A short fifteen years ago, it was hard to get a pizza worth the calories outside of a relative handful of surviving legacy pizza joints (e.g. Totonno's in Coney Island, DeLorenzo's in Trenton, Arturo's and John's in the Village (NYC), Tacconelli’s in Philly, Sally's in New Haven, Vito & Nick's in Chicago, Santarpio in Boston, Conte's in Princeton, & DiFara in Brooklyn). Today, I could rank not just the Top Five in an unlikely city like Austin, but I could name the Top Five Neapolitan pizzas in Austin and all would be worth the time, effort, and calories.
With DeSano, we will examine another contender, to my surprise and delight. After six and a half years in my adopted hometown of Austin, the food continues to confound any preconceived notions. The BBQ has exceeded my high expectations (though most sides at BBQ joints remain dismal), while the Mexican food trails Arizona, New Mexico, and California by a wide gap.
Meanwhile, Austin has become a hotbed for top-end Japanese restaurants! The New York Times recently listed the 25 top restaurants in Austin, and several of them were Japanese. Regarding the chef's selection menu approach in these places, the NYT said "In 1995, Tyson Cole, a white, Florida-born sushi novice, was hired by a Japanese chef in Austin on the condition that he learn Japanese. That discipline is still evident in the food at Uchi, the restaurant Mr. Cole opened 8 years later. This is how Austin, where Japanese are only 0.2% of the population, became home to one of the country’s most dynamic Japanese restaurant scenes ... Omakase restaurants are to tech-boom Austin what mounted longhorns are to Texas steakhouses: distinguishing features suggestive of achievement."
But let's get on to the pizza! Pizza has been the most surprising revelation. Coming here from Philly/NJ/NY region, I had eaten some of the world's best pizza. Expecting to find little of that here, early on I discovered top shelf Neapolitan at Pieous and the incredible Detroit pizza at Via 313, which has kept its standards high even as it grows the number of locations. Since then, Baldinucci and Allday and Pedroso's are all making pies that rival the best of the northeast.
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The Margherita |
I had seen the downtown DeSano pizzeria (Lavaca Street) and learned that the Burnet Road location was opened first. I wrongly assumed that they were the (only) two outlets of an Austin-based pizzeria, but in fact the first DeSano was in Nashville. DeSano now has ten locations in Austin, Nashville, North and South Carolina, Florida, and California.
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The Pepperoni Doppio |
Their website notes their pizza philosophy: "At DeSano Pizzeria, we follow the strict guidelines of the Associazione Verace Pizza Napoletana (VPN), preserving the centuries old craft of making authentic Neapolitan pizza." Their dough is made fresh daily using low-gluten flour, and ingredients for everything on the menu are imported from Italy (except for French butter).
We visited the Burnet location for dinner on a hot August night. The interior is a large, airy, welcoming space with large black and white photos of Italian life and a very cool red scooter on display. Although DeSano is proud of following the VPN guidelines, they make a traditional 12in "Napoli" ($22 for the margherita) and a 16 inch "Grande" version ($28). However, the VPN specifies that a Neapolitan pizza may not exceed 35cm in diameter, which is 13.78 inches.
Beyond that, my reasoning to be leery of the16" pizza is that a Neapolitan pie is going to have a lot of flop and potential wet center at that larger diameter, so we stuck to the traditional size. We ordered a 12 inch Margherita (San Marzano tomato sauce, mozzarella di bufala, olive oil, basil, & pecorini romano) and a 12 inch Pepperoni Doppio (San marzano tomato sauce, pepperoni, nickel pepperoni, garlic, scamorza, mozzarella di bufala, & pecorini romano).
The crust was textbook Neapolitan, expertly rendered. It was thin and soft with a cornicione that was both dense and puffy. It had the signature leopard spotting on the edges and underneath. Under VPN rules, the red sauce has to be pretty simple, and this seemed to be a thin base of unseasoned tomato sauce.
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Under the hood |
For those accustomed to the bold umami flavors of New York, New Haven, Detroit, and other American styles, this sauce might seem bland. It serves mostly as a role player. I suspect the cheeseless Marinara pie has more pop to the tomato sauce because it is seasoned with garlic, oregano, and salt.
I preferred the pepperoni pizza to the traditional Margherita, precisely because that pepperoni delivered on the umami. Both of these pizzas were essentially flawless in execution, but they drove home an opinion that has been growing in my pizza perception: pizza may have been invented in Naples, but it was perfected in America. On most days, I'll take a well-executed Trenton, Old Forge, New York, Detroit, or New Haven pizza over a Neapolitan because the flavors are so much bigger.
Having said that, we had three slices left over, and they spent two months in my freezer. We reheated them in a toaster oven and they were fresh, soft, and tasty. A Neapolitan that survives a freezer journey and still tastes great? Sign of a particularly well made pie with superior ingredients. If Neapolitan is your jam, DeSano is about as good as it gets.