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American Pie: My Search for the Perfect Pizza

American Pie: My Search for the Perfect Pizza

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Author: Peter Reinhart
Publisher: Ten Speed Press
Category: Book

List Price: $27.95
Buy New: $18.45
You Save: $9.50 (34%)



Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 49 reviews
Sales Rank: 8325

Media: Hardcover
Pages: 256
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.9
Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 7.1 x 1.2

ISBN: 1580084222
Dewey Decimal Number: 641.8248
EAN: 9781580084222
ASIN: 1580084222

Publication Date: November 2003
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

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  • The Bread Baker's Apprentice: Mastering the Art of Extraordinary Bread
  • The Art of Pizza Making: Trade Secrets and Recipes
  • Crust & Crumb: Master Formulas for Serious Bread Bakers
  • Peter Reinhart's Whole Grain Breads: New Techniques, Extraordinary Flavor
  • Pizza: More than 60 Recipes for Delicious Homemade Pizza

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review
Baking bread is mysterious enough. But creating truly great pizza--the transformation of next to nothing into something extraordinary--is downright alchemical. It is for no small reason that there are distinct words in Italian for those disciples of these mystic arts who bake pizza and focaccia, pizzaiolo and focacciaiolo. Peter Reinhart, he who gave us Brother Juniper's Bread Book and the multi-award winning The Bread Baker's Apprentice, takes the reader of American Pie: My Search for the Perfect Pizza right into the heart of the matter.

Reinhart begins his inquiry into pizza with his baseline palate memory for what a great pizza should be. As a teenager he had worked in a pizzeria, Mama's, and instinctively knew this pie to be the best. Returning as an adult years later, he discovered otherwise. Had he changed, or had the pizza changed? Both, it happened, were true.

So what is the nature of perfection, and where do you go to find it? In the case of Peter Reinhart, this journey includes travels through Italy and across the US. This is Part One of the book, called The Hunt. It's not the most enlivening travel writing, which would have helped elevate the insights into the nature of great pizza and the people who make it happen. But it's only a third of the entire package. The best is yet to come. In Part Two: The Recipes, Reinhart comes entirely into his own. Here is the master at work. Chapters include "The Family of Doughs", "Sauces and Specialty Toppings," and "The Pizzas." Reinhart gives you the building blocks, no matter what your kitchen, tools, and oven might be like. And then he unfolds the roadmap--pizzas from the strictly classical to the strictly whimsical.

Work diligently with American Pie and in time you will be able to call yourself, without hesitation or rising color, pizzaiolo and focacciaiolo. --Schuyler Ingle

Product Description
In the course of his extraordinary career as a baker, culinary instructor, and author, Peter Reinhart has dedicated himself to exploring the passions and techniques behind the great breads of the world. His most recent pursuit has been pizza a seemingly simple food that has been hotly debated since Italian immigrants brought it to America more than a century ago. Allegiances run from the general (Chicago- versus New York style, Neapolitan versus Sicilian) to the particular (Pepe s versus Sally s, Gino s East versus Pizzeria Uno), and newfangled versions like sushi pizza are extending the frontier. In AMERICAN PIE, Reinhart follows the pizza trail from Italy to the States, capturing the stories behind the greatest artisanal pizzas of the Old World and the New.

Beginning his journey in Genoa, Reinhart scours the Italian countryside in search of the fabled focaccia col formaggio di Recco. After a stop in Florence for pizza vesuvio, with its black truffles and molten cheese, Peter heads to Rome to sample the famed seven-foot-long pizza bianca, and then Naples for the archetypal pizza napoletana. Back in America, the hunt for authentic pizza begins in the unlikely locale of Phoenix, Arizona, where Chris Bianco of Pizzeria Bianco has convinced many that his pie is the best in the country. Sardinian pizza in Dallas; the pizza epicenter of New Haven; grilled pizza in Providence; the deep-dish pies of Chicago; Yugoslavian pogacha in Bellevue, Washington these are just a few of the stops on Reinhart s epic tour.

Reinhart then returns to the kitchen, where he gives a master class on pizza-making techniques and provides his interpretations of the most memorable pizzas from his journey. His insatiable curiosity and appetite and gift for storytelling make this a must-have book for the avid cook, as well as a great read for the armchair pizzaiolo.


Customer Reviews:   Read 44 more reviews...

2 out of 5 stars Not horible but not what I expected   January 4, 2009
Jim
The narrative was OK but he spent FAR too much time covering "Sushi Pizza" and "California Pizza" while completely ignoring Sicilian Pizza. He also spent too much time talking about cheese steaks. I also do not agree that any crust with stuff on it is pizza. I haven't tried the recipes yet but I hope they're better than the rest of the book.

Since I travel a lot I was really hoping to find a couple of great pizza places around the country to try out. This book did not provide that.



5 out of 5 stars Informative and delicious   December 27, 2008
Boston Book Addict (Boston, Mass.)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I picked up this book because I had recently fallen in love with home pizza making and this book continued to fuel my interest. In the first part of the book Reinhart lets us tag along as he tastes pizza all over the globe. He's a great story teller and really gives you a sense of not just the flavors he experiences, but also the people who make the pizza, and the atmosphere in which it was eaten. I think the stories of the people were especially interesting because he talks about how one major difference between pizza making in Italy vs. the US is that in Italy pizza making is much more of an art done with care and patience, where as in the US in fine restaurants it was often a station chefs wanted to move off of to something more complicated. I found this detail, and the many others he shared, very interesting. Beyond stimulating my interest and giving me a greater appreciation for the history and varieties of pizza but also helped me discover new favorite restaurants. One of the restaurants he visits is Pizzetta 211 in San Francisco, which couldn't have been a better find. The pizza was absolutely delicious and lovingly crafted and the restaurant had the ambiance of the kind of place you would like to make your signature place. It was by far one of the most memorable meals we had on our California vacation and we ate at some lovely places.
As if the first part of the book wasn't informative and entertaining enough Reinhart fills out the book with well researched recipes. I love the variety of dough recipes he gives in addition to pizza recipes with a multitude of toppings. Regardless of what kind of pizza you like you are sure to find a recipe here that meets your needs and because Reinhart has a great attention to detail you can rest assured it will turn out great.
The only downside about this book is that you will find yourself craving good pizza. When I first sat down to read it I had to take a break so my boyfriend and I could grab a pizza, and it wasn't even mealtime.
Overall, I couldn't recommend this book more highly. I love picking up cookbooks as well as reading non-fiction books on food and this one does a brilliant job of combining intriguing stories with delectable recipes. A perfect read.



5 out of 5 stars American Pie   December 20, 2008
Ms. Violet Torossian (Encino, California)
I just love this book. It so many ideas on making the perfect pizza for the home baker.

Encino, CA



4 out of 5 stars Good, but not perfect yet   November 2, 2008
Musashi&Koyama (CA USA)
This is a very good book and author does a very good job with dough description. However, I find two problems with this book.

As a person who really likes to cook I need to know things like the size of eggplants in his recipes. Why does he not indicate the sizes and types. We have many types, but there are two major ones. A large American ones and slender Asian/Japanese ones. Without that information, it's hard to make some of the toppings for puree and such. He talks very sweetly about his wife Susan roasting a bushel of eggplants for later puree. That is great, but what type of eggplants is she roasting? This is just one example. I had to stop from making eggplant puree because it was missing _that_ information.

I don't know if it's just me, but I find this book a bit scattered. I have to move around throughout the book to make my first DOC Neapolitan pizza ie Pizza Margherita from this book.




4 out of 5 stars Not just...   November 2, 2008
R. Stephenson (Chesapeake, Va)
Not just a great recipie and technique collection but a surprisingly enjoyable read. My good friend and "pizza mentor" calls it "The Bible" and for good reason. Buy it.

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