Pizzerias

Time capsule: Freddie’s Restaurant & Pizzeria

When Mark Brockriede, current owner of Freddie’s Restaurant & Pizzeria (freddiespizzeria.com) in Long Branch, New Jersey, took over the pizzeria’s operations in 1995 as a third-generation owner from the original family, many customers were worried that he’d change too much and lose the familiarity of a restaurant that had been in business since 1944. After all, … More

Marketing

Atlanta’s pizza wars

Knowing that we’d be passing through Atlanta on our way to meet up with 30-Day Pizza Diet guru Matt McClellan, who was biking his way up the East Coast last June, we started searching the Internet for the city’s most popular pizzerias, enlisting the help of sites such as CitySearch, Yahoo Local, Yelp … More

Pizzerias

Time capsule: Home Run Inn

Home Run Inn (homeruninn.com) began in 1923 as a small tavern on Chicago’s South Side. Founded by Mary and Vincent Grittani, the tavern received its name when a baseball from the neighborhood park flew through one of the windows. It wasn’t until son-in-law Nick Perrino returned from an Army stint War II that Nick … More

Pizzerias

Coalfire: the American Neapolitan

In search of pies like they got back home, Chicago residents Bill Carroll and J. Spillane became pizza pioneers and created their own style of pizza.  In Chicago, the deep-dish pizza reigns supreme. So when two entrepreneurs with roots in Massachusetts conceived the idea of a New England-style thin crust pizza joint in the heart of Chicago, they … More

Pizzerias

Time capsule: Mary’s Pizza Shack

In 1959, Mary Fazio wisely took this casual advice from a friend: “You make such good pizza; you should open a restaurant.” The friend’s husband lent Mary one of his vacation cottages and, with help from her husband and son Toto, she quickly set up Mary’s Pizza Shack (maryspizzashack.com) in Boyes Hot Springs, … More

Pizzerias

Doing the right thing

ldquo;We’re Rolex guys, not Timex guys,” laughs Jeff Good, managing partner at Mangia Bene, a three-restaurant group in Jackson, Mississippi, that includes Sal & Mookie’s New York Pizza & Ice Cream Joint (salandmookies.com). “We’re better doing something more complex, with more moving parts.” Sal & Mookie’s, indeed, has a plethora of moving parts: a full-service adult lounge, the Pi(e) Lounge; an … More

Pizzerias

Time capsule: DeLuca’s Restaurant and Pizzeria

In 1960, Italian immigrants Pat DeLuca and his brother-in-law Jim opened the Willow Bar, a neighborhood bar for nearby factory workers, in Lansing, Michigan, but the pizza they served became so popular the business eventually switched its name to DeLuca’s Restaurant and Pizzeria (delucaspizza.com). When Jim retired in 1977, the transition to family eatery … More

Pizzerias

Time capsule: Fricano's Pizza Tavern

In the early 1950s, tavern owner Cosimo Fricano (known as Gus) decided that his menu needed a boost. After seeing a sign that said “pizza” near Wrigley Field in Chicago, he returned home determined to introduce this new item in his own business—but met with little enthusiasm from those around him, including his Sicilian … More

Pizzerias

Makin' it on Wooster St.

Anyone who has ever been to New Haven, Connecticut, fi nds out pretty quickly that there’s something special about the pizza you fi nd there. First of all, it’s not called pizza; it’s called apizza (pronounced “a-beets”), and there’s a huge sense of pride surrounding the creation of every pie that comes … More

Pizzerias

Time capsule: Alongi’s

In the small mining community of DuQuoin, Illinois, Alongi’s is a true survivor: Sicilian immigrant Guy Alongi started his business during the height of the Great Depression, in 1933, and his family continues to weather difficult economic times in the present day. However, even through hardship, the business has seen remarkable success as an independent family restaurant, serving more … More

Pizzerias

Now that’s Apizza!

11:22am The battle between New York and New Haven pizza has raged for years, with New Haveners insisting that the apizza (pronounced “a-beets”) that comes out of New Haven would win any contest against a New York pie—some even claiming that Italianborn New Haven transplant Frank Pepe invented pizza in America. While the … More

Pizzerias

Blues, barbecue… and pizza!

The Bluff City is known for many things: Beale Street, The King, blues music and barbecue. Our mission was to view all of Memphis’ glory from a pizza perspective. After strolling the streets of downtown and savoring slices at the gates of Graceland, we found that Memphis has yet another draw—great pizza! … More