janet US But then dieters will eat more slices than they would otherwise. I wouldn't call pizza a good dieter's food regardless what configuration... like thin sliced bread, folks just eat more slices and/or stuff in more filling... thin sliced toast is a great excuse to eat more slices, and therefore eat more butter. |
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Susan wrote:
> > Low fat is a fad, low carb is compatible with human biology. That's just for old-ass people with slower metabolisms and diabetes issues, current or pending. Try pushing your low carb diet on olympic athletes. G. |
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On Thu, 07 Mar 2013 13:36:54 -0500, Brooklyn1
> wrote: >On Thu, 07 Mar 2013 07:55:22 -0700, Janet Bostwick > wrote: > >>On Wed, 06 Mar 2013 20:52:11 -0800, Julian Vrieslander > wrote: >> >>>In article >, >>> Susan > wrote: >>> >>>> Very unusual sounding for a margherita. But maybe each family has its >>>> own recipe. It's always been thin crust IME. With whole basil leaves >>>> usually all over the top. >>> >>>The thin vs thick crust debate rages on. Some of my friends insist that >>>authentic pizza must have a thin (almost cracker-like) crust, because >>>they prefer it that way, or because that's the way it's done in The Old >>>Country. But for most of my life, living and traveling all over the >>>USA, the vast majority of pizzas that I have encountered were made with >>>a medium-thick rising crust. When done well, this makes a nice >>>combination of chewy and toasty textures, with good flavor. I prefer >>>this style to the cardboard-like stuff that some people cite as >>>"authentic". >>> >>>For the purposes of this discussion let's leave out that soggy Chicago >>>deep-dish stuff which is more like a casserole. >>> >>>I did not encounter thin crusts very often until recent years. It now >>>seems to be popular with chain/franchise operations. Is it more suited >>>or more convenient for mass-production low-skill preparation? Cindy >>>thinks it might also be favored by vendors because of quicker bake >>>times, or by consumers who are following the current low-carb diet fads. >> >>The thin crust in modern culture is in response to diet trends. Thin >>crust equals less dough. >>Janet US > >But then dieters will eat more slices than they would otherwise. I >wouldn't call pizza a good dieter's food regardless what >configuration... like thin sliced bread, folks just eat more slices >and/or stuff in more filling... thin sliced toast is a great excuse to >eat more slices, and therefore eat more butter. I didn't mean diet in the terms you are. You may be right in your assertion for those that are attempting to limit calories. Janet US |
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jmcquown wrote:
> > I grew up thinking thin crust pizza > was the norm. This was in the 1960s. I don't think anyone was overly > concerned about diet trends at the time. It was just the way pizza > dough was made in some places. > > Jill And just to go off on NY people. I personally think their traditional habit of folding a slice of pizza in half to eat it is very strange, to say the least. ![]() G. |
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