OT: Delucia's Brick Oven Pizza in Raritan

Status
Not open for further replies.

bac2therac

Hall of Famer
Jul 30, 2001
238,735
168,477
113
No he isn't. Not only is it a lazy stereotype, it's dead wrong.

This thread is literally about a review from a guy who made a side business out of testing pizza for the under 30 demo.

Soyboys and females are not his demo
 

RC1991

All-Conference
Jul 31, 2003
3,760
1,706
81
Same here in Arizona. I and all of my family members have lived in several states and agree that NJ in general has the best pizza by far... The last great pizza I had was about 6 years ago when I was back in NJ for a friend's funeral. (And it was the first really great pizza I'd had in years..) Not sure what pizzeria it was, but we were in the Ramsey-Mahwah area.

The biggest pizza related culture shock was when I moved from northern NJ to a little town in Ohio as a teenager in the early 80's. We went to our local small town pizzeria for the first time and ordered a large pizza.. When it came out, we found out that the cheese that they used on their pizzas was 100% yellow American cheese, and the crust could've passed for cardboard. "Toto, I've a feeling we're not in Kansas anymore."
American cheese! That’s probably the biggest pizza travesty I’ve ever heard. Should have their pizza license or whatever revoked for that!
 

RC1991

All-Conference
Jul 31, 2003
3,760
1,706
81
actually i like a thicker doughier crust and there are plenty of NJ places that make it that way...keep the thin crusty stuff away from me..to each his own
I found out the hard way that you need the dough a little thicker when making pizza at how so it comes off the pizza peel in one piece when getting it in the oven. Finally got it right.
 

RUevolution36

All-American
Sep 18, 2006
8,165
5,647
113
Soyboys and females are not his demo

"“I think this is a defining brand for young men. I think it's a company that understands its audience -- I think the most elusive consumer that anyone has is a 19-year-old,” she explained.

“They're not watching television. They are not buying the things that they used to. They're not going to retail stores. They are different and we are a company that understands them,” Nardini said.

The company’s target demographic, men ages 18 to 34, spends an average of 45 million minutes per month consuming Barstool Sports content, according to the company."
 

Section124

Heisman
Dec 21, 2002
16,830
18,456
96
No he isn't. Not only is it a lazy stereotype, it's dead wrong.

This thread is literally about a review from a guy who made a side business out of testing pizza for the under 30 demo.
I always love how a guy in Utah tells people living in NJ what is going on in NJ. You would be shocked if you saw what my son (and his friends) and neighbors order. My neighbors wife always complains when the husband doesn't get Papa John's. A lot of these families have smaller kids so they go for value as well. It's not all about millennials taking pictures of their food.
 

zappaa

Heisman
Jul 27, 2001
73,532
89,743
103
My two daughters are 17 and 15, it’s Domino’s, Smash Burger, Starbucks and Playa for them and friends.
Late night grabs will always be fast food or diners
 
  • Like
Reactions: Jm0513

RUevolution36

All-American
Sep 18, 2006
8,165
5,647
113
I always love how a guy in Utah tells people living in NJ what is going on in NJ. You would be shocked if you saw what my son (and his friends) and neighbors order. My neighbors wife always complains when the husband doesn't get Papa John's. A lot of these families have smaller kids so they go for value as well. It's not all about millennials taking pictures of their food.
If you want to talk anecdotally, I know of no one who orders domino's, papa John's, etc., except when it's late at night and other places are closed.
 

Sweet Pea's Corner

All-American
Sep 10, 2001
17,096
5,114
113
If you want to talk anecdotally, I know of no one who orders domino's, papa John's, etc., except when it's late at night and other places are closed.
The Domino's in Hillsborough is packed liked sardines on the weekend. We have like 8 other real pizzarias in town but folks like that cardboard taste. When i was at ASU in the early 80's it was Dominos. I didn't understand it.
 

RUevolution36

All-American
Sep 18, 2006
8,165
5,647
113
The Domino's in Hillsborough is packed liked sardines on the weekend. We have like 8 other real pizzarias in town but folks like that cardboard taste. When i was at ASU in the early 80's it was Dominos. I didn't understand it.
That's just poor. My wife and I pick up Conte's, Nomad, or Tino's in Kingston. They are all very busy, esp on weekends.
 

mdk02

Heisman
Aug 18, 2011
26,134
18,482
113
No he isn't. Not only is it a lazy stereotype, it's dead wrong.

This thread is literally about a review from a guy who made a side business out of testing pizza for the under 30 demo.
Sure, that's why half of every social media app is food. Also why crappy chain restaurants have been struggling since millennials took over from you tasteless boomers.

Do you ever know wtf you're talking about?

Speaking about lazy stereotypes....
 
  • Like
Reactions: bac2therac
Oct 17, 2007
69,704
47,620
0
Tasteless boomers created or preserved all the great pizza places people are raving about on this thread.

Yeah. It's all the boomers, most of them stayed in Hoboken and Jersey City and totally didn't flee for the suburbs, not only in NJ but nationally and leave local businesses for dead. And they're totally the ones spending money now...

The "me" generation really doesn't even begin to tell the story, does it?
 
Oct 17, 2007
69,704
47,620
0
My two daughters are 17 and 15, it’s Domino’s, Smash Burger, Starbucks and Playa for them and friends.
Late night grabs will always be fast food or diners

Well one of the founders of Playa Bowls is a RU alum so no argument there, but when you're a teenager you're usually spending money from a part time job or your parents, so not like you're going for nicer places. If they're doing that 10 years from now that's another story.

When I was at Rutgers I used to go the student center and "splurge" on Wendy's. The Chinese fast food place there used to fill up a styrofoam box for $5 if you came right before they closed. The youngest millennial now was born in 1995 or so, putting them at 26-27. You think they're doing that? Unless they're in grad school or have noi choice, I doubt it.
 

Phi_1055

All-Conference
Feb 27, 2006
3,189
3,864
0
Yeah. It's all the boomers, most of them stayed in Hoboken and Jersey City and totally didn't flee for the suburbs, not only in NJ but nationally and leave local businesses for dead. And they're totally the ones spending money now...

The "me" generation really doesn't even begin to tell the story, does it?

I agree with almost all your points in this thread. But on this one, It was our parents who fled the cities and raised us boomers in the suburbs. Some Boomers moved back, or never left, and helped to spearhead the revitalizations . But much if came too late for those of us already raising children to move to the cities.

Both of my adult offspring and their spouses. Love(d) living in Hoboken.
 

fsg2_rivals

Heisman
Apr 3, 2018
10,881
13,184
0
I always love how a guy in Utah tells people living in NJ what is going on in NJ. You would be shocked if you saw what my son (and his friends) and neighbors order. My neighbors wife always complains when the husband doesn't get Papa John's. A lot of these families have smaller kids so they go for value as well. It's not all about millennials taking pictures of their food.

And I always love when someone uses weak anecdotes that don't even support the original point they think they're making. The fact they're going for "value" actually argues against bac's dopey stereotype as much as anything I've said. So thanks.

BTW, we weren't talking only about NJ ...or your neighborhood, ftm.
 

bac2therac

Hall of Famer
Jul 30, 2001
238,735
168,477
113
And I always love when someone uses weak anecdotes that don't even support the original point they think they're making. The fact they're going for "value" actually argues against bac's dopey stereotype as much as anything I've said. So thanks.

BTW, we weren't talking only about NJ ...or your neighborhood, ftm.


I was talking about NJ and the northeast....yes there are people of all ages eating ****** pizza and sandwiches in the south and middle america and going to subway and dominos where those places are the norm. I will contend though, these other places might have other venues for food specialities that we dont have here. They certainly do not do pizza or subs well but they may do barbeque or mexican or southern food way better than here.
 

fsg2_rivals

Heisman
Apr 3, 2018
10,881
13,184
0
I was talking about NJ and the northeast....yes there are people of all ages eating ****** pizza and sandwiches in the south and middle america and going to subway and dominos where those places are the norm. I will contend though, these other places might have other venues for food specialities that we dont have here. They certainly do not do pizza or subs well but they may do barbeque or mexican or southern food way better than here.

.."and the Northeast," which extends well beyond the borders of NJ.
 

bac2therac

Hall of Famer
Jul 30, 2001
238,735
168,477
113
same thing to me, actually my specific words were not northeast by nj.nyc/philly.....and we have a high pop of subways and dominoes in NJ...that is just ridiculous
 

fsg2_rivals

Heisman
Apr 3, 2018
10,881
13,184
0
Actually, your specific words didn't say anything about geography, "what said is that the younger generation embraces food at wawa, subway, dominos, papa johns as being real examples of sandwiches and pizza."

You qualified that later ...but still overshot.
 

fsg2_rivals

Heisman
Apr 3, 2018
10,881
13,184
0
Well, you're also not supporting it at all, in a thread that's very existence argues against it, so it remains but a limp overreach.
 

WhiteBus

Heisman
Oct 4, 2011
39,360
21,743
113
Interesting that you judge the doneness by the sauce. Isn't that already cooked ahead of time and just gets warmed during the bake? For me it's definitely the dough. Not that I necessarily need it well done but undercooked dough is a major no-no.
No, pizza sauce is not cooked beforehand.
 

RUChoppin

Heisman
Dec 1, 2006
19,270
13,695
0
The Domino's in Hillsborough is packed liked sardines on the weekend. We have like 8 other real pizzarias in town but folks like that cardboard taste. When i was at ASU in the early 80's it was Dominos. I didn't understand it.

Honestly, though, we've been largely disappointed in the pizza offerings in Hillsborough. I know there have been outright wars over pizza places on the township FB group, but we've found most places in town are average at best.

Once the hub bub dies down, we'll give DeLucia's a try - only 15 min away. We had tried De Lorenzo's couple years back after his glowing review and weren't that impressed.

What I find funny about Portnoy is that he's a dude from Massachusetts who went to college in Michigan then worked in Boston until 2016, who somehow made himself out like some expert on NY/NJ pizza.
 

Zak57

Heisman
Jul 5, 2011
10,848
10,952
113
Honestly, though, we've been largely disappointed in the pizza offerings in Hillsborough. I know there have been outright wars over pizza places on the township FB group, but we've found most places in town are average at best.

Once the hub bub dies down, we'll give DeLucia's a try - only 15 min away. We had tried De Lorenzo's couple years back after his glowing review and weren't that impressed.

What I find funny about Portnoy is that he's a dude from Massachusetts who then went to college in Michigan, who's somehow made himself out like some expert on NY/NJ pizza.
I liked Angelo's the best in Hillsborough. Tastes like your normal town slice should taste. Ama neapolitan is solid but nothing amazing but I do like it there. The calzone was better.

Genteels in Montgomery.
 

RUChoppin

Heisman
Dec 1, 2006
19,270
13,695
0
I liked Angelo's the best in Hillsborough. Tastes like your normal town slice should taste. Ama neapolitan is solid but nothing amazing but I do like it there. The calzone was better.

Genteels in Montgomery.

We've worked through a few places in H'boro, and our most recent resting place has been Victor's.

Will try Genteel's, though it's about 20-25 min from our side of town.
 

bac2therac

Hall of Famer
Jul 30, 2001
238,735
168,477
113
We've worked through a few places in H'boro, and our most recent resting place has been Victor's.

Will try Genteel's, though it's about 20-25 min from our side of town.

Yes..of all the places I find Victors to be the best

The worst is the one at the Shop Rite mall..worst customer service and inedible pizza
 
  • Like
Reactions: RUChoppin

ru109

All-American
Sep 18, 2011
6,763
5,274
113
American cheese! That’s probably the biggest pizza travesty I’ve ever heard. Should have their pizza license or whatever revoked for that!

If they were true friends and it was the Ramsey/Mahwah area then they would have taken you to Kinchley's.
 

toby83

All-Conference
Dec 23, 2014
4,095
3,822
0
No but Manville Pizzeria its father is
I feel like something about Manville pizza was "better" in the old strip mall...i don't like it as much now. Perhaps in my head the nostalgic places, memories going with family in easier times, makes me think the pizza was better lol. Also remember the jukebox there and my pop always playing Jack and Diane.
 

RUPete

Heisman
Feb 5, 2003
26,846
16,117
0
I feel like something about Manville pizza was "better" in the old strip mall...i don't like it as much now. Perhaps in my head the nostalgic places, memories going with family in easier times, makes me think the pizza was better lol. Also remember the jukebox there and my pop always playing Jack and Diane.
I do think nostalgia plays a part in this sometimes. I went to both locations and thought the pizza was pretty good, but I can see the new location being less personal. It's a standard storefront.
 
  • Like
Reactions: bac2therac

Section124

Heisman
Dec 21, 2002
16,830
18,456
96
Honestly, though, we've been largely disappointed in the pizza offerings in Hillsborough. I know there have been outright wars over pizza places on the township FB group, but we've found most places in town are average at best.

Once the hub bub dies down, we'll give DeLucia's a try - only 15 min away. We had tried De Lorenzo's couple years back after his glowing review and weren't that impressed.

What I find funny about Portnoy is that he's a dude from Massachusetts who went to college in Michigan then worked in Boston until 2016, who somehow made himself out like some expert on NY/NJ pizza.
If you didn't like De Lorenzo's, you will probably not like DeLucia's, but I could be wrong. Definitely try it. I don't think Portnoy thinks he is an expert on NY/NJ pizza. It's just that working in NYC he has access to the best NY/NJ/CT pizza within a 1.5 hour drive. So those drive his scale since he knows those are the best.

If you listen to his reviews, he likes the bar pie style he grew up on in MA. That is why he likes the thinner / crispy pizza's. He has a different scale for those as he does for basic "football" pizza (his definition is pizza you eat every day - doughier version). That is the type of pizza we mostly see here in NY/NJ. You can pretty much rate his review before he even takes a bite.
 
  • Like
Reactions: bac2therac
Status
Not open for further replies.