The Conneaut Cult of Stromboli

The Italian American delight was perfected in Ohio

Ali Trachta
Heated

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Photos by Ali Trachta

Bob Dylan once sang “I’ll look for you in old Honolul-a, San Francisco, Ashtabula.” If he happened to be singing about stromboli (he wasn’t), he’d probably have the most luck on that last stop. A few pizza shops in Ashtabula, Ohio, serve stromboli, but if he wanted his pick from a slew of truly great ones, he’d be wise to search one town over, in Conneaut — America’s secret stromboli paradise.

Nearly all the competing pizza places in Conneaut — a town of about 13,000 with a half dozen-plus solid mom and pop pizza joints — have stromboli on the menu. Rainbow Cafe, Pat’s Fireside Pizza, JD’s Pizza, Covered Bridge Pizza Parlor: Any of these would be a worthy first stop on a stromboli crawl. Restaurant signs all over town boast that they serve what’s essentially a pizza tucked into itself. The question of which one is the best can spark debates about dough-to-cheese ratio and off-putting wait times.

People’s loyalties are fierce, but they can shift: Sometimes they have to. Pizzi Cafe, for example, was a dependable favorite back when I was on staff at Sheldon Calvary Camp in the late ’90s and early 2000s, and spent my whole summer in that town on Lake Erie’s shore. Pizzi’s had its own version of stromboli — the Torpedo, affectionately known as a “torp.” The…

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