REVIEW: Tombstone Tavern Style Thin Crust Pizza

Living in Chicago taught me a few important things. 1) Your eyelashes can (and will) freeze together much easier than you’d expect them to, 2) “dibs” on parking spots is a very divisive, very serious thing, and 3) the best pizza isn’t the Chicago deep dish (which, I know, I know, some don’t consider “pizza” at all) but is instead the thin, crunchy crusted, party-cut, tavern-style pie.

But what if you’re not in Chicago? Well, I’m sure you have at least one local place that tries their hand at it. Even still, if you’re like me, you like to have a frozen pizza or two on standby for an easy, cheap dinner. And if you’re even MORE like me, a general frozen pizza guideline is, “The less crust, the better.” With the exception of the best frozen pizza, period (Motor City Pizza Co.), most frozen pizza crust, to put it bluntly, sucks. That’s why I was excited when I spotted Tombstone’s new Tavern Style Thin Crust Pizza.

Tombstone tends to be one of my preferred options when it comes to the low-end of frozen pizza. The crust isn’t too thick, the sauce isn’t applied too heavily, and the pepperoni version uses round slices and the little cubed kind. When they’re on sale, and I notice it, I’ll pick one up. Would I buy the new Tavern Style again? Eh. Probably not for more than a couple of bucks.

It’s offered in two versions: The Primo, featuring pepperoni, sausage, red onions, and banana peppers, and the one I tried for this review, the Let’s Meat Up (a brief aside about products everywhere using puns for names these days: what’s the deal?) featuring pepperoni, pork belly crumbles, and, in addition to mozzarella, cheddar cheese (The Primo only has mozz). The website copy further suggests that the sauce is “zesty” and the crust is “buttery.”

While I wouldn’t necessarily call the sauce “zesty,” it was mildly noticeable. It tasted like generic frozen pizza sauce. The crust was in no way buttery. It was bland and inoffensive, but it held up fine under the weight of the… okay, there was no weight to the pizza. The pepperoni— which was your run-of-the-mill round Tombstone pepperoni— was sparse. So, too, was the application of “pork belly crumbles,” which were salty and crispy. They reminded me, for better or worse, of pre-cooked bacon crumbles you get in a bag to put on a salad. I enjoyed their presence, as they were the only thing keeping this from being a completely pedestrian and unmemorable frozen pizza. The cheese types were indistinguishable from one another; you could’ve paid me a thousand dollars, and I’d have never been able to tell you it had mozzarella AND cheddar.

I’m willing to bet these will be quickly gone, like your dibs in some neighborhoods, and not exactly missed, like the sensation of your eyes freezing together on the Montrose Brown line platform at 7 a.m. in the middle of January.

Purchased Price: $5.99 (on sale)
Size: 19.8 oz
Purchased at: Hy-Vee
Rating: 5 out of 10
Nutrition Facts: (1/4 pizza) 350 calories, 19 grams of fat, 9 grams of saturated fat, 35 milligrams of cholesterol, 870 milligrams of sodium, 31 grams of carbohydrates, 2 grams of fiber, 5 grams of sugar (including 5 grams of added sugar), and 15 grams of protein.

8 thoughts to “REVIEW: Tombstone Tavern Style Thin Crust Pizza”

  1. Are you joking? It’s witty, informative, and….a review of frozen pizza. Not a Pulitzer contender. Who peed in your cornflakes this morning? Jesus.

  2. Great review Brandon. I thought It was witty, informative, and personable. Don’t listen to cranky old men yelling at clouds on the Internet 😛

  3. If you don’t like the review perhaps apply the next time Marvo opens spots for more writers? I thought it was fine. I’m not looking for Michelin Star level reviews on this site.

  4. Aren’t all Tombstone pizzas thin crust like this? This kind of feels like a marketing stunt to create a new variation out of nothing. Especially considering they only come in two varieties that don’t include frozen pizza staples like Cheese, Pepperoni, or Sausage.

  5. I just tried the same pizza due to it being made by Tombstone. I paid 8.99. Yikes! It was bland. The crust was like a Totinos pizza. Not much oon it and it was almost twive the cost of a regular tombstone which I like. This is marketing and not actually a good pizza. Worth abour 3.99 at most.

  6. Not impressed, almost twice the normal price of a Tombstone pizza. I had to search for the red onion and banana peppers. Always too many pepperoni and sausage the size of mouse turds and if I were into mouse turds I might also add that they might taste the same.
    I don’t expect a lot from a frozen pizza but believe it or not I’ve been buying Tombstone pizzas for over 50 years and this is my LAST one. Red Barron is a rising new star. My last Red Barron was over a dollar cheaper and twice the pizza.
    The moral of this comment is: If you’re buying frozen pizza, dont expect much or for it to taste like it just came out of a brick oven made by artisans because you will be sorely disappointed.

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