Good pizza and beer: take me there
Doug Tabbert
Oggi’s Pizza and Brewing Co. has been pumping out hot pies and
locally made micro-brews in the Seacliff shopping plaza for two
years. The restaurant is constantly accommodating parties for
Huntington Beach High School teams and community sports programs,
while catering to young professionals who dine in private booths
along the wall and mingle in the sleek bar area. Sports fans will
inevitably gravitate toward at least one of the 28 televisions, many
with large screens.
Dinners reap the benefits of a kitchen that keeps it simple. They
make everything. The salad dressing, pasta, sauces and pizza dough
are all made on location. Oggi’s makes seven types of beer and you
can sample them all for $6.95, before, or instead of, deciding on
pint.
Last fall the arts center voted Oggi’s “Sweet Spot Hefe” as the
best Hefeweizen in their annual beer-tasting contest and the strong,
crisp “California Gold” blond ale, earned a gold medal in 2000 at the
Great American Beer Festival.
If you want to opt for a lean repast, the balsamic chicken salad
is a popular choice. With the rich Gorgonzola cheese and candied
walnuts nestled among the cool mixed greens and grilled chicken
breast you won’t feel left out of the indulgence.
This evening, I opted for the grilled shrimp salad that comes with
mixed greens, bell peppers, tomatoes, sunflower seeds and their honey
mustard dressing. It would have been more appropriate to enjoy this
zesty salad sitting under an umbrella on Oggi’s sunny porch with an
iced tea. Better still, go for the Longboard pizza with its garlic
olive oil sauce and rock shrimp.
The thick-crusted Oggi special is a smart classic call. The red
onions, red sauce and fresh red tomatoes meld exquisitely with the
pepperoni, sausage and mozzarella cheese atop the
still-baking-when-its-served dough.
Thin crust is available, but the magic for me began when I bit
into that ample, warm, Chicago-style crust that had just emerged from
the 525-degree oven. The flour, yeast and oil is dropped into a
5-foot-high industrial Hobart mixer and emits balls of dough the
night before and the yeast is activated by lunch the next day. Any
fresher and you’d have a stomachache.
High on the walls of Oggi’s main dining room are televisions --
26 inside and two on the outdoor porch -- it can resemble a sports
book in Las Vegas when you first walk in the triangular restaurant
with its tall, unfinished ceilings. It isn’t excessive during
football season, explained owner Terry Shindle, who spends up to 40
minutes on some Sundays cueing the various sets.
Oggi’s, unlike other do-it-all places, maintains good food,
service and atmosphere while doing plenty. There are 14 Oggi’s
speckled throughout Southern California.
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