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iBoaterer[_3_] July 16th 13 03:27 PM

Pizza!
 
In article ,
says...

On Tue, 16 Jul 2013 07:55:52 -0400, iBoaterer wrote:

In article om,
says...

On 7/15/2013 4:13 PM,
wrote:
On Mon, 15 Jul 2013 12:04:30 -0400, iBoaterer
wrote:

There is a place here that has a genuine pizzaiolo, studied in Italy.
The real deal is hard to find, most pizza in the U.S. is *******ized
anyway.

I agree. American pizza has about as much to do with pizza in Italy as
Taco Bell has to do with real Mexican food.


I had a pizza pie in Italy a few decades ago. If I recall correctly, It
was a pie crust filled with diced tomatoes heated in a brick oven. Yum.
(not)


Then you didn't have a real pizza.


Tell us all about your Italian pizza eating experiences, Harr...er, Kevin.

John (Gun Nut) H.


Gee, now I'm kevin, plume, loogy, and now someone named "Harr"...... IF
you were talking to me, as I stated, I sometimes eat at a restaurant
that is owned and ran by a master pizzaiolo . Trained in Italy. There
are very few in the United States. Do they have classically trained
pizzaiolos at Costco?

John H[_2_] July 16th 13 04:51 PM

Pizza!
 
On Tue, 16 Jul 2013 09:27:31 -0400, iBoaterer wrote:

In article ,
says...

On Tue, 16 Jul 2013 07:55:52 -0400, iBoaterer wrote:

In article om,
says...

On 7/15/2013 4:13 PM, wrote:
On Mon, 15 Jul 2013 12:04:30 -0400, iBoaterer
wrote:

There is a place here that has a genuine pizzaiolo, studied in Italy.
The real deal is hard to find, most pizza in the U.S. is *******ized
anyway.

I agree. American pizza has about as much to do with pizza in Italy as
Taco Bell has to do with real Mexican food.


I had a pizza pie in Italy a few decades ago. If I recall correctly, It
was a pie crust filled with diced tomatoes heated in a brick oven. Yum.
(not)

Then you didn't have a real pizza.


Tell us all about your Italian pizza eating experiences, Harr...er, Kevin.

John (Gun Nut) H.


Gee, now I'm kevin, plume, loogy, and now someone named "Harr"...... IF
you were talking to me, as I stated, I sometimes eat at a restaurant
that is owned and ran by a master pizzaiolo . Trained in Italy. There
are very few in the United States. Do they have classically trained
pizzaiolos at Costco?


Hey, at least you were honest and didn't try to tell us of all the pizza you ate in Italy! If your
Italian buddy is making pizza which is popular among Americans, then he's most likely become
'Americanized' in his pizza making skills.

If he were serving what's served in Italy, he'd go broke.

I believe the Costco pizzaiolos are quite properly trained. They do a much better job than the folks
in Italy!

John (Gun Nut) H.
--

Hope you're having a great day!

JustWaitAFrekinMinute July 16th 13 05:49 PM

Pizza!
 
On 7/16/2013 10:51 AM, John H wrote:
On Tue, 16 Jul 2013 09:27:31 -0400, iBoaterer wrote:

In article ,
says...

On Tue, 16 Jul 2013 07:55:52 -0400, iBoaterer wrote:

In article om,
says...

B On 7/15/2013 4:13 PM,
wrote:
On Mon, 15 Jul 2013 12:04:30 -0400, iBoaterer
wrote:

There is a place here that has a genuine pizzaiolo, studied in Italy.
The real deal is hard to find, most pizza in the U.S. is *******ized
anyway.

I agree. American pizza has about as much to do with pizza in Italy as
Taco Bell has to do with real Mexican food.


I had a pizza pie in Italy a few decades ago. If I recall correctly, It
was a pie crust filled with diced tomatoes heated in a brick oven. Yum.
(not)

Then you didn't have a real pizza.

Tell us all about your Italian pizza eating experiences, Harr...er, Kevin.

John (Gun Nut) H.


Gee, now I'm kevin, plume, loogy, and now someone named "Harr"...... IF
you were talking to me, as I stated, I sometimes eat at a restaurant
that is owned and ran by a master pizzaiolo . Trained in Italy. There
are very few in the United States. Do they have classically trained
pizzaiolos at Costco?


BWwwaaaaaaahhhhhhhhhhaaaaaaaaaa.......


Hey, at least you were honest and didn't try to tell us of all the pizza you ate in Italy! If your
Italian buddy is making pizza which is popular among Americans, then he's most likely become
'Americanized' in his pizza making skills.

If he were serving what's served in Italy, he'd go broke.

I believe the Costco pizzaiolos are quite properly trained. They do a much better job than the folks
in Italy!

John (Gun Nut) H.



F.O.A.D. July 16th 13 05:51 PM

Pizza!
 
On 7/16/13 11:30 AM, wrote:
On Tue, 16 Jul 2013 10:51:14 -0400, John H
wrote:

On Tue, 16 Jul 2013 09:27:31 -0400, iBoaterer wrote:


Hey, at least you were honest and didn't try to tell us of all the pizza you ate in Italy! If your
Italian buddy is making pizza which is popular among Americans, then he's most likely become
'Americanized' in his pizza making skills.

If he were serving what's served in Italy, he'd go broke.

I believe the Costco pizzaiolos are quite properly trained. They do a much better job than the folks
in Italy!


Americans wouldn't eat real Mexican or Chinese food either. We take
the concept of their food, add a generous helping of extra fat, some
sugar and a ****load of meat to it.


Frank Pepe, an Italian immigrant, invented what became known as
Italian-American pizza in the 1920's in New Haven, Connecticut. It is
really funny that Herring, who is about as ethnic as Wonder Bread,
thinks that Costco, whatever its merits as a retail store, makes pizza
that rivals that baked in a good, Italian-owned and operated small
restaurant that specializes in the dish.

I've eaten *real* Chinese food. It's very tasty, but it doesn't taste
like what most Americans think is Chinese food.

Eisboch[_9_] July 16th 13 06:07 PM

Pizza!
 


"F.O.A.D." wrote in message
m...

On 7/16/13 11:30 AM, wrote:
On Tue, 16 Jul 2013 10:51:14 -0400, John H
wrote:

On Tue, 16 Jul 2013 09:27:31 -0400, iBoaterer
wrote:


Hey, at least you were honest and didn't try to tell us of all the
pizza you ate in Italy! If your
Italian buddy is making pizza which is popular among Americans,
then he's most likely become
'Americanized' in his pizza making skills.

If he were serving what's served in Italy, he'd go broke.

I believe the Costco pizzaiolos are quite properly trained. They do
a much better job than the folks
in Italy!


Americans wouldn't eat real Mexican or Chinese food either. We take
the concept of their food, add a generous helping of extra fat, some
sugar and a ****load of meat to it.


Frank Pepe, an Italian immigrant, invented what became known as
Italian-American pizza in the 1920's in New Haven, Connecticut. It is
really funny that Herring, who is about as ethnic as Wonder Bread,
thinks that Costco, whatever its merits as a retail store, makes pizza
that rivals that baked in a good, Italian-owned and operated small
restaurant that specializes in the dish.

I've eaten *real* Chinese food. It's very tasty, but it doesn't taste
like what most Americans think is Chinese food.

-------------------------

I happened to like the pizza we had in Italy. Other than the name
"pizza" it's not really something that can be compared with American
style pizza.
Totally different.

I've also had *real* Chinese food (and drink) while visiting the PRC
back in the mid 80's. I *much* prefer the American versions. :-)


F.O.A.D. July 16th 13 06:10 PM

Pizza!
 
On 7/16/13 12:07 PM, Eisboch wrote:


"F.O.A.D." wrote in message
m...

On 7/16/13 11:30 AM, wrote:
On Tue, 16 Jul 2013 10:51:14 -0400, John H
wrote:

On Tue, 16 Jul 2013 09:27:31 -0400, iBoaterer wrote:


Hey, at least you were honest and didn't try to tell us of all the
pizza you ate in Italy! If your
Italian buddy is making pizza which is popular among Americans, then
he's most likely become
'Americanized' in his pizza making skills.

If he were serving what's served in Italy, he'd go broke.

I believe the Costco pizzaiolos are quite properly trained. They do a
much better job than the folks
in Italy!


Americans wouldn't eat real Mexican or Chinese food either. We take
the concept of their food, add a generous helping of extra fat, some
sugar and a ****load of meat to it.


Frank Pepe, an Italian immigrant, invented what became known as
Italian-American pizza in the 1920's in New Haven, Connecticut. It is
really funny that Herring, who is about as ethnic as Wonder Bread,
thinks that Costco, whatever its merits as a retail store, makes pizza
that rivals that baked in a good, Italian-owned and operated small
restaurant that specializes in the dish.

I've eaten *real* Chinese food. It's very tasty, but it doesn't taste
like what most Americans think is Chinese food.

-------------------------

I happened to like the pizza we had in Italy. Other than the name
"pizza" it's not really something that can be compared with American
style pizza.
Totally different.

I've also had *real* Chinese food (and drink) while visiting the PRC
back in the mid 80's. I *much* prefer the American versions. :-)


Taste, as they say, is subjective.

JustWaitAFrekinMinute July 16th 13 06:14 PM

Pizza!
 
On 7/16/2013 11:30 AM, wrote:
On Tue, 16 Jul 2013 10:51:14 -0400, John H
wrote:

On Tue, 16 Jul 2013 09:27:31 -0400, iBoaterer wrote:


Hey, at least you were honest and didn't try to tell us of all the pizza you ate in Italy! If your
Italian buddy is making pizza which is popular among Americans, then he's most likely become
'Americanized' in his pizza making skills.

If he were serving what's served in Italy, he'd go broke.

I believe the Costco pizzaiolos are quite properly trained. They do a much better job than the folks
in Italy!


Americans wouldn't eat real Mexican or Chinese food either. We take
the concept of their food, add a generous helping of extra fat, some
sugar and a ****load of meat to it.


Some... I used to love it when the Laotians brought native cooking in.
We all sat in a circle at lunch and shared. When I lived in Essex, the
first time I went into the local Asian takeout they said "what can we
get you"... there was a few younger kids/employees sitting in a corner
eating something black and rubbery... Nothing from their menu at all.. I
answered him, "I want some of they are eating"... :)

Eisboch[_9_] July 16th 13 06:21 PM

Pizza!
 


"F.O.A.D." wrote in message
m...

On 7/16/13 12:07 PM, Eisboch wrote:

I happened to like the pizza we had in Italy. Other than the name
"pizza" it's not really something that can be compared with American
style pizza.
Totally different.

I've also had *real* Chinese food (and drink) while visiting the
PRC
back in the mid 80's. I *much* prefer the American versions.
:-)


Taste, as they say, is subjective.

---------------------------------------

I just couldn't get into having a big bowl of chicken feet that you
were supposed to chew whatever little meat was on them and spit out
the toe nails.
Oh ... yeah ... and the strange "meat" that I was assured tastes "just
like chicken".

Boiled Pigeon eggs for breakfast washed down with a glass of warm goat
milk?

No thanks.



F.O.A.D. July 16th 13 06:32 PM

Pizza!
 
On 7/16/13 12:21 PM, Eisboch wrote:


"F.O.A.D." wrote in message
m...

On 7/16/13 12:07 PM, Eisboch wrote:

I happened to like the pizza we had in Italy. Other than the name
"pizza" it's not really something that can be compared with American
style pizza.
Totally different.

I've also had *real* Chinese food (and drink) while visiting the PRC
back in the mid 80's. I *much* prefer the American versions. :-)


Taste, as they say, is subjective.

---------------------------------------

I just couldn't get into having a big bowl of chicken feet that you were
supposed to chew whatever little meat was on them and spit out the toe
nails.
Oh ... yeah ... and the strange "meat" that I was assured tastes "just
like chicken".

Boiled Pigeon eggs for breakfast washed down with a glass of warm goat
milk?

No thanks.




I spent five months or so in the 1970s as a contractor for Burroughs and
stayed at the old Friendship Hotel. I got over my squeamishness and
actually went to some "banquets" where the food was very good. I rarely
asked what it was I was eating.

My job was to translate computer operating manuals from American English
into "simple English" for the Chinese techies who were learning how to
use "modern computers" for agricultural weather forecasting and were
also learning English. Nowadays, there are tens of millions of Chinese
in China who read and speak American English.


iBoaterer[_3_] July 16th 13 06:55 PM

Pizza!
 
In article ,
says...

On Tue, 16 Jul 2013 09:27:31 -0400, iBoaterer wrote:

In article ,
says...

On Tue, 16 Jul 2013 07:55:52 -0400, iBoaterer wrote:

In article om,
says...

On 7/15/2013 4:13 PM,
wrote:
On Mon, 15 Jul 2013 12:04:30 -0400, iBoaterer
wrote:

There is a place here that has a genuine pizzaiolo, studied in Italy.
The real deal is hard to find, most pizza in the U.S. is *******ized
anyway.

I agree. American pizza has about as much to do with pizza in Italy as
Taco Bell has to do with real Mexican food.


I had a pizza pie in Italy a few decades ago. If I recall correctly, It
was a pie crust filled with diced tomatoes heated in a brick oven. Yum.
(not)

Then you didn't have a real pizza.

Tell us all about your Italian pizza eating experiences, Harr...er, Kevin.

John (Gun Nut) H.


Gee, now I'm kevin, plume, loogy, and now someone named "Harr"...... IF
you were talking to me, as I stated, I sometimes eat at a restaurant
that is owned and ran by a master pizzaiolo . Trained in Italy. There
are very few in the United States. Do they have classically trained
pizzaiolos at Costco?


Hey, at least you were honest and didn't try to tell us of all the pizza you ate in Italy! If your
Italian buddy is making pizza which is popular among Americans, then he's most likely become
'Americanized' in his pizza making skills.


He's a master pizzailolo, and takes great pride in it. Nothing but
traditional pies that he's trained in making.

If he were serving what's served in Italy, he'd go broke.


Bull****.

I believe the Costco pizzaiolos are quite properly trained. They do a much better job than the folks
in Italy!

John (Gun Nut) H.


Please, show what training they've had to become master pizzaiolos,
idiot.




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