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Robin Garr

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Discussion of Robin Garr's Boombozz fried pizza etc., review

by Robin Garr » Thu Nov 14, 2013 12:08 pm

Fried pie? Boombozz fried pizza wins our applause
Voice-Tribune review by Robin Garr

When a kid, I looked forward to road trips as an occasion for fried pie, a rare culinary treat that seemed to exist only in those exotic places where people lived among cornfields and tobacco patches and spoke in a slow drawl.

Fried pie! We never had anything like that at home. It was a pie-crust turnover, loaded with fruit filling - apple was as popular as Mom or the Flag - folded over, sealed into a fat half-moon and deep-fried until it sizzled. Hot and crisp, juicy and sweet, it was just the right size for eating out of hand. Yum!

A single fried pie probably packed 1,000 calories, but at that age I didn't mind. Now I do, and I haven't indulged for years, maybe decades. The other day, though, I ran across an even more tempting take on fried pie that I just couldn't resist.

It's a fried pizza pie from Louisville's Boombozz, or the branch on Frankfort Avenue at Cannons Lane, at least. The fried pizza rolled out a year ago at the local mini-chain's Pizza & Taphouses, billed as a Neapolitan-style "Montanara" pizza that Tony Palombino, the restaurant's founder, spotted in Italy.

I didn't see it on the menu during a recent visit to the Westport Village Taphouse, so when I spotted in another lunch stop on Frankfort Avenue later on, I struck while the pizza was hot, so to speak, and happily devoured the crunchy, crusty goodness of an 8-inch individual pie in about three minutes of happy eating.

Don't worry, they don't bread-and-fry a whole pizza with the toppings. Rather, a thin crust hits hot frying oil and wham! It pops into a puffy flatbread round cloaked in a crisp, crackly fried crust that came as close to grease-free as fried can be.

This sizzling round gets a quick margherita-style topping of sweet-tangy tomato sauce, rounds of creamy mozzarella, and fresh basil, then hits the hot pizza oven for a second round of heat just long enough to bubble the sauce and melt the mozz'. Pizza heaven it is!

Read my full review on LouisvilleHotBytes.com:
http://www.louisvillehotbytes.com/fried ... r-applause
and in the Voice-Tribune:
http://www.voice-tribune.com/life-style ... -applause/

Boombozz
3400 Frankfort Ave.
896-9090
http://www.boombozz.com
http://www.facebook.com/boombozzfamouspizza

BoomBozz Taphouse - Westport Village
1315 Herr Lane
394-0000
http://www.boombozztaphouse.com
http://www.facebook.com/BoombozzWestportVillage

Boombozz has another Louisville Taphouse at 1448 Bardstown Road (458-8889) and in Indianapolis and Gilbert, Arizona. Another is coming soon to Jeffersonville, Ind.
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Adrian Baldwin

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Re: Discussion of Robin Garr's Boombozz fried pizza etc., re

by Adrian Baldwin » Thu Nov 14, 2013 12:18 pm

This stuff is blowing up in NYC....led by Don Antonio by Starita...........which has two pizza legends teaming up, Antonio Starita & Kesté's Roberto Caporuscio.

We had the Montanara there last year, and it was outstanding.

To be 'fried', it's an amazingly light pizza, it was nothing like I thought it would be.


Looking forward to checking out Forcella's version here in a few weeks when we return for our 4th NYC trip of the year. :shock:

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