Posted on 01/05/2026 6:44:58 PM PST by logi_cal869
The restaurant industry is trying to figure out whether America has hit peak pizza.
Once the second-most common U.S. restaurant type, pizzerias are now outnumbered by coffee shops and Mexican food eateries, according to industry data. Sales growth at pizza restaurants has lagged behind the broader fast-food market for years, and the outlook ahead isn’t much brighter.
“Pizza is disrupted right now,” Ravi Thanawala, chief financial officer and North America president at Papa John’s International, said in an interview. “That’s what the consumer tells us.”
The parent of the Pieology Pizzeria chain filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in December. Others, including the parent of Anthony’s Coal Fired Pizza & Wings and Bertucci’s Brick Oven Pizza & Pasta, earlier filed for bankruptcy.
Pizza once was a novelty outside big U.S. cities, providing room for growth for independent shops and then chains such as Pizza Hut with its red roof dine-in restaurants. Purpose-made cardboard boxes and fleets of delivery drivers helped make pizza a takeout staple for those seeking low-stress meals.
Today, pizza shops are engaged in price wars with one another and other kinds of fast food. Food-delivery apps have put a wider range of cuisines and options at Americans’ fingertips. And $20 a pie for a family can feel expensive compared with $5 fast-food deals, frozen pizzas or eating a home-cooked meal.
(Excerpt) Read more at wsj.com ...
The corporate chain food/fast food experience is absolutely awful. Poor quality, expensive, abysmal service.
The best USA pizza is in NYC. Has the quality there gone down? I think it is something to do with the water in making the pizza.
The key to that is to set the dough on end, then squash it down into itself.
That produces the round dough blank.



My wife teased me for years about my crush on Sandra Bullock! She would say to me in a lilting, arched eyebrow fashion: "This new movie has...Sandra Bullock in it! Don't you want to see it?"
A pizza sized spatula.
LOL
Well, we do now: I had never heard that prior and looked it up.
Rather than the mooslims, perhaps it was Taco Bell that rotted Europe from the bottom up...
Costco pizza is my cheap pizza guilty pleasure. Slice and a Diet Coke for <$3. My county GOP chairman’s comment - “That stuff is way better than it has any right to be.” He’s not wrong.
Save this pizza recipe bump!
In Clearwater FL area we’ve got a small chain called Jett’s Pizza.
A Jet 10 (Most every thing in generous quantities) large thick crust with extra italian sausage but is like $32, add $8 tip and great pizza for two or three days but they’ve boosted pricing during the Bidding Admin.
So how long to make your pizza? Do you spin it around or just use a rolling pin? Sounds great just really time consuming - Jett’s delivered in 35 minutes - we’re close by.
;-)
Save this pizza recipe bump!
In Clearwater FL area we’ve got a small chain called Jett’s Pizza.
A Jet 10 (Most every thing in generous quantities) large thick crust with extra italian sausage but is like $32, add $8 tip and great pizza for two or three days but they’ve boosted pricing during the Bidding Admin.
So how long to make your pizza? Do you spin it around or just use a rolling pin? Sounds great just really time consuming - Jett’s delivered in 35 minutes - we’re close by.
;-)
LOL
Smart woman!
I would guess they are toaking about garbage fast food type pizza, not da Kine pizza restaurants.
Do not eat that artificial crap.
Was not Pizza Slut sued for using fake cheese at some point?
I make a pseudo-pizza on flour tortillas for about 50 cents with two minutes prep time and 7-10 minutes bake time that tastes as good as anything Pizza Hut or Dominoes (the only pizza places within 50 miles of me) puts out these days. And two of my pseudo-pizzas for a dollar are about as filling as a medium pizza from P-H or D's. (Also works with bagels or english muffins, but need three on bagels or four on english muffins to fill me up.
I posted my recipe at FR a few years ago, but I'll post it here again if anyone wants it.
Damn, bookmarked
Sorry for the dupe post - it was tagged - reviewed ready to post but if I’d hit post it should have posted and gone back to the original article.
Thanks for the recipe!
But pasta with red sauce, unless I make it myself, is generally a no-go for me.
That is why I make mine as I do, with no red sauce.
One of the greatest yet most satisfying curses is learning how to well-prepare a dish that you absolutely love!
Okay...I am taking a thread detour! (my apologies, logi_cal869!)
Case in point (besides pizza) is a Spanish Tapas dish: Gambas al Ajillo...shrimp with garlic in sizzling olive oil. I have traveled long distances to get this. I cannot get sick of it, and I can make it as spicy as I want! (this picture below is nice, but I noticed they only put a single pepper on it...when I make it for myself, I usually put at least five or six!) Gambas al Ajillo (Spanish Tapas dish)

I have to take some extra time to explain the garlic aspect of this.
I cannot stand garlic when it has that taste where it hasn't been cooked enough or cooked the right way. Gives me indigestion, makes me reek of garlic. I don't like it. But this dish does not affect me this way.
Here is what happens. In this process of simply pouring the smoking hot oil over the pile of ingredients in the pan, the garlic nearly disappears, and if you slice it thin enough, it actually WILL disappear. Amazingly. It doesn't get brown or carmelized...or bitter. It just gets softer and softer, and loses the raw garlic flavor (which I dislike). If you don't slice it thin enough, you may still get that strong garlic flavor. I love garlic, but I don't like garlic, if you know what I mean.
Then when you eat it with the bread and the shrimp, often, you only find a few slices of translucent, completely cooked, non-garlicky...garlic. Better than oven roasted garlic done right. I am now four hours past dinner, and...no garlic aftertaste!
Wow! Beautiful walkthrough.
Egad! I know what you mean, that made me laugh...”rat turd sausage”!!!
It is always a disappointment when they bring it to my table (I order a Margarita pizza with Italian sausage) and I see those uniform clumps of sausage that look like, well...RAT TURDS!
Hate it. Hate it. Hate it.
But...I usually eat it anyway!
Here where I live, I get my sausage from a place in Revere (an Italian town near Boston) called Bianco & Sons Sausage! When I put it on my own pizza, I usually steam it to get the fat out, then crumble it randomly on top of the pie! Steaming it keeps the pizza from getting greasy...:)
Ahhh! You can probably tell how much I love my pizza.
I have never been able to do the dough from scratch. I have to learn how to do that. I just cannot get it right.
I agree
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