OPINION

Pizza Pie - Mi Amore

Written by Friend Mouse
Published July 16, 2007

Who among us doesn’t love pizza? My mother would point out that as a child, for a while I didn’t like pizza; I even refused it as a guest at a birthday party and the mom had to order me a cheese steak instead. (In my after-the-fact defense, that cheese steak was really, really good.) I have certainly gotten past that momentary gustatory lapse: during the fall and winter months we have homemade pizzas once a week. I like to think the residual warmth from the oven helps heat the house.

My earliest recollection of pizza is from The Cabin in Bath, Maine. This very local institution, located across from the shipyard, has been around for at least 35 years. When my parents first moved to Bath, going to The Cabin on Friday nights was the highlight of their tightly-budgeted social calendar. Since the available toppings at that time (the early to mid-'70s) were limited by today’s standards, my dad kept his own personal tin of anchovies in the restaurant’s refrigerator. Now, of course, anchovies are on the doughy-crust pizza menu, along with pretty much everything else. My current favorite Cabin pie is a white pizza (mozzarella cheese and olive oil but no marinara sauce) with black olives.

Later on, my Midwestern-born folks introduced me to Chicago-style, deep-dish, double-crust pan pizza. Made at home in a special round pan with a two-inch high lip, this pizza could feed an Olympic soccer team. Lay in the first crust, and then fill the pan with everything you’ve got: onion, green pepper, meatballs, pepperoni, shrimp, olives, artichoke hearts, anchovies, Italian sausage, broccoli, tons and tons of cheese. Put the second crust on top, cover it with red sauce and more mozzarella, use a forklift to place the laden pan in the oven and then wait for the utensils-required, gooey goodness to bake. That old deep-dish pan of my parents’? Still in heavy rotation.

These days when we go out for ‘za, we head to the Flatbread Company in Portland, Maine. Located right on the working waterfront in a stunningly rehabilitated pier warehouse, the Flatbread Company deals in natural, largely organic flatbreads. The company seems to be hippie-run (and I mean that in the very best way) with a commitment to using natural and organic ingredients, supporting local small farmers, fostering community and serving damn fine food. Their organic house salad, comprised of mesclun and small leaf lettuces (with the option of tasty purple arame seaweed!) and dressed with a homemade ginger-tamari dressing, is delightful and their flatbreads are just fantastic. I usually go with the “Punctuated Equilibrium” pie (topped with Greek olives, local goat cheese, rosemary, red onion and roasted red peppers) but I always take the time to hear the daily specials.

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Friend Mouse lives the way she should be in Maine, reading, skiing, drinking good beer, fishing, going to matinees solo and madly working her way through a huge movie queue. She is relatively new to the blogosphere and is trying to make up for lost time at friendmouse.blogspot.com.
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Pizza Pie - Mi Amore
Published: July 16, 2007
Type: Opinion
Section: Tastes
Filed Under: Tastes: Food and Drink
Writer: Friend Mouse
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Comments

#1 — July 29, 2007 @ 15:08PM — alessandro Nicolo [URL]

Here are some thoughs on "white" pizzas. Pizza with garlic, fresh rosemary, marjoram and fresh italian sausage is something to consider. You can do make a variation of it - for example, all the aforementioned but without sausage. Another pizza calls for sausage with a vegetable in the spinach family called rapini. In Italy they look at you funny when you ask for onions but I feel onions too can add flavour to these pizzas if you deem it necessary. Last, one pizza I enjoy is ricotta pizza. Sound crazy? Not until you eat it. I'm sure Dean Martin and the boys would have approved.

#2 — July 30, 2007 @ 09:16AM — Friend Mouse [URL]

Mmmmmm-mm - those sound delectable! We often have rapini as a side vegetable but I never thought to use it as topping. I really do prefer white pizzas - so often the tomato sauce can make the crust soggy. Thanks so much for the recipe ideas.

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