Mike G wrote: So my guess is, even if Puck never saw one like this (and let's remember, he was in Indianapolis in the mid-70s) before the idea hit him, lots of people in the parts of the world where they make BBQ were messing around with pizza back then, it's inconceivable that BBQ pizza didn't get invented multiple times in the 70s or even earlier.
A point well-taken, Mike. There is, of course, the matter of what constitutes an "invention" in cuisine. This is something of a philosophical issue on the board (as in the discussion of what constitutes a sandwich), and a scholarly question related to discussions of origins and authenticity. When does a dish become something new? Is BBQ pizza BBQ, or is it a thing in itself? Maybe it is like a marriage, where I becomes "we" some or most of the time. As in marriages, some combinations "take" and some do not. So, when a place like Memphis appears to have a BBQ tradition and BBQ pizza is served all around town, doesn't Memphis get to lay claim to the dish? If LaDou came up with BBQ pizza for Puck's establishment, that's nice. But saying he invented BBQ pizza is like giving credit to Robuchon for mashed potatoes, though I am sure this has been done! I guess I am arguing against a cosmopolitan view where food is concerned.
At the same time, notions of authenticity seem to bump up against innovation in a way that makes my anti-cosmopolitan position awkward. Frankly, I can't imagine Honey1 rib tips would make a good pizza. So, should we call it BBQ pizza then, or meat-jello pizza? On second thought, it seems like hot links might make a good pizza. The question is which crust to use. But this example/digression has me talking in circles, which illustrates the difficulty of resolving this sort of issue. I suspect the answer may be found in some anthropological text.
Taking a more mystical view, it's possible that, like most "inventions," BBQ pizza probably emerged from the great soup of consciousness in a number of locations simultaneously. A quick Google search on my dim memory of that dish yields claims that The King Himself used to order BBQ pizza at Colletta's in Memphis. Apparently
Colletta's claims to be THE originators of BBQ Pizza. One of the blogs even claims Colletta's invented it for Elvis. (If that is the case, it seems a shame that their site's musicial theme evokes another legendary gourmand, Marlon Brando.) Certainly, there is no shortage of invention claims in restaurant marketing. I imagine that with a bit of investigation, a classical scholar might find such a claim in graffiti carved on a wall near the Roman Forum: "Chez Marcus Gavius -- originators of songbirds with cardoons in honey, Tiberius' favorite!" It just may be that, as Mike speculates above, BBQ pizza got "invented" even earlier than the 70's and indeed has been around since the 50's in Memphis.
I'm wondering if anyone from Memphis cares to share early recollections of this pizza.
Man : I can't understand how a poet like you can eat that stuff.
T. S. Eliot: Ah, but you're not a poet.