"Touchdown Jesus" and "Hail Mary" and now...
Posted: Thu Sep 10, 2015 8:28 pm
"Touchdown Jesus" and "Hail Mary" and now from The City of Brotherly Love comes "Pope-apalooza."
Any visit to the PFRA forum will likely enable one to read the cry of some members for wanting pizza.
What does a better job washing down that crispy substance than a "cold one?"
In Philadelphia, fans can now watch their favorite team and have a few beers in honor of Pope Francis
or even use a special mozzarella for their pizza.
Even beer. Down the street from the basilica, Brookland Pint plans to offer a specially brewed “No Pope ’til Brookland” draft.
A Philadelphia priest recently blessed the bubbling vats of “Papal Pleasure” beer at Manayunk Brewery.
“People are going to have pope parties,” said Anthony Messina, co-owner of South Philly’s Pastificio Homemade Pasta. His shop is offering two versions of Pope Francis molded in mozzarella, one hatted and one without. The mitred pope is far more popular (“You can really tell that one is the pope”), but the shop is having a hard time keeping up with pre-orders for both. Messina expects to sell 700 to 1,000 of them, each weighing a bit over a pound and costing $20. He knows that carving the pontiff will be a challenge.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/po ... story.html
Any visit to the PFRA forum will likely enable one to read the cry of some members for wanting pizza.
What does a better job washing down that crispy substance than a "cold one?"
In Philadelphia, fans can now watch their favorite team and have a few beers in honor of Pope Francis
or even use a special mozzarella for their pizza.
Even beer. Down the street from the basilica, Brookland Pint plans to offer a specially brewed “No Pope ’til Brookland” draft.
A Philadelphia priest recently blessed the bubbling vats of “Papal Pleasure” beer at Manayunk Brewery.
“People are going to have pope parties,” said Anthony Messina, co-owner of South Philly’s Pastificio Homemade Pasta. His shop is offering two versions of Pope Francis molded in mozzarella, one hatted and one without. The mitred pope is far more popular (“You can really tell that one is the pope”), but the shop is having a hard time keeping up with pre-orders for both. Messina expects to sell 700 to 1,000 of them, each weighing a bit over a pound and costing $20. He knows that carving the pontiff will be a challenge.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/po ... story.html