I have a friend who loves pizza.
To him, a pizza is not just a go-to meal.
It is a dish that encompasses anything and everything of a European, Mediterranean or American meal as how he wants, as however much he wants.
It is a meal that enables him to try of as much, or as little, of cuisines from this side of the world, or that side of the world all at once, all at the same time.
He does not have to order an entire plate of steak if he wants to have some beef.
Neither does he have to content with tomato simply because the dish comes with it.
If he's in the mood for beef, he'll just order a pizza with some form of beef on it.
If he's in the mood for some ham or bacon or olives, he'll just go for a pizza that has most, or more, of it.
There's no need to worry whether there'll be enough of this or that.
It's all on that circular piece of oven-baked flatbread.
With a palate like this, there's got to be some discernment somewhere, so yes, I was interested when he suggested we try this (by then) not-so-new pizza place in town.
Casa Vostra in Raffles City occupies the space that for the longest time used to be McDonalds, and from what I hear, fast it is becoming to be one of the best places in town for pizza.
Casa Vostra has three different variations on their menu.
There is, of course, the Pizza. There is, also of course, the Pasta. And then there is something they call the Doublecrunch.
Amongst the Pizzas there're those that seem to be rich in tomato, like the Marinara, and the Margherita, both of which have San Marzano tomatoes, except that the Margherita has fresh basil and parmigiano.
Actually it isn't just these two that have the San Marzano tomatoes.
The Burrata, Gamberi, and Diavola have them too.
Burrata has the cheese, and the parmigiano reggiano.
Diavola has the salame, the fresh basil and the parmigiano reggiano.
Then the Gamberi has prawns (Argentinian!), prawn jus, lemon zest, and the parmigiano.
We were particularly interested in the other white selections of pizzas, however.
This was the section that had more fascinating ingredients, like anchovies, sausage, broccoli, pistachio, four cheese, even fig puree.
Personally I wouldn't think of having anchovies on a pizza- how is the taste of a fish anchovy on a pizza, I wonder- but I'm sure some do, and I'm sure too that when you get roasted yellow tomatoes, fiordilatte, fresh basil and olives, it will taste good.
My friend is a meat and mushroom lover, so three times we went, three times we got pizzas with either one on it.
The first time there was the Prosciutto e Fichi, with Parma Ham, Fig Puree, Rocket Lettuce, Fiordilatte, Baked Walnuts, and Parmigiano Reggiano.
We had been attracted by the parma ham, but goodness me, did the fig puree taste good too.
Plus, I think he'd added truffle.
There was the hint of sweetness, there was the crunch from the walnuts, and even the rocket lettuce, known for its slight bitterness, didn't overwhelm the salt of the ham nor the sweet of the fig.
What I fancied most was the bread, really.
Oven-toasted, warm, and soft with a slightly burnt taste, it went so, so well with the EVOO on the table that you could pour out on your own plate for yourselves.
Another time we had a pizza that was, if I'm not wrong, the Mortadella.
This one was one of the more unique ones that I remember, not only for the sliced salame made of finely hashed pork, but the unique flavors of pistachio nuts (generously sprinkled all over), its distinctive crunch, the balance of fresh basil leaves, lemon zest, and parmigiano reggiano.
It isn't every place that has me savoring pistachio with lemon zest and ham all over the pizza.
Neither is it every place that gives me a bunch of full-sized basil leaves.
And then there was the time where we went for the Tartufo e Funghi, which turned out to be a savory combination of fresh black truffle, mushrooms, Fiordilatte, Taleggio, truffle oil, and thyme.
I can't say which pizza was my favorite.
Honestly I love all three.
They're all so quintessential it is hard not to love.
I like the truffle, I like the pistachio and the mushroom and the parma ham. I also like the basil leaves.
But they wouldn't taste good together, I'm sure, and I'm not the kind to experiment with them all.
There're still a couple of pizzas on the menu that I want to try.
I want to try the 4 Formaggi- the combination of Fiordilatte, Gorgonzola, Taleggio, and Parmigiano Reggiano cheeses sound amazing.
I also want to try the Salmone.
I like smoked salmon. and I don't mind rocket lettuce, burrata cheese and onions.
Then again I like the fig puree with parma ham too....