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Fire and Stone – Spitalfields
Yes, Pizza is fast food. Well, more accurately it’s
fast-ish food. A good pizza has a freshly-made base and an exceptional
one has that cooked in a real pizza oven. It’s fast food with a
pedigree.
The first pizzas were simple affairs sold by the slice on the streets
of Naples. It wasn’t available much outside
the
environs
of
that
city and didn’t become widely known till after the
Second World War when the returning GIs spread the word. As usual the
UK followed suit and now there are pizza restaurants and kiosks all
over the world.
Heritage meets history with the latest Fire and Stone Pizza restaurant
in Old Spitalfields Market. There has been a market on this site since
1638 when Charles I licensed the sale of meat and veg. It was then a
rural area near London rather than being in the centre of it. The
existing structure was built in 1887 to service a wholesale market. It
was subsequently extended and now has new office buildings added to the
complex, although it still holds much of its traditional Victorian
charm.
Fire and Stone opened on 1st August at this famous site, and has
seating for 190 people. It has an airy ambiance as it is separated only
by glass walls from the vibrancy of the market. It’s a contemporary
restaurant with copper-clad oven on view to the expectant diners.
Plenty of dark wood to complement the glowing metal. It’s already a
popular spot after only a couple of weeks of trading. A good start when
one considers the close proximity of other casual dining restaurants.
Lunchtime finds Fire and Stone filled with office workers and tourists
visiting the market. The evening sees groups of friends looking for
decent food before an evening of bar-hopping and cinema-going. Its
location a stone’s throw from Aldgate East makes it ideal for convivial
and surprisingly economic dining.
We started our meal with the Mediterranean Sharing Platter. This was a
generous plate of Parma ham, salami, smoked ham, homous, taramasalata,
black and green olives, cornichons (small pickled gherkins) and
triangles of fresh pita bread. This was a substantial plateful and a
bargain at less than £4.00 per person. You’ll need these nibbles
while you scan the diverse and lengthy menu.
Fire and Stone is a small chain that offers quality pizza. There is a
raft of pizza restaurants around but the goods on offer here are
outstanding. There is a long list of exotic toppings but they have not
forgotten the classics. You can have the basic Margherita with the
three-colour garnish of tomato, basil and mozzarella (said to represent
the Italian flag) and then add extras of your choice.
Napoli pizza tempted me. It’s a traditional one, but a simple dish
reflects the confidence of the establishment, and there was nothing
wrong with this one. Tomato sauce covered with spicy sliced pepperoni,
mozzarella cheese and anchovies. The thin base was cooked to perfection
– slight crunch around the edge with a firm rather than soggy centre.
The topping was authentically Italian, and a sprinkle of semolina still
remained under the bottom crust.
Marrakech pizza appealed to my guest. Cumin perfumed the minced lamb,
while mozzarella, mint and yoghurt sauce, green olives, raisins and
thinly sliced red onion drizzled with chilli oil were the flavourful
toppings. This is well worth trying. OK, so it’s not a classic pizza –
Fire and Stone offers many that are not, but let us not be food snobs.
This restaurant does indeed have a list of the usual suspects, but
consider trying some of the more exotic offerings. The aforementioned
Marrakech is similar to a traditional Middle Eastern pizza-style dish,
lahem bil ajine, but one of the most popular pizzas here is the Peking,
with Hoi Sin sauce, shredded aromatic duck, mozzarella and spring
onions. Another highly recommended is the London pizza with its nod to
the English fried breakfast: tomato sauce, bacon, mozzarella,
Cumberland sausage, black pudding and free-range eggs as its crowning
glory.
Fire and Stone have reached a compromise between tradition and
modernity. They present well-executed pizza made from the best of
ingredients. They take pride in their products and that will appeal to
the pizza purist. Others will say that the masterfully baked crust
should be considered a worthy vehicle for other delicious foods, and
those people will be well content with the globe-trotting menu of
pizzas inspired by every continent.
Your friends might not be able to agree which topping is the best in
house, but all will agree that Fire and Stone do a very fine pizza.
I’ll be back for the Peking, or perhaps the New York, or perhaps I’ll
make that American Hot.
Fire and Stone
4 Horner Square, Old Spitalfields Market, London E1 6EW
Phone: 0844 371 2554
Opening hours
Monday to Saturday 11am – 11pm
Sunday 11am – 8pm
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