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Garfield Pizzeria

There’s no lasagne in sight at this rollicking Lygon Street hangout.

Emily Holgate

72-hour fermented dough is prepared using the "Tokyo stretch" technique.
1 / 872-hour fermented dough is prepared using the "Tokyo stretch" technique.Supplied
Located at the King & Godfree site on Lygon Street.
2 / 8Located at the King & Godfree site on Lygon Street. Supplied
Verde pizza with anchovy.
3 / 8Verde pizza with anchovy.Supplied
House red and white is available by the glass or carafe.
4 / 8House red and white is available by the glass or carafe.Supplied
Head chef Sangsub Ha cooks the pizzas in a rotating Marana wood-fired oven.
5 / 8Head chef Sangsub Ha cooks the pizzas in a rotating Marana wood-fired oven.Supplied
Dessert might include soft serve yoghurt with nutty praline.
6 / 8Dessert might include soft serve yoghurt with nutty praline.Supplied
The cacio e pepe pizza topped with vinegary salted potato crisps.
7 / 8The cacio e pepe pizza topped with vinegary salted potato crisps.Supplied
Cut your pizza at the table with the provided scissors.
8 / 8Cut your pizza at the table with the provided scissors.Supplied

Garfield Pizzeria

Pizza$$

The menu and Lygon Street location might scream Naples or Rome, but there’s a touch of Tokyo at Carlton pizzeria Garfield, the first restaurant inside the reimagined King & Godfree site. Culinary director Karen Martini (Johnny’s Green Room, Bar Carolina) and executive chef Mark Glenn (Cumulus Inc., Dinner by Heston) oversee the offering, while head chef Sangsub Ha takes charge of the rotating Marana wood-fired oven, imported from Italy.

Ha applies the “Tokyo stretch” method to Garfield’s 72-hour fermented dough, involving gentle pinching and stretching to create a unique, textural crust. The pies are then baked for just over two minutes to achieve a charred, chewy base.

There are just eight pizzas on offer (four red, four white), including a cacio e pepe-inspired number stacked with crunchy, vinegary potato crisps, born from Martini’s affinity for both potato pizza and salt and vinegar chips. Things get more peculiar with an umami-forward pizza where marinara is swapped for a dried bonito-infused bechamel, and traditional toppings are eschewed in favour of raw tuna, finger lime and shiso added after cooking.

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A rotating monthly dessert might include Pidapipo soft-serve yoghurt, or a limoncello tiramisu, while a small selection of bottled wine is available to purchase from the fridge (drink in for $15 corkage, or order house red and white by the glass or carafe). Summery, aperitif-style cocktails round out the drinks list.

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Emily HolgateEmily HolgateEmily is a producer for the Good Food App at The Age. She previously wrote for the likes of Broadsheet and Urban List.Connect via email.

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