Pizza is one of those foods almost everyone has eaten, almost no one has thought about, and almost no one has tasted in its proper form. The frozen pizza in your freezer, the chain pizza you ordered last Friday, the New York slice you picked up at the airport — all of those are real foods with their own histories, and all of them have their place. But none of them is the original Italian pizza. The original Italian pizza is wood-fired, hand-stretched, cooked in ninety seconds at thirteen hundred degrees, and tastes like almost nothing else.
If you have ever wondered what the fuss is about — or where to find a real wood-fired pizza in Santa Rosa — here is everything worth knowing.
A Brief History
Pizza, in the form most of us recognize, was born in Naples. There were flatbreads with toppings throughout the Mediterranean for centuries, but the round, tomato-and-cheese pizza Margherita was invented in Naples in 1889, supposedly in honor of Queen Margherita of Savoy — red tomato, white mozzarella, green basil, the three colors of the Italian flag.
From the beginning, the pizza was cooked in a wood-fired oven. Not because there was no other option. But because the wood-fired oven did something nothing else could — it reached temperatures hot enough to cook a pizza in under two minutes, charring the crust, melting the cheese, and locking in flavors before they could evaporate.
That is the secret. Real Italian pizza is fast — almost shockingly fast — and the speed is what makes it taste like Italian pizza.
What Wood Fire Actually Does
A standard home oven reaches about 550 degrees Fahrenheit at its hottest. A commercial gas oven might hit 700 or 800. A wood-fired Italian pizza oven, properly fired, reaches between 800 and 1,000 degrees — and the dome of the oven, where the heat radiates from, can climb past 1,200.
At those temperatures, three things happen at once:
- The dough lifts dramatically — the crust rises and chars in seconds, producing the characteristic puffed edge (cornicione) that defines a Neapolitan-style pizza
- The cheese melts without burning — the speed of the cook keeps the mozzarella creamy rather than oily
- The tomato sauce stays fresh-tasting — there is no time for the sauce to caramelize, dry out, or cook down
A standard oven cannot do any of these things. It bakes the pizza too slowly, dries the toppings, browns the cheese into oil, and turns the dough into something more like a thick cracker. The wood fire is not a stylistic choice. It is the technical requirement for a pizza to taste like Italian pizza.
What to Look For in a Real Italian Pizza
You can tell a wood-fired pizza apart from anything else by three signs:
- The cornicione is puffed and lightly charred. Look for black spots on the crust — these are signs of high heat. A perfectly even golden-brown crust means the oven was not hot enough.
- The center is slightly soft. Traditional Neapolitan pizza is meant to be eaten with a knife and fork — the middle is not crisp. American pizza is crispier; Italian pizza is softer.
- The toppings are sparse. Real Italian pizza uses very few ingredients — three or four toppings, not ten. The dough and the wood fire are the main event; the toppings are accents.
If you bring those expectations to a wood-fired pizza in Santa Rosa or anywhere else, you will know immediately whether the kitchen is doing the work properly.
The Three Pizzas to Order
A proper Italian pizza menu is short. Three to five options, each tightly conceived. At Capriciano, our wood-fired pizza menu offers three pies, each rooted in Italian tradition:
- Margherita — San Marzano tomatoes, fresh mozzarella, fresh basil. The original. If a pizza menu has a Margherita and you do not know what to order, this is the answer.
- Funghi & Salsicce — wild mushrooms, Italian sausage, fontina, arugula. A heartier pie, perfect for cooler evenings and a glass of Italian red.
- Pizza Capriciano — our signature, with seasonal vegetables, pesto, ricotta, pecorino, Parmigiano, shrimp, pancetta, and black pepper. The pizza for the night you cannot decide.
Each comes out of the oven in under three minutes, charred at the edges, soft in the middle, and ready to be eaten exactly as it is.
What to Drink With Wood-Fired Pizza
Wood-fired pizza pairs best with three kinds of drinks:
- A crisp Italian beer — Menabrea Bionda from Biella, or the Italian-style Sfizio Pilsner from Fort Point Brewing in San Francisco. Both cut through the cheese and complement the char.
- A medium-bodied Italian red — Barbera, Nero d’Avola, or a young Chianti. Big enough to stand up to the sausage and cheese, light enough not to overwhelm the dough.
- A glass of Prosecco — surprising, but the bubbles cleanse the palate between bites in a way nothing else does. Try it once.
Our Italian and California wine list has all of these, and our Birre menu features the Italian imports and Sonoma County local picks that pair best with pizza.
Why It Still Matters
In a world of frozen pizzas and chain delivery, the wood-fired Italian pizza has not gone away — and the reason is simple. Once you have eaten a proper one, the alternatives feel like a different food. The crust is alive. The cheese is fresh. The toppings taste of themselves. And the pizza itself is built for one purpose: to be shared, eaten warm, washed down with something cold, and enjoyed without ceremony.
That is what we make at Capriciano. Real Italian wood-fired pizza, baked in our firewood oven, in the heart of Santa Rosa’s wine country.
If you would like to try a real wood-fired pizza in Santa Rosa, our pizza menu at Capriciano is the place to start. Pair it with a glass from our Italian and California wine list or a pour from our Birre selection.
