
Pizza Zulu on Königstraße brings Neapolitan pizza tradition to Fürth through long-fermented dough, San Marzano tomatoes, and fresh mozzarella sourced to southern Italian specification. Chef Gaspare Squitieri's kitchen extends beyond pizza to fried Neapolitan street food, including croquettes and pasta frittata. For anyone tracking authentic regional Italian cooking in the Nuremberg-Fürth corridor, this address warrants attention.
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- Address
- Königstraße 81, 90762 Fürth, Germany
- Phone
- +49 911 25322201
- Website
- pizzazulu.de

Where Neapolitan Sourcing Discipline Shows Up in a Fürth Side Street
Pizza Zulu is a restaurant at Königstraße 81, 90762 Fürth, Germany, serving Authentic Neapolitan Pizza by chef Gaspare Squitieri. The room at Pizza Zulu reads warm rather than designed, the kind of atmosphere that comes from a kitchen that has decided the food is the statement. That positioning is deliberate. In a region where the dominant dining conversation runs toward haute cuisine, operations like Kupferpfanne for classic Franconian cooking, or at the higher end across Germany, places like JAN in Munich and Schwarzwaldstube in Baiersbronn,
The Sourcing Logic Behind the Dough
The ingredient framework at Pizza Zulu follows the established Neapolitan protocol with genuine fidelity. San Marzano tomatoes, grown in the volcanic soil of the Agro Sarnese-Nocerino zone south of Naples, carry a lower acidity and higher natural sweetness than most commercial alternatives, qualities that make them the regulated standard for Vera Pizza Napoletana certification. Fresh mozzarella and fiordilatte (the cow's-milk counterpart to buffalo mozzarella) each behave differently under the heat of a wood or gas-fired Neapolitan oven: fiordilatte melts more evenly and holds its texture through the cook, which is why it pairs with a ragù that already carries significant moisture and fat.
The dough itself is where the sourcing commitment becomes most visible in the eating. Long natural leavening, typically 24 to 72 hours depending on the house protocol, produces a cornicione that is airy rather than bready, with a slight char and the faint tang of fermentation. That texture is not cosmetic: it signals that no commercial fast-rise yeast has been used to compress the process. The long-ferment method at Pizza Zulu is a technical choice that separates it from that category.
The Ragù Pizza as Editorial Point
Neapolitan ragù pizza is worth addressing specifically because it is one of the more demanding items on any Neapolitan menu. Ragù Napoletano is a slow-cooked meat sauce, sometimes cooked for four to six hours, that requires a dough structure capable of holding the weight and moisture without collapsing or becoming soggy. The balance with fiordilatte is deliberate: the mild dairy note cuts the intensity of the meat sauce without competing with it. That this dish works as described points to a kitchen that understands the relationship between components, not just individual ingredient quality.
This kind of depth in a single dish is what separates a Neapolitan-specific address from a general Italian pizzeria. Pizza Zulu's appeal is orthogonal: it is not competing in that category. Its comparable set is the handful of Italian addresses in Germany's mid-sized cities that treat Neapolitan pizza as a disciplined regional cuisine rather than a crowd-pleasing format.
Fried Neapolitan Street Food: The Supporting Category
The fried section of the menu extends the sourcing logic beyond pizza. Croquettes, crocchè in Neapolitan dialect, and pasta frittata are street food staples in Naples, typically sold from friggitorie and consumed standing at the counter. They are not afterthoughts; in Naples, fried food culture runs parallel to pizza culture and demands the same attention to timing and temperature. Properly executed, the exterior is thin and audibly crisp, the interior soft and cohesive. The version described at Pizza Zulu, crispy outside, soft inside, follows that specification. For a kitchen operating in Fürth, maintaining that standard requires both technique and the right fat temperature, neither of which can be improvised.
That the kitchen offers this category at all indicates an orientation toward Neapolitan food as a broader tradition, not just a pizza format. Visitors to Restaurant Haerlin in Hamburg or Schanz in Piesport are buying into a chef-driven tasting format; here the proposition is regional fidelity and informal accessibility.
Chef Gaspare Squitieri and the Fürth Context
Neapolitan cooking in Germany is not new, Italian immigration and the postwar gastarbeiter period established an Italian restaurant presence across the country decades ago. What has shifted more recently is the distinction between generic Italian-German hybrid operations and venues with provenance-specific sourcing and technique. Chef Gaspare Squitieri's presence behind the kitchen at Pizza Zulu places it in the latter category. The name and culinary direction suggest a connection to the Neapolitan tradition at the level of training and identity rather than market positioning.
Fürth itself, adjacent to Nuremberg and often overshadowed by it in travel coverage, has a dining scene that rewards closer reading. For a full picture of what the city offers beyond a single address,
Planning a Visit
Pizza Zulu is located at Königstraße 81, 90762 Fürth, accessible by U-Bahn from Nuremberg's city centre in under 20 minutes. The format, informal, neighbourhood-facing, centred on pizza and fried food, suits an evening with a small group rather than a formal occasion. The atmosphere described as warm and service described as quick and attentive positions it as a high-frequency local address rather than a destination restaurant requiring significant advance planning. The restaurant is open Monday from 5 to 10 PM, Tuesday through Thursday from 5 to 10 PM, Friday and Saturday from 5 to 11 PM, and Sunday from 12 to 10 PM. Reservations are essential, and the price per person is about $20.
Budget and Context
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pizza ZuluThis venue — the venue you are viewing | City Center, Authentic Neapolitan Pizza | $$ | 1 recognition | |
| Restaurant La Palma | Fuerth, Authentic Italian Fine Dining | $$$ | , | |
| Spitiko Meze Restaurant | Innenstadt, Greek Meze | $$ | , | |
| Kupferpfanne | $$$ | Michelin Plate | City Center, Classic German with Mediterranean Influences | |
| Tim's Kitchen | $$$$ | , | Fürth, Modern French-Japanese Fusion Fine Dining | |
| Da Gino Restaurant - Ingolstadt | $$ | , | :null, Traditional Italian |
At a Glance
- Modern
- Lively
- Trendy
- Group Dining
- Casual Hangout
- Open Kitchen
- Beer Program
Modern, spacious hall-like room with bright lighting, closely packed tables, and a loud, hectic atmosphere.
![[w]einklang restaurant in Nuremberg](https://cdn.enprimeurclub.com/storage/v1/object/public/images/locations/rec2OpfvDJLj7d0zO/hero1.jpg?width=3840&quality=75)






