DUNCAN BARKES: Pizza, pasta or burger? Not a very tasty choice
I was minding my own business the other evening and trying to ignore the brain-numbing television offering that is Ant and Dec’s Saturday Night Takeaway when an advert popped up for the latest culinary car crash from Pizza Hut.
The Cheeseburger Pizza Crust is now available. Their website says it all: ‘When eating out, there is always a choice – burger or pizza? Now you don’t have to make that choice!’
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Hide AdI am not sure if they can genuinely use the word ‘pizza’ in describing this muck. It looks the creation of a chef with ADHD on a bad acid trip.
But doesn’t it tell you everything you need to know about our attitude to food? Presumably the company carried out market research before launching the product and must have received the thumbs-up from potential customers.
That people actually like the idea of pizza somehow combined with burgers makes me think the tastebuds of these would-be munchers should be forcibly removed and given to those who actually appreciate food. Food, not chemically enhanced and processed fat.
It’s not a pizza. Wander into a restaurant in Italy and you will find proper cooks making dough, producing a thin base and adding a simple topping of fresh ingredients. That’s a pizza.
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Hide AdThis latest offering from Pizza Hut is simply satisfying the gluttonous demands of obese Britons who would
not know a decent dish if it smacked them in the chops.
The pizza has become bastardised in this country, but the obsession continues.
The word in Chichester is that the latest addition to the restaurant scene will be yet another Italian-themed outlet.
How many venues knocking out plates of pasta and pizza does one place need? Wildwood Kitchen is set to join all the other gaffs offering the same: Pizza Express, Carluccio’s, Prezzo, Ask and Zizzi’s.
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Hide AdIt makes you wonder if Chichester District Council really cares about or understands the true meaning of choice.
Such a decision does nothing to support independent businesses in
the area.
Who is eating this stuff anyway? In Italy, pasta is not a meal. It is merely a course ahead of the meat and vegetables main event.
My mother never considered pizza to be proper food and I do not know anyone over the age of 60 who does.
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Hide AdThe explosion in pizza and pasta restaurants is indicative of this country’s poor and lazy attitude to food. Put enough salt, sugar and fat in a bowl of gruel and I doubt many would be able to tell the difference.