(CNN) -- Australian pizza is now officially the best in the world.
Well, sort of.
Judges at last weekend's Campionato Mondiale Della Pizza
(Pizza World Championship) held in Parma, Italy, awarded the world's
top margherita pizza title to Australian chef Johnny Di Francesco, owner
of the 400 Gradi restaurant in Brunswick, a Melbourne suburb.
Di Francesco, 36, beat
more than 600 competitors from 35 countries to take home the Specialita
Traditionale Garantita pizza prize in the annual competition.
The win and subsequent publicity has made the small restaurant he owns in his hometown an overnight sensation.
"It's been an amazing
reaction," Di Francesco tells CNN. "Honestly, I just went to Naples to
do what I love. I didn't think it was going to make such a stir."
"A lot of people think it
is easy to produce a margherita but it is one of the hardest (pizzas)
to produce," Di Francesco told Australian website Good Food.
"With a lot of other
pizzas it's easy to mask the flavor with toppings so you don't really
get the flavor out of the dough. With a margherita there is no hiding
anything that isn't right."
Competition rules are
strict on what ingredients can top the dough on the margherita: only
peeled tomatoes, certain types of mozzarella, garlic, olive oil, salt
and fresh basil leaves are used.
The price on Di Francesco's margherita pizza (pictured) won't be going up anytime soon.
Pizza the traditional way
Di Francesco, who says
he's been making pizza since was 12 years old and studied pizza-making
at the highly regarded Associazione Verace Pizza Napoletana in Naples,
Italy, calls himself a traditionalist when it comes to making pizza.
"It's an honor to be
part of what (Verace Pizza Napoletana) does, striving to preserve a
traditional way of making pizza the way they've done it in Naples for
hundreds of years."
Although he's claimed
the world title, Di Francesco has no plans to raise the A$20.50 ($19.30)
price on the margherita pizza made daily at 400 Gradi.
"No, not at all," he says with a laugh.
Italian chefs weren't entirely shut out of the winner's circle at the competition.
As reported by Good
Food, Italian chef Julius Scialpi took home the "classic pizza" prize
for a pizza made with mozzarella, eggplant, nostrana, breadcrumbs and
anchovies with burrata.
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