What do you know about Italian pizza? Pizza may be a national food of Italy but there is no national pizza in Italy. Consensus is limited to a single point: My pizza is better than yours.
Support for a local pizza style can be ingrained. No kind of pizza is quite like the one you grew up with. That’s maybe why some Australians feel conflicted about the pizza they try in the old country. So what if Sicilian pizza in Palermo is more authentic than its Italian-Australian adaptation in Sydney? It’s not quite their pizza.
Such loyalty is laudable but it is also limiting. Your first pizza love is not necessarily your best and it doesn’t have to be your last. No virtue points are awarded for pizza monogamy, or for limiting your relationships to a single body shape, such as square and top-heavy.
In Italy, where exceptional pizza comes in several styles, the last thing you want to be is typecast. Here’s how to navigate pizza polyamory in Italy.
1. Pizza Napoletana
The softness of the true Neapolitan pizza crust partly comes from its being cooked in a 900℉ wood-fired oven. The air bubbles in the dough—pushed outward by the skilled pizzaiolo to form the cornicione (rim) of the pizza base—swell, char and blister before the interior crumb has dried out and hardened. But the dough itself is built to be elastic, able to cradle the prized tomatoes and mozzarella of the Campania region in a loving fold. “The sensations you get from eating a soft and well-leavened pizza are different,” says Santarpia. “You feel all the flavors in one bite.”
Soft-core pizza has finally developed a hardcore following in areas as remote from Naples as, well, Florence: The lines for classic pizza napoletana extend outside Santarpia, Giovanni’s new pizzeria, nearly every night.
2. Pizza al Taglio
Pizza al taglio bakes in an electric oven for up to 15 minutes, yielding a crisp, airy, golden crust that’s up to an inch thick. The longer cooking time isn’t always ideal for toppings. To prevent overcooking or unnecessary cooking some of these pizza accessories are applied mid-bake or after-bake. Why such precautions for so humble a street food? Because pizza al taglio, at its best, is a platform for the some of the most prized cheeses, cured meats, seafood, produce and, yes, baking in Italy.
Not all pizza al taglio is Roman, though you may hear it called pizza romana, and not all pizza romana is pizza al taglio. Pizza al taglio is prepared in many areas of Italy and takes on different regional characteristics. The round version of pizza romana – pizza romana tonda (see below) – has a crust that’s extremely thin and crisp, with no corners to cut.
The dough for “pizza by the cut” doesn’t even have to be molded in a pan. Some is baked directly on the stone surface of the oven and goes by the description pizza alla pala (see below).
3. Pizza Siciliana
Even so, when you order pizza in most areas of Sicily you usually get one round pie or, in the case of a stuffed pizzolo, two round pies stacked atop one another. The term pizza siciliana is defined less by shape than by local ingredients: Semolina and other home-grown grains in the dough; toppings of goat cheese, pecorino siciliano and local cow’s milk cheeses – anything but buffalo mozzarella. Anchovies are everywhere. A dusting of breadcrumbs is another pretty reliable indicator.
4. Pizza Gourmet
Bosco doesn’t care for the word ‘gourmet’ either. “For me the correct term is pizza contemporanea,” he says. “Pizza evolving not only in terms of the cooking, but also for the choice of raw materials and for the study of leavening.”
With their fanatical focus on wholegrain flours, ancient grains and sourdough starters, the gourmet pizza geeks are very much part of the craft baking movement. The obsession with sourcing runs deep. What distinguishes them from their American counterparts is a willingness to play with various doughs and blur the lines between a beautiful pizza and an artisanal bread with fancy toppings: Bosco’s celebrated Aria di Pane is a golden fluff of both.
5. Pizza Romana Tonda
6. Pizza Fritta
That aside, pizza fritta is finally having its moment. Greasy street food is trendy, eating bread dough that’s been cooked in a big vat of hot oil has lost its stigma and, perhaps most importantly, pizza fritta looks freakin’ great on Instagram. What’s more, Neapolitan-style pizza fritta is a wonder of cooking science: You drop a circular or half-moon pouch of stuffed dough into the deep-fryer and watch it swell and change color. Out comes an exceptionally airy cocoon of golden goodness. Once opened it’s as if the fillings – ricotta, provola (smoked cheese), tomato, salami – have not been touched by a drop of oil. You almost don’t need napkins. Almost.
7. Pizza Alla Pala/Pizza A Metro
Texture and depth can vary, but in most instances, these Italian pizzas are crunchy and at least a half-inch thick.
8. Calzone
Recognizing calzone as a type of pizza doesn’t mean it should be prepared in the same way. Otherwise you might end up with five inches of crust around the border. “You spread out the dough as you would for a normal pizza,” advises master pizzeria Enzo Coccia of Pizzaria La Notizia in Naples, “but you don’t build up the cornicione.”
A calzone at its best doesn’t have a thick, heavy barrier to entry. You want to break into the steaming ricotta, melty mozzarella and other delights from the pizza pantry as quickly and easily as possible. Believe it or not there is such a thing as a light calzone.
9. Pizza Italiana
Southern Italians may equate the term pizza Italiana (Italian Pizza) with industrialized, fast food or supermarket pizza, even if some is handmade with fresh ingredients and baked in a wood-fired oven. One of the highest words of praise for any pizza Italiana is digestible –“digestible.” With inferior pizza, the dough has often been rushed into service. The pizza leaves you with a bloated feeling lasting for hours. With good pizza, the dough has had plenty of time to rest and ferment. It won’t hole up for the night in your gut.
When in Italy you generally don’t seek out pizza Italiana (Italian Pizza). It finds you. With any luck, it will be digestible.
If you want to taste some of these pizza from an authentic Italian pizzeria in Australia, come to The Golden Crust restaurant in Baulkham Hills.
We make the best pizza you have ever tasted.
Source: foodandwine
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