La Boca & Tokyo Marinara - podcast episode cover

La Boca & Tokyo Marinara

Jan 24, 2022โ€ข1 hr 33 minโ€ขSeason 1Ep. 9
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Episode description

๐Ÿ•๐Ÿ•๐Ÿ•๐Ÿ•๐Ÿ•๐Ÿ•๐Ÿ•๐Ÿ•๐Ÿ• Pizza is a universal language, one of love, and legend.


Weโ€™ll start with a trip to South America, by way of Argentina and Brazil โ€ฆ No, weโ€™re not doing this alphabetically, but rather, chronologically. The first pizzas sold in Buenos Aires were by Don Agustin Banchero, at his bakery Olivarria in 1893, who, surprisingly, was a Genoan immigrant, not Neapolitan. Banchero, the standalone pizzeria, wasnโ€™t opened until the 1930s in the La Boca port area.


Whereas Brazilโ€™s pizza culture dates back to the early 1900s, thanks to an influx of immigrants from Campania โ€” here, the style is personal pies, served at dinner only, and eaten with a knife and fork.


In Japan, thereโ€™s an emergence of Tokyo-style marinara, a 50/50 ratio of tomato sauce to olive oil, but what seems to be most important there, is the experience, or as they call it: ometanashi.


And of course weโ€™re going to talk about Italy โ€ฆ but what is there to say that hasnโ€™t been said already? A lot it seems! Weโ€™ll hear from modern day masters, a chef in Rome applying modernist techniques to toppings, as well as the making of โ€œmountain piesโ€ in the hills between Venice and the Dolomites.

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