Mhays wrote:Can't help with query #1, but I'm betting that #2 is JB Alberto's on Morse. Staggering in size and cheap - not bad, not great...
Possibly John's, good, if not great thin crust, home of the football pizza. If nothing else John's has a don't miss old school verging on dive ambiance with a secluded second bar area in the rear.
...
Enjoy,
Gary
John's Pizza & Lounge
2104 N Western
Chicago
773-384-1755
Darren72 wrote:
Just as an aside, I know where Northwestern is and I know where Loyola is. I've never heard of an area in Chicago described as "Loyola/Northwestern". The only area I can think of that is close to both locations is downtown, close to the Loyola's Water Tower campus and the NU Medical School. But from the discussion above, it seems people are referring to the main Loyola campus.
ksbeck wrote:The main Loyola campus is in Roger's Park, fairly close to Northwestern's main campus in Evanston. Perhaps you were thinking of DePaul's main campus rather than Loyola's?
Binko wrote:ksbeck wrote:The main Loyola campus is in Roger's Park, fairly close to Northwestern's main campus in Evanston. Perhaps you were thinking of DePaul's main campus rather than Loyola's?
Yeah, I took Northwestern/Loyola to mean Rogers Park/Evanston. Even though I'm very familiar with both areas, having lived there for years, I kinda lump them into one myself. It's just shorthand for "way up north in Chicago or so."
Darren72 wrote:DePaul is of course in Lincoln Park, not particularly close to either NU or Loyola. Not that it really matters.
Cathy2 wrote:
I have never been to John's, though I have heard much about it. I recall Erik M commenting their pizza is best eaten at John's location. Their pizza suffers in quality from pick-up to home, thus loosing the beauty of the experience.
Regards,
I've never heard of an area in Chicago described as "Loyola/Northwestern".
whiskeybent wrote:Art of Pizza on Ashland is our go-to for thin crust, I should give it a shot for pan pizza.
rlguffman wrote:I tried to get Pequods to deliver to me the other day, but they only go up to Montrose. I explained that I am like 3 doors north of Montrose, and could they make an exception, but whoever was manning the phones seemed to be on auto-reply and kept saying "only up to Montrose"
whiskeybent wrote:Not deep dish, not stuffed, just pan pizza.
nsxtasy wrote:whiskeybent wrote:Not deep dish, not stuffed, just pan pizza.
I'm confused by this statement. I always thought "deep dish" referred to pizza that's, well, baked in a deep dish, i.e. a pan with vertical walls around the edges. And this includes double-crust "stuffed" pizza such as at Giordano's, as well as single-crust pizza such as what Lou Malnati's and Gino's East menus call "deep dish pizza" (as distinguished from their "thin crust pizza") and what Pequod's calls "pan pizza" (as distinguished from their "thin crust pizza"). IOW, I always thought that "pan pizza" is simply one type of deep-dish pizza, the type served at Malnati's, Pizano's, Uno's, Gino's East, Pequod's, Burt's, etc. Note that I am not claiming that these pizzas all taste the same (and am not trying to get into that hornet's nest); however, all are baked in a deep dish pan and all use a single crust.
So isn't pan pizza one type of deep-dish pizza?
leek wrote:I always think of "pan" pizza as something like what Pizza Hut makes. It's made in a pan, with a thicker, breadier crust. Apparently a secret ingredient is milk, which may be what makes it tender.
leek wrote:Yes, there are lots of pizza styles that are made in pans, but we don't generally call what is made by Giordano's or Edwardo's (for example) "pan" pizza.
leek wrote:I always think of "pan" pizza as something like what Pizza Hut makes. It's made in a pan, with a thicker, breadier crust. Apparently a secret ingredient is milk, which may be what makes it tender..
Kramerica wrote:Pequod's, at mentioned, is another favorite of mine and I've never really come across anything else offering the carmalized cheese burnt crust. I hate crust and yet at Pequod's it's the first thing I eat.
sundevilpeg wrote:I always liked Villa May for a solid go-to pie . . . where are they now located?