MarlaCollins'Husband wrote:I think it's not a minor nitpick and I don't think anyone can reasonably call stuffed a subset of deep dish.
One of my favorite Chicago (tavern)-style variations is subbing Alfredo sauce for the pizza sauce and topping with artichoke hearts, mushrooms and black olives.
Binko wrote:ld111134 wrote:deep-dish (the usual suspects - Lou Malnatti's, Giordano's...), stuffed (Art of Pizza),
Minor nitpick: Giordano's should be in the stuffed category. (Although you can call stuffed a sub-set of deep-dish, but it looks like we're making a distinction here.)As I wrpte upthread, I'm not a huge fan of Chicago-style thin crust (the crust is too crispy for my tastes, probably because the dough is rolled out using a sheeter).
Chicago-style thin crust is all over the map in terms of crispiness. Most of the thin crust I've had is usually pretty pliable. Yesterday's trip to V&N's was unusual in that we didn't even ask for the pizza well-done, and it came out cracker crisp--I've never had it like that in my dozens of trips to V&Ns. There's usually plenty of bend to it (you can fold it over if you wanted to--well, at least anything but the edge pieces. So it's kind of nice compromise. Like crispy? Get the edges. Like floppy? Get the inner pieces.) That said, it's not as floppy as a New York style pizza, of course. It's rare that I've had a pizza I'd truly consider "cracker crust" (like Zaffiro's in Milwaukee) here in Chicago. Maybe Candlelite, although I haven't been there in ages and don't know whether they still make it like that.
I was going to mention Detroit style, too. I still have yet to make it out to Jet's here in Chicago, but I can't pass through Detroit without stopping at Buddy's.
Also, I kind of like the variations within the Chicago styles from time to time. Like Home Run Inn is kind of unusual to me with its heavy buttery crust, and Barnaby's with its oddball almost pie-like cornmeal crust.
ld111134 wrote:I need to try Detroit-style pizza. I've had D'Amato's bakery pizza and I'm not a fan...it reminds me of the Sicilian-style pizza that my junior high school cafeteria served.
Binko wrote:One of my favorite Chicago (tavern)-style variations is subbing Alfredo sauce for the pizza sauce and topping with artichoke hearts, mushrooms and black olives.
Ooo...where can I find that?
Binko wrote:MarlaCollins'Husband wrote:I think it's not a minor nitpick and I don't think anyone can reasonably call stuffed a subset of deep dish.
It depends on how fine you want to be with your pizza taxonomy. I know the history of Uno's and Nancy's, but I'm charitable, as a lot (probably most) Chicagoans I know don't even know the difference between a Giordano's stuffed pizza and an Uno's deep dish. How many times have I heard someone recommend Giordano's for "Chicago deep dish" I can't even begin to tell you. So, rather than be nitpicky about it, I personally just divide them into classic Chicago single-crust deep dish, and Chicago stuffed, and put them both under a general deep dish category. I might even put Burt's and Pequod's in its own subset of deep dish instead of "pan pizza." Or perhaps we can reorganize everything under a broad "pan pizza" category.
MarlaCollins'Husband wrote:For me. a real test is whether one satisfies the craving for another. If I'm in the mood for deep dish, stuffed isn't going to scratch that itch. And when I want the cheesy monstrosity that is stuffed pizza, as happened last week, there's no way a deep dish pie would have been sufficient.
ronnie_suburban wrote:Try as I have, I've almost never been able to get past that undercooked, doughy, slimy layer of top crust on stuffed pizza so for me, it's never really been comparable to deep dish.
Katie wrote:As long as we're discussing Chicago-area pizza styles, perhaps we should include mention of the double-decker thin crust, described here by Daniel on Serious Eats Chicago, and perhaps invented in Mundelein? I've had several double-deckers at Bill's and a few at other places --- Bill's is not the only place in Lake County that serves it. I've never found it farther afield than that, though. I have a feeling it wouldn't meet Ronnie's standard for how cooked the top crust should be, but it's an interesting thin version of a stuffed pizza and offers plenty of cheese, for those (like me) who like that sort of thing.
Katie wrote:As long as we're discussing Chicago-area pizza styles, perhaps we should include mention of the double-decker thin crust, described here by Daniel on Serious Eats Chicago, and perhaps invented in Mundelein? I've had several double-deckers at Bill's and a few at other places --- Bill's is not the only place in Lake County that serves it. I've never found it farther afield than that, though. I have a feeling it wouldn't meet Ronnie's standard for how cooked the top crust should be, but it's an interesting thin version of a stuffed pizza and offers plenty of cheese, for those (like me) who like that sort of thing.
Vital Information wrote:Katie wrote:As long as we're discussing Chicago-area pizza styles, perhaps we should include mention of the double-decker thin crust, described here by Daniel on Serious Eats Chicago, and perhaps invented in Mundelein? I've had several double-deckers at Bill's and a few at other places --- Bill's is not the only place in Lake County that serves it. I've never found it farther afield than that, though. I have a feeling it wouldn't meet Ronnie's standard for how cooked the top crust should be, but it's an interesting thin version of a stuffed pizza and offers plenty of cheese, for those (like me) who like that sort of thing.
When I was a teen, 40 or so years ago, there was a place we used to order pizza from in Northbrook, I cannot think which one, but maybe it was @ Willow and Techny, and we'd get a double decker pizza. It was an Oscar Madison kinda thing where they essentially baked two pizzas and then combined them, cheese to cheese. Ring a bell anyone? JoelF, BR?
BTW, as long as I'm now on this thread, can I mention my disdain for the term "tavern pizza." I was arguing this with MikeG recently. He said well the originators of these places were all taverns. I disagree. For one thing, places like Vito and Nicks are NOT taverns, in the sense of what a Chicago tavern is, and I mean that both in a legal sense and in a sense of what people knew as a tavern. Second, and perhaps related, but serving beer with pizza, has never made these places "taverns." All these places serving thin, square cut pizza, are restaurants first and foremost. I find it rather incredulous that "taverns" starting offering a certain kind of pizza to their customers and then various Italian restaurants started selling THAT kind of pizza to their customers. Does that make sense? I know we need a name to specify thin-square cut pizza from deep-dish, but it should not be "tavern."
Vital Information wrote:Does that make sense? I know we need a name to specify thin-square cut pizza from deep-dish, but it should not be "tavern."
deepdish wrote:This may sound odd (probably because I actually am odd), but I never heard of "tavern style" pizza growing up here in Chicago.
zoid wrote:I never heard it before encountering it here on LTH.
Binko wrote:zoid wrote:I never heard it before encountering it here on LTH.
You know, that very well may be where I first heard it, but I've seen it all over the place since, so it's burrowed its way into the Chicago foodie lexicon.
JeffB wrote:...
Speaking of the style, a very, very good version comes from the original La Gondola on Ashland (well, original after moving into the stripmall across from the true original stand-alone building). Extra thin with sausage is a very balanced pie with excellent cheese, good sauce and top-notch house sausage. ... Not a big fan of many other things on the La Gondola menu, but I do like the option of stracciatella soup and tripe Florentine. I really love that the family has kept the latter chestnut on the menu after all these years, and it's quite good. Forget about the newer, more expensive, and inferior Belmont location in the old Brickhouse/Feed the Beast space. It's been a big disappointment for me in my intermittent quest to replace Stefani's.
spinynorman99 wrote:Binko wrote:zoid wrote:I never heard it before encountering it here on LTH.
You know, that very well may be where I first heard it, but I've seen it all over the place since, so it's burrowed its way into the Chicago foodie lexicon.
The term exists outside of LTH. It's an effective shorthand. The other Tavern pizza to me, as far as Wisconsin's concerned, was an old-school (waaay before Kraft and then Nestle) Tombstone in a toaster oven behind the bar in an actual tavern.
smorris76 wrote:Just want to echo a lot of what's been said by others in the thread. Growing up on the SW side, Giordano's was "deep dish". Most of the locals I know refer to everything from Lou's to Giordano's as "deep dish". It was also something that I never had until college and was something special.
Binko wrote:zoid wrote:I never heard it before encountering it here on LTH.
You know, that very well may be where I first heard it, but I've seen it all over the place since, so it's burrowed its way into the Chicago foodie lexicon.
Binko wrote:Funny enough, when I was searching for the term "tavern pizza," that's the earliest reference I could find for it in a Chicago publication. And it concerned Tombstone pizzas.
JoelF wrote:I think I've also seen it called "party cut"
JoelF wrote:I think I've also seen it called "party cut"
ronnie_suburban wrote:I'm pretty sure that both Leona's and Ranalli's offered the double decker pizzas. I don't remember a north-suburuban place doing this.