Pizza on the Farm: A to Z Produce, Stockholm, WI

After a number of recommendations from friends and readers of this site I finally made the trek down to the Pizza Farm, home to A to Z Produce in Stockholm. Run by Robbi Bannen and Ted Fisher, A to Z Produce opens up the farm up for visitors to buy pizza on Tuesdays.

Max, Courtney, Lesely and I took the trek down for our first pizza on the farm. We chose to leave before rush hour and the trip from Saint Paul was only about an hour and fifteen minutes.

People were showing up when we arrived around 5 P.M. to both order pizza for take out as well as set up tables and chairs to dine on the farm with friends and relatives. I talked with Ted Fisher briefly while he was making pizzas and he explained that they try to grow and raise everything in the pizza on the premises. Everything from the wheat in the dough to the animals that produced the cheese to the fresh peppers are all within a short reach of the outdoor wood-fired brick oven they built themselves.

They had a surprising amount of pizza options written on a chalk board such as “stinging nettles with shallots cooked in cream, parmesan, mozzarella” and “italian sausage (happy pigs), kalamata olives, red onion, fresh mozzarella.” All the pizzas are large, about sixteen inches in diameter, and are priced in the lower twenties, tax included. We ordered their Margherita with basil, garlic, roasted tomato and mozzarella.

The process was fast: Ted takes your order and goes into the kitchen to lay out the dough and put on the ingredients. Through a window you can see other family members helping out. The uncooked pizza then parades through people waiting to the other side to the oven where Robbi takes over. It’s only in the oven a few minutes and it’s pulled out a couple times to rotate. She puts it directly in a box (it’s common for regulars to re-use their pizza box) and you pay in cash on the spot.

We were lucky enough to score one of the few picnic tables. We brought our own wine, cups, napkins, plates and it’s expected that everything you take in you take out with you.

Our pizza was nothing short of beautiful. All the ingredients tasted incredibly fresh. The crust fluffed up perfectly and the edges were almost artfully uneven and were a little crispy on the edges. The cheese was tasty and satisfying. We all were impressed with the pizza to the point where afterwards we couldn’t resist to get another, even if it meant we’d take most of it home with us.

Our next pizza had artichoke hearts, kalamata olives, roasted tomato, garlic and fresh mozzarella. Just as great as the first pizza. As expected, we couldn’t finish it and took most of it to go.



Pizza on the Farm, originally uploaded by Aaron Landry.

As we were leaving, more people started arriving. The crowd was quite mixed from older families laughing and drinking oversized bottles of white wine to a large group of college students to parents with young kids to a man in an old Camaro delivering a bottle of Argentinean wine and picking up his pizza to go and few people speaking only in Swedish.

Being able to meet the animals and the people raising the ingredients that you eventually eat was a great experience and the pizza itself was one of the freshest pizzas I’ve ever tasted. On the way out I picked up some focaccia to enjoy later in the week.

It’s well worth the trip.

Check out Courtney’s fantastic video of the pizza farm done in a “Sesame Street documentary” style as well as my photoset on Flickr. If you have a minute, I recommend watching the slideshow to see the farm as well as our bonus stop to Lake Pepin on the way home. I’ll be back soon.

A to Z Produce
N2956 Anker Lane
Stockholm, WI 54769

Comments 10

  1. Sharyn wrote:

    Yay! I’m glad you enjoyed it. The lad and I going back in a couple of weeks.

    Posted 30 Apr 2008 at 14:40
  2. Laura wrote:

    The SE MN ALC is all drooling over your pictures right now :)

    Posted 01 May 2008 at 10:45
  3. Alexis wrote:

    That looks amazingly wonderful! I really want to go. Plus, I dig road trips (even if they involve Wisconsin).

    Posted 02 May 2008 at 10:19
  4. Jilly wrote:

    Okay seriously, I am salivating! I am going to have to check my passport to ensure I can still get into WI.

    I think I am going to arrange a wine outing for my wine club there, AWESOME idea!

    Posted 13 May 2008 at 12:34
  5. Jim wrote:

    Is Tuesday the only day to get pizza there?

    Posted 13 May 2008 at 12:41
  6. Aaron wrote:

    Unfortunately, due to the amount of work they put into it and their baking schedule throughout the week, it’s only on Tuesdays.

    I can’t wait to go back.

    Posted 13 May 2008 at 12:46
  7. Debbie wrote:

    Did you have any trouble talking to them (or let’s say interviewing)? Did they know that you were doing this blog/article?

    Just curious—I have heard that they do not like being written about or receive any press.

    Just want to know if it is a friendly environment if I start asking questions when I bring my girls group there tonight!!

    Posted 27 May 2008 at 11:17
  8. Aaron wrote:

    Debbie-

    I didn’t have any problems talking with them. They were both very friendly. I also wanted to keep this post informal and avoided interviewing. I did tell them that I write about pizza on my site and that I was from Minneapolis. I told them that’s how I found out about pizza on the farm: people that read my site recommended it to me. They also saw me take about a hundred photos. I had a couple brief conversations with them but that was about it. They never indicated anything to me about not wanting to be written about or published.

    I don’t think they (or I, for that matter) were aware of the amount of buzz this post may have generated though. I’ve gotten a ton of traffic and it was also on Slice as well as Chow.

    My apologies if they didn’t want any more buzz about pizza on the farm.

    Posted 27 May 2008 at 12:10
  9. Debbie wrote:

    When I called for directions earlier, and asked if this was the “pizza on the farm”, Robbi came down on me that they were not to be referred to as that because there is a farm in CA that is actually called The Pizza Farm (you can google that and see). Apparently they have received warnings from them.
    I too am a free-lance writer and thought about doing a small paragraph about them along with other farms that do wood-fired pizzas.
    Not to steer anyone away from going, I sure will make the trek out there. I have heard so much about the pizza.

    Posted 27 May 2008 at 14:35
  10. Shelby's Boyfriend wrote:

    They had a big write up last year in the Milw J-S: http://www.jsonline.com/story/index.aspx?id=656056

    Posted 02 Jun 2008 at 09:26

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