Huntington Beach mayor takes pizzeria’s calzone challenge, but he can’t quite down all 6 pounds
- Share via
Huntington Beach Mayor Erik Peterson helped roll out Surf City’s newest way to overindulge in pizza.
Stoney’s Pizza at Warner Avenue and Pacific Coast Highway invited Peterson to take on its 6-pound calzone — a folded pizza — as a way to drum up interest in Stoney’s food challenge.
“I’ve never, ever thought of doing a food challenge before,” Peterson said Monday. But, he figured, “why not?”
Peterson took on the task Sunday of eating the massive calzone in less than 30 minutes, but ultimately, he was defeated by the crust.
“I did regret it a little after,” said Peterson, who still had “a half-pound of dense bread” on his plate when the time limit ran out.
Peterson was only the second person to attempt the challenge, and the closest to completing it, since Stoney’s announced it a week earlier, according to owner Brandt Stebbins, whose wife, Jennifer Kulik, helped introduce the contest after becoming a partner in the business in September.
“It was a lot of pizza,” Peterson said. “More than anyone should eat.”
The made-to-order calzone contains ricotta and mozzarella cheese, meatballs, onions, sauce, mushrooms and about a half-pound of french fries, Stebbins said.
Why french fries? The idea is to keep the calzone’s cheesy contents from cooking into a solid mass.
“It’s put in the middle of the cheese and meat for separation,” Stebbins said.
“I think it just makes it so that nobody can finish it,” Peterson theorized.
Anyone can walk in and order the $40 calzone, which comes with a side of marinara sauce for dipping, Stebbins said.
The challenge requires that the entire thing be tackled by a single ambitious eater. If the plate is cleared within 30 minutes, the calzone is free and the champion gets his or her photo on Stoney’s wall of fame, as well as a T-shirt and a certificate good for five pizzas of any kind.
“It was fun and I was glad I was able to do it,” Peterson said, though he assured there wouldn’t a repeat showing. “Once is enough.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.