



Grade: A
Each pizza pie is handmade by DeMarco, so the pizzeria is closed when he is not available.[4] He "believe[s] only one guy should make the pizza.”[5] Three of his seven children work in the back area of the restaurant.[4] He makes 100 to 150 pies a day, and does so by cutting fresh basil over the pies with a pair of kitchen scissors.[5][6][7][8] DeMarco uses imported ingredients – flour, extra-virgin olive oil, San Marzano tomatoes, buffalo mozzarella cheese from Casapulla, freshly grated grana padano (a slightly salty hard cow's milk cheese), three types of mozzarella cheese, and hand-grated Parmigiano Reggiano cheese are all from Italy, and the basil and oregano are from Israel.[5][6][8][9][10] In a windowsill flower box, he grows thyme, oregano, basil, rosemary, and hot peppers.[4][11][12][13] The pizzas bake for a few minutes at about 800 °F (427 °C).[8][14] The pizzas are described as thin-crust and crispy, slightly shy of burnt, with a thin layer of savory, subtle, tangy sauce.[5][9][15][16][17] It is served over a sheet of wax paper, which is in turn over a paper plate. DeMarco serves classic New York-style pizza and Sicilian-style square pies.[5] In July 2009, Di Fara raised its price for a plain slice of pizza from $4 to $5, becoming the first $5-a-slice pizza place in New York City.[6][18] [Source]
Marketing. Appalachian. Storyteller. Author. Instructor. Columnist. Farmers market board member. Community volunteer. Candace127@gmail.com CandaceRoseNelson.com
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