Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:![]()
Most of the Pizza Hut restaurants I would go to as a youth are long gone and have been replaced by carry out locations.
When I order carryout from Pizza Hut more often than not I end up with a Pizza that looks like this.
I try to tell my wife & kids this is not what the Pizza looked like when I used to eat at Pizza Hut when I was growing up.
What has your experience been with carryout pizza from Pizza Hut?
There are still a few of the old school Pizza Huts around with the booths, buffet, juke box, and Pac Man table all the kids fight to sit at. But not telling anyone where they are, so don't ask. Want them to remain as they are and not get overcrowded.
Anonymous wrote:![]()
Most of the Pizza Hut restaurants I would go to as a youth are long gone and have been replaced by carry out locations.
When I order carryout from Pizza Hut more often than not I end up with a Pizza that looks like this.
I try to tell my wife & kids this is not what the Pizza looked like when I used to eat at Pizza Hut when I was growing up.
What has your experience been with carryout pizza from Pizza Hut?
Anonymous wrote:Pizza Hut was a staple of my youth in the 80s. After every swim meet, the whole team went. I remember the pitchers of coke on the table. Nothing was more exciting than calling dad at work to have him pick up a pizza on his way home too! I do still like it, cause I like a really thin crust.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I grew up in NY, so the idea of going to Pizza Hut was horrifying. We viewed that as the place people who moved to NY from the midwest went, because they were too ignorant to know any better.
Once I was in Florida and a few girlfriends and I went to Pizza Hut. It was as disgusting as we thought it was.
Yep. Even here in DC, my parents never got Pizza Hut. It was always Ledo's or local companies. Maybe cause my mom is a New Yorker. The handful of times I had Pizza Hut growing up I thought it tasted like cardboard
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, does anyone have a suggestion for something in the DC area that is similar to the Pizza Hut some of us remember from our childhoods? I love Pete's and other high-end pizza joints, but sometimes you just want deep dish pizza, cold soda, and cozy booths instead of an industrial motif and artisanal ingredients.
Yes! Where in Bethesda or Rockville can I get deep dish? We tried Armand's and the crust tasted like paper.
Is Gepettos's still there?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It wasnt pizza Hut for us growin up, it was Little Cesear's. "Pizza pizza!"
Pan pan!