Life Desk
Published:21 May 2021, 11:22 AM
The best frozen pizzas
Frozen pizza and most of us think of the utilitarian discs found in the supermarket freezer case, not wood-fired creations meticulously crafted by top pizzaioli. “If you would have told me [a year ago] I would be doing frozen pizza, I would have told you I have a bridge to sell you,” said Chris Bianco, chef-owner of Pizzeria Bianco in Phoenix, Ariz., credited with some of America’s best pies. But with his restaurants operating at half capacity during the pandemic, Mr. Bianco began supplementing earnings by freezing his celebrated pies and selling them nationally through the delivery site Goldbelly.
He wasn’t the only pizza pro to pivot this way. Frozen pizza has grown beyond the usual grocery-store brands to include intriguing mail-order options. Between establishments like Pizzeria Bianco that ship restaurant-quality pies and new direct-to-consumer brands ranging in scale from micro to major, the options are diverse and enticing.
The demand was certainly there. According to the market research firm Nielsen, from March through April 2020, supermarket frozen pizza sales jumped 63.2% from the previous year. The appeal to consumers is obvious: Frozen pizza is quick, it’s easy and it can appease even the most finicky palate. When you’re cooking nearly every meal at home, those are all major wins.
In addition to being decidedly delicious, the frozen pizzas recommended below have a few other things in common. All were shipped in insulated packs with dry ice and arrived frozen. All came with clear, simple heating directions that yielded melty cheese and appropriately crisped crusts. While most of the instructions recommend reheating the pizzas either on a baking sheet or directly on the oven rack, a grease-dripping incident smoked out this tester’s kitchen; for pizzas that are crammed with rich toppings, consider sticking with the sheet. Beyond that, these pies are pretty foolproof.
Meat Lover’s Pizzas
Pizzeria Bianco’s Wood Fired Pizza + Sicilian Pizza four-pack ($135, including shipping) comes with three thin-crust pizzas plus a rustic rectangular Sicilian pie and lets you choose from the restaurant’s signature combinations—many of them meaty. The Wiseguy, crowned with house-smoked mozzarella, fennel sausage and roasted onions, comes with a vial of peppery Puglian olive oil to drizzle on top. The Sonny Boy (shown) marries soppressata and Gaeta olives, while the Sicilian, saturated with olive oil and topped with fontina, comes plain or with gold-standard Ezzo pepperoni. The crisp, airy crusts are crafted from organic flour, and the sauce is made from Mr. Bianco’s own Bianco DiNapoli tomatoes.
Straight Outta Italy
Direct-to-consumer pizza peddler Talia di Napoli has shipped frozen pies from Naples, Italy, since February 2020. Founder and CEO Edouard Freda hires certified master pizzaioli to make Neapolitan-style pies by hand, using ingredients such as fine 00 flour, olive oil from Puglia, and tomato sauce and fior di latte mozzarella from Campania. “Our pizza meets all requirements of Neapolitan pizza, from ingredients to preparation,” said Mr. Freda. “But the designating body does not recognize frozen pizza.” The Classico 8 Pack (shown) has four Margherita and four Provolina pizzas, with smoked mozzarella and sliced tomatoes ($110, including shipping). A very good gluten-free option uses a blend of buckwheat flour, rice flour and gluten-free wheat starch ($108 for 6, including shipping).
Best of Brooklyn
The restaurant Roberta’s in Bushwick, Brooklyn, has been selling a frozen version of its lauded wood-fired pizzas for more than a decade. The brand combines a purist’s eye for process and ingredients with a chef’s sensibility when it comes to genius flavor combinations. The Baby Sinclair (shown), showered with kale, Calabrian chiles, sliced garlic, cheddar and Parmigiano-Reggiano, is compulsively noshable. Roberta’s other frozen pie, an unimpeachable Margherita, comes topped with the classic trio of bright tomato sauce, housemade mozzarella and fresh basil. The bubbly sourdough crust is forged in a 900-degree oven before being frozen and packaged. All it takes at home is 5½ minutes at 450 degrees to produce some very fine pizza (10 for $149, including shipping).
Creative Veggie Pies
In 2015, Natalie DeSabato started Traze as a one-woman pop-up operation in Queens, N.Y., selling square slices of highly original pizzas at local markets and breweries. Last October, she added frozen pizzas to her repertoire. Ms. DeSabato’s 10-by-10-inch vegetarian pies are fun and fully loaded. The signature Falafel pizza ($14, or $17 for vegan) has a sesame-dotted crust topped with crumbled fava-bean falafel, halal-cart-style white sauce, smoked gouda and extra-sharp cheddar. The Vodka Flambae (shown; $14) comes smothered in fresh mozzarella and pea-studded vodka sauce. The Bleu Dream ($16) features Alfredo sauce thick with artichoke hearts and spinach, plus Parm, mozz and blue cheeses, and a topping of stuffed mushrooms recreated from her Aunt Susan’s recipe.