Free Articles on Cooking Tips

- Free & Useful articles at your fingertips

Home | Cooking Tips Category Index

Click here for more Cooking Tips related articles

Collection of Articles from

  • USA
  • UK
  • India
  • Germany
  • China
  • Brazil
  • Canada
  • France

Pizza

The pie is an ubiquitous symbol of both Italian cooking and Americana. Oven-baked, thin-crust or deep-dish, round or square, it is a common favorite throughout the United States, with a wide number of regional variations.

The most traditional pie is the pizza Napolitano, or Neapolitan pizza. Made of strong flour, the dough is often kneaded by hand and then rolled flat and thin without a rolling pin. The pizza is cooked in an extremely hot wood-fired stone oven for only sixty to ninety seconds, and is removed when it is soft and fragrant. Common varieties of Neapolitan pizza include marinara, made with tomato, olive oil, oregano, and garlic, and margherita, made with tomato, olive oil, fresh basil leaves, and mozzarella cheese.

New York was home to the first pizza parlor in the United States, opened in Little Italy in 1905 by Gennaro Lombardi. It is not surprising, then, that New York-style pizza dominates in the Northeastern part of the country. It is thin-crusted, and made with a thin layer of sauce and grated cheese. The dough is hand-tossed, making the pie large and thin. As a result, it is served cut into slices, traditionally eight, which are often eaten folded in half. It can be served with any number of toppings, including pepperoni, the most popular topping in the United States, or as a “white pizza”, which includes no tomato sauce and is made with a variety of cheeses, such as mozzarella and ricotta.

Chicago is also home to a major variety of pizza.The Chicago-style pizza is deep dish, meaning it is made in a pan with the crust formed up the sides, or even with two crusts and sauce between, a so-called “stuffed” pizza. The ingredients are “reversed” in a Chicago pizza, with cheese going in first, and then sauce on top. This


particular form of pizza was invented in 1943 at Uno’s Pizzeria in the River North neighborhood of Chicago.

The Midwest also plays host to the St. Louis style pizza. This thin-crust delicacy is made using local provel cheese instead of mozzarella, and is very crispy. Heavily seasoned with oregano and other spices, with a slightly sweet sauce, it is difficult to fold because of the crust and is often cut into squares, instead of served in slices.

A Hawaiian pizza is an American invention that has nothing to do with Hawaii save that one of the main ingredients is pineapple. The pineapple is put atop the pizza, along with Canadian bacon, giving a rather sweet taste very different from pizzas closer to the Italian original. Hawaiian pizza is very common in the Western United States.

In fact, a number of esoteric pizzas are common on the West coast, and “gourmet” pizza is often referred to as “California-style” pizza. This is an example of fusion cuisine, and many of the pizzas go far beyond the common tomato sauce and cheese. Thai pizza, for example, can include bean sprouts and peanut sauce, while breakfast pizza, as the name implies, may be topped with bacon and scrambled eggs. As a “gourmet” food, California pizzas are often individual sized, serving two people at most, and are not cut in slices like other common types of pizza pie.

Pizza is as diverse as America itself, with almost infinite variations – all of them delicious.


About the author:

Kirsten Hawkins is a food and nutrition expert specializing the Mexican, Chinese, and Italian food. Visit http://www.food-and-nutrition.com/for more information on cooking delicious and healthy meals.


Circulated by Article Emporium


Similar Terms : cooking tipx   cook9ng tips   cook8ng tips   cooking tips   cooking 6ips   

Google
 

Latest News on : Pizza
 

Search Tags : safety tips about cooking with jalapenos.   cooking tips for gas grills   cooking mama tips   cooking tips ham   saftey tips about cooking with jalapenos.   safety tips about cooking with jalapenos.   safety tips for cooking a turkey   indoor grill cooking tips   safety tips about cooking with jalapenos.   safety tips for cooking   cooking safety tips   butterball turkey cooking tips   chinnese cooking tips   large group cooking tips   safety tips on cooking with kids   cookie cooking tips   tips to cooking pork chops   charbroil commercial infrared cooking tips   safety tips for cooking a turkey   tips to cooking pork chops   cooking tips ham   outdoor grill cooking tips   safety tips on cooking with kids   cooking marinated steak tips   cooking tips for beginners   


More Tags

Site Home | Cooking Tips Category Index | Privacy Policy

web site hit counter