Ziggy's Pizza is a small chain in New Hampshire, with a location in the town my parent's live in. I had heard about it when it first opened, lauded for introducing a new style of pizza to the area (*not* the super cheesy, greasy, fairly awful "Village Pizza" ... yup, really). But I certainly never sought it out, I'm not really a pizza girl (and, I'm not in town that often).
But summer of 2020, I went to stay with them for a couple months to enjoy fresh air, warm weather, and, "escape" from the COVID lockdown in San Francisco. My family has a ritual: pizza night. Every week. Basically without fail. Usually when I'm visiting, I can convince them to skip that week, or sometimes mom will make pizza, or more often, I choose to go visit a friend on pizza night. It just isn't my thing, and they generally order from the closest place (yup, Village Pizza, or the even worse Mickey's - review coming soon!), and they complain about the quality every time. After a few weeks of such orders, I proposed trying somewhere new, even if it was a bit further away.
I picked Ziggy's, since I remembered it, and it seemed to have some staying power, in business for a few years, and with a location in Sunapee too. I couldn't convince them to get Ramunto's, which at least has decent garlic knots - and cinnamon sugar dessert knots! - as it is even further, sadly. So Ziggy's it was.
This review is for takeout only, so I cannot comment on the dine-in experience.
Ziggy's has a larger than average menu for a pizza joint, in addition to the pizzas (both hand tossed or chicago style, including tons of ridiculous custom creations), they have calzones, wings, burgers (with *many* custom creations), hot dogs, a decent sandwich lineup (ranging from BLTs to warm cheese steaks to meatball/chicken parm), classic pastas (meatball parm, chicken broccoli alfredo, a very well known mac and cheese made with local dairy cream), salads, and a very unique menu of starters. Oh, and desserts. There really were many things I'd like to try.
First Time Ordering. Wonderful! |
Second Time Ordering: MEH! |
Same pizza, this time over cooked and lacking flavor. Missing a dressing I ordered. Salad much smaller.
Eh. Some things were fine, don't get me wrong, but, the quality difference was striking.
The salad lineup also has a salad, the "Merry Mushroom", that includes marinated mushrooms. These sounded good to me, so I asked for a side of them, knowing my dad hates mushrooms, and I shouldn't put on the salad directly.
Starters
The starters is where Ziggy's menu really called out to me. If I was dining in, I'd be in a world of indecision, with fried pickles, sweet potato fries, rings, etc, etc, all with house made dipping sauces. I still was able to find starters that would work for takeout, and gladly tried several.
Buns & Oil. $3.99. |
"Basket of freshly baked buns served with a side of homemade garlic oil for dipping."
Perhaps the most boring appetizer available, but, sometimes, I like a good roll, and I love a good dipping sauce.
I'm so glad I ordered these. I really liked these rolls, my favorite dish that we got.
The bread was soft, fluffy, slightly crisp, not too much flour on the outside. And the garlic oil? DELICIOUS. A bit of herb, plenty of garlic, and seemed high quality. Seriously, that oil. I still think about it.
I kinda could not stop eating these, particularly with that oil. Would get again in a heartbeat!
"12 inch freshly made dough brushed with garlic oil and Romano cheese. Baked up golden with a side of marinara."
The next time we ordered it took all my willpower not to just order the buns & oil again, as I had loved them so much last time. But I was eyeing the "Ziggy's Sticks", their version of garlic bread sticks, also made with that signature garlic oil. Available with or without mozzarella cheese on them as well, and served with a side of their (pesto) marinara.
We got without the mozzarella. I ... was not pleased.
They make the sticks by taking a medium 16" pizza crust, but only stretching it to 12", so its thicker and puffier than the regular pizza. But otherwise, its the same pizza dough. It was ... um ... just pizza crust, kinda overcooked. Too crispy. I missed the soft, puffy buns.
But the real reason it failed is the utter lack of garlic flavor. We were excited for the garlic oil, and it was ... not detectable in any way. Yes, it was slightly cheesy, at least most pieces, from the romano, but otherwise, this was just oily (it clearly had oil soaking into the top, it just sure didn't taste of garlic), and crispy, boring pizza crust. And the dipping sauce had spilled in, because the lid melted.
I liked the dipping sauce at least, but would never get the sticks again.
The pesto marinara though was quite good actually. I'll give them that.
Ziggy's Sticks. $4.99. |
The next time we ordered it took all my willpower not to just order the buns & oil again, as I had loved them so much last time. But I was eyeing the "Ziggy's Sticks", their version of garlic bread sticks, also made with that signature garlic oil. Available with or without mozzarella cheese on them as well, and served with a side of their (pesto) marinara.
We got without the mozzarella. I ... was not pleased.
They make the sticks by taking a medium 16" pizza crust, but only stretching it to 12", so its thicker and puffier than the regular pizza. But otherwise, its the same pizza dough. It was ... um ... just pizza crust, kinda overcooked. Too crispy. I missed the soft, puffy buns.
But the real reason it failed is the utter lack of garlic flavor. We were excited for the garlic oil, and it was ... not detectable in any way. Yes, it was slightly cheesy, at least most pieces, from the romano, but otherwise, this was just oily (it clearly had oil soaking into the top, it just sure didn't taste of garlic), and crispy, boring pizza crust. And the dipping sauce had spilled in, because the lid melted.
I liked the dipping sauce at least, but would never get the sticks again.
Pesto Marinara. |
Nice tomato sauce, not too tangy, not too sweet, just, pretty good marinara. It is what they use on the pizzas. I really liked the cheesy, herby touch the pesto added as well.
Another good sauce at least.
Soup & Salad
My parents always order a basic dinner salad when they get pizza, but Ziggy's does have a decent lineup of salads, some entree style. All are available with your choice of ranch, blue cheese, house vinaigrette, thousand island, or maple mustard vinaigrette. The dressings are all made in-house.
The soup lineup is even more interesting, they feature one kind of base soup, a chowder. A cheesy chowder. Available in two forms: the basic cheeseburger, or, the "Cowgirl", which is the same base cheeseburger based chowder, but with differing toppings (onion rings and bbq sauce for the Cowgirl, lettuce, tomato, ketchup for the regular). I couldn't resist going for this ridiculousness (which you can also get over fries).
Basic Salad, Large. $6.99. House Vinaigrette and Mustard Vinaigrettes. |
"Mixed greens, grape tomatoes, cucumber and red onion."
This was for my parents, as I had no interest in a generic salad from the pizza place, and had my own fresh greens from my sister's garden, along with her heirloom tomatoes, but I did try a few bites, and it was a decent salad, I was impressed, above average for a pizza place. Everything seemed quite fresh.
I did try the mustard vinaigrette, and it was, well, mustard vinaigrette. Very tangy. I'm not one for vinaigrettes. They do make all of their dressings (except the ceasar), in house.
The next time we ordered, same salad, the onions were white rather than red. I really liked them, sweet white onions, for some reason, I just loved the flavor. And stole them all to eat dunked in dressing. #sorrynotdorry.
Basic Salad. Large. $6.99. Thousand Island. |
I liked them, just chunks of mushroom, in some kind of herbs and oil, but, they were tasty enough. Nice to add in to my salad.
I also opted to try the thousand island once I learned they make most dressings in-house. I also ordered the ranch, but alas, we paid for it, but our order did not include it. Wah.
It was fine thousand island, creamy, balanced well enough, although a touch on the sweet side. Not to much mayo or anything. Decent. It went great with my sister's heirloom tomatoes I had on hand.
So, what was it. Well, a cheese chowder base. Very cheesy, basically like, uh, mac and cheese sauce? It really reminded me of mac and cheese sauce. But, with chunks of ground beef crumbled up inside. It was pretty rich, and I wasn't quite sure what to make of it, and it lacked seasoning.
Cheeseburger Soup (toppings on the side). $4.99. |
"A creamy chowder with chunks of beef and onion, topped with crisp lettuce, chopped tomato and a drizzle of ketchup."
I was craving red meat. Ground beef. Very clearly. But I didn't quite want a burger. But cheeseburger soup? Chowder with cheeseburger? Now that sounded fascinating! I tried to order the Cowgirl version, but alas, they were out of it (which I guess means they just didn't have onion rings?). Regular version it was. It came with two more rolls (no dipping sauce).
When you dine in, this comes with "Ziggy's" written across it in ketchup, and garnished with the lettuce and tomato, but I asked for the toppings on the side. And since I couldn't have the Cowgirl with the bbq sauce and onion rings, I also got a side of the bbq to try mixing in.
The toppings were fine: diced tomato, really, they were classic burger tomatoes, in that they were pretty generic, not quite ripe, etc. The "crisp lettuce" though was just fine shreds, and not much. Ketchup was, well, ketchup, and the bbq was fairly decent, tangy and sweet.
But this really was all about the cheeseburger soup, right?
Cheeseburger Chowder: Inside. |
I heated some up, and then got to garnishing. I added the lettuce provided, plus some from the salad that I chopped up. My chopped tomatoes. My crispy fried onions and bacon bits. Lots of pepper. The toppings definitely enhanced it, but it was still fairly bland, besides the cheese nature. I mixed in spoonfuls of ketchup and bbq, and those added more to it, but, yeah, its, uh, cheeseburger chowder.
Dunking bread into it was good, I could imagine a bread bowl working well. But I loved the oil too much to "waste" it dunking in here.
I think it would be good to use as a mac and cheese base though - if no one else in my family wanted it, I would have turned it into mac and cheese.
"Three layers of moist carrot cake loaded with shredded carrots, pecan pieces, and crushed pineapple, filled and iced with real cream cheese frosting and topped with chopped pecans."
So, about that carrot cake. Finally. They told me that people love it, and come there for it explicitly.
The online menu listed a lower price, but I saw we were charged $5.49 per slice, which ... is kinda just crazy for a thin slice of the Sysco product.
"A Chocolate cookie filled with custard, brownie pieces, peanuts, and chopped Snickers bars. More brownies, caramel, and both white and dark chocolate cover the top."
"Chocolate cookie crust filled with custard & brownies, topped with Snickers bars, more brownies, caramel & peanuts, and then drizzled with dark and white chocolate."
Um, yeah. This is what tipped me off to the desserts being from Sysco. A pie called "Grand Slam" and Snickers as an ingredient. The "Grand Slam" it turns out all revolves around the Snicker's concepts: peanuts, chocolate, caramel. The two descriptions I pulled from the Sysco site differ slightly, is the custard filled with peanuts and chopped Snickers or not? Is it topped with Snickers and peanuts or not? Maybe the product changed at some point?
Also, um, how crazy did this sound?! A chocolate cookie (crust). Brownies (inside and on top). Snickers (inside ... and on top?). Caramel. Chocolate sauce. Dark chocolate. White chocolate. Peanuts. Custard. It also had whipped cream. WAT.
I approached this with slight fear, to be honest. I assumed that at least some component would be tasty, but kinda doubted that they'd come together all that well.
It actually turned out to be pretty tasty, although, yes, there was a lot going on.
Starting at the top.
The whipped cream on top was fluffy, sweet, and tasty enough. The chunks of brownie, perched on top and falling off the side were rich, thick, chocolately, smoist chunk of brownie, but ... I'm not really a brownie girl. They were a bit lost in all the very sweet, very gooey caramel sauce drowning the whole thing. The caramel sauce poured over it was perhaps a bit too generous (ok, pretty sure Ziggy's added to that part). The chocolate elements on top were also fairly lost, just, sweet caramel it was.
Ok, moving to the base, the chocolate cookie crust. It was fine. Not to hard, which I appreciated. Intensely chocolately.
Above that was a layer I couldn't quite understand. It looked like cookie dough ... but studded with. peanuts. It almost even tasted like cookie dough. The description really didn't help here, but it actually was pretty good. Maybe it was supposed to be like the nougat in a Snickers? And the peanuts? There were TONS of peanuts. Very, very, very peanut forward.
Above that is the ... custard, not as thick as a cheesecake. I liked the custard, it was smooth and creamy, and the peanuts in particular were really nice integrated into it. I didn't find actual Snicker's bars inside my piece, but that was fine with me.
So add up a chocolate cookie crust, tons of peanuts, a creamy custard, way too much caramel, brownie bits, chocolate sauce, and some kind of cookie dough like layer ... and you get a complete overload. Overload of sweet, overload of textures, overload of SNICKERS, ZOMG SNICKERS. Why is this not called Snicker's Pie?
So overall, this really wasn't bad. I quite enjoyed bites of creamy sweet custard, with crunchy nuts, and a *little* sweet caramel. But it was an overload, and you definitely need to like Snicker's flavors. And, well, not have a peanut allergy.
Pizza
So, the main attraction, the pizza. Most of their pizzas as standard hand-tossed style, but they do a legit sounding Chicago deep dish too - "A deep-dish pie stuffed with 6 cups of cheese sealed with a top crust and then covered with sweet and spicy Chicago sauce." Yup.
My mom almost was going to order the Chicago style, at my urging as it was the one I'd really like to try, but, when she read the bit about it being stuffed with a full 6 cups of cheese, she got scared away.
Ziggy's also has an, um, impressive line up of curated pizzas. While you can build your own, their speciality line up is ... well, fun to say the least. Bbq cuicken, philly cheesesteak, greek, thai chicken, those are on there, but child's play compared to the Mandarin Beef and Broccoli pizza, the Mac and Cheese Pizza, the Lasagna Pie, um, the Crab Rangoon Pizza (yes, it has cream cheese, imitation crab, wonton crisps, sweet chili sauce ...). Most of the crazy pizzas are available as calzones too.
My family though? Not exactly adventurous.
Margherita. Medium. (16"). $19.99. |
"Garlic oil, tomato, fresh basil oil, Parmesan and mozzarella cheese."
This was my parent's order, as my mom really wanted something different (not regular saucy pizza, as they get pizza basically weekly). She loves Ziggy's Margherita apparently.
I tried a small piece, and I see why. Its all about the garlic oil and basil oil! Really, excellent flavorful oils. This was much like the rolls and dipping sauce, and, if I wanted cheesy pizza, well, I would actually have more.
The next time they got it though ... it wasn't the same. They were not pleased.
The pizza was over-done, too crispy, and dry. It ... didn't taste like garlic. This pizza is all about that garlic! My main said it had way too much cheese.
We also got a small cheese pizza, because they have an online deal for a free small cheese pizza if you order a medium or large specialty pizza.
Margherita. Large. (24"). $25.99. |
The pizza was over-done, too crispy, and dry. It ... didn't taste like garlic. This pizza is all about that garlic! My main said it had way too much cheese.
Cheese Pizza. Small 12". (Normally $8.49, free with deal). |
I'm glad we did, as it was dramatically better than the margarita.
A classic cheese pizza, marinara sauce, cheese, but, it was good, the style I like. Thin crispy crust, good sauce level with sauce that was not too tangy nor too sweet, and plenty of greasy greasy cheese.
The kind of pizza I'm not normally in the mood for, but when I want a cheesy bomb, this is exactly the style I like.
Dessert
The desserts are not made in-house, but are locally made. Or so they said. As a dessert-lover, I had to add on a dessert to each ord, particularly when I saw the lineup. A slew of cakes (triple layer chocolate, chocolate mousse, carrot cake), cheesecakes (raspberry or cotton candy (!!!) the day I ordered), cookies, crispy treats, and, whoppie pies. I kinda wanted them all.
I asked for recommendation and the guy taking our order said the triple chocolate layer cake was his favorite, followed by the chocolate mousse, and said the carrot cake was really good. Really, he said, they were all good. And were fresh. Well, that did it. I had to order something. I almost got the cotton candy cheesecake out of curiosity, but really had just had cheesecake for two days in a row, so that didn't seem right. If it wasn't night time, I would certainly have gotten chocolate mousse, or, a whoopee pie as they had a peanut butter filled one (but with chocolate cookies). So many great options, and I almost ordered the chocolate based ones for the next day ...
I ordered the carrot cake. However ... it did not come with our order, and my mom did not notice until she was home, and I asked about it. Sadness.
The next time we ordered, I was certain to order it again. I've since tried several others, but have become convinced of something.
These desserts are *not* all made locally. The cotton candy cheesecake, and the "Grand Slam" pie most certainly come from Sysco. Their names and uniqueness tipped me off. Pretty sure most of the chocolate cakes do as well (e.g. the "Ultimate Chocolate Cake"). And yes, the carrot cake. I do believe the whoopee pies might be made locally.
The next time we ordered, I was certain to order it again. I've since tried several others, but have become convinced of something.
These desserts are *not* all made locally. The cotton candy cheesecake, and the "Grand Slam" pie most certainly come from Sysco. Their names and uniqueness tipped me off. Pretty sure most of the chocolate cakes do as well (e.g. the "Ultimate Chocolate Cake"). And yes, the carrot cake. I do believe the whoopee pies might be made locally.
Gourmet Carrot Cake. $5.49. |
So, about that carrot cake. Finally. They told me that people love it, and come there for it explicitly.
It is a 3 layer cake, with nuts.
It was highly, highly mediocre. It was moist enough, and the shredded carrot and pineapple were pleasant. Yay for crunch from pecans (also on the back frosted layer). It did not have too much spicing. But ... it really did not shine in any way.
And the frosting? Didn't taste like cream cheese at all.
Overall, very, very, very generic, and not something I'd get again.
The online menu listed a lower price, but I saw we were charged $5.49 per slice, which ... is kinda just crazy for a thin slice of the Sysco product.
Grand Slam Pie (Top). $5.49. |
"Chocolate cookie crust filled with custard & brownies, topped with Snickers bars, more brownies, caramel & peanuts, and then drizzled with dark and white chocolate."
Um, yeah. This is what tipped me off to the desserts being from Sysco. A pie called "Grand Slam" and Snickers as an ingredient. The "Grand Slam" it turns out all revolves around the Snicker's concepts: peanuts, chocolate, caramel. The two descriptions I pulled from the Sysco site differ slightly, is the custard filled with peanuts and chopped Snickers or not? Is it topped with Snickers and peanuts or not? Maybe the product changed at some point?
Also, um, how crazy did this sound?! A chocolate cookie (crust). Brownies (inside and on top). Snickers (inside ... and on top?). Caramel. Chocolate sauce. Dark chocolate. White chocolate. Peanuts. Custard. It also had whipped cream. WAT.
I approached this with slight fear, to be honest. I assumed that at least some component would be tasty, but kinda doubted that they'd come together all that well.
It actually turned out to be pretty tasty, although, yes, there was a lot going on.
Starting at the top.
The whipped cream on top was fluffy, sweet, and tasty enough. The chunks of brownie, perched on top and falling off the side were rich, thick, chocolately, smoist chunk of brownie, but ... I'm not really a brownie girl. They were a bit lost in all the very sweet, very gooey caramel sauce drowning the whole thing. The caramel sauce poured over it was perhaps a bit too generous (ok, pretty sure Ziggy's added to that part). The chocolate elements on top were also fairly lost, just, sweet caramel it was.
Grand Slam Pie: Base. |
Above that was a layer I couldn't quite understand. It looked like cookie dough ... but studded with. peanuts. It almost even tasted like cookie dough. The description really didn't help here, but it actually was pretty good. Maybe it was supposed to be like the nougat in a Snickers? And the peanuts? There were TONS of peanuts. Very, very, very peanut forward.
Above that is the ... custard, not as thick as a cheesecake. I liked the custard, it was smooth and creamy, and the peanuts in particular were really nice integrated into it. I didn't find actual Snicker's bars inside my piece, but that was fine with me.
So add up a chocolate cookie crust, tons of peanuts, a creamy custard, way too much caramel, brownie bits, chocolate sauce, and some kind of cookie dough like layer ... and you get a complete overload. Overload of sweet, overload of textures, overload of SNICKERS, ZOMG SNICKERS. Why is this not called Snicker's Pie?
So overall, this really wasn't bad. I quite enjoyed bites of creamy sweet custard, with crunchy nuts, and a *little* sweet caramel. But it was an overload, and you definitely need to like Snicker's flavors. And, well, not have a peanut allergy.
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