TAC Crazy wrote:In a related topic, I once had Okonomiyaki (Japanese Pizza) in Tuscon but can't find any place in the city limits that serves it. I know it exists outside the city, but I do not own a car. Maybe LTH members can help us both!
dupreeblue wrote:Will do. I wouldn't be upset to find some solid Dulce de Leche ice cream reminiscent of Freddo myself.
dupreeblue wrote:@JeffB - I've read about Penguin time & time again on here. I'm pretty sure I moved to Chicago within weeks of its closing. A travesty for me & for them.
JoelF wrote:Wow, Evanston had one 26 years ago, on Benson, I think where the BBQ joint is, or a couple doors down.
Didn't impress me much. It was a long rectangular pizza you ordered by the decameter.
Antonius wrote:
That's Brazilian, not Argentine.

JoelF wrote:It was a long rectangular pizza you ordered by the decameter.
globetrotter wrote:dupreeblue wrote:Will do. I wouldn't be upset to find some solid Dulce de Leche ice cream reminiscent of Freddo myself.
that is cruel.
Antonius wrote:
That's Brazilian, not Argentine.
Kennyz wrote:It's not Argentine pizza if it doesn't come with a slice of faina, the chickpea-flour flatbread that's ubiquitous in the pizzerias that abound in Buenos Aires. I liked The Penguin, but there was nothing Argentine about it besides the ownership.
TAC Crazy wrote:In a related topic, I once had Okonomiyaki (Japanese Pizza) in Tuscon but can't find any place in the city limits that serves it. I know it exists outside the city, but I do not own a car. Maybe LTH members can help us both!


nicinchic wrote:Here is the pizza I had in BA in the Palermo district.
This is the link to all the food we ate.
viewtopic.php?f=15&t=15636&p=252909&hilit=buenos+aires#p252909
Kennyz wrote:It's not Argentine pizza if it doesn't come with a slice of faina, the chickpea-flour flatbread that's ubiquitous in the pizzerias that abound in Buenos Aires. I liked The Penguin, but there was nothing Argentine about it besides the ownership.
JeffB wrote:...and Argentine pizza with sliced ham and hardboiled eggs on it, soccer games blaring on TV, the owner handing out wine...
JeffB wrote:Kennyz wrote:It's not Argentine pizza if it doesn't come with a slice of faina, the chickpea-flour flatbread that's ubiquitous in the pizzerias that abound in Buenos Aires. I liked The Penguin, but there was nothing Argentine about it besides the ownership.
Hold on. That's not anywhere near my experience both with the Penguin and BA pizza. I'm not suggesting that faina isn't available in Argentina. It's a side item at Los Inmortales, eg. I am saying that few places are more Argentine than the Penguin. I'd be there at midnight on a Tuesday with little kids running around, eating empanadas, dulce de leche gelato (before it became a standard flavor in the US), and Argentine pizza with sliced ham and hardboiled eggs on it, soccer games blaring on TV, the owner handing out wine. The old guy only spoke Italian and Spanish with a Porteno accent so thick and quirky that my native-Spanish-speaker inlaws could barely understand him. The Penguin was much more Argentine, in my experience, than even the Argentine pizza places in Miami. And the menu had both "Argentine style" and "regular" pizzas, with quite different approaches for each.