by Jenise » Wed Oct 12, 2022 5:29 pm
Once upon a time in California there was a pizza chain (maybe called Numero Uno) that did a pizza they may have called deep dish, though if you know Chicago pizza by that name there's absolutely no similarity. It was a lightly sweet (a very minor amount of sugar, but some where none is correct in a classic pizza dough) puffy dough that had a magical crispy crust, close to an inch tall and evenly so end to end which I absolutely adored. The specific version I liked was called a Slaughterhouse Five and if I remember correctly it was topped with pepperoni, sausage, onions, green bell pepper and black olives.
The chain went away, but over the years I've been reminded that it once existed, most curiously about 30 years ago when an Armenian friend's mother, newly emigrated to California from Kenya made a pizza with that same type of crust. She used a sheet pan but the flavor, texture, etc--it was puffy, moist yet cake-y just like the Numero Uno pizza dough. They called it Hye Pizza, 'hye' being a short-syllable identifier of things from their culture and her sons, my friends Vic and Leon, said it was what they grew up with.
I haven't had Detroit pizza but it looks very similar in texture, though it has it's own specific methodology for the cheese and sauce--sauce going over the cheese, not under.
And then just this morning, I watched an America's Test Kitchen video for a cast iron pan pizza. Looks very similar but of course they had their own custom tweaks. Gotta try one soon.
Anyone else a fan of this style pizza?
My wine shopping and I have never had a problem. Just a perpetual race between the bankruptcy court and Hell.--Rogov