Posted on 06/17/2016 11:02:30 AM PDT by nickcarraway
For six weeks, the editors of New York Magazine and Grub Street are publishing a series of definitive lists that declare the absolute best versions of 101 things to eat, drink, and do. Pizza: Its what New Yorkers are made of. Now, were not talking Neapolitan or neo-Neapolitan, deep dish or Detroit-style not even whole pies. Its all about the slice, the economical, accessible, on-the-go meal in its many styles: the classic round slice; square in the Sicilian or grandma style; vodka-sauced; with or without toppings, from the minimal (sausage) to the maximal gourmet (Buffalo chicken); and so on. Ideally, its served on a paper plate which it stains with grease at a small shop or a takeout counter of a larger operation thats no-frills and was built with economy more than design in mind. There could be cheap beers, should be a fridge with sodas, and possibly, but not necessarily, photos of random celebrities on the wall (ideally Italian-American and/or C-list). But most of all, the perfect slice is served at a place where you can get in and out quickly, whether youre a local without any time to wait or a pizza pilgrim save the 40-minute waits for whole pies.
The Absolute Best
1. Joes Pizza 7 Carmine Street, at Bleecker St.; 212-366-1182; 150 E. 14th St., nr. Third Ave.; 212-388-9474; and 216 Bedford Ave., at N. 4th St.; 718-388-2216
As the ancient Italian-American proverb goes, there are three constants in life: death, taxes, and the excellence of Joes slices. The workaday Greenwich Village shop is the consummate New York slice parlor first and foremost for its uncanny, unparalleled consistency. Its a spot where your slice is exactly as excellent as the last time, and the time before that, every time. That can be attributed, yes, to high turnover: Slices fly off the counter, and new pizzas are constantly being baked, guaranteeing freshness. This brings up another essential fact: Joes is always busy, but its never a pain to get in and get out. The ideal slice joint shouldnt be a major commitment for locals, and the slice must be obtained without hassle. Which is why the legendary Di Fara, where you wait 45 minutes to an hour for a slice that could be fantastic but might be burnt, is absent from this list.
The perfect slice is also about dedication and craft. Staff turnover is low, so the pizza men master their skills, and owner Pino Joe Pozzuoli and his family remain invested in the operation and expand at a sloths pace. Cooked so its a few shades shy of burnt and speckled with black spots, the thin crust has that slight yeasty tang, bends easily, and has a pudgier, puffy, and nicely browned end-crust. The cheese blisters, with occasional golden freckles, and the sauce has the brightness of fresh tomatoes. The consistency and craft come into focus here, as the sauce and cheese are laid out evenly and in just the right amount so that youre getting the ideal ratio with every bite. Its, in a word, what your younger self thought all New York slices were like.
2. Joe & Pats 1758 Victory Blvd, nr. Manor Rd., Carlston Heights, Staten Island; 718-981-0887
The Staten Island icon doesnt serve a classic New York slice. Its style is more of a bar pie, defined by its exceedingly thin, unyielding, and ultra-crunchy crust, made from dough thats pounded rather than stretched, so it doesnt get airy. Its topped with a delicately ladled layer of irresistibly sweet, smooth vodka sauce and mozzarella applied, in the Neapolitan style, as little misshapen islands. The cheese doesnt commingle with the tomatoes, unlike in the classic New York slice, but its chewy, creamy, and perfectly balanced with it. Joe & Pats, which has served pies in the heart of Staten Island since 1960, is wonderful, but its on this list in part because of its vodka-sauce-drenched confederacy of pizzerias. Theres the Mulberry Street spinoff Rubirosa, where they sell slices of their admirable, slightly more yielding vodka pie during lunch. Even better is the estimable Pier 76, a family-friendly bar, restaurant, and takeout spot thats a short walk from the Staten Island Ferry. The crust here is a bit thicker than the version at Joe & Pats, but still remarkably thin, and the slices, some argue, surpass their forebears. Certainly get the Buffalo chicken, which is, thankfully, blue-cheese-free. And whatever you do, dont sleep on the vodka square. A corner slice has a high-ridged crust that contains the soupy, Day-Glo vodka sauce, some of the blistered and browned mozzarella peeking through, and a few bits of tomatoes swimming around. The best part of it, though, is the crust thats just under the sauce. Whereas so many squares have crusts that are soft and doughy up top, here its sublimely buttery.
3. Prince St. Pizza 27 Prince St., nr. Mott St.; 212-966-4100
All respect to the revered L&B Spumoni Gardens, but New Yorks current king of the square is Nohos Prince St. Pizza. Successor to the original Rays, its a slice lovers slice shop, with a brick-lined Marsal & Sons oven that turns out Sicilian slices that, at their best, put the leaden, middling squares sold at many parlors to shame. The three Sicilian-style slices look imposing, but the dough is anything but dense. Its airy with a crunchy bottom and soft interior, substantial but not leaden. Its the sort of slice you cant help but wolf down and is gone before you know it. Nothing beats the dangerously good Spicy Spring, with its mildly spicy and complex fra diavolo sauce and cups of oil-catching, extra-crispy pepperoni. Its the kind of slice you order two of when you only have room for one, then cant help but order a third to go, undaunted by the threat of a food coma. The ultragarlicky, thin grandma slice, a.k.a. the Mercer Margherita, will do you well, too, as will the regular slices, if youre a round-or-bust kind of slice hound.
4. Williamsburg Pizza 265 Union Ave., nr. S. 3rd., Williamsburg; 718-855-8729; and 277 Broome St., nr. Allen St.; 212-226-4455
New Yorks new-wave slice parlors are distinct from the new crop of throwback shops like Pier 76 and Prince St. Theyre hipper and more modern in the Robertas vein, flaunt better ingredients, are run by pizza mavens who talk flour varietals and exacting dough techniques, and tinker with more unorthodox toppings. While Best Pizzas sesame-seed-crusted white slice is a contender for Best White in Show, the king of this crew is Williamsburg Pizza, now with a second Lower East Side location and a Barclays Center outpost. Its excellence is an accident, really. The parlor was opened by a guy who lived upstairs, wanted decent pizza downstairs, and instead got into league with one of Americas most talented pizzaioli, Nino Coniglio. The Brooklyn slice is a delicious homage to the classic, with a sweet and fresh tomato sauce interwoven with bubbly Grande mozzarella and a puffy end-crust youll find yourself tearing into. However, the real magic here is in the sensational grandma slice, topped with homemade fresh mozzarella and wilted basil, and given a salty boost courtesy of parmigiana. The star of the show, however, is the golden crust, which isnt as thick as a Sicilian or flimsy-thin as many other grandma slices. Thankfully, for those with easily distracted palates, there are another six well-thought-out combinations available, several of them perplexingly good. Take the kale-taleggio, with its crumbles of moist sausage; taleggio melting into blistered kale, plus more batons of cheese on top; and sweet, crunchy pine nuts. Theres an oddly appealing Gorgonzola, bacon, and apple, but also more traditional options like the Paesano, blanketed with mushrooms, crumbly Italian sausage, and red peppers roasted to intense sweetness.
5. Patsys Pizzeria (East Harlem) 2287 1st Ave., at E. 118th St.; 212-534-9783
Before anyone waxed poetic about grandma slices or the airy structures of end-crusts, pizza in New York was cooked in coal ovens. Today, only two coal-powered places serves slices. The one that truly matters is the original Patsys in East Harlem, part of the loose family that grew out of Lombardis, New Yorks original pizzeria. Of course, you cant eat history. But the cheese-only slices at Patsys dimly lit, dusty takeout corner have held up (possibly after a dip following the death of its longtime head pizza-maker in 2009) and cost only $1.75 a pop. Like Totonnos, another branch of the Lombardis fam, Patsys does a sort of hybrid New YorkNeapolitan pie, with the scorching heat of the coal oven creating a crust thats lighter and more yielding while being impossibly thin. Rather than overloading it and causing the crust to break under the weight of its toppings, the bright tomato sauce and mozzarella are applied frugally, bordering on spartan. The mozzarella is creamy and high-moisture, the crust a little smokey and blackened, but be patient and give your slice a few moments to cool off so you can properly enjoy it.
it was never pizza....it was always "hot pie"....
anyone else from back east remember that?
I’ll take Modern over the other more popular places ANY DAY!!
I don’t like burnt pizza. If I want charcoal, I’ll eat charcoal.
Get the bomb pizza at modern. You’re welcome.
I favor their white clam.
Ronald Reagan went there at least once.
Ozone Pizzeria, under the EL in Queens has without a doubt the best Sicilian Pizza that exists.
https://www.facebook.com/Ozone-Pizzeria-117825134910781/
The crust is puffy and crisp on the bottom, light mozzarella under the sauce and parmesan on top.
We’ve been in Pennsylvania for 12 years now. We always pick up a few of their Sicilian pies to bring home and freeze when we get into NY. Only problem is parking there.
Nice FReep name!
With all respect to the tasty pizza I’ve had in Chicago, the reason it’s called the windy city is because of all the hot air blown around about it. New York pizza is found worldwide. Chicago?
one across from Pace is made by italian sons of italian mother who USED to make them with her sons.
they are huge slices, excellent sauce and cheese, doughy crust, but not too doughy and one slice is all you need.
joe and pats on staten island. remember my cousin working there for 1.25 an hour 35 years ago :)
thin, flaky, hard bread, not the best tasting sauce and sskimpy on the cheese
I haven’t been in NYC since 1989. But back then, Original Ray’s pizza was the best. 2 slices on 2 plates,$4.00.
I remember in the early 19780’s it was often “pizza pie”, but also just usually “pizza”.
“The best Pizza is from Chicago. “
That ain’t pizza, it is a casserole!
Thank you very much for that link.
You’re welcome. I hope it helps!
Chicago is the BEST source of delicious pizzas of all kinds...and also Italian Beef sammiches. And here I am living in Florida...gastronomical gloom! New York pizza is rife here, what with all the NY city retired transplants living here in this state.
Thank heavens, Publix is finally stocking Home Run Inn Pizza, the very best of all the frozen pizza pies in the supermarkets.
Home Run Inn pizzas are manufactured in a plant in Chicago and there's also a plant in the city's western suburb of Woodridge near where I lived years ago in an adjoining community.
There's a Home Run Inn inn near Woodridge (Downers Grove) where you can go to dine in homey surroundings and luxuriate in consuming their pizzas right out of their brick ovens.
Home Run Inn, Inc...locally operated...CEO is Joe Perrino...Operations Chief is Dan Costello....Director is Jeannette Davila....how could their product NOT be good, LOL !!!
One or more of their pizzas are always in my freezer. When I have guests I add another generous sprinkling of my own Mozzarella cheese to the top....then I bake it and serve it to guests and it's SO good they all rave about it.
Bon appetit!
Leni
Bay Pizza. It wasn’t directly under the train. I honestly do not know. Haven’t been back to Brooklyn in a few years. Last time I was there I did go Spumoni Gardens, as well as Brennan & Carr and Nathans.
Yes, it was a food day for me.
I like thin crust with a little bit of a crisp bite, so that eliminates a lot of the “foldable” NY Pizza. One exception is Chicago’s Gino East Deep dish, yum. But being from Cali it is a rare treat, with no plans to get back to Chicago ever.
Just say this brand in my So Cal Walmart today. But it was in the refrigerated deli section, not frozen. They must make it locally to get away with fresh?? I'll definitely be checking that out sooner than later.
Just “saw”
“Bon appetit!”
Yikes, living here in Chicagoland (western suburb), I am now dying for a pizza and I’m hungry, and I don’t have one. Nothing beats a good Chicago pizza. Well, I can dream....
BAR on Crown Street does the New Haven style magnificently. I think they stole a cook or two from Sally’s at twice the pay.
Thanks for the info Leni.
I'll give it a try!
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