Dough dear to local man
Dane Grace
If throwing and twirling pizza dough were a martial art, Juan
Hermosillo would have a black belt.
The Mexican immigrant, who now lives in Costa Mesa, recently won
the U.S. Pizza Team Acrobatic finals in New York City by performing a
routine that involved tossing five pieces of dough, choreographed to
music. His upset victory took the honor from five-time champion Tony
Gemignani and will allow Hermosillo to represent the U.S. Pizza Team
in the world competition that takes place in Italy.
For Hermosillo, his victory brought a “great feeling.”
“I’m a big fan of soccer, and it was like I won the World Cup,”
Hermosillo said.
Hermosillo works at his family’s restaurant in Costa Mesa, La
Cocina De Isabel, and came from relative obscurity to the
dough-throwing world.
In fact, the early days of his dough-tossing career are
self-described as less than stellar.
“I was really bad at it,” Hermosillo said.
He once asked a fellow pizza maker to teach him the trick, but he
refused. Hermosillo took it upon himself to learn, and he practiced
every day while he worked at the pizza restaurant. Eventually, his
brother Pedro suggested that they make the long drive from Costa Mesa
to Ohio, so that Juan Hermosillo could try out for the U.S. Pizza
Team.
But even his family had doubts that he’d make it to the top level.
“At first off, no, [but] right now we see, every single day, how
he trains, and we changed our minds that he can do it, and he does,”
Pedro Hermosillo said.
Juan Hermosillo said part of his success is due to his innovation
in his routine. He mixes the Italian pizza traditions with his Latin
heritage and energy.
“I want to mix both -- the Italian ways and the Latin way,” he
said.
In preparation for a future contest in Italy, Juan Hermosillo said
he is practicing daily with dough he makes at his family’s restaurant
and is further tightening his routine.
And he remains confident. He said that at the national
championships, he went hoping for second place but ended up winning.
“I defeated a five-time former champion,” Juan Hermosillo said.
But for Italy, he said he’s entering the competition with the
intent of taking the gold.
“I hope to win,” he said. “I’m not going for second or third
place.”
The champion dough tosser said he’s driven by the spirit of
competition, and while the trip to Italy will be an all-expenses-paid
trip, he said there is no monetary prize for winning. He got nothing
for winning the national championship, either.
“This thing is more about having fun,” Juan Hermosillo said. “It’s
mostly about that feeling of winning.”
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