By Sourish Bhattacharyya
The Olive Bar & Kitchen team posing for a photo-op with the Best Pizza Trophy being handed over by Rocky Mohan and other members of the Delhi Gourmet Club jury |
AFTER enjoying a long Diwali weekend,
I am back with a bucketful of news, starting with the announcement of the Delhi Gourmet Club's Pizza Hunt
results. When I look back at the evolution of the pizza in our city, I remember
the days when the Nirula's Keema Do
Pyaza Pizza used to be my post-examination treat from my father. The pizza
crust used to be like toast, with shredded Amul processed cheese filling in for
mozzarella, the 'tomato puree' suspiciously seeming to be straight out of a
ketchup bottle, and the keema do pyaza
was unevenly spread on top, with the serving getting thinner as the pizza got
popular. Of course, there was also the pepperoni pizza, which was hugely
popular (with good reason!), but I discovered it much later.
I am speaking of the early 1980s,
when a pizza was a treat that few middle-class families could afford. That was
when Taxila, the city's only respectable Continental restaurant on the Maurya
rooftop, was struggling to survive, and so was Valentino at the fledgling Hyatt
Regency, which made way for the juggernaut named La Piazza. It was La Piazza, together (a little later) with Italian
electrical engineer-turned-restaurateur Tarsillo
Natalone's Flavors, which ended Delhi's pizza virginity. In fact, the
opening chef of La Piazza, who was an Austrian, was so pernickety about the
restaurant's Neapolitan pizzas that he banned the waiters from dousing them
with Tabasco sauce or chilli flakes. The waiters, as a result, had to smuggle
bottles of both in their jacket pockets to serve their contents on the sly.
Since those early days, we have seen Ritu Dalmia introduce Delhi to the
wonders of the wood-fired oven at Diva.
We have had Bill Marchetti
inaugurate one with great fanfare at Pavilion, the all-day restaurant at the ITC Maurya, but the restaurant never
became famous for pizzas. We have watched Olive
Bar & Kitchen turn pizza slices, freshly out of the wood-fired oven,
into popular party snacks in the days when the trio of Anirban Sarkar, Mohit
Balachandran and Sabyasachi 'Saby'
Gorai had made the restaurant a force to reckon with. And Mist at The Park, in the days of Bakshish Dean (the golden age of the Connaught
Place hotel's culinary journey), rolled out such novelties of the time as the
smoked salmon and quattro formaggi pizzas.
Of course, we had our share of PR
gimmicks as well, such as the pizza priced at Rs 9,999 (its toppings included a
generous helping of beluga and lobster), with which The Qube opened its doors at The
Leela Palace Chanakyapuri. It was the creation of the hotel's then
executive chef, the affable American, Glenn
Eastman, who formerly presided over the kitchen at the personal yacht of
the world's richest man, Mexican telecoms tsar Carlos Slim Helu. Talking about Americans and pizzas, India is well
on its way to becoming one of the top five market for Domino's, which straddles across 55 per cent of the country's Rs
1,300-1,400-crore organised pizza market. Pizza
Hut is hot in pursuit, followed at a respectable distance by players such
as Papa John's and Sbarro, and now, JSM Hospitality, the company behind Shiro and Hard Rock Cafe, is
ready to roll out California Pizza
Kitchen in Delhi/NCR after a successful run in Mumbai, Chennai and
Bangalore.
With Delhi's pizza offerings getting
more diverse than ever, it has become important for food connoisseurs to get a
sense of where they can get the best pizzas in the city and its upscale suburbs.
True to its record of becoming the final arbiter of taste in the city, the
Delhi Gourmet Club, led by 'Mr Old Monk' and author of four well-received
cookbooks, Rocky Mohan, went on a
whirlwind hunt for the best pizza, covering 15 restaurants a record three
weeks.
The jury consisted of a mixed group
of well-travelled people united by a passion for food but representing the
universe of Delhi restaurants--a couple of home-makers, a social media marketer,
a management consultant, a well-known restaurateur, and even a professor of human
rights at a reputed law school. Each of them spent Rs 5,000, tasting a basic
margherita pizza followed by a gourmet pizza at each of the 15 restaurants, over
five nights to arrive at a ranking that is refreshingly honest, though some of
the big names in the business may not agree with their relegation to the lower
end of the list.
My big complaint against the jury is
that it left out Flavors and Cilantro at The Trident, Gurgaon,
which, I maintain, has been consistent with the superior quality of its pizzas.
I wholeheartedly endorse the No. 1 position going to Olive Bar & Kitchen, but
I was left wondering how threesixtydegrees
at The Oberoi managed to be No. 2 -- I have never known of anyone going there
to ask for a pizza. Fat Lulu, in my
opinion, should have been No. 2, not No. 3. But the shocker was Diva ending at the
bottom of the heap, at No. 15. The news made me lapse into a state of violent disbelief
followed by shock. Has Ritu Dalmia allowed her restaurant to slip to such an
extent or was it a bad dough day? Anyway, without more quibbles, let me share
the ranking with you:
Olive Bar & Kitchen, Mehrauli, 79.33; threesixtydegrees, The Oberoi
New Delhi, 74.50; Fat Lulu, Gurgaon,
70.50; San Gimignano, The Imperial, 68.50; La Piazza, Hyatt Regency, 68.44; Sen5es, Pullman Gurgaon, 66.25; Sartoria, Vasant Vihar, 62.93; Mistral, Ambience Mall, Vasant
Kunj, 62.20; Prego, The Westin,
Gurgaon, 60.57; La Tagliatella, Ambience
Mall, Vasant Kunj, 58.47; The Qube, The
Leela Palace Chanakyapuri, 53.35;
Amici, Ambience Mall, Vasant Kunj, 50.36;
Tonino, Andheria More, Mehrauli, 48.57;
Mist, The Park, Parliament Street, 43.22;
Diva, M-Block, Greater Kailash-II, 42.88.
So, how do you rate a pizza? Did the
jury follow certain guidelines? Rocky shared them with the Delhi Gourmet Club
before posting the results. Though Rocky did not mention this fact, you'll find
the pointers in the blog 'A Gravy Train with Biscuit Wheels'. Anyway, here they are:
Is the crust worth eating on its own? Or is it simply a load-bearing device to hold up massive
quantities of toppings (not necessarily a bad thing, but not usually seen in
the best pizzerias)?
Is the bread dense or airy?
Do the individual toppings taste good on their own? Would you eat them if they were
served on an appetiser plate alone? Or do they need cheese, bread and tomato
sauce to work.
What types of cheeses are being used? Would the cheese(s) also taste okay on its own?
Is there a lot of sauce, a sauce drought, or is it in-between? Is the sauce delicious on its own?
Does it rely on salt or sugar for a strong taste?
Does the pizza remain tasty and interesting from start to finish? Or does the pizza have a great first
bite, but then become an uninteresting trudge to finish eating. Over-salted
pizzas can definitely fall into this trap. If you wish to check out the original, go to http://cincinnatimalavita.blogspot.in/2012/12/how-to-judge-great-pizza.html.
Interesting pointers! Keep these in
mind the next time when you to have a gourmet pizza experience.
Pizza Heaven is one of the most renowned Pizza Store Cape May Court House and working in this field for last 12 years. visit our website and know more about all kind of pizzas.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for sharing this useful information. If you are looking for the best pizza shop in cape may then you should visit Pizza Heaven as they offer tasty pizza at a very reasonable price.
ReplyDelete