- Introduction
- Our Crust
- Our Ingredients
- Our Ovens
WHY WE MAKE PIZZA
Passionate About Pizza Since 1925
Frank Pepe was the quintessential American immigrant with a quintessential American story. He immigrated to America as a teenager in 1909. After returning to Italy for a few years to fight in World War I, he returned to New Haven to work in a pasta factory and then in a bakery on Wooster Street. While working at the bakery, Pepe started making his version of the classic "apizza" (pronounced A-beets), a style of pizza from his hometown of Naples. Frank Pepe began selling his "tomato pies" off a special headdress, walking through the Wooster Square market with several pies perched atop his head. He eventually saved enough money to buy a wagon and continued selling the increasingly popular "apizza." In June of 1925, Frank Pepe took over the bakery's operation and established "Frank Pepe Pizzeria Napoletana" on Wooster Street. The rest, as they say, was history.
Introduction
Filomena Pepe was a partner to Frank and his greatest supporter. Unlike her husband, Filomena could speak and write in English, so she was invaluable in establishing and growing the business. She took care of all administrative tasks and other things requiring such knowledge. True to his humble roots, Frank Pepe's restaurant first sold just two types of "apizza": one with tomatoes with grated pecorino cheese, garlic, oregano, and olive oil; and a second that also had anchovy. The Original Tomato Pie is still offered today, and anchovy continues to be available as an added topping.
In the formative years, 1925-1937, Frank Pepe employed a small crew of relatives that included his half-brother Alessio, Alessio’s son Mac, Pepe’s cousin Tommy Sicignano, and his nephews Salvatore and Tony Consiglio. After learning the pizza trade from his Uncle Frank, Salvatore opened his own shop down Wooster Street, still known today as Sally’s Apizza.
Like many small business owners of the day, Frank and Filomena lived in an apartment above the pizzeria. They had two daughters: Elizabeth and Serafina. Parents and daughters worked downstairs at the pizzeria. Active in his community, Frank Pepe became known as “Old Reliable” for his contributions to the neighborhood and for his unwavering love of his growing extended family. Having established one of the first pizzerias in the country, Frank Pepe passed away in 1969.
In the late 1970s, Elizabeth and Serafina purchased the old bakery next door from the Boccamiello family and opened it as Frank Pepe’s The Spot, an annex to the main building.