Posted on 05/04/2023 2:57:19 PM PDT by nickcarraway
It’s called The Elvis, and we still can’t decide if it’s bolt of culinary genius or a terrible mistake.
Served at Roscoe’s Pizza in Corwin, Ohio, which is roughly an hour away from Downtown Columbus, the pizza features a peanut butter base, traditional pizza cheese, bacon and bananas. Honey is added after baking.
An allusion to American music icon Elvis Presley, the pie has garnered more than 7,000 likes and more than 3,000 comments on a Facebook post the restaurant made about the pie on April 5.
The majority of comments were positive, with some leaving rave reviews after eating the pizza and others voice their desire to try it.
The pizza also recently received coverage from Indy 100 and Rare.
The Elvis isn’t the only wild pie to come out of the Corwin eatery either. On April 26, Roscoe’s introduced The Peanut Butter & Jelly, which combines combines peanut butter, jelly and a Panko topping.

There is a small town pizza restaurant, also in Ohio, that puts brown sugar on their pizzas. It is SO good.
Peanut butter sounds gross, though.
The Bud Lite of Pizza’s.
Isn’t Elvis allegedly dead?
I won’t think of it as pizza, but I might eat it just the same.
I tried making a PBJ pizza at home a few years back. It was okay, but nothing to rave about.
What defines pizza for you? To me it is simply a dough base with toppings.
A dessert pizza, perhaps.
I’m in.
Yuck!
Ain’t pizza.
You can have my portion; just not for me.
In a Potato Bread Sandwich, PB & Bananas...YEAH!
True, especially the Apple Butter and considering the fact it was a German restaurant. Still I loved it.
Every year when F1 races at Monza, the Mexican driver Sergio “Checo” Perez goes to the same restaurant, and orders his favorite pizza with TUNA on it. He says it’s great.
Its not a pizza.
To think people made fun of me because I like onions on my pizza
When I lived in LA there was a place in Westchester, just north of LAX, called “Hanks”, open 24 hours in those days, which was pretty good, and much better than the chains.
No self-respecting Thai would put peanut sauce on a pizza. The key ingredient that turns an ordinary Italian pizza into an authentic Thai pizza is ketchup.
https://www.quora.com/Why-do-people-in-Thailand-put-ketchup-on-their-pizza
A pie is not a pizza...
Sounds like Brazilian pizza.
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