The Evolution Of Pizza

Released on: March 19, 2008, 3:12 am

Press Release Author: Anureet Singh Bhanot

Industry: Food & Beverage

Press Release Summary: Trying to trace the history of the first pizza is a
surprisingly controversial subject. Some claim that this popular food is based on
early unleavened breads served in the early centuries in Rome. Others trace a
connection from modern pizza back to the pita breads of Greece.

Press Release Body: Trying to trace the history of the first pizza is a surprisingly
controversial subject. Some claim that this popular food is based on early
unleavened breads served in the early centuries in Rome. Others trace a connection
from modern pizza back to the pita breads of Greece.

It\'s fairly well established that the first pizza as we know it today was created by
a man named Raffaele Esposito from Naples, Italy. Esposito\'s creation was designed
to honor the visit of Queen Margherita to Naples in 1889, and he decorated it with
the colors of the Italian flag, using white cheese, green basil, and red tomatoes
(tomatoes, which had arrived from the west about 60 years earlier, were originally
thought to be poisonous, but by Esposito\'s time they were already embraced by
Italian cuisine).

As the years passed and the turn of the century came about, Italian immigrants
brought this recipe with them to America. The first pizzeria was opened in America
in 1905. It remained popular almost exclusively among immigrants until the end of
World War II, when American soldiers returned to their home soil and brought back a
love of the pizza they had discovered overseas. With that, the pizza boom in America
began and this food became a mainstream meal instead of an underground Italian
snack.

The concentration of Italian immigrants in New York in those olden days explains the
fact that many people feel you must visit New York to get true pizzeria-style pizza.
It\'s where the pizza got its American start, after all. And nobody who has
experienced New York style pizza can disagree. New York is famous for its pizzerias,
where a true slice of pizza consists of a thin, wide crust loaded with plenty of
toppings and marinara and smothered in heady Italian seasonings. A side of garlic
bread and some heady pastas and tortellini's usually round out the menu. Pizzerias
in New York are not for the faint of heart.

In the early 1940s, the city of Chicago, IL took pizza in a different direction. It
is believed that the first pizzeria in Chicago was Pizzeria Uno, opened in 1943 by
Ike Sewell. Sewell\'s pizza creation was a new twist on the old New York standard. He
created what is known today as deep-dish pizza, where the pizza is sunk low into a
deeper pan, and the crust is allowed to rise in thick bubbles around the edges.
People flocked to Sewell\'s pizzeria, and a whole new way of looking at this favorite
food was born.

To this day you can find yourself in some pretty heated debates if you argue with a
New Yorker or a Chicagoan about what constitutes authentic pizzeria-style pizza. But
whatever crust style you choose, pizza is a unique food with a foggy past and a
definite appeal that has lasted through many incarnations.

So you\'re lucky enough to find yourself in New York or Chicago, or any city for that
matter that has a true pizzeria, complete with checked tablecloths and plenty of
garlic on the menu, indulge yourself in an old tradition and order a slice. After
all, its tradition.


Web Site: http://www.dishadvice.com

Contact Details: H.No. 554/4, Ajit Nagar Near Grewal Chowk, Malerkotla, 09872481899

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