The One Pizza You Have to Try in Naples
By: Giada De Laurentiis
| Read time: 2 min
Pizza fritta is a can't-miss specialty in the Italian city
When pizza lovers make a pilgrimage to Naples, where the pizza as we know it was invented more than 125 years ago, they usually overlook one of the city's more unique offerings. Pizza fritta - fried pizza - is a combination of the city's pizza history and its tradition of friggitoria (fried food stalls), and the result is a totally unique treat.
To make the decadent delicacy, pizza dough is stretched and shaped as for a normal pizza al forno, then topped with ricotta cheese and meat (but no tomato sauce!). Then it's folded in half and sealed shut, so the fillings won't escape when it's dropped into the deep fryer. The result is a puffy, golden half-moon of crisp dough filled with creamy, melty cheese and salty meat, the perfect snack as you walk the winding streets of the ancient city.
Forming the dough and frying it at just the right temperature are skills that take years to perfect, which is why it's hard to find pizza fritta outside of Naples. In fact, local favorite La Masardona is on its fourth generation of pizza cooks, run by the same family since it opened in 1945. But if you're in New York City, you can stop in for a at Sorbillo, the only U.S. location of a Neapolitan chain run by famous pizzaiolo Gino Sorbillo. New York or Naples, pizza fritta is worth the trip!
Where to try it:
Antica Friggitoria Masardona, Via Giulio Cesare Capaccio 27
Pizzeria Di Matteo, Via Tribunali 94
Starita, Via Materdei 27/28
Sorbillo, 334 Bowery, NYC
Pizza fritta is a can't-miss specialty in the Italian city
When pizza lovers make a pilgrimage to Naples, where the pizza as we know it was invented more than 125 years ago, they usually overlook one of the city's more unique offerings. Pizza fritta - fried pizza - is a combination of the city's pizza history and its tradition of friggitoria (fried food stalls), and the result is a totally unique treat.
To make the decadent delicacy, pizza dough is stretched and shaped as for a normal pizza al forno, then topped with ricotta cheese and meat (but no tomato sauce!). Then it's folded in half and sealed shut, so the fillings won't escape when it's dropped into the deep fryer. The result is a puffy, golden half-moon of crisp dough filled with creamy, melty cheese and salty meat, the perfect snack as you walk the winding streets of the ancient city.
Forming the dough and frying it at just the right temperature are skills that take years to perfect, which is why it's hard to find pizza fritta outside of Naples. In fact, local favorite La Masardona is on its fourth generation of pizza cooks, run by the same family since it opened in 1945. But if you're in New York City, you can stop in for a at Sorbillo, the only U.S. location of a Neapolitan chain run by famous pizzaiolo Gino Sorbillo. New York or Naples, pizza fritta is worth the trip!
Where to try it:
Antica Friggitoria Masardona, Via Giulio Cesare Capaccio 27
Pizzeria Di Matteo, Via Tribunali 94
Starita, Via Materdei 27/28
Sorbillo, 334 Bowery, NYC

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Giada is a chef, mother, author and restauranteur. She is known as the Emmy-award winning television personality of Food Network’s Everyday Italian, Giada at Home, Giada In Italy, as a judge on Food Network Star, NBC Today Show correspondent, for her eight New York Times best-selling cookbooks and her debut restaurant, GIADA, in Las Vegas. Though most days, you can find her in Los Angeles with her daughter, Jade and kitten, Bella, whipping up something delicious in the kitchen involving parmiggiano reggiano or her weakness, dark chocolate!