Saturday, August 22, 2020

9 Different Types of Pizza in the United States

 

Pizza consists, at its core, of three things: dough, sauce, and toppings. It's hard to believe that this simple dish could spawn hundreds of variations and result in an extremely profitable worldwide industry, not to mention the huge number of chefs and pizza-makers who specialize in perfecting this single dish. Many chefs in the United States have tweaked the concept to come up with their own pizza styles, making it as American as any culinary creation.

Pizza Supply For A Year

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The Original Neapolitan

Neapolitan pizza

The Neapolitan pizza is the original pizza that left Italy and arrived with Italian immigrants in the United States. This is the pizza that launched American pizza fanaticism. In fact, Italy has sought UNESCO heritage protection for the Neapolitan pizza

The dough is made from Tipo 00 wheat flour (Italian milled) and the crust is thin, crunchy, and baked in a wood-fired oven. The pizza should have minimal toppings—perhaps San Marzano tomato sauce, buffalo mozzarella cheese, and basil—because too much sauce or cheese will weigh down the crust and make it soggy.


02of 09

California Style


Pizza with prosciutto

California style pizza uses a dough base similar to the Neapolitan or New York style pizza and jazzes up the base with unusual and uncommon ingredients. This style of pizza is generally credited to Chef Ed LaDou who developed a pizza with ricotta, red peppers, mustard, and pate, that Chef Wolfgang Puck tried and loved in the early 1980s. Chef Puck immediately hired Chef LaDou to work at the newly opened Spago in 1982 and Chef LaDou continued creating innovative pizzas, including varieties with duck sausage and smoked salmon.  

Pizza Supply For A Year

In 1985, Chef LaDou created the first pizza menu for California Pizza Kitchen, including its signature barbecue chicken pizza, which spread California-style pizza to a national audience.


03of 09

Chicago Deep Dish


Stuffed vegetarian pizza

In the 1940s, Pizzeria Uno in Chicago developed the deep-dish pizza, which has a deep crust that lines a deep dish, similar to a large metal cake or pie pan. Though the entire pizza is quite thick, the crust itself is only of thin to medium thickness, and the pizza has a very thick, large layer of toppings. Because the pizza is so thick, it requires a long baking time and a different assembly method, to avoid burning the cheese.
In a deep-dish pizza, the toppings are usually assembled "upside-down" with cheese, vegetables, and meats placed on top of the crust, and an uncooked tomato sauce on the top layer, to help the vegetables and meats cook all the way through in the oven. 

Pizza Supply For A Year

In the mid-1970s, Chicago restaurants Nancy's Pizza and Giordano's Pizzeria developed a variant of the deep-dish pizza known as the stuffed pizza, which is even deeper and has a larger topping density than any other type of pizza. To keep the cheese and toppings contained, a thin layer of dough is added above the tomato sauce with a hole in the crust (similar to a pie) to let steam escape, and tomato sauce is added above the top crust.



04of 09

Chicago Thin Crust


Thin Crust Square Pizza

The Chicago thin crust is crispier and crunchier than the New York style and normally cut into squares (or tavern cut) rather than diagonal slices. The Quad City area, a group of five cities between Iowa and Illinois, has developed a variation of the Chicago thin crust which uses a spicy sauce, large amounts of meat, and is cut into strips or squares.

Pizza Supply For A Year

05of 09

Detroit Style


Detroit style pizza

The Detroit style pizza is a square pizza, similar to Sicilian-style pizza, with a deep-dish crust and marinara sauce sometimes served on top. The crust is usually baked in a well-oiled pan to develop caramelized crunchy edges. Detroit style pizza has developed a larger fan base as Detroit-based Little Caesars launched a Detroit-style deep dish pizza available at its nationwide chains.

06of 09

New England Greek Style


Greek Style Pizza

Greek-style pizza generally refers to the pizza served at Houses of Pizza, run by Greek immigrants in New England. The pizza crust lies in between the crunchy New York-style pizza and its thicker Sicilian cousin and it is baked in a heavily greased cake or cast iron pan, which results in a thick and golden crunchy crust. Many of these pizzas are topped with typical Greek ingredients, such as feta, artichokes, and kalamata olives, as well as an oregano-heavy tomato sauce. Though, a Greek pizza may also be simply topped with tomato sauce and mozzarella cheese.  


07of 09

New York Thin Crust



New York style pizza in boxes on a countertop

New York-style pizza originated in New York City in the early 1900s and is a modification of the Neapolitan pizza. The pizza has a thin and crunchy crust that is soft and pliable on the interior, so you can fold the pizza while eating. Typical toppings are a perfect balance of thin tomato sauce and lots of grated mozzarella cheese, plus a type of meat or vegetable if you desire. These are often sold by the slice, whereas a Neopolitan pizza is sold as a whole pie. Most pizzerias in the United States tend to serve a form of New York-style pizza.

08of 09

St. Louis Style


Thin Crust Pizza

St. Louis-style pizza, a unique take on New York-style pizza, originated in the 1960s by Ed and Margie Imo of Imo's Pizzeria. The pizza has a thin cracker-like crust made without yeast, and is topped with Provel cheese, rather than mozzarella. Provel cheese is a white processed cheese, made by combining cheddar, mozzarella, and provolone cheeses, and is used primarily in the St. Louis area. The pizza is usually cut into rectangles or squares.


09of 09

Tomato Pie


Pizza making

The tomato pie is a type of pizza created in the early 1900s by Italian-Americans in the Philadelphia metropolitan area. Papa's Tomato Pies, in the Trenton, New Jersey, area claims to be the United States' second oldest pizzeria. Unlike the New York-style pizza, where cheese and toppings are placed on top of the sauce, in the tomato pie, the cheese and toppings are placed under the tomato sauce. Because of this differentiation, the dominant flavor of the pizza is the sweet and tart tomatoes that top the pie. 






9 Different Types of Pizza in the United States

  Pizza consists, at its core, of three things: dough, sauce, and toppings. It's hard to believe that this simple dish could spawn hundr...