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Pizza. Do you call it 'pie'?

Maybe I was a waiter long enough to see some strange eating habits.

Ranch dressing with rolls. Um, okay, whatever.
Tabasco with rolls. ... Yeah.
Pepper vinegar with rolls. ... You're joking, right?

I don't even remember all the weird things people would order.
 

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Vraille Darkfang said:
I do occasionally call a Deep-Dish Pizza a "Pizza Pie", as it comes in a big, deep dish & more resembles an actual pie.

There is also a style of pizza where the toppings go Underneath the cheese & its a Deep Dish. With a solid layer of cheese on top & over an inch think, that would be a "Pizza Pie".

Chicago-style deep-dish pizza is closer to the former that you describe. From top to bottom on a "true" Chicago-style pizza, as made by Pizzeria Uno (the folks who invented it):
- Crushed tomatoes (no tomato sauce)
- Toppings
- Mozzerella cheese (the standard-sized Chicago-style, which is about 12" in diameter, apparently has a pound of cheese)
- Crust

I've lived in Chicago for 16 years, and have never heard anyone here refer to any pizza (either deep-dish or thin crust) as "pizza pie." Sounds East Coast-y to me, too.
 

The only thing I EVER call a "Pizza Pie" is those Pizza Desserts I see every now and again - pizza crust baked with fruit toppings and sugar and such.
 

Ambrus said:
Now I'm tempted to go to a restaurant and try ordering "pixa" just to see how the waiter reacts. :]

I knew some people who just refer to it as "zah".


I knew one person who referred to it as "zah"....I desperately wanted to beat him to death. :)
 


Ambrus said:
And how about submarine sandwiches? I call them "subs" but I've heard them referred to as "hero sandwiches", "hogies", "footlongs", ect.

Well, "hoagies" are a nickname for a special kind, I think, "gyro sandwiches" are Greek (hence the pronunciation), and "footlongs" are attributed because they are a specific length of sandwich (note: this term can also be applied to hot-dogs).

I've also used the term "'zza."
 


In a number of Seinfeld episodes I remember they referred to pizzas as pies.

KRAMER: I'm going to open my own pizza place, where you make your own pie!

JERRY: I can't imagine anyone, ever, under any circumstances, wanting to make their own pie.
 


StupidSmurf said:
I see! :) I mean, do they:
call macaroni "roni"?
call asparagus "gus" (and how does Gus feel about that?)?
call hamburger "ger"? :]
No, generally they just treated their friends poorly. Which is why I said that I knew them. ;)
 

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