Don’t get me wrong.
I’ve got nothing against pizza.
Though that could
be like saying “No offense” and then immediately offending someone.
Okay, you got me.
I’ve got something against pizza.
Not pizza per se.
No, yeah. Pizza per
se.
I have got something against pizza per se.
Which is, specifically, this.
Good or bad, thick crust of thin, New York, Chicago,
Patterson New Jersey – all pizza is exactly the same.
“But you just listed the
ways pizzas are different.”
I did. Still, I stand
by that statement.
“Even though you said
exactly the opposite?”
Yes.
“Man! It’s like ‘Trump World’, but with pizza.”
I adhere to my contradictory guns because, despite their
surface distinctions, all pizza is exactly the same, and here’s how. And why because
of that “how”,
I have got something against pizza.
First off, I like pizza.
“You have an odd way
of showing it.”
I’ll ignore that.
Why?”
Because I feel like it.
I have eaten hundreds of pizzas in my day, beginning with my
neighborhood (but with a “u”) La Pizza
and Charjo’s, back in Toronto. I enjoyed pizza so much that when I had one
delivered, I’d use my treasured “Chanukah Gelt” silver dollars that I swore I
would “keep forever” to pay for it.
That’s how much I like
pizza!
(Note: Before
ordering in pizza, make sure you have enough money without using your treasured “Chanukah Gelt” silver dollars you
swore you would “keep forever.” I forgot
to do that. And I paid the price.)
Let us stipulate – as they say on courtroom dramas and
possibly actual courtrooms as well – that it’s good pizza.
So there it is:
Good pizza, ready to eat.
Knife and fork? Eat it with your
hands? It’s all the same. You are excited about that pizza.
(And by the way, writing the previous paragraph, my mouth reflexively
started to water.)
You take the first bite of that pizza?
You are in heaven.
You take another bite.
And another. And then
another. Rapidly finishing that first
slice. You look down at the remaining
slices of the pizza… and you are happy.
Because that first slice was terrific.
And there are so many slices to go.
You dig into the second slice of your pizza. It’s
good. But at some point during that
second slice, if you’re like me – a person committed to undermining his own
pleasure – you face an unavoidable reality:
Eating pizza has become a bit of a slog.
Suddenly you are aware that what is ahead of you is a meal
wherein every slice – nay, every bite
of that pizza – tastes exactly the same as the first one.
Dooming you to a Groundhog
Day pizza-eating experience.
Other dishes are different.
You have a veal cutlet.
It comes with potatoes of some sort, a vegetable. You look down at your plate –
You have three options to choose from.
You taste the veal cutlet?
You try some potatoes? You sample
the vegetables? It’s like – because it is – three distinctly alternate tastes. Moosh them together, and the taste options
increase.
It’s even more so
with fruit salad, where the choices are multiplied. You dig into fruit salad, and it’s like,
“Ooh! A strawberry!” “Ooh!
A grape!”
Sometimes it’s “Ooh! A
pine nut!” Fruit salads surprise you! Every bite – well not every bite; let not get crazy – but many bites are deliciously unlike the bite before.
“Ooh! A kiwi!”
“Ooh! A … what is that?”
Your taste buds are dancing!
But with pizza… it’s just pizza.
Then more pizza.
Then more pizza.
Then more pizza.
Sure, you can go half “something” and half “something else”
with your pizza. But I don’t know
anyplace… I mean, can you imagine asking,
“Can I have a different topping on each slice?”
They’re, like,
“We don’t do that!”
Leaving you stuck with “just pizza.”
Understand this. I love pizza. I love the dough. I adore the crust. (My family knows that, and gives me their crust.) In some ways, pizza’s my “ideal food.” But I can’t fool myself.
Pizza is eight slices of exactly the same thing.
Of course, I won’t eat
eight slices. I will save some for
later. Although later, it’s the same
thing… colder and dryer.
Pizza is great. But
it is, and can be nothing other than
–
Just pizza.
Over and over.
Oh well.
There is always that first bite.
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