Chicago-style pizza

Chicago-style pizza

Chicago-style pizza is a deep-dish pizza style developed in Chicago. Chicago-style pizza has a buttery crust up to three inches tall at the edge, slightly higher than the large amounts of cheese and chunky tomato sauce, acting as a large bowl. The term also refers to "stuffed" pizza, another Chicago style. While in Chicago most pizzerias serve thin-crust pizza, generally in a style characteristic to the city, the term Chicago-style pizza is used to describe this deep-dish style of pizza.

Contents

Styles of pizza

Deep-dish pizza

Deep dish pizza from the original Pizzeria Uno location.
a slice of pizza from Marcello's Father and Son Pizza of Chicago.
Deep dish from Gino's East of Chicago.

The Chicago-style "deep-dish" pizza was invented at Pizzeria Uno, in Chicago, in 1943,[1] reportedly by Uno's founder Ike Sewell, a former University of Texas football star. However, a 1956 article from the Chicago Daily News asserts that Uno's original pizza chef Rudy Malnati developed the recipe.[2]

This pizza is far from the roots of an original Italian pizza. It does not include thin crusts or delicate toppings, but rather it is made with a heavy, thick crust and large amounts of cheese, sauce and ingredients.[3]

The pizza begins with a thick layer of dough made with olive oil and cornmeal laid into a deep round pan and pulled up by the sides, then parbaked before the toppings are added, to give it greater spring; the pan is oiled heavily in order to create a fried effect on the outside of the crust. The crust is covered with cheese (generally sliced mozzarella) and meat, usually in a solid layer or patty, just above the crust. Italian sausage (a Chicago staple), as well as vegetables such as onions, mushrooms and bell peppers are also used. A sauce, usually uncooked, made from shredded or puréed tomatoes is added.

Another deep-dish restaurant is Uno's companion restaurant Due, opened down the block by Sewell in 1955. However, a year before, the Original Gino's Pizza opened on Rush Street. Twelve years later, in 1966, Gino's East opened. Lou Malnati's was founded by another of Rudy Malnati's sons.

In 1972, the Chicago Tribune reported that a steakhouse chain called "Gulliby's at S.O.P." offered "pub dining rooms that feature deep-dish pizza and sandwiches."[4]

Some Chicago deep-dish pizza restaurants ship their partially baked pizzas within the continental U.S.[5][6]

Stuffed pizza

A Giordano's pizza

By the mid-1970s, two Chicago chains, Nancy's Pizza, founded by Rocco Palese, and Giordano's Pizza began experimenting with deep dish pizza and created the stuffed pizza.[7] Palese based his creation on his mother's recipe for scarciedda, an Italian Easter pie from his hometown of Potenza.[8] The Giordano brothers worked for Palese as cooks and split off on their own in the early 1970s. Chicago Magazine articles featuring Nancy's Pizza and Giordano's stuffed pizza popularized the dish.

Stuffed pizzas are often even deeper than deep-dish pizzas, but otherwise, it can be hard to see the difference until it is cut into. A stuffed pizza generally has much deeper topping density than any other type of pizza. As with deep-dish pizza, a deep layer of dough forms a bowl in a high-sided pan and the toppings and cheese are added. Then, an additional layer of dough goes on top and is pressed to the sides of the crust.

At this stage, the thin dough top has a rounded, domed appearance. Pizza makers often tear a small hole in the top of the "lid" to allow air and steam to escape while cooking, so that the pizza does not explode and injure the pizza maker, and also to allow the sauce to permeate the pie. Pizza sauce is ladled over the top crust and the pizza is baked.

Pan pizza

Pan pizza in Chicago is similar to the deep-dish style, and baked in a similar deep-sided pan, but its crust is quite thick—a cross between the buttery crisp crust and focaccia. Toppings and cheese frequently go on the top of a pan pizza, rather than under the sauce as is traditionally the case with deep-dish and stuffed pizza. The placement of the cheese and toppings on top make the pan pizza variety similar to a thin-crust pizza with a thicker and larger crust.

Thin-crust pizza

Chicago style, party cut, thin-crust pizza.

There is also a style of thin-crust pizza found in Chicago and throughout the rest of the Midwestern USA. The crust is thin and firm enough to have a noticeable crunch, unlike a New York-style pizza.

The crust is topped with a liberal quantity of Italian style tomato sauce, which usually has quite a lot of herbs or is highly spiced, and typically contains no visible chunks of tomato. Next, a layer of toppings is added, and finally a layer of mozzarella cheese. This pizza is cut into squares, also known as party cut or tavern cut,[9] as opposed to a pie cut into wedges. However, the consistency of the crust and the quantity and choice of the tomato sauce and cheese are what separate this style from East Coast- and Roman-style pizzas, and it makes the pizza from most neighborhood pizzerias immediately distinguishable from that offered by national chains such as Papa John's or Pizza Hut. Aurelio's is a chain which specializes in this kind of pizza.

See also

References

  1. ^ Who Cooked That Up?
  2. ^ Pizano's History Page
  3. ^ Who Cooked That Up?
  4. ^ McGuire, Carolyn. "Where the Unwed Wet Their Whistles in Suburbs." Chicago Tribune. January 14, 1972. p. 2-9
  5. ^ Zimmerman, Karla; Cavalieri, Nate (2008). Chicago: city guide. Lonely Planet. pp. 122. ISBN 1741047676. 
  6. ^ Lou Malnati's Deep Dish Pizza
  7. ^ Pollack, Penny; Jeff Ruby (2005). Everybody Loves Pizza. Emmis Books. pp. 33. ISBN 1-57860-218-1. 
  8. ^ Nancy's Pizza
  9. ^ Vettel, Phil; Kevin Pang (2009-07-23). "Pizza slices: Two foodies debate the merits of wedge versus 'party cut'". Chicago Tribune (Chicago, IL: Tribune Company). http://www.chicagotribune.com/entertainment/dining/chi-090722-pizza-cut-debate,0,7968080.story. Retrieved 2009-07-23. 

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