Pie in the sky
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Lindsay Sandham
When the moon hits your eye like a big pizza pie ...
Teresa Acevedo was feeling the amore Sunday when she was lightly
struck by a flying pizza at the Orange County Fair. The 5-year-old
from Paramount giggled as the raw dough landed on her face, covering
her with flour.
It was the work of Tony Gemignani, a six-time world pizza-throwing
champion, who demonstrated his unique pizza-tossing style during four
performances in front of Enzo’s Pizzeria, which supplied Gemignani
with the dough.
Although many fairgoers tried to cool off with ice cream and
lemonade, pizza connoisseurs stopped to watch Gemignani juggle
multiple doughs in time to such pizza-parlor tunes as “That’s Amore.”
Like a basketball player, Gemignani twirled and tossed the doughy
discs through his legs and behind him acrobatically before chucking
them out to the audience.
The lucky audience members who caught the dough, like Teresa
Acevedo, were asked to join Gemignani on stage. There they got a
brief tutorial on pizza-tossing techniques and then competed against
one another in a toss-off.
The winners, Teresa and 32-year-old Tim Quigley of Washington,
D.C., shared a large pizza pie from Enzo’s Pizzeria as their prize.
Dominic Palmieri, owner of Enzo’s, said he first saw Gemignani at
a pizza convention in Las Vegas five years ago and was impressed with
his skills. He saw him again recently on the Tony Danza show, and had
the idea to get Gemignani to perform at the fair.
Gemignani said he only does shows for pizzerias that make their
own dough fresh everyday, like Enzo’s. The dough must be fresh for
tossing, he said, and it’s good to triple the salt or add honey for
elasticity.
“He puts out a great product,” Gemignani said of Palmieri’s pizza,
adding that carnival pizzeria stands that make pies from scratch are
a rarity.
Palmieri said the tricks Gemignani is able to do are the mark of a
six-time world champion. But unlike Lance Armstrong, Gemignani said
he doubts he will retire if he wins a seventh time.
Gemignani doesn’t do much individual competing anymore -- in fact
his last world-championship win was as part of a team performance.
“The big thing now is team acrobatics,” Gemignani said. He works
with acrobats from all over the country -- all pizzeria owners
promoting their businesses.
Gemignani first started tossing dough about 15 years ago when he
and his brother opened a pizzeria, named Pyzanos, in Castro Valley,
Calif.
“I started doing tricks for the kids when they would come in the
shop,” he said. He competed for the first time in 1995 and has since
made a name for himself with his agile pizza-tossing skills.
Gemignani has been featured on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, The
Today Show, CNN and the Food Network, among others. He also teaches
culinary workshops and hands-on pizza-tossing classes, and has worked
with many celebrities, teaching them the art of dough-flipping. He
even co-wrote the book on pizza, titled “Pizza,” due out in September
by Chronicle Books. The tome will contain 60 pizza recipes and a
section on dough-tossing.
“Pizza to me is like pasta -- you can eat it every way,” Gemignani
said. “I used to eat it every day for probably 10 years. Now I
probably eat it every other day. There’s so many ways you can make
it, you never really get sick of it.”
Palmieri said he eats at least one slice every day.
“I call that quality control.”
* LINDSAY SANDHAM is the news assistant. She can be reached at
(714) 966-4625 or [email protected].
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