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The Roni pizza at Noble Pie pizza in the Eighty Eight Brewing Company in Calgary, Alta.Todd Korol

At a much younger age, something that made me crave pizza more than anything was watching the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles on a Saturday morning. Their pizza-eating was animated (figuratively and literally), but also often as a reward for a job well done.

Could my brother and I also get a gigantic pepperoni pizza if we sought out an evil villain and battled to victory?

Ah, a young boy’s hopes …

At the time, the pizza in Saskatoon wasn’t quite like what the Turtles used to eat back then. After all, this was a small city in the heart of the Prairies. Not New York.

New York-style pizza can be quickly summed up as big, hand-tossed pizzas that are at least 18 inches in diameter. Not quite thin crust, but close; the signature way to eat it is to fold it in half and devour at your desired pace.

There are two New York pizza-focused eateries in the Prairies (Calgary and Winnipeg, respectively) that locals have been obsessing over as of late.

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Noble Pie Pizza started out as a pop-up 'hobby' project inside the slickly designed, 1988 Olympics-themed Eighty-Eight Brewing.Todd Korol

Name: Noble Pie Pizza

Location: 2600 Portland St. SE #1070, Calgary

Inside Eighty-Eight Brewing Co.

Phone: 403-452-5880

Website: noblepiepizza.com

Price: $5-$35

Cuisine: Pizza

Atmosphere: Cool, brightly coloured microbrewery with ample seating

Drinks on offer: Microbrews by Eighty-Eight Brewing Co.

Best bets: The Roni and Sweet Cheesus

Vegetarian friendly? Yes.

Additional information: Only open Thursday to Sunday

Rating: Cheap eats

Owned by Mike Lange, Noble Pie Pizza started out as a pop-up “hobby” project inside the slickly designed, 1988 Olympics-themed (more or less) Eighty-Eight Brewing. It has now turned into one of the hottest tickets in town.

The unexpected success grew out of an admiration for New York’s pizza culture. When his brother and sister-in-law relocated to Brooklyn in 2013, Mr. Lange made frequent visits to the city, became captivated by its pizza culture and delved deep into it, bite-by-bite.

“I was really inspired by what I experienced on those trips. There is so much history, pride and passion for pizza in New York City,” he explains. “It’s something that is hard to find anywhere else [in North America] and that really resonated with me.”

Made with a high-protein flour as opposed to the famed “00” flour used in Neapolitan pizza making, Mr. Lange’s dough is put through a multiday, multifermentation process. The result is a highly addictive crust that has a subtle tangy flavour (somewhat akin to sourdough bread) and plenty of chew.

Word caught on quite quickly about Mr. Lange’s quality pizza-making skills, garnering positive reviews from Calgary’s food fanatics and industry professionals alike. Now, Noble Pie is arguably the place to go for pizza. It garners long wait times during peak hours, sometimes leaving a hungry person waiting nearly two hours for a whole pizza (though, slices are typically always available).

The pizza is well worth the wait.

“The Roni” is an easy favourite here. What’s not to love about American-made Ezzo pepperoni, aged mozzarella, grana padano, pecorino, oregano and banana peppers for a little heat and acidity? With the proportions of every component near-perfectly balanced, it’s certainly worth salivating over.

The “Holy Cheesus” is almost as satisfying, made with a blend of fresh and aged mozzarella, caciocavallo, grana padano and pecorino romano, and finished off with a subtle pouring of a Brooklyn-made, chili-infused honey. As tasty as the “hot honey” is, I’d argue that this is a component Mr. Lange could make very easily using Alberta honey and locally grown chilies. This one missing local effort coupled with opting for U.S.-made pepperoni – again, instead of something more local – is about the only thing I can knock Noble Pie for.

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Owner Mike Lange of Noble Pie pizza makes the Roni pizza. The Roni is an easy favourite at the restaurant.Todd Korol/The Globe and Mail

Name: Wall Street Slice

Location: 753 Wall Street, Winnipeg

Phone: 204-221-7272

Website: wallstreetslice.com

Price: $3.50-$33.50

Cuisine: Pizza

Atmosphere: Casual vibe with graffiti artwork and custom wooden bench seating

Drinks on offer: Beer, cider and sodas

Best bets: Pepperoni Prince and T-Bird, an order of ranch on the side

Vegetarian friendly? Yes

Additional information: Closed Mondays

Rating: Cheap eats

Wall Street Slice differs from Calgary’s Noble Pie Pizza in several ways, mainly in how it operates with more of a grab-and-go and delivery focus. Primarily owned by Steffen Zinn and Quin Ferguson of Red Ember Common and just down the road from Barn Hammer Brewing, the unassuming and inviting location on Wall Street boasts vibrant graffiti art as well as wooden-slat bench seating attached to a few communal tables.

Even when visiting on a mid-afternoon on a Sunday and only open less than a month, the place is buzzing. There’s plenty of pies cooked and ready to go a la slice, and they all sound worthy of trying out.

A tasty “Pepperoni Prince” (house-made pepperoni – created with Berkshire pork from owner Steffen Zinn’s family farm – mozzarella, parmesan, tomato sauce and oregano), an equally satisfying roasted-garlic and four-cheese pizza dubbed the “White Out” and, finally, “T-Bird”, which comes topped with house-made turkey sausage, kale pesto, mozzarella, creamy feta and thinly sliced pepperoncini.

Admittedly, the latter sounds the least desirable (I mean, kale pesto?), but things are not always as they seem, as “T-Bird” comes out on top as the tastiest of the bunch. The well-seasoned turkey sausage was surprisingly juicy, while the pesto, feta and mozzarella intermingle happily along with the brightness of the bits of pepperoncini peppered across my slice.

It’s hard not to compare the pizza crust almost immediately to Noble Pie’s as well as Slice’s sister eatery, Red Ember, and, admittedly, it is the most lacklustre of the three. Not disappointing by any means, but I have to wonder if the pizza dough itself would garner a thumbs up from a New York-style pizza purist.

What this pizzeria lacks in a captivating crust, it makes up for with a delicious homemade spin on ranch dressing, laden with fresh herbs, to dunk into. As well, Zinn and his co-owners penchant to locally sourcing is commendable. Meats used as toppings here come from Zinn Farms and the flour used for their dough is ground locally.

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