BR wrote:Last night I paid a visit to Pequod's and was once again reminded why I like but don't love their pizza.
First, the crust is really too much of a bread, too fluffy really. Burt managed to control the yeast and keep the style that of pizza and less of pizza bread.
Octarine wrote:The RIP Burt sign was a classy touch.
JeffB wrote:Picked up a sausage and meatball, extra sauce extra cheese, well done, at Pequod's the day Burt's passing was announced here. Best damn pie of any genre I've had in quite some time. Also, the place is basically a tavern. That makes it a real Chicago pizza spot (in the Marie's, Vito's, etc. sense) in a way that many others, while good, can't match.
Agree. First couple of bites, when Pequod's (Morton Grove) pizza was steaming hot were very tasty, slight sweet to the sauce, hint of fennel in the sausage, crisp highly caramelized cheese ring, nice bottom crunch and the dough layer was light and airy. The medium pizza lost all definition as it cooled, slightly doughy, no real crisp and slight acrid notes in the caramelized outer ring of cheese became more pronounced.BR wrote:Last night I paid a visit to Pequod's and was once again reminded why I like but don't love their pizza.
I don't know if I ever directly thanked you for this tip (that one could even request such), but I am now. Thanks. Extra cheese, light dough is my baseline for Pequod's. I prefer Lefty's because it's right by home and their sausage is top notch, but Pequod's being open later gives them some of my business.Ram4 wrote:Don't forget to order it with LIGHT DOUGH if you want a thinner pizza at Pequod.
I have no idea what the author Neil Gale is talking about with thispudgym29 wrote:this scholastic article about Burt's Place and Pequod's Pizza
Aside from the place on Touhy, which people mainly seem to prefer for the hot grinder sandwiches, and which offers standard thin (not tavern style) by the slice to the best of my knowledge (I may have tried it 15-20yrs, or so, ago, but don't think I ever have), I don't know of any Chicago use of the term "Eastern Style", and certainly not for something thick, like Lefty's. I don't know where the hell the author came up with that.John Munao ventured out on his own, taking Burt Katz caramelized pizza crust secret, and opened Lefty's Pizza Kitchen in Wilmette in 2018. The pizzas are a New York style with the crust being double thin in thickness or as Chicagoans call it, Eastern Style.
bweiny wrote:I have no idea what the author Neil Gale is talking about with this
Gale is a legend is his own mind.ronnie_suburban wrote:bweiny wrote:I have no idea what the author Neil Gale is talking about with this
Don't give it another thought. He's a known moron who should be ignored.
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ronnie_suburban wrote:bweiny wrote:I have no idea what the author Neil Gale is talking about with this
Don't give it another thought. He's a known moron who should be ignored.
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thetrob wrote:ronnie_suburban wrote:bweiny wrote:I have no idea what the author Neil Gale is talking about with this
Don't give it another thought. He's a known moron who should be ignored.
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I grew up in the same neighborhood as Neil. He tends to rub people the wrong way, and can be, should we say, persnickety.
ronnie_suburban wrote:thetrob wrote:ronnie_suburban wrote:bweiny wrote:I have no idea what the author Neil Gale is talking about with this
Don't give it another thought. He's a known moron who should be ignored.
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I grew up in the same neighborhood as Neil. He tends to rub people the wrong way, and can be, should we say, persnickety.
Persnickety, I can live with. Being factually incorrect on a consistent basis is how one earns the "moron" label.
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