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This is the blog and public record of the Chicago Pizza Club. We eat a lot of pizza and share our thoughts on it as well as post any relevant pizza news we come across.

We invite you to post any comments on anywhere you have eaten under our review of that establishment. If you have any questions, please read the FAQs on the sidebar first to see if it has already been answered. Please note that we are at capacity and are not seeking new members. And finally, if you have a place you think we should try, have some other inquiry, or want to send us love/hatemail then please contact us at:

ChicagoPizzaClub@gmail.com

Friday, July 29, 2022

Pizza Fried Chicken Ice Cream [Meeting #127]

Pizza Fried Chicken Ice Cream

964 W 31st Street (Map)
Chicago, IL 60608
(773) 565-4192

CPC invaded Pizza Fried Chicken Ice Cream on Saturday, July 16, 2022.
The story behind the pizza part of Pizza Fried Chicken Ice Cream is pretty cool. Two longtime friends and the fiancé of one of them joined forces to create Eat Free Pizza, through which they gave out free pizza and beer one night a week via Instagram. Check out the back story here. The combination of working on their craft and getting a boatload of social media and real media love enabled them to open up a permanent home in Bridgeport that they share with Kimski (next door) for fried chicken and Pretty Cool Ice Cream (Logan Square) for ice cream pops.
They've gotten a ton of praise since then and have expanded to long-term pop-ups (like the one currently at Marz) and just opened a second permanent location in Westmont, Kim's Uncle Pizza. Esquire even named it one of the best new restaurants in America in 2020. Now we've got to pump the brakes a little bit. Given that Pizza Friendly Pizza, Professor Pizza, and Milly's Pizza In The Pan all opened in Chicago 2020 and are all significantly better than PFCIC, the idea that this is one of the best new restaurants in the country is batshit crazy. Either that or the fried chicken is life-changing, in which case I need to get back ASAP.
In a CPC first, we actually began our meeting with something from a different pizzeria than the one we were meeting at. Stelios is currently between homes (pro tip: don't sell your condo months before the house you're building is ready) and is living on the far south side, minutes away from Chicago tavern style legend Vito & Nick's. Since we knew we'd be eating on an outdoor patio at Maria's, we got him to bring us a sausage pie from Vito & Nick's.

Good Lord, even at room temperature, this is just a fantastic pie. And that fennel-packed sausage just oozes Chicago pizza vibes. Magical.
Back in my prolific pizza eating days when I wrote for Serious Eats, I occasionally got into debates with the pizza nerds who were appalled that I firmly believed that a pizza could be great even with a mediocre crust. Exhibit A were the many great tavern crust places throughout Chicago and the Midwest. That being said, the three tavern crust pizzas that were truly special - Vito & Nick's, Pat's, and Villa Nova, all had crusts that were a cut above.
The pizza at Pizza Fried Chicken Ice Cream does not have a special crust. It's fine, but it's effectively just an edible plate. I would have liked it to be crisper (the edges were great) but nobody else seemed to agree with me.
The toppings are a different story. The ones we had were top notch. We were not able to try their sausage because for the first time in visiting literally hundreds of pizzerias in Chicago, I encountered a place that was sold out of sausage. This wasn't a case of them running out late at night - they sent all of their sausage (an ingredient that's incredibly easy to buy or make) to their pop-up at Marz. Truly baffling. And by baffling, I mean stupid.
Bitter old man grumpiness aside, as I said, the toppings we had were great. One pizza was pepperoni and mushroom and the other was spicy sopressata, garlic and Mike's hot honey. Everything was high quality and they didn't hold back in piling them on. And that latter combo, one I haven't had before, was a gamechanger that I will be trying again multiple times at multiple pizzerias.
All in all, this was good stuff. I had really high hopes that weren't met, but that just means this isn't destination pizza. If I lived in the neighborhood (won't happen) or they opened a location in my neighborhood (seems unlikely), I'd be absolutely thrilled to have this as a regular stop.
The obvious plan was to have some of Pretty Cool Ice Cream's excellent ice cream pops at the end of the meal. But we all live a whole lot closer to their north side locations than we do to Mario's so the genius decision was made to go there instead since we were relatively close, or at least a lot closer than any of us normally are. It was a good call.
Tavern style pizza and Italian lemonade. Now that's a fine Chicago summer night.

Thursday, March 31, 2022

George's Deep Dish [Meeting #126]

George's Deep Dish
6221 N. Clark Street (Map)
Chicago, IL 60660
(773) 801-1551

CPC brought George's Deep Dish to AJ & Amanda's house on Saturday, February 5, 2022.
Photo: George's Deep Dish
Deep dish pizza is a beautiful thing. That's been true since it came on the scene and it's even more true today when the term can be used to justify any number of variations of thick sauce-on-top pizzas. But over time, some of the legends have started to fade. Uno's was still solid when I last had it several years ago, but I don't know anyone who goes there. Gino's East is a joke these days, though it still packs in tourists and people who are able to convince themselves they're eating what they loved years ago rather than what's actually going into their mouths. Lou Malnati's and Pizano's can both still make some great pizzas, though Lou's has expanded so much that there's consistency issues. Pequod's is still plugging along and can be very good if you order right. None of this is new; it's been true for years.
Photo: George's Deep Dish
What is new is that over the last several years, for the first time in a very long time, some new deep dish places have come along to rejuvenate the scene. And what's been special about that is that people have really put some effort into the crusts, which has never been a focal point of the longtime deep dish favorites (with the important exception of Burt's Place, which is no longer what it was since Burt died (RIP)). 

Labriola was probably the first one to deliver a version of the Chicago classic with a truly delicious crust. And there have been others since. But last year, George Bumbaris, gifted Chicago with what is surely the greatest deep dish crust in the history of professional pizzerias. But wait, there's more. The sauce and toppings just as good. This is some stellar pizza.
Confession: We had to cheat a little bit with our ordering. George's only serves a limited number pizzas each night so they limit orders to two pizzas per person. Because apparently pre-teen children count as people, we had 10 people RSVP yes to this meeting. Two pizzas is not enough for that many people so we cheated a little bit by having one of us order 2 pizzas and one of us order 1. Sorry about that. Not really. Did you know we're the mother fucking Chicago Pizza Club, tasting and chronicling and rating for almost 20 years? We're special.

Anyhow, we picked up our pizzas in Wisconsin Edgewater and brought to AJ and Amanda's home to savor these delicious pizzas. 

There are 8 pre-set toppings combinations on the menu at George's, with each available in 10-inch and 14-inch versions. Each of those pies is named after a famous real or fictional George. Weasley's Spicy Red Top comes with the fantastic sausage, roasted red peppers, spicy cherry peppers and ricotta.

Clooney's ER has more of that top notch sausage along with some high quality pepperoni and beef meatballs and bacon

For our third pizza, we built a simpler one with just pepperoni and cremini mushrooms to accommodate the children, although it was so good, the adults happily ate most of it.



The toppings are so good at George's that it'd be a winner even on a mediocre crust. But this is the best bread base of any thick pizza in Chicago. According to this Instagram post, the dough uses natural fermentation and a little bit of added yeast. That means is kind of sourdoughy, but not really. A kiss of tang if you will. Texturally it's somehow tender and chewy at the same time. Just truly great stuff. 
George's is carry out only but it travels very well.