by Frank » Sat Apr 24, 2021 11:44 am
PolackTony wrote: ↑Fri Apr 23, 2021 8:15 pm
Bear with me people, as I wasn’t sure if I should post this in the “General” or “Mafia” forum lol.
Chicago received a major contingent of immigrants from the Basilicata and Puglia regions. These migration links began in the late 19th century and continue to this day. While Chicago has received many settlers from Metropolitan Bari, many also arrived in the Windy City from dirt poor and isolated comunes in the rugged mountains of the interior of the Italian south. These contingents of
contadini , and their modern descendants, naturally brought their recipes with them, leaving a lasting mark on Chicago’s food culture. I strongly believe that the typical Chicago thin crust style is derived from “pizza a la Barese/Pugliese” (rolled out with a pin into a thin sheet unlike the hand-tossed Neapolitan-style pizza that caught on in NYC).
A more recent contribution is the distinctive Chicago “stuffed pizza” — with a second layer of dough over the cheese and meat — popularized mainly by the Giordano’s chain. This style was first developed by Lucani immigrants Rocco and Annunziata Palese in the early 1970s, who developed the recipe from older family recipes for scarcedda/scarcella, a variety of rustic “pizza” in the form of a layered pie stuffed with meat, cheese, tomatoes, and eggs served for Easter in Basilicata and Puglia. The Boglio brothers, northern Italian immigrants from Torino, probably ripped off the recipe from the Paleses and founded the Giordano’s chain (it’s been alleged that one of the Boglio worked for the Paleses before starting Giordano’s)
Apparently part of why the Paleses were not able to compete with the much more successful Boglios was that three of the Palese locations were bombed in the early 1980s. Being Chicago, the press naturally suspected that these bombings were mob related. The Outfit of course long had major interests in restaurants, food processing and distribution, and hospitality. Incidentally, the more famous (at least to outsiders) Chicago “deep dish” style pizza also had close Outfit connections, with the influential Gino’s East pizzeria founded by Outfit associates Fred Bartoli and George LoVerde (the latter brother of made Chicago member Frank “Butch” LoVerde).
In 1984, disgruntled former Palese franchisee Biaggio Cirrincione was convicted for the bombings. Given the MO, I still wonder if there was more to the story then a simple business dispute. Cirrincione was likely a Sicilian immigrant, and of course there seems to have been a notable influx of Sicilian OC operatives in Chicago and Rockford in the 1970s and ‘80s, so I wonder also if Cirrincione had any connections.
Anyone ever come across any info on this?
https://www.chicagotribune.com/dining/c ... story.html
Never knew that 3 locations of Nancys Pizza were bombed. Great post. Also didnt know the connection between Ginos and the Outfit. There's a Bartoli pizza too. Never had Nancys, but their getting pretty widespread. Not surprising about mob connections to Chicagoland Pizza
[quote=PolackTony post_id=192184 time=1619234105 user_id=6658]
Bear with me people, as I wasn’t sure if I should post this in the “General” or “Mafia” forum lol.
Chicago received a major contingent of immigrants from the Basilicata and Puglia regions. These migration links began in the late 19th century and continue to this day. While Chicago has received many settlers from Metropolitan Bari, many also arrived in the Windy City from dirt poor and isolated comunes in the rugged mountains of the interior of the Italian south. These contingents of [i] contadini [/i], and their modern descendants, naturally brought their recipes with them, leaving a lasting mark on Chicago’s food culture. I strongly believe that the typical Chicago thin crust style is derived from “pizza a la Barese/Pugliese” (rolled out with a pin into a thin sheet unlike the hand-tossed Neapolitan-style pizza that caught on in NYC).
A more recent contribution is the distinctive Chicago “stuffed pizza” — with a second layer of dough over the cheese and meat — popularized mainly by the Giordano’s chain. This style was first developed by Lucani immigrants Rocco and Annunziata Palese in the early 1970s, who developed the recipe from older family recipes for scarcedda/scarcella, a variety of rustic “pizza” in the form of a layered pie stuffed with meat, cheese, tomatoes, and eggs served for Easter in Basilicata and Puglia. The Boglio brothers, northern Italian immigrants from Torino, probably ripped off the recipe from the Paleses and founded the Giordano’s chain (it’s been alleged that one of the Boglio worked for the Paleses before starting Giordano’s)
Apparently part of why the Paleses were not able to compete with the much more successful Boglios was that three of the Palese locations were bombed in the early 1980s. Being Chicago, the press naturally suspected that these bombings were mob related. The Outfit of course long had major interests in restaurants, food processing and distribution, and hospitality. Incidentally, the more famous (at least to outsiders) Chicago “deep dish” style pizza also had close Outfit connections, with the influential Gino’s East pizzeria founded by Outfit associates Fred Bartoli and George LoVerde (the latter brother of made Chicago member Frank “Butch” LoVerde).
In 1984, disgruntled former Palese franchisee Biaggio Cirrincione was convicted for the bombings. Given the MO, I still wonder if there was more to the story then a simple business dispute. Cirrincione was likely a Sicilian immigrant, and of course there seems to have been a notable influx of Sicilian OC operatives in Chicago and Rockford in the 1970s and ‘80s, so I wonder also if Cirrincione had any connections.
Anyone ever come across any info on this?
https://www.chicagotribune.com/dining/craving/ct-nancys-pizza-profile-food-0921-20160916-story.html
[/quote]
Never knew that 3 locations of Nancys Pizza were bombed. Great post. Also didnt know the connection between Ginos and the Outfit. There's a Bartoli pizza too. Never had Nancys, but their getting pretty widespread. Not surprising about mob connections to Chicagoland Pizza