MarlaCollins'Husband wrote:JeffB wrote:Not a term I coined, but Tavern Style describes a particular very thin pizza specific to Chicago and surrounds that often sports house made sausage. I never understood it to describe the condition of pizza cut into squares any more than I thought NY-style meant no more and no less than pizza cut into sectors (the geometric description of a pie slice). The term's specific meaning is why it's helpful. "Square cut" or "party cut" describe the division of tavern style pies- but also many St Louis, Detroit, bakery and grandma pies, none of which are synonymous with square cut. Or, cutting a Pizza Hut pie into squares doesn't make it tavern style.
Time and complexity lead to all sorts of new shorthand from critics and observers to describe old things. One of the gifts of this forum is to isolate and identify an essential food tradition and hang a name on it that makes sense and sticks. 30s style burgers and Depression Dogs, aquarium smokers and secret menus. The novelty of the name doesn't delegitimize the concept. The "Detroit sound," "house music," "West Coast offense," "Spaghetti Westerns," "Chicago School," "Magical realism," Dutch masters": these are monikers that were imposed on real things whose practitioners and patrons did not use the terms when the phenomena emerged. So what.
I think the idea that it's Chicago-specific is simply incorrect (unless your use of "Chicago and surrounds" refers to the entire Midwest). Milwaukee, the Twin Cities, and Indianapolis are a few places where thin crust pizza traditionally is the same as Chicago's. For specific examples, see Maria's and Zaffiro's in Milwaukee, La Casa Pizzaria in Omaha, Red's Savoy in St. Paul, and Maria's in Indianapolis. Any one of those places would fit in perfectly in the Chicago thin crust tradition and all of them have excellent sausage (most are housemade). It's not novelty of the term that delegitimizes the application of "tavern-style" to Chicago; it's the fact that the style has been established for decades in several cities.
I agree with you that new terms can be used to describe old things but it doesn't fall on any one person to impose the terms; there has to be some kind of widespread acceptance. Tavern-style, tavern-cut, tavern-whatever haven't been accepted in the Chicago-specific way you're suggesting. Not among pizzerias (when's the last time you saw "tavern-style" on a menu), not among the general public, and not among the pizza obsessed who populate websites like Slice (RIP) or pizzamaking.com.
I guess I'm confused about what we are talking about then, a problem I've had with this thread and discussions about pizza taxonomy in general. I thought you were suggesting that the term isn't very descriptive because anything thin cut in squares could be "tavern style." Now I think the suggestion is that thin crust pizza all around the Midwest is the same, or maybe less sweepingly that there are some old examples of what we have been calling "tavern style" here on LTH (but we shouldn't call it that because it wasn't a historical term). As to the latter point, it seems like "tavern style" would be a fine way to identify the pies you mention and distinguish them from lesser Midwestern dreck. Like Pizza Hut, of Wichita (as opposed to La Casa, of Omaha). Southeast Wisconsin I'll give you, but that seems like not much of an exception but rather part of a continuum. Otherwise, what LTH and now carpetbagging food writers have taken to calling "tavern style" is not what I've had in the Midwest, beyond Chicago and WI, but I've been unlucky -- particularly when it comes to the sausage. Also, I'm not sure the logic works. There have long been Chicago style hot dog places in Iowa, Indiana, Las Vegas, Phoenix and the Gulf Coast of Florida. This is because Chicago is Paris to some (Iowans) and because Chicagoans go out to pasture in warm climes, but bring their neon relish. I don't think we'll stop calling them Chicago style. But my comparison is not perfect. "Chicago-style hot dog" means something - but of course it sometimes means different things. See "Depression Dog," a term that seems strikingly similar to "Tavern Style Pizza" and perhaps also should not be used. I have a hard time grasping the point, when we are both able to discuss the same basic type of pizza simply by calling it "tavern style," of suggesting that the term should not be used because it is not historically accepted. It works. I'm happy to use other shorthand, whatever it is. But it appears there is no historical way to describe this regional gem. Let's change that.
So there are Chicago traditions when it comes to pizza. Some of them only go back a few decades (stuffed) or WWII (deep dish) but they should be respected. I agree with that. Fine. There's also a tradition of very thin pie, often with fresh fennel sausage served often at convivial places with liquor licenses, worn wooden bars, and classic neon 1950's signage. That tradition might not be limited to Chicago (but might be limited to the Midwest?), but we should resepect it as a Chicago institution anyway (I think), because that's what real Chicagoans eat. But it should not be called "tavern style," ever, because that's something used or even coined by the nemeses of this thread - the unnamed out of town foodies who only fawn over an older VPN tradition or the a la mode non-tradition, exemplified by Great Lake, not that either of those are unworthy but the other real Chicago (or Midwest) stuff deserves some fawning too. (I respectfully disagree that only real Chicagoans can "get it" when it comes to local pizza styles. The Lord offers his pizza love to all who seek it, in my experience. That's why the hottest pizza place in NY right now is a deep dish place started by Chicago dudes -- but its presence in NY does not dilute its Chicagoness, right?) In the end, we seem to agree that this thin, sausage - focused midwestern square cut pie is a "thing," there's an ideal or an archetype if you will.
What shall we call it? Maybe we can have a contest, or a poll, and the Trib and/or Sun Times can report, with the effect of declaring once and for all what the hell this pizza is called.