AngrySarah wrote:But they changed it and the sausage is more like rabbit turd/Domino's type.
Athena wrote:America's Test Kitchen did a show a couple of weeks back where they rated frozen pizzas - they rated one by California Pizza Kitchen highest (the review is also on their website; iirc you need to be a subscriber to see the full review).
Pie Lady wrote:Y'know what I used to dig? French bread pizza. I liked the sausage one. It was in a red box - maybe Banquet?
JackieK wrote:About twice a year I will crave a Tombstone Pizza. Maybe it's because I ate those growing up (not too often, but more than twice a year for sure), but sometimes I just really want one and nothing fresh will suffice.
AngrySarah wrote:
But they changed it and the sausage is more like rabbit turd/Domino's type.
tem wrote:jimswside wrote:dukesdad wrote:I liked it as well, but always burnt the heck out of the roof of my mouth.
One of my 'favorite' childhood memories ... the inevitable scalding of the hard palate and accompanying skin peeling off
happy_stomach wrote:I'm not a fan of CPK. The kids I babysit seem to be fed CPK frozen pizzas all of the time. I find the pizzas, both frozen and in the restaurants, too sweet.
JackieK wrote:
About twice a year I will crave a Tombstone Pizza. Maybe it's because I ate those growing up (not too often, but more than twice a year for sure), but sometimes I just really want one and nothing fresh will suffice.
Me, too. I've never indulged the craving though...
cito wrote:Every self-respecting neighborhood bar in Chicago served them, baked in the small electric toaster oven that Tombstone provided. Tombstone pizza achieved cult-like status at that time, and then it was introduced to supermarkets.
tem wrote:jimswside wrote:dukesdad wrote:I liked it as well, but always burnt the heck out of the roof of my mouth.
One of my 'favorite' childhood memories was the pain of eating Stouffer's french bread pizza. It was so thick and difficult to bite through completely that you had to really chomp down on it, leading to the inevitable scalding of the hard palate and accompanying skin peeling off for the next couple days.
Cogito wrote:I know that a frozen pizza is never going to compare with a fresh sampling, but jeez, do they have to be so bad? It would nice to be able to go to the freezer at 2AM and take one out, put it in the oven for a few minutes, and then just enjoy getting that pizza jones scratched, albeit at a sacrifice in quality.
I've been trying everything in Tony's frozen pizza section, and man, it is grim. So far, everything has sucked like a Hoover. The best thing I've found is a Palermo ultra-thin crust, and it doesn't come close to fresh. Almost eferything has a horrible cardboard-like crust, or if the crust is near-to-palatable, there are no ingredients to speak of, or they are just awful in quality. Has anyone found anything that is even remotely decent?
cito wrote:Thirty years ago when Tombstone was still a small Wisconsin company, their sausage was spicier with a gravel-like texture. Every self-respecting neighborhood bar in Chicago served them, baked in the small electric toaster oven that Tombstone provided. Tombstone pizza achieved cult-like status at that time, and then it was introduced to supermarkets.
Several years after that, the company was purchased by Kraft, and the rest is history--
cito wrote:AngrySarah wrote:
But they changed it and the sausage is more like rabbit turd/Domino's type.
That is also what happened to Tombstone pizzas.
Thirty years ago when Tombstone was still a small Wisconsin company, their sausage was spicier with a gravel-like texture. Every self-respecting neighborhood bar in Chicago served them, baked in the small electric toaster oven that Tombstone provided. Tombstone pizza achieved cult-like status at that time, and then it was introduced to supermarkets.
Several years after that, the company was purchased by Kraft, and the rest is history--
JeanneBean wrote:If you want the "old-school Tombstone" it's called classic on the wrapper.
Riffhard wrote:A few years ago I found @ Woodman's a Pizza claiming to be made by the original inventor/owner or something of Tombstone. It was awesome just like I remember at the bowling alleys when I was a kid...but I never found it again
iiifrank wrote:tem wrote:dukesdad wrote:I liked it as well, but always burnt the heck out of the roof of my mouth.
One of my 'favorite' childhood memories was the pain of eating Stouffer's french bread pizza. It was so thick and difficult to bite through completely that you had to really chomp down on it, leading to the inevitable scalding of the hard palate and accompanying skin peeling off for the next couple days.
That is so funny. I have the exact same memories. Having grown up in Cleveland, I thought that the Stouffer's products were local. I haven't seen them here in Chicago but, then again, I don't really spend much time in those aisles any more.
phredbull wrote:iiifrank wrote:tem wrote:I liked it as well, but always burnt the heck out of the roof of my mouth.
One of my 'favorite' childhood memories was the pain of eating Stouffer's french bread pizza. It was so thick and difficult to bite through completely that you had to really chomp down on it, leading to the inevitable scalding of the hard palate and accompanying skin peeling off for the next couple days.
That is so funny. I have the exact same memories. Having grown up in Cleveland, I thought that the Stouffer's products were local. I haven't seen them here in Chicago but, then again, I don't really spend much time in those aisles any more.
j r wrote:What about the frozen pizzas from places like Unos or Ginos that I see in the freezer section with all the flat national brands? Any one try them and have any comments?
They must be better than Tombstone
happy_stomach wrote:Another individual-size frozen pizza I like are the ones from Market Day. They're probably not on par with Home Run, which I haven't had, but the Market Day pizzas always hit the spot for me.