Margherita vera
San Marzano tomato, fior di latte, fresh basil picked the morning of, a thread of olive oil. Nothing else, and nothing missing.
Hand-stretched dough, 48-hour ferment, San Marzano tomatoes and a wood-fired oven that does most of the talking. Lunch and dinner, every day except Monday.
No tricks, no shortcuts. The pizza you grew up wanting to be cooked just for you, served at the table while the crust is still loud.
Our dough rests 48 hours in cold ferment. It's lighter to eat, easier to digest, and tastes of the flour, not just the salt.
Beech and oak, 450°C, ninety seconds. The crust comes out blistered and a little stubborn, exactly how it should.
Tomatoes from Campania, fior di latte from a small dairy outside Parma, basil from a grower we know by name. That's the whole secret.
Everything we do is shaped by the oven in the corner of the room. It's loud, it's hot, and it doesn't forgive a dough that wasn't taken seriously. Which is the point.
Once the pizza goes in, there's nowhere to hide. The crust either sings, or it doesn't. So we spend the long hours, before the doors open, making sure it does.
Wood from the Vosges, sourced through a forester who replants what he cuts. It burns clean, it smells like a place, and it makes the kind of crust people text their friends about.
Read our story
Pizzeria
"We weren't trying to invent anything. We were trying to make a pizza we'd actually want to wait in line for."
If you don't know where to start, here's what the regulars reach for. Order one of each and pass them around.
The one we'd serve our grandmother. Tomato, fior di latte, basil, oil.
Four cheeses, no apologies. Mozzarella, gorgonzola, fontina, parmesan.
Prosciutto, arugula, shaved parmesan. The most requested at the table.
Sourdough grilled in the oven, garlic, ripe tomato, basil. Eat it warm.
Spicy salami, smoked scamorza, chili oil. Order water on the side.
Mascarpone, espresso, savoiardi, cocoa. Made fresh in the morning.
The room is small and most evenings it fills up early. A quick message a day or two ahead is the safest way in, especially for Friday and Saturday.
Tell us how many you are, when you'd like to come, and anything we should know (a birthday, an allergy, a stroller). We'll write back the same day.
Private events, large tables and take-away: drop us a message and we'll get back the same day.