NEW YORK — The cardboard pizza box has a status in American
culture at least equal to that of the soup can. Andy Warhol did not silk-screen
them, but a Philadelphia artist named Ed Marion painted a series of portraits
on them, “right where the pie would sit,” as he explained. Other artists,
including Ed Hardy, contributed designs to be printed on the outside. Pizza
boxes have been used as movie props, usually in the hands of eager delivery
boys, and as musical instruments: When the Velvet Underground parody band the
Pizza Underground performed “Take a Bite of the Wild Slice” and other reworked
songs, a percussionist, Deenah Vollmer, kept time by striking a drumstick
against a pizza box.
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One thing that a box never does, though, is make pizza better.
The lightness and crunch that the dry heat of an oven gives the dough is undone
by the steam heat of the cardboard shvitz. Moisture in the sauce or toppings
seeps into the crust, where it can turn the center of the pie into red soup. As
a general rule, the better the pizza, the greater the damage it suffers in
confinement.
Over the past year, when far more pies than normal have been
packed for takeout and delivery, some pizzerias have had to adapt. Two in
particular — one older, one pandemic-new — craft memorable pizzas that can
travel with almost no discernible wear and tear.
The first time I called the Brooklyn pizzeria Wheated to place
an order, the man who picked up the phone asked me if I was going to eat my
pizza in the car. I thought he was a bit nosy, until he explained that he would
slice the pie if it was for immediate consumption but would leave it intact if
not, making it easier to transfer to my oven.
The man turned out to be the owner, David Sheridan, and he
seemed to have thought through just about every aspect of pizza transportation.
Between Wheated’s pizzas and its takeout boxes, for instance, he places a type
of paper mat I’ve never seen before, a stiff white disk covered with small
dimples, like the surface of a golf ball. According to Sheridan, the texture
allows steam to escape the crust, so it stays crisper.
After five minutes at 350 degrees, each of my four takeout pies
was exceptional. The outer lip of crust was dark, substantial, chewy and
crunchy, like a heel torn from a warm loaf of Italian bread. I might have
buttered it if I hadn’t been distracted by the rest of the pizza.
On top of the pie that Wheated calls the NY Slice Style were
tiny pebbles of coarsely grated Pecorino Romano. Bronzed patches of mozzarella
shone out from under a thin layer of pulped tomatoes. This is a reversal of the
usual cheese-on-top order, of course, and it seemed to protect the bottom
crust, which stayed as dry as a cracker even after the long drive home.
Wheated makes 19 kinds of pizza. Some, like the margherita and
the one topped with roasted eggplant, are known quantities. Others, like the
Coney Island, with chorizo and fresh pineapple, may be new under the sun. The
sturdy crust also allows Sheridan to indulge a fondness for kitchen-sink pizza
that he has harbored since his childhood in Kentucky. One very good pie is
topped with two kinds of meat, four kinds of cheese, mushrooms, roasted onions
and mixed olives. It is called the Supreme.
The name Wheated is taken from a term applied to whiskey, which
before the pandemic Sheridan bought by the barrel. He sold most of it to
finance the shop’s transition to takeout pizza, except some 6-year-old rye. You
can order a $63 bottle of it when you place your pizza order, or drink it in a
takeout-ready old fashioned sweetened with walnut liqueur.
Over the past decade or so, places such as Williamsburg Pizza
and Mama’s Too have advanced variations on grandma-style pan pizza — a lighter,
less doughy alternative to the Sicilian pie. (I mean the Sicilian pie as known
in New York slice joints; the Sicilian pie as known in Sicily is another
story.)
In the pizzerias of Nassau County where the grandma style seems
to have originated, the dough was stretched to fill an oiled sheet pan and then
topped, like a Totonno’s pizza, in reverse order: The cheese went down first,
then the tomatoes. This, and the pizza’s greater height, save the dough from
getting soggy while trapped inside a cardboard box.
Grandma pizza, in other words, might have been expressly
designed for the pandemic. And since December, the city has had a new takeout
and pickup outfit specializing in the style. Called Washington Squares, it is a
project of chef Dan Kluger, who runs it out of his restaurant Loring Place in
space that before the pandemic was devoted to cooking for private parties. With
its own logo and website and delivery service, Washington Squares is essentially
a ghost kitchen.
It’s also a spinoff from Loring Place, where a grandma pizza has
been sucking up more than its share of attention since the restaurant opened in
2016. The restaurant also makes a thin-crust round pie, but for Washington
Squares, Kluger chose the more portable grandma style.
The grandma pizza at Loring Place comes in one variety —
tomatoes, mozzarella, fresh basil — and sits on a whole-grain red-wheat crust
that is slightly different from the one Kluger uses at Washington Squares, he
says. There’s a strong family resemblance, though, between the two models, both
of which have a rounded, toastlike flavor and a fine structure that stands in
opposition to the dry, starchy, gratuitously sweet whole-wheat pizza crusts
that blighted college towns across the country in the 1970s and ‘80s. Those
pies sat in the stomach like a bag of folded laundry; the ones at Washington
Squares are so well constructed that after eating an entire eight-slice box you
feel lively enough to break into a Nicholas Brothers tap routine.
The crust, though, is solid enough to support a load of toppings
that would undo a typical thin-crust pizza. Besides the standard
tomatoes-over-cheese version, called the O.G., and an even more streamlined
cheeseless tomato pie called the Plain Jane, Washington Squares exploits the
structural stability of the crust with more elaborate arrays.