The "I Didn't Comment in Another Thread" Thread

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Objection.

Facts not in evidence.
My bad; I will rephrase my statement:

Detroit-style pizza is maybe my least-favorite, with the square crust and burnt cheese. "The burned cheese is the best part!" folks will say, and I honestly hope that's not true because otherwise there's no redeeming it. But it's still a flat, open-faced baked pie of Italian origin, consisting of a thin layer of bread dough topped with spiced tomato sauce and cheese, often garnished with anchovies, sausage slices, mushrooms, etc., and still an excellent choice if you're in Detroit and craving a zesty flatbread.​

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I ran a game at work, when I still had an AT work. And two of the players shields had arms carved on them holding flagons. Flagons they’d fill with beer and slam them together during fights whenever they keyed off each other. Lots of beer was spilled.
 

Chicago style is the one slice style, too much cheese, at least when I go up to the city (I'm not too far away); square style is often called Sicilian? I'm kind of a heretic anyways because I eat it with a knife and fork.
 


Chicago-style "pizza" is actually a "casserole," but I don't hold that against it either...it's a friggin' delicious casserole.
My nderstanding is that tChicago style is a buit more traditional than most American varieties of Pizza...but then, that might just depend on which Italian tradition that you paybattention to.
 

The Morning Post (London) - 17 Dec 1860 had an article on Naples that talked about Pizza in part of it. The clip below starts half way through the pizza section. It was also printed in several other English newspapers later that month, and in Boston the following January (just the pizza section).

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