Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Trenton Tomato Pies (DeLorenzo's)



Trenton Tomato Pies (DeLorenzo's)
Trenton tomato pies are the stuff of legends
Times, The (Trenton, NJ) - Wednesday, January 15, 2003
Author: SUSAN YESKE, Food Editor


A De Lorenzo's tomato pie is constructed with cheese first
and tomatoes last. Tyler Marie Valenza, 4, is the latest
generation to enjoy tomato pie. Here she eats her with dad
Lou. The family is from Hamilton but comes back to the
'Burg for tomato pies. At right, a small neon sign in the
window at De Lorenzo's advertises pizza, but the main sign
for the Hudson Street store advertises tomato pies.
Gary Amico and Anthony Angeloni work with fresh ingredients
as they make tomato pies at De Lorenzo's. Sam Amico, the
third generation to make pies at the Hudson Street De
Lorenzo's, moves quickly as he slices pie.
Gary Amico manages the store for the family. He has
worked there for more than 30 years.
Marian and Manny Rose traveled from Montclair to try
De Lorenzo's tomato pies after reading a
recommendation in Zagat's. Trenton tomato pies are
the stuff of legends. Tomatoes, no sauce.
There are pizzas, and then there are Trenton-style
tomato pies, the stuff of Chambersburg legends.
Red or white, thin crust or thick, pizza can be
found in nearly every suburban shopping center and
mall in the country. But that regional favorite,
the tomato pie, is another story. While some say
they see no difference, the experts heartily
disagree. True fans say nothing will do but a
tomato pie made in the style perfected generations
ago in Trenton. ''With a tomato pie, the emphasis
is on the tomatoes,'' said Gary Amico, manager and
co-owner of De Lorenzo's on Hudson Street in
Trenton. ''With pizza, the sauce goes on first,
then toppings and olive oil and cheese. With a
tomato pie, the cheese goes on first, then the
toppings, and the tomatoes go on last,'' said Amico,
who began making them 34 years ago when his
father-in-law made him ''an offer I couldn't
refuse.'' Whole canned plum tomatoes are crushed
and seasoned before going on the pie, creating
texture and flavor different from pizza sauce.
Each bite of a De Lorenzo Trenton-style pie brings
a taste of California tomatoes although when the
restaurant opened in 1947, Sophie De Lorenzo canned
New Jersey tomatoes at home for her husband Alexander
(Chick) to put on his pies. That's one of the few
changes in the original Chambersburg pie that still
commands sufficient loyalty for the family to take
the phone off the hook at 4:30 each afternoon to
limit the number of phone orders. After that time,
the only choice is to show up in person, which
diehard De Lorenzo's fans do in droves. They make
their way to Chambersburg to queue up outside the
tiny restaurant to wait in rain, snow and heat for
their pies. ''Back when it first opened, we used to
get the pie wrapped in newspaper, rolled up at the
top, and carry it home that way,'' said Morris S.
Rubino of Hamilton, a customer since the Hudson
Street shop opened. Rubino said back then he paid 25
cents for a small pie, 35 cents for a large. The
only flavors were plain or sausage. The years have
brought boxes, higher prices and additional choices
to De Lorenzo's and other area restaurants that sell
tomato pies. That includes DeLorenzo's Pizza in Hamilton,
founded in the 1950s by two of Chick De Lorenzo's
brothers, where lines also get so long that customers
wait outside for the chance to buy pies. Today, they
and a half-dozen other Trenton area restaurants make
white pies with clams and tomato pies with a variety of
vegetable and meat toppings. But all are made
following the rules established long ago. While the
tomato pie has legions of loyal fans here and
De Lorenzo's annually takes top honors in the Zagat
restaurant survey, the pie doesn't necessarily
translate well in other parts of the country.
''I moved to Colorado 18 years ago and tried to make
tomato pies, but they wanted nothing to do with them,''
said Anna Scozzari, one of the owners of Enzo's La
Piccola Cucina Restaurant in Lawrence. ''It's really
something just in this area,'' she said, referring to
the New York/New Jersey/Pennsylvania corridor which
has seen large numbers of Italian immigrants who
introduced tomato pies to America.

10 comments:

Ralph Lucarella said...

HI MAC....HAVING KNOWN THE DeLORENZO'S SINCE THE 1920' WHEN MOST OF THE BURG BOUGHT THEIR TOMATO PIES FROM PAPA'S ON BUTLER STREET. I WOULD SAY THE BIGGEST DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THE TWO IS DeLORENZO'S PIES ARE MORE CRISPER. DURING THE FEAST IN THE EARLY DAYS PAPA'S ALSO SOLD MUSSELS. THE DeLORENZO'S BRANCHED OUT AROUND THE BURG AND BECAME KNOWN AS PROABLY THE MOST POPULAR ALONG WITH MARRUCA'S AND PAPA'S. I WOULD LIKE TO ADD WHILE VISITING IN ITALY WE FOUND THE BEST PIZZAS IN CASERTA, NEAR NAPLES. THE REST OF THE COUNTRY SEEMED TO CONSIDER PIZZAS AS SMALL PERSONAL ITEMS ON THE MENUS. BEST REGARDS.

Unknown said...

I worked at Hamilton DeLorenzo's for the better part of 15 years. Nothing against Hudson Street, but DeLorenzo's on Hamilton is the major leagues of pizza.

Rick DeLorenzo is the epitome of a man. While working there he taught me the values of hard work, discipline, and responsibility. To learn all this at a pizza joint in Trenton is pretty amazing. Everyone who worked there should be extremely fortunate for having witnessed that man work on a daily basis.

Anonymous said...

DeLorenzo, Marruca and all, we were so fortunate in retrospect.

The first time we "traveled" was when I was in my early teens and having tried a pizza in upstate NY and then Canada in probably 1960, I just never bothered again trying "pie on the road", even when I was in the Navy, I just never bothered since it was so horrid?

Around 1975 tried one in Maine and it was like ketchup on white bread. My traveling companion insisted we stop at Pizza Hut a week later and by comparison, at least I could eat it.

But there is truly no place like home. The Burg is where the moon and stars converged for that moment in time.

The biggest shock I have had was in the Italian section of Switzerland. I asked the owner for sausage but she could not understand me but offered me the "special" (insert Italian), and that is what the locals came for. The pie was very, very good but the raw egg in the middle was a bit of a spectacle. Not wanting to offend, I slipped it away and into the rest room trash.

Skip

Mack said...

Musing over the best food in the Burg is like picking Miss America out of the 50 contestants..even all the ones that "lost" are still
pretty damn good:)

Anonymous said...

Never like D's pizza, and I thought the Hudson place was dirty and gee....no bathroom

Mack said...

Everyone from the Burg knew the deal about no bathroom and I have never heard that Delo's Hudson was
dirty in all my Burg years, but everyones entitled to their opinion.

Anonymous said...

Yоur оwn article has confіrmed necеssaгy to myѕelf.
ӏt’s extrеmely educational anԁ you aге naturally quite educated in this
field. You have got popped my sight to numerous thοughts аbοut thіs paгtіcular
mattеr together with intriguіng, notаblе anԁ
reliable wгitten content.

Also ѵisit my homepage ambien

Anonymous said...

always i used to read smaller posts that also clear
their motive, and that iis also happening with this post which I am reading at this time.


Also visjt my weblog; meridia

Anonymous said...

Have you ever considered about including a little bit more than just your articles?
I mean, what you say is important and all. Nevertheless imagine if you added some great photos or videos to give your posts more, "pop"!
Your content is excellent but with pics and clips, this site could
undeniably be one of the very best in its field. Very good blog!


Also visit my web site - best diet pills that work

Anonymous said...

Do you have a spam problem on this website; I also am a blogger, and I was wanting to know your situation; we
have created some nice methods and we are looking
to swap techniques with other folks, be sure to shoot me an email if
interested.

Feel free to surf to my homepage - clash of clans builder hack