Since I arrived in Buenos Aires a week ago, I have been eating pizza non stop.
At the hostel at which I am staying, the proprietor, an African American knicnamed Obama by the local
Chinese grocer because he couldn´t pronounce his name Melvin, told me
that ``Portenos (natives of Buenos Aires) think that they have pizza
down...they don´t.`` I assumed he was being overly dramatic in this
denunciation of the local pizza. After all, Buenos Aires has a healthy
population of people of Italian descent as Eye Tie immigrants came here
by the hundreds of thousands, if not millions, in the early 20th
century. So how bad could it be? I decided to find out by taking a
whilrwind tour of BA pizza.
If this foray into the world of
Buenos Aires `za was to be scientifically
accurate, I would have to order it for every meal, ensuring I was
getting a sufficient cross section of the different pizzas the city had
to offer. My first pizza experience came on my first night. It was
midnight, I hadn´t eaten all day, and I had traversed much of the city
by foot. I felt pretty confident that if they put Elios frozen pizza in
front of me I would have devoured it (that´s actually a pretty unfair
swipe at Elios. I considered it to be haute cuisine when I was young.
To this day I still buy carts full of Jack´s frozen pies when Jewell
does a 10 pies for 10 dollars special). Unfortunately, St. Paul´s
Elementary school cafeterias friday pizza would have been an upgrade at
this place. The crust was so cardboard like that even J. Patrick Doyle,
the CEO of Dominos pizza and star of their highly successful new
advertising campaign, would scoff at it (of course he has more
confidence to scoff now, what with their revamped crust and
`revolutionary` parmesan bread bites (Lori goes crazy whenever that
commercial comes on ``They are just putting cheese on the bread! How is
that something special?!?!`` she will scream. Then she turns the
channel back to RuPauls Drag Race and is immediately mollified). A
bigger problem than the cardboard crust was the virtually non existent
sauce. Polly-O string cheese used to boast that the mozarella was the
best part of the pizza. I never questioned that logic as a I youth, but
as a wizened afficionado of pizza I now see that even the best part of
the pizza is nothing without a good crust and sauce. Its like having
Lebron (the mozarella) with a terrible supporting cast comprised of Mike
Miller and Eddy Curry (the sauce and crust respectively). It basically
amounts to disgraceful early exits from the playoffs (is that reference
still applicable? I´ve been too busy eating pizza and drinking Malbec to
check out espn lately). So on a scale of Speedway Gas Station slices
to Tarantellas with Famous Original Rays somewhere in the middle, I put
that first Buenos Aires pie slightly below Little Cesars Hot and Ready. However, what they
lack in culinary skill and proper ingredients, they more than make up
for in consistency. Literally every pizza I have had subsequent to that
first pie has tasted more or less the same. Same weak crust, decent
mozarella, and a dearth of sauce.
Now that Lori is arriving tomorrow (along with her superior knowledge of
Spanish), I can now diversify what I eat. Perhaps a tour of the
different steaks and meats offered by the city is up next....
Tuesday, June 26, 2012
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