Since we NYers eat a lot of pizza, just thought I would let you guys in on a little secret:
Tired of taking pizza out of the micro and having to chew it like its shoe leather?
Tired of the cheese getting burned and hard in toaster ovens?
The best way to reheat pizza is in a big stick-free frying pan, no oil or grease, low flame and covered.
If the pan has an associated cover, fine, if not, use tin foil, just make sure its completely covered so the heat does not escape. The time is approximately three to five minutes if the pan is preheated as it should be, but take an occasional peak and stop the moment the cheese is sufficiently melted. DO NOT go beyond that and burn the cheese, otherwise it will quickly harden when you take it out of the pan and the pizza loses its taste, similar to the toaster oven effect.
The low flame is so the bottom won't burn and get too hard, and the cover insures that the cheese will re-melt and get soft, just the way the pizza comes to your house when its delivered. Thats how it should be if you don't overcook it and do it right, it should taste exactly the way it did when it was freshly made.
Tired of taking pizza out of the micro and having to chew it like its shoe leather?
Tired of the cheese getting burned and hard in toaster ovens?
The best way to reheat pizza is in a big stick-free frying pan, no oil or grease, low flame and covered.
If the pan has an associated cover, fine, if not, use tin foil, just make sure its completely covered so the heat does not escape. The time is approximately three to five minutes if the pan is preheated as it should be, but take an occasional peak and stop the moment the cheese is sufficiently melted. DO NOT go beyond that and burn the cheese, otherwise it will quickly harden when you take it out of the pan and the pizza loses its taste, similar to the toaster oven effect.
The low flame is so the bottom won't burn and get too hard, and the cover insures that the cheese will re-melt and get soft, just the way the pizza comes to your house when its delivered. Thats how it should be if you don't overcook it and do it right, it should taste exactly the way it did when it was freshly made.