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Welcome to the Love Pizza. Inc website! Where
we share news about our next projects, answer questions, alongside
some other goodies you may find.
Who Are We?
Love Pizza. Inc is a game-development company located in
Ball, New Jersey. Our mission is to create not just games, but
experiences that put smiles in the face of many with memorable
stories, characters and scenarios. Our love for Italian food of
triangular variety fuels us with power. All of our productions are
hot and ready in 30 minutes or less, and as a company, we are
dedicated to providing the greatest products and services to our
clients and to putting money into the wellbeing of our staff. Except
Robert, we don't like him.
Our Games
Our most notable 2 games we've created can be seen below.
Pizza Delivery - $5.43
PC Only
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Pizza Delivery 2 - Unreleased!
Playstation 2 & PC
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And some of our other releases can be found in
here,
too!
Background
The history of pizza begins in antiquity, as various ancient
cultures produced basic flatbreads with several toppings.
A precursor of pizza was probably the focaccia, a flatbread known to
the Romans as panis focacius, to which toppings were then added.
In Sardinia, French and Italian archaeologists have found bread
baked over 7,000 years ago. According to Philippe Marinval, the
local islanders leavened this bread. Foods similar to pizza have
been made since antiquity. Records of people adding other
ingredients to bread to make it more flavorful can be found
throughout ancient history.
In the 6th century BC, Persian soldiers serving under Darius the
Great baked flatbreads with cheese and dates on top of their battle
shields.
In Ancient Greece, citizens made a flatbread called plakouswhich was
flavored with toppings like herbs, onion, cheese and garlic.
An early reference to a pizza-like food occurs in the Aeneid (c. 19
BC), when Celaeno, the Harpy queen, foretells that the Trojans would
not find peace until they were forced by hunger to eat their tables
(Book III). In Book VII, Aeneas and his men are served a meal that
includes round cakes (like pita bread) topped with cooked
vegetables. When they eat the bread, they realize that these are the
tables prophesied by Celaeno.
Some commentators have suggested that the origins of modern pizza
can be traced to pizzarelle, which were kosher for Passover cookies
eaten by Roman Jews after returning from the synagogue on that
holiday, though some also trace its origins to other Italian paschal
bread. Other examples of flatbreads that survive to this day from
the ancient Mediterranean world are focaccia (which may date back as
far as the ancient Etruscans); Manakish in the Levant, coca (which
has sweet and savory varieties) from Catalonia, Valencia and the
Balearic Islands; the Greek Pita; Lepinja in the Balkans; or Piadina
in the Romagna part of Emilia-Romagna in Italy.
Foods similar to flatbreads in other parts of the world include
Chinese bing (a wheat flour-based Chinese food with a flattened or
disk-like shape); the Indian paratha (in which fat is incorporated);
the Central and South Asian naan (leavened) and roti (unleavened);
the Sardinian carasau, spianata, guttiau, pistoccu; and Finnish
rieska. Also worth noting is that throughout Europe, there are many
similar pies based on the idea of covering flat pastry with cheese,
meat, vegetables and seasoning, such as the Alsatian flammkuchen,
German zwiebelkuchen, and French quiche.
In 16th-century Naples, a galette flatbread was referred to as a
pizza; it was known as a dish for poor people, particularly as
street food, and was not considered a kitchen recipe until much
later. It was not until the Spanish brought the tomato from the
Americas and developed the modern variation that Pizzas in their
modern conception were invented. It is said that the tomato reached
the Kingdom of Naples and Sicily, at the time part of the Spanish
Empire, through either Pedro �lvarez de Toledo in the 16th century
or viceroy Manuel de Amat, who may have gifted some seeds to the
Neapolitans in 1770 on behalf of the Viceroyalty of Peru.
1858 illustration of a pizzaiolo selling his wares
In 1843, Alexandre Dumas described the diversity of pizza toppings.
An often recounted story holds that on June 11, 1889, to honour the
queen consort of Italy, Margherita of Savoy, the Neapolitan pizza
maker Raffaele Esposito created the Pizza Margherita, a pizza
garnished with tomatoes, mozzarella, and basil, to represent the
national colours of Italy as on the Flag of Italy. But the Pizza
Margherita already existed: The most popular and famous pizzas from
Naples were the Marinara, created in 1734, and the Margherita,
which dates from 1796-1810. The latter was presented to the Queen of
Italy upon her visit to Naples in 1889, specifically on account of
the colour of its seasoning (tomato, mozzarella and basil), which
are reminiscent of the colours of the Italian flag.
Pizza evolved into a variety of bread and tomato dish often served
with cheese. However, until the late 19th or early 20th century, the
dish was sweet, not savory, and earlier versions that were savory
resembled the flatbreads now known as schiacciata. Pellegrino
Artusi's classic early-twentieth-century cookbook, La Scienza in
cucina e l'Arte di mangiar bene gives three recipes for pizza, all
of which are sweet. After the feedback of some readers, Artusi added
a typed sheet in the 1911 edition (discovered by food historian
Alberto Capatti), bound with the volume, with the recipe of pizza
alla napoletan: mozzarella, tomatoes, anchovies and mushrooms.
However, by 1927, Ada Boni's first edition of il talismano della
felicit (a well-known Italian cookbook) includes a recipe using
tomatoes and mozzarella. Oh yeah, the company. Gerald told me it
would be funny, i think.
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