Jeff Seizer spent much of his career in fine dining, but his first culinary idols were the cooks at the pizza shop in his childhood Brooklyn neighborhood.
โThey were like the coolest dudes in the world,โ Seizer recounts. โThe shop had this old-school Italian vibe. Everyone knew the pizza guys. They drove cool cars, and I looked up to those guys growing up.โ
It is fitting, then, that Seizer now helms the pizza kitchen for Ponysaurus Brewing Co. at the companyโs recently opened Raleigh Iron Works space, its third location. Leading a pizza kitchen, he says, is the culmination of a 22-year-long dream.
Seizer has spent his entire career in kitchens, beginning with cooking school at age 18. His first kitchen job was at Montrachet, the illustrious French restaurant in New York City that closed in the early 2000s. He was part of a six-person intern classโand was the only intern to last the summer.
โAll I did at that job for six months was make blinis with caviar. I just stood there with a little hot plate and flipped blinis,โ Seizer remembers, laughing.
From there, Seizer moved on to Union Square Cafe, where he began as a line cook before assuming the role of sous chef. Union Square Cafe brought him fully into the hospitality company of legendary restaurateur and chef Danny Meyer. Seizer went on to join Maialinoโs opening team, eventually serving as the chef de cuisine of the Gramercy Park Hotel restaurant. While leading the kitchen there, he cooked for the likes of Keith Richards, Mick Jagger, and Questlove.
โI am this little kid from Brooklyn,โ Seizer says of his fine-dining experience. โI am earning nothing, working my butt off, and Iโm doing dinner for Questlove.โ
Seizer cites Union Square Cafeโs Carmen Quagliata as one of his most important mentors. He points to Quagliataโs vision of putting beautiful ingredients on a plate without overly complicating them as a key lesson in his own evolution as a chef, describing that ethos as cooking with โItalian sensibilitiesโ in terms of believing that olive oil, garlic, roasting, and caramelization can drive a beautiful dish forward.
โYou let time and heat do the work,โ he says. โYou develop the natural flavors.โ

I first met Seizer when he was guiding the kitchen at the now-closed Royale in downtown Raleigh. Seizer moved to the Triangle with his then-wife to be closer to family. Royale offered a blend of French and American fare, including a much-loved burger that arrived on a locally made English muffin with Gruyรจre cheese and Royale sauce; fried duck wings made ร lโorange; and moules frites.
Some of my fondest memories of Royaleโs food came when Jeff would offer one-night tasting menus. On several occasions, the menus were built around โred-sauce Italianโ fareโand you could see his love for his grandmotherโs cooking shine through. Even then, he would hint that an Italian restaurant might be in his future.
Royale, like many restaurants, fell victim to COVID-19, and Seizer found his way to the Counting House restaurant at Durhamโs 21c Museum Hotel. He breathed new life into the menu there with, among others, a Royale burger and an array of pasta that often stole the show.
Shortly after he moved to Durham, Seizer befriended Nick Hawthorne-Johnson, one of the owners of Ponysaurus Brewing Co. They stayed in touch over the years, and one day Hawthorne-Johnson texted Seizer and asked him to chat. After learning that Hawthorne-Johnsonโs next project would be based in Raleigh under the Ponysaurus brandโand that in this role Seizer would work with Anthony Guerra of Oakwood Pizza Box and that Seizerโs partner (in both life and the kitchen), Roxy Garza, could join him in the kitchenโit was an easy yes for Seizer.
Ponysaurus launched as a Durham pop-up in the years before it became a full-fledged brewery in 2015. The brand felt creative from the start. From the pony-meets-dinosaur logo to the slogan (โthe beer beer would drink if beer could drink beerโ), the brand has showcased its creativity, as if it had been made to both delight and reflect the community in which it was builtโand brewed.
I caught up with Hawthorne-Johnson recently about Ponysaurusโs expansion from Durham to Wilmington and now Raleigh. Hawthorne-Johnson said it ultimately came down to allowing Ponysaurus to do what it does best in more places: โWe do two things,โ he says. โWe make beer and we hold space for people to gather together and build their community in our space. Opening some more locations where people can get together and where we can provide space for people to enjoy our beers and share in fellowship together was exciting.โ
Over the past two years, the Ponysaurus team evaluated markets across North Carolina before settling on Wilmington and Raleigh. Both of the new Ponysaurus locations have opened within the last four months.
โWith Raleigh, it came down to the fact that we have amazing friends doing really amazing things in the food and beverage space,โ Hawthorne-Johnson says. โWe wanted to come and add to the scene here and participate in all that is happening.โ
The locationโs proximity to the original brewery in Durham will also allow Ponysaurusโs production team to dive into making sours and barrel aging at the Raleigh facility while remaining close to their main brewing facility.
The proximity also means that many Raleigh customers have already visited the brewery in Durham. This comes with a certain amount of pressure, Hawthorne-Johnson adds: โItโs scary to open something thatโs so close to our original location. Pretty much everybody here knows who we are and what weโre doing in Durham. Weโre going to have a certain set of expectations.โ
Over the past several months, Seizer, Garza, and their team have worked to breathe life into the Raleigh locationโs menu. The pizza is built around the sauce and dough that Guerra and Oakwood Pizza Box have perfected. Seizer and his team wanted to lean into โgood, humble foodโ that reflects both the flavors that Seizer grew up loving and the seasonal bounty of the nearby farmers market.
On the current menu, youโll find a clam pizza inspired by Seizerโs love for Frank Pepe Pizzeria in New Haven, Connecticut. Itโs built on a white-sauce base, and the chopped clams taste fresh and swim in garlic, lemon, and parsley. Youโll notice just a little spiciness in the zestโand youโll definitely want more than one slice.
You will also find a blistered-tomato pizza (that has, over repeat visits, become one of my favorites); wings that Seizer says are โcooked with minimal ingredients,โ including a little brown butter and sugar; a burger made with LaFrieda beef and aged cheddar; and several salads. And, of course, thereโs a pepperoni pizza, because as Seizer notes, โpepperoni and pilsners go super well together.โ
Ultimately, pizza will remain core to the menu, even as the team works on varied options to go alongside it.
โPizza and beer,โ Seizer says, โare natural friends.โ
Comment on this story at [email protected].
Correction: This story has been updated with the correct spelling of Roxy Garza’s last name.


You must be logged in to post a comment.