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By
Cliff Lowe
Pizza,
like so many other foods, did not originate in the country for which
it is now famous. Unless you have researched the subject, you, like
so many people, probably always thought Pizza was strictly an Italian
creation.
The
foundations for Pizza were originally laid by the early Greeks who
first baked large, round and flat breads which they "annointed
with oil, herbs, spices and Dates."
Tomatoes
were not discovered at that time or, very likely, they would have
used them as we do today.
Eventually the idea of flat bread found its way to Italy where,
in the 18th century, the flat breads called "Pizzas",
were sold on the streets and in the markets. They were not topped
with anything but were enjoyed au naturel. Since they were relatively
cheap to make, were tasty and filling, they were sold to the poor
all over Naples by street vendors.The acceptance of the tomato by
the Neapolitans and the visit of a queen contributed to the Pizza
as we know and enjoy it today.
In
about 1889, Queen Margherita, accompanied by her husband, Umberto
I, took an inspection tour of her Italian Kingdom. During her travels
around Italy she saw many people, especially the peasants, eating
this large, flat bread. Curious, the queen ordered her guards to
bring her one of these Pizza breads. The Queen loved the bread and
would eat it every time she was out amongst the people, which caused
some consternation in Court circles. It was not seemly for a Queen
to dine on peasant's food.
Never
the less, the queen loved the bread and decided to take matters
into her own hands. Summoning Chef Rafaelle Esposito from his pizzeria
to the royal palace, the queen ordered him to bake a selection of
pizzas for her pleasure.
To honor the queen who was so beloved by her subjects, Rafaelle
decided to make a very special pizza just for her. He baked a Pizza
topped with tomatoes, Mozarella Cheese, and fresh Basil (to represent
the colors of the Italian flag: Red, white, and green).
This
became Queen Margherita's favorite pizza and when word got out that
this was one of the queen's favorite foods, she became even more
popular with the Italian people. She also started a culinary tradition,
the Pizza Margherita, which lasts to this very day in Naples and
has now spread throughout the world.
History
has not made it clear whether Rafaelle began to sell this creation
from his own pizzeria but it is known that the Pizza, in much the
same form as we now know it, was thereafter enjoyed by all the Italian
people. Variations began to be made in different parts of the country.
In Bologna, for example, meat began to be added into the topping
mix. Neapolitan Pizza became quite popular and it brought garlic
and crumbly Neapolitan cheeses into the mixture as well as herbs,
fresh vegetables, and other spices and flavorings.
About this time the idea of baking in special brick ovens came into
existence and the bread, as it is today, was a rather simple combination
of flour, oil, salt and yeast.
Pizza
spread to America, France, England and Spain, where it was little
known until after World War II. While occupying Italian territories,
many American and European soldiers tasted Pizza for the first time.
It was love at first taste! Italian immigrants had been selling
Pizzas in their American stores for some time, but it was the returning
soldiers with a lust for the saucy delight that drew the Pizzas
out of the quiet Italian neighborhoods into the main stream of city
life all over the continent. In fact, the square "Sicilian
Pizza" which is so popular and was the forerunner of the now
well-promoted "Party Pizza" is an American invention.
Real Sicilian Pizza has no cheese or anchovies.
Today
we celebrate Pizza. February 9 is International Pizza Day and the
Guinness Book of Records states that the largest Pizza ever made
and eaten was created in Havana, Florida and was 100 feet and 1
inch across!
American
and Canadian citizens will eat an average 23 pounds of Pizza, per
person, per year. Pepperoni and Cheese is the favorite combination,
especially with the younger set, and is second only to the hamburger
as this continent's favorite food.
Pizzas
can be made either healthy or fatty, depending upon what you use
for the toppings. They come in many forms such as Calzones (half
the dough is topped then the other half folded over to form a large
half-moon shaped Pizza Pocket, which is then baked). It also comes
in various forms such as breads, rolls, pan pizza, stuffed crust
pizza, thin crust Pizza and thick crust pizza, wholewheat crust,
and bagel crust.
The
concept has also taken many forms such as Mexican Pizza (a pizza
dough topped with chili or taco filling, shredded Cheddar, chopped
onions, tomatoes and Jalapeno peppers), Ice Cream Pizza, Candy Pizza
and even Pizza cake as well as Pizza flavored items such as Potato
Chips and Tortilla Snacks!
So,
next time you eat a Pizza, stop and think of Queen Margherita and
Chef Rafaelle and be grateful that a Queen would dare stoop to eat
peasant bread.
About
the name: The word "pie" does not refer to the crust,
nor even to the shape or position of the crust. The Oxford English,
the Webster's unabridged,and lexicographer Charles Earl Funk, all
agree that the elemental word "pie" relates to the Magpie,
a bird with feathers splotched in two colors, a bird called "Pica"
by the Romans, whence the English "Pie" and the alteration
of "Pica" to "Pizza". The name relates to the
bird's double color and its habit of gathering odds and ends as
does a Pizza, or Pie, gather, and consist of, varied ingredients.
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