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Re: New York Times: Is New York’s Best Pizza in New Jersey?
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Like Santillos in Elizabeth. It kept making all the best of NJ lists so I gave it a try. I wasn't impressed.

Posted on: 2018/3/21 17:25
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Re: New York Times: Is New York’s Best Pizza in New Jersey?
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$18 dolla personal pizzas?
no wonder those noobs downtown line up for it.


#spendthrift

Posted on: 2018/3/21 15:34
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Re: New York Times: Is New York’s Best Pizza in New Jersey?
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Does this man make the best pizza in New Jersey?

, Food Editor, @EstherDavido

Soon after Dan Richer graduated Rutgers University, he took a two-week trip to Italy — and came back home deeply puzzled as to why the food abroad "tasted so good, like nothing I ever tasted in New Jersey." 

Determined to figure it out, Richer consulted countless cookbooks, watched cooking shows incessantly and, most importantly, experimented in his family's Matawan kitchen, cooking dishes over and over again.

Fast forward 15 years, and today Richer, 37, chef and owner of Razza pizzeria in Jersey City, turns out pizza that tastes so good that a recent, glowing, 3-star New York Times review declared it "the best pizza in New York." The pronouncement no doubt astonished the innumerable pizzerias that are truly located in New York. 

Perhaps even more astonishing is that Richer, a two-time James Beard Award nominee, produces extraordinarily delicious pies by breaking every time-honored rule the cognoscenti say turns out magnificent pizza.

https://www.northjersey.com/story/ente ... zza-new-jersey/386265002/


Posted on: 2018/3/21 14:03
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Re: New York Times: Is New York’s Best Pizza in New Jersey?
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Cool story, bro!

Posted on: 2017/10/12 2:03
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Re: New York Times: Is New York’s Best Pizza in New Jersey?
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Quote:

Monroe wrote:
... the People's Republic of Maplewood


You'd probably be more comfortable there than you'd think:

Maplewood seeks to replace top cop over controversial arrests

"Authorities recently released video and audio clips of the incident, which appears to show officers kicking and punching one of the four arrested."

"Citizens also said the officers wrongfully used pepper spray to subdue the crowd."

Posted on: 2017/10/11 14:47
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Re: New York Times: Is New York’s Best Pizza in New Jersey?
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Sigh....I remember eating there....

Posted on: 2017/10/10 19:58
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Re: New York Times: Is New York’s Best Pizza in New Jersey?
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East Village Pizzeria Wants to Give Back Its Zero Star Times Review

https://ny.eater.com/2017/10/9/1644800 ... o-star-times-review"}">  Owner Demian Repucci explains why

by Oct 9, 2017, 1:33pm EDT

In a letter dated October 6, 2017 and addressed to Wells and the Times Dining section, Bruno Pizza proprietor Demian Repucci calls out reputed chef Sébastien Bras’ recent statement requesting to relinquish the three Michelin stars held by Le Suquet à Laguiole, his restaurant in the South of France, and declares, “It is in this same spirit that I would like to give back the New York Times ‘zero star’ review of Bruno Pizza in 2015.” He goes on to cite Wells’ three star review of Jersey City’s Razza Pizza Artigianale last month, which caused him to wonder how his own eatery could have earned zilch. “...[T]he sting was suddenly rekindled with this review,” he writes, adding, “Which then raised the question for me, in what context was Bruno Pizza reviewed?”

https://ny.eater.com/2017/10/9/1644800 ... ts-zero-star-times-review


Posted on: 2017/10/10 1:34
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Re: New York Times: Is New York’s Best Pizza in New Jersey?
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yes, good call. I actually prefer Arturo's. The menu is broader (meat balls, ravioli, sandwiches, my favorite pizza - the santo) less costly and a little more elbow room. It is open for lunch and byob. But Razza is great and when things calm down, definitely worth trying (on an off evening.)


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Monroe wrote:
The pizza and food at Dan's first restaurant, Arturo's in the People's Republic of Maplewood, is almost as good-not far by car or rail, but often a wait there as well.

Posted on: 2017/9/18 13:15
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Re: New York Times: Is New York’s Best Pizza in New Jersey?
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Welcome bridge and tunnel crowd!

Posted on: 2017/9/18 11:49
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Re: New York Times: Is New York’s Best Pizza in New Jersey?
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thirstyquaker wrote:
I knew something was up when my mother (who lives in Manhattan) called and said a couple friends were visiting in town and they really wanted to visit Jersey City and get dinner at a pizza place. Cool to see JC getting more attention.
lo!. That's good news- manhattanites finally have a reason to cross the Hudson for something other than work

Posted on: 2017/9/17 1:16
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Re: New York Times: Is New York’s Best Pizza in New Jersey?
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brewster wrote:
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JadedJC wrote:
So, yeah, this NYT thing is great for them, bad for the rest of us.

But good in the long run, as those shut out of Razza look elsewhere, other places up their game to compete for these customers, and new restaurateurs see JC as a viable place to open and still be on the NYC foodie radar like Brooklyn is.


One item that was on many peoples wish list who wanted to see night life grow is that we needed a reason for people to come to Jersey City. We have one now.

Posted on: 2017/9/16 23:54
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Re: New York Times: Is New York’s Best Pizza in New Jersey?
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Quote:

JadedJC wrote:
So, yeah, this NYT thing is great for them, bad for the rest of us.

But good in the long run, as those shut out of Razza look elsewhere, other places up their game to compete for these customers, and new restaurateurs see JC as a viable place to open and still be on the NYC foodie radar like Brooklyn is.

Posted on: 2017/9/16 17:49
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Re: New York Times: Is New York’s Best Pizza in New Jersey?
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I knew something was up when my mother (who lives in Manhattan) called and said a couple friends were visiting in town and they really wanted to visit Jersey City and get dinner at a pizza place. Cool to see JC getting more attention.

Posted on: 2017/9/16 17:22
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Re: New York Times: Is New York’s Best Pizza in New Jersey?
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The pizza and food at Dan's first restaurant, Arturo's in the People's Republic of Maplewood, is almost as good-not far by car or rail, but often a wait there as well.

Posted on: 2017/9/16 12:49
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Re: New York Times: Is New York’s Best Pizza in New Jersey?
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I usually alternate between Razza and Roman Nose for my Friday night pizza & Netflix habit. I should have known to go straight to Roman Nose when I got off the PATH tonight. There was a horde of desperate foodies who looked like they just braved a Hudson River crossing waiting to be seated outside Razza. Anyway, Razza told me they have suspended takeout and Uber Eats orders for the time being because business has gone through the roof. So, yeah, this NYT thing is great for them, bad for the rest of us.

Posted on: 2017/9/16 3:42

Edited by JadedJC on 2017/9/16 4:07:22
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Re: New York Times: Is New York’s Best Pizza in New Jersey?
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Last night, I met a slightly lost couple making their way from the Upper West Side to Razza. Uh oh.

Posted on: 2017/9/14 15:43
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Re: New York Times: Is New York’s Best Pizza in New Jersey?
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What they all need is to hire someone to stand out front wearing one of these.

http://www.ebay.com/itm/362044949059

Resized Image

Posted on: 2017/9/13 20:17
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Re: New York Times: Is New York’s Best Pizza in New Jersey?
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No, it's not traditional NYC pizza. It's much closer to the pizza one gets in Italy.

Posted on: 2017/9/13 19:26
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Re: New York Times: Is New York’s Best Pizza in New Jersey?
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I like Razza pizza but it's comparing apples to oranges. Razza is not really NY traditional style pizza at all. Both styles are great in different ways.

Closest thing that I have found to good NY traditional style pizza here is Boun Appetito.

Posted on: 2017/9/13 17:19
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Re: New York Times: Is New York’s Best Pizza in New Jersey?
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Well deserved love for this place.

Most recent visit was this past weekend, and the place was as great as always. The evening's specials included a delicious mixed green salad that had thick, ripe peach slices and pecans. The pies never disappoint, and the bread and butter is perhaps the best I have ever had this side of the Atlantic.

Posted on: 2017/9/13 12:59
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New York Times: Is New York’s Best Pizza in New Jersey?
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Is New York?s Best Pizza in New Jersey?

RAZZA
NYT Critic?s Pick
Pizza $$
275 Grove Street 201-356-9348

Restaurant Review
By PETE WELLS SEPT. 12, 2017
The New York Times

JERSEY CITY ? We were on our third pie of the night at Razza, across the street from City Hall here, when Ed Levine stopped chewing long enough to ask me a question:

?Are you going to say that the best pizza in New York is in New Jersey??

Ed Levine knows what it means to make a strong claim for a pizzeria. The founder of the website Serious Eats and the author of the book ?Pizza: A Slice of Heaven,? he caused a stir in 2004 by writing in The New York Times that the pies at Pizzeria Bianco in Phoenix ?just might be the best pizza in America.? So when it started to dawn on me, about a year after my first dinner at Razza, that no pizzeria in the five boroughs gave me as much pleasure, I thought of Ed.

New York pizzerias can be divided into those that apply the steady heat of gas (the most revered of these is Di Fara Pizza) and those that subject their pies to the blistering, scorching fires of coal or wood. The high-heat group is further subdivided into the bakers, such as Co. and Totonno?s, whose reputations rest on their dough, and the cooks. Among the cooks, there are those whose pizzaioli express themselves through combinations of toppings that have never before occurred to anybody (Roberta?s, Paulie Gee?s) or a less exhibitionistic, farm-to-table sensibility, of which the late Franny?s was the paragon.

Razza, which burns wood, is one of the few that excel at both dough and toppings. Even if Ed and I had learned, after our seven-minute PATH ride from the World Trade Center to Grove Street, that the kitchen had run out of cheese, tomatoes and the rest, I would have asked for a pizza dressed with nothing but olive oil. I?m willing to bet it would be delicious that way, with the texture and flavor of naturally leavened bread right from the oven.

I was glad it didn?t come to that, though, because Razza dresses its pies with local ingredients so distinctive that every time I?ve eaten there, I?ve learned something about New Jersey farms.

Our plan was to eat two pies and stop there. Green-edged coins of zucchini were scattered over the first, along with garlic cloves roasted to a translucent jelly, bright white ricotta and cracked pepper. In the center was a lemon wedge. There was ricotta on the other, too, and blots of house-made fig jam, and sheets of prosciutto-style Iowa ham, all covered by unwilted arugula.

Like every pie I?ve eaten at Razza, these two had been put together with exquisite sensitivity to the needs of the dough. The crust had no soggy or underbaked patches, and the bottom surface was crisp all the way from the puffy outer lip to the inner tip, which would jut straight out, or nearly straight, when I picked up a slice. When I tore open the outer rim, the crust crackled and the white interior steamed, soft, somewhat springy, with a slow-building, many-layered, lively flavor underlined by sea salt.

I could have stopped there, my point made. But as Ed noticed belatedly, we?d ordered two white pies, and he wanted to try one with tomatoes. His choice was the classic margherita. I was exceptionally curious, though, about a locavore variant called the Garden State margherita. Its sauce was made from New Jersey heirloom tomatoes and its mozzarella from the milk of Sussex County water buffaloes.

While we were trying to decide, Dan Richer, the chef and owner, came to our table. Mr. Richer, who opened Razza five years ago, may or may not have recognized us, but in any case he had a solution. When he came back, he had placed one half of each margherita variant together to make a full circle. He hadn?t invented this 50-50 format for us, he said; he?d been experimenting with it for an idea he plans to spring on the public shortly: a pizza tasting menu.

Resized Image

A chef prepares pizza dough during a dinner service at Razza Pizza Artigianale in Jersey City.

Razza?s standard margherita, as I knew from previous exposure, is a model within the prescribed parameters of the form. I particularly admire the sauce, which is less acidic and bitter than many, and about as sweet as possible without tasting sugary.

This, it turns out, was not a coincidence. Mr. Richer explained that each January, when he is fairly certain that the latest vintage of tomatoes has been canned, he and his staff conduct a double-blind tasting of eight or so brands from California, New Jersey and Italy. Using a seven-point ?tomato evaluation rubric,? they assess each variety for color, viscosity, texture, skins and seeds (the fewer the better), ?tomato flavor,? acidity and sweetness. The tomato with the highest score is usually the one he will buy, although he said that one year he blended three different brands, ?kind of like a Bordeaux wine.?

For the Garden State pizza, he runs ripe red local tomatoes through a food mill. I do not have a seven-point rubric to describe the flavor of the sauce, but I can say that it was bright and sweet enough to remind me that ripe Jersey tomatoes are still worth hunting down. The buffalo mozzarella, meanwhile, was more buttery and flavorful than any other American mozzarella I?ve tried. It had a slight tartness and melted into soft, unrubbery, creamy-yellow circles.

?I?ve been waiting for that cheese for three years,? Mr. Richer said, explaining that he had been tracking the water buffalo herd until it was big enough to ensure a steady mozzarella supply.

It is not the first obscure homegrown ingredient he has snatched up and built a pizza around. For the past two years Mr. Richer has bought local hazelnuts, a crop that had stubbornly refused to grow in the state until the New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station at Rutgers University developed blight-resistant trees. The nuts, fat and round, are barely chopped, and baked with ricotta, mozzarella and just enough honey to point up their natural sweetness. The pizza is called Project Hazelnut. I have never had anything like it.

Farm-consciousness informs the whole menu. New Jersey greens and fruits go into the salads, which are fresh and vivid in ways not normally seen at the corner slice joint.

New Jersey wheat berries and ambient New Jersey yeasts made up the first batch of the pizza dough starter, which has been burbling along for eight years now. New Jersey pork and Hudson Valley beef go into the tender meatballs, which are roasted in the wood oven until they carry a minor char. They are great meatballs, and suggest the kind of Italian restaurant Mr. Richer might have run had he not become transfixed by the intricacies of pizza.

Pennsylvania cream and milk go into Razza?s only dessert, a panna cotta that is more fluffy than firm and is served under a pool of dark salted caramel. Ed and I, having eaten a pizza and a half each, shared a single panna cotta. Then he asked me again: ?Are you going to say that the best pizza in New York is in New Jersey??

Razza NYT Critic?s Pick
275 Grove Street
(Montgomery Street)
201-356-9348
razzanj.com

Atmosphere A casual hangout with some salvaged architectural details and a pervasive smell of wood smoke. Service is cheerful and well informed. Sound Moderate, even with Tom Verlaine and Debbie Harry keening in the background. Recommended Dishes Bread and butter; ricotta crostini; salads; meatballs; all pizzas. Appetizers, $5 to $12; pizza, $12 to $18. Drinks and Wine The wines are Italian. All are under $100 and most are under $60. Cocktails are appealing and often aperitif-based. Price $$ (moderate) Open Monday to Saturday for dinner. Reservations Not accepted. Wheelchair Access Lower dining area and accessible restrooms are a small step above the sidewalk level; main dining area is three steps up. What the Stars Mean Ratings range from zero to four stars. Zero is poor, fair or satisfactory. One star, good. Two stars, very good. Three stars, excellent. Four stars, extraordinary.

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/09/12/din ... -jersey-city.html?mcubz=1

Also

https://ny.eater.com/2017/9/12/1629711 ... -razza-review-jersey-city

Posted on: 2017/9/13 12:34
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