For some odd reason, this picture cracks me up. If my photoshop skill was a little better I'd put a couple of eyes and a smiley face on the slice.soltro79 wrote:
Noli's NY Style Pizza
Kennyz wrote:I'm tempted to try the new and improved Noli, but a peek in the window this morning has me scared. I saw one of those rotating heat lamp contraptions, frequently used with dire consequences to keep the day's slices warm. Please tell me that this torture device is just a show piece at Noli. No self-respecting place claiming to serve NYC-style pizza would dream of using one of those.
soltro79 wrote:Kennyz wrote:I'm tempted to try the new and improved Noli, but a peek in the window this morning has me scared. I saw one of those rotating heat lamp contraptions, frequently used with dire consequences to keep the day's slices warm. Please tell me that this torture device is just a show piece at Noli. No self-respecting place claiming to serve NYC-style pizza would dream of using one of those.
It's leftover by the previous owner. If they could have done their own build out I'm sure they would prefer to do something similar to Cafe Luigi or Ian's. But it is what it is. Whether you use the rotating heat lamp, or it sits on the counter, neither would be as fresh/flavorful as a pie right from the oven.
Kennyz wrote:soltro79 wrote:Kennyz wrote:I'm tempted to try the new and improved Noli, but a peek in the window this morning has me scared. I saw one of those rotating heat lamp contraptions, frequently used with dire consequences to keep the day's slices warm. Please tell me that this torture device is just a show piece at Noli. No self-respecting place claiming to serve NYC-style pizza would dream of using one of those.
It's leftover by the previous owner. If they could have done their own build out I'm sure they would prefer to do something similar to Cafe Luigi or Ian's. But it is what it is. Whether you use the rotating heat lamp, or it sits on the counter, neither would be as fresh/flavorful as a pie right from the oven.
I don't understand what "leftover by the previous owner" has to do with anything. Why can't they just get rid of it? Slices reheated a la minute are WAY better than heat lamp slices, and every pizzeria in NY knows it. Even Famous Famiglia. I might still try a fresh Noli pie someday, but I'm disappointed to hear that slices are out of the question. It's not a NY pizza place if you can't just grab a quick- reheated via oven blast - slice. Anyway, thanks for helping me avoid wasting a trip today.
soltro79 wrote:I never said slices were out of the question, you did.
soltro79 wrote:It'd be better off sitting in cardboard before making its way back into the oven.
Kennyz wrote:I'm tempted to try the new and improved Noli, but a peek in the window this morning has me scared. I saw one of those rotating heat lamp contraptions, frequently used with dire consequences to keep the day's slices warm. Please tell me that this torture device is just a show piece at Noli. No self-respecting place claiming to serve NYC-style pizza would dream of using one of those.
stevez wrote:Kennyz wrote:I'm tempted to try the new and improved Noli, but a peek in the window this morning has me scared. I saw one of those rotating heat lamp contraptions, frequently used with dire consequences to keep the day's slices warm. Please tell me that this torture device is just a show piece at Noli. No self-respecting place claiming to serve NYC-style pizza would dream of using one of those.
I thought that was pretty much standard equipment at a NYC slice place.
stevez wrote:Kennyz wrote:I'm tempted to try the new and improved Noli, but a peek in the window this morning has me scared. I saw one of those rotating heat lamp contraptions, frequently used with dire consequences to keep the day's slices warm. Please tell me that this torture device is just a show piece at Noli. No self-respecting place claiming to serve NYC-style pizza would dream of using one of those.
I thought that was pretty much standard equipment at a NYC slice place.
Kennyz wrote:stevez wrote:Kennyz wrote:I'm tempted to try the new and improved Noli, but a peek in the window this morning has me scared. I saw one of those rotating heat lamp contraptions, frequently used with dire consequences to keep the day's slices warm. Please tell me that this torture device is just a show piece at Noli. No self-respecting place claiming to serve NYC-style pizza would dream of using one of those.
I thought that was pretty much standard equipment at a NYC slice place.
Oh god no! Standard is to keep a bunch of pies on the counter at room temperature and blast them to order for a minute in a scorching hot oven. I don't think I had ever seen one of those things before I moved to the midwest.
JeffB wrote:Good "plain" pie, with toppings added to the slice before going into the Fauld's oven for a minute of 2.
MoodyGirl wrote:The sausage was not very good. They use those strange sausage nuggets most chain places use.
stevez wrote:MoodyGirl wrote:The sausage was not very good. They use those strange sausage nuggets most chain places use.
... the pizza itself was very doughy and the crust was bland. I suppose these are traits that endear the NY style to many.
Kennyz wrote:stevez wrote:MoodyGirl wrote:The sausage was not very good. They use those strange sausage nuggets most chain places use.
... the pizza itself was very doughy and the crust was bland. I suppose these are traits that endear the NY style to many.
Steve, no offense - but you have already outed yourself as someone with no idea about NY style pizza. The thinly veiled insults about the style are doing nothing to change that reputation.
stevez wrote:Here's a question for all those NY pizza lovers. Do you consider there to be different styles (and grades) of NY pizza? In other words, if you order a pie at Lombardi's, for example, is it different/better than a pie ordered at a "by the slice" place? Are they considered different styles, or just a different quality of the same thing?
stevez wrote:I aways assumed that the soft doughy style is what the lovers of that style prefer, mostly due to the fact that being able to fold it in half is praised as one of the hallmarks.
Kennyz wrote:stevez wrote:I aways assumed that the soft doughy style is what the lovers of that style prefer, mostly due to the fact that being able to fold it in half is praised as one of the hallmarks.
The best NY pizzas, imo, are the ones that are bready (doughy? perhaps - but I would call it "springy") toward the outside lip, but then taper to a very crisp crust at the center. In fact, I would argue that that tapering characteristic is a requirement if you are going to call something "NY style". You can fold them because the outside is pliable enough, but the center should be quite crispy, and ideally have a good bit of char.

Kennyz wrote:The best NY pizzas, imo, are the ones that are bready (doughy? perhaps - but I would call it "springy") toward the outside lip, but then taper to a very crisp crust at the center. In fact, I would argue that that tapering characteristic is a requirement if you are going to call something "NY style". You can fold them because the outside is pliable enough, but the center should be quite crispy, and ideally have a good bit of char.
stevez wrote:Here's a question for all those NY pizza lovers. Do you consider there to be different styles (and grades) of NY pizza? In other words, if you order a pie at Lombardi's, for example, is it different/better than a pie ordered at a "by the slice" place? Are they considered different styles, or just a different quality of the same thing?