stevez wrote:I'll be interested to hear what my dining companions have to say about their visit to Wells Brothers. Quite a few of them were making their maiden voyage.
stevez wrote:It was a decent salad, perfectly in keeping with the aesthetic of Wells Brothers. It was almost entirely iceberg lettuce, pizza topping style pepperoni and shredded mozzarella...and tasty as hell. The house dressing was good, if a little sweet.
Rene G wrote:I see you mixed up your salad, but still it looks like you might've gotten shorted on the cheese. At Wells Brothers, it seems that the mark of a well made salad is not leaving any vegetation visible.
stevez wrote:Rene G wrote:I see you mixed up your salad, but still it looks like you might've gotten shorted on the cheese. At Wells Brothers, it seems that the mark of a well made salad is not leaving any vegetation visible.
No, actually our salad was served with the cheese yarmulke. I just mixed it up first so that it looked more like a salad and less like a cheese bowl.
budrichard wrote:The best Wells pizza is a simple basil and cheese.
Ram4 wrote:budrichard wrote:The best Wells pizza is a simple basil and cheese.
Basil on a midwest tavern-style pizza?! Never, ever saw anyone do that. I am sure it's good, but... it's just... wrong. I usually only get sausage on mine (well done) at Wells Bros.
budrichard wrote:Ram4 wrote:budrichard wrote:The best Wells pizza is a simple basil and cheese.
Basil on a midwest tavern-style pizza?! Never, ever saw anyone do that. I am sure it's good, but... it's just... wrong. I usually only get sausage on mine (well done) at Wells Bros.
Surely you jest!
From wiki "A popular contemporary legend holds that the archetypal pizza, Pizza Margherita, was invented in 1889, when the Royal Palace of Capodimonte commissioned the Neapolitan pizzaiolo (pizza maker) Raffaele Esposito to create a pizza in honor of the visiting Queen Margherita. Of the three different pizzas he created, the Queen strongly preferred a pie swathed in the colors of the Italian flag: red (tomato), green (basil), and white (mozzarella). Supposedly, this kind of pizza was then named after the Queen as "Pizza Margherita",[15] although recent research casts doubt on this legend.[16]"
-Dick
budrichard wrote:The best Well's pizza is a simple basil and cheese.
stevez wrote:In an attempt to revitalize the area, the streets in front of the restaurant are going to be completely torn up starting in June and projected to remain that way for at least three months. The parking lot will remain open and accessible. The end result will be worth it, but in the meantime, the folks at Wells Brothers are a little concerned that their business will drop off due to the construction. What we can do to help is to plan a visit during the summer months and enjoy a pizza. Put Wells Brothers on your sumer road trip map and help a GNR stay in business.
budrichard wrote:The reason the basil pizza is so good is that the basil is fresh and put under the cheese to keep it from crisping.
I don't eat 'Tavern Pizza', so I have no idea of what a Midwest Tavern Pizza is?
I have eaten a lot of pizza over the years at famous(most not so good) and small pizza places.
I even worked as a pizza maker during high-school at Frank & Pat's in Menasha Wis ( now Frank's Pizza Palace in Appleton andCrankyPat's elsewhere). I guess Frank and Pat must have had a falling out.
15 years ago we were at a class reunion and had a sausage pizza from Frank's Pizza Palace, very greasy but close to the old style of thin crust I was taught to make.
The simple fact of the matter is that this little non-des crept family owned and run place in Racine Wisconsin makes one of the best pizza's I have ever eaten and the basil & cheese is simply the best.
Well's may not have the publicity of a Burt's or Uno, but the pizza aside, it's a great place.-Dick
budrichard wrote:Frank's and Well's pizza have absolutely zero in common except cheese, sauce and dough.
Frank's has a thick crust compared to Well's, Well's crust is crisp, very crisp, Frank's is not crisp and if they make the 'Special' as I was taught to make it at Frank and Pat's, then it's downright soggy.
At Frank and Pat's I was taught to give the pizza a once over of oil just before it goes into the oven but I suspect Frank's carries that to the extreme, the Pizza as very greasy.
Well's does NOT put the basil on the pizza, it's under the cheese and it's fresh basil.
I did not grow up on the streets, so obviously we have a different expectation of pizza and life in general.-Dick
ld111134 wrote: Plus, I still think that most Chicago-style pies have a sauce that too cloyingly-sweet for my tastes (including the aforementioned Vito & Nick's pizzas).
Binko wrote:ld111134 wrote: Plus, I still think that most Chicago-style pies have a sauce that too cloyingly-sweet for my tastes (including the aforementioned Vito & Nick's pizzas).
This is a surprising criticism to me. I'm not much for the "sugar sauce" style of pizza, but I never found V&N's to be particularly sweet. Or sweet at all, really. Maybe it's because I'm comparing to places like Palermo's and Aurelio's.
Katie wrote:I do like Wells Brothers, pizza and place, very much, in accordance with everything positive said about them both in this thread. But --- pet peeve alert --- I am going to nominate "Platonic ideal" for our next round of "expressions you wish were banned." Can something be perfect? Yes, I think so. Let's just say it's perfect. But if you can touch it and it's real (so real you can take home leftovers), it is by, by definition, not a Platonic ideal.