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Great WSJ Article on Regional Pizza Styles...

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Pizza Quest: A Cross-Country Guide to America’s Best Pies

America has regional pizza styles all its own, and each one has a fascinating story to tell. This summer, get out there and taste them for yourself. Here’s your road map

By Eleanore Park

Updated July 25, 2019 3:52 pm ET

Imagine a world before Pizza Hut, a time before Domino’s and Papa John’s homogenized our notions of what pizza can be. Over the last century, a patchwork of idiosyncratic styles emerged in family-owned pizzerias across the U.S., each one a history written in flour, tomatoes and cheese. I’ve made it my mission to sample them all.

The Detroit style is as different from Chicago deep dish as a pug is from a poodle—though, in a strictly culinary sense, the American-born pizzas do share common features. “To me, it’s silly when you see people trying to create this taxonomy of pizza,” said Anthony Falco, formerly of Brooklyn pizza destination Roberta’s, now a self-styled international pizza consultant who’s brought “New York-inspired” pizza to Bangkok and his expertise to Kuwait, Toronto, Colombia and Ulaanbaatar. “I feel like there are only really two stories: Neapolitan immigrants and Sicilian immigrants. Squarish, pan-baked pizzas by the Sicilians and round, hearth-baked pizzas from the Neapolitans.”

EXTRA CHEESE Detroit Zoo pie with roasted tomatoes, fresh basil and tomato basil-sauce at Buddy's Pizza in Detroit. PHOTO: MARVIN SHAOUNI FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

True enough, as far as it goes. Pizza, however, is more than crust, sauce and cheese. The originators of the Detroit style did have roots in Sicily; their crust has the Sicilian square shape. But it gets a singular crunch and caramelized bottom from the blue-steel pans it bakes in— borrowed, it’s said, from Detroit factories where they held auto parts. The buttery brick cheese comes from neighboring Wisconsin. Sit down at a checker-clothed table at Buddy’s Pizza on Detroit’s east side, and you’re at eye-level with the neighborhood’s past, in black-and-white photos lining the walls. At tables all around, you’ll find a tableau of the people who followed the Sicilians to Detroit and the bordering city of Hamtramck, one of the most diverse in the nation. What museum offers such a visceral experience of history?

That said, you should tour the nearby Motown Museum and the Ford Rouge Factory, too, for a picture of the once-thriving industrial economy that provided a market for Buddy’s Pizza and an opportunity for founder Gus Guerra.

Visiting these places is a kind of time travel. In his 2005 book “Pizza: A Slice of Heaven,” Ed Levine documents two waves of pizza innovation. Around the turn of the 20th century, more than 4 million Italians immigrated to the U.S., largely from southern Italy; many found factory work on the eastern seaboard. Anthracite mines in Pennsylvania provided hot-burning coal for bread ovens repurposed for pizza. Places such as Sally’s Apizza in New Haven, Conn., (1938) still use coal ovens. Their well-charred pies offer a taste of the cooking of another century.

The pizza places that opened in the northeast between 1900 and the ’30s served growing immigrant enclaves and workers in search of cheap meals and companionship. “Sociologists talk about the need for third places in every culture, the one place people can gather besides work and home,” writes Mr. Levine. “It seems to me that pizzerias were a third place in many Italian-American communities.”

By all reports, hand-kneading dough and stoking coal were physically grueling. Commercial mixers and gas ovens set the stage for a second pizzeria boom post World War II. Some, such as DiCarlo’s Pizza—founded right after the war with locations, initially, in Steubenville, Ohio, and Wheeling, W.V.—were the projects of soldiers returning from Italy to a ready market of shift workers with disposable income to spend.

According to a 1949 article in the Wheeling News-Register, Primo Di Carlo, son of bakery owners, came home thinking of a “little ‘Pizzaria’ crowded with GIs” he’d seen overseas: “Why couldn’t they be as popular here as over there?” The writer explains what pizza is (“an Italian bread dough base...garnished with a sauce of tomatoes”) to a readership presumed to be unfamiliar with this food. Today you can try the pizza Primo and his brother Galdo came up with at DiCarlo’s and other pizzerias throughout the Ohio Valley. Sold by the rectangular slice, it’s known for the cold cheese piled on top.

Would a native Neapolitan or Sicilian recognize Chicago’s stuffed pizza—a sort of pizza pot pie with a flaky double crust—as one of their own? Perhaps the postwar pies are best understood as American, a response to available technology and ingredients and the markets they fed. The cheffy inventions of the ‘70s and ‘80s—the California pizza and Rhode Island’s grilled pizza— really belong in a class of their own.

Now a new wave of pizza innovators is shaping up into a legitimate movement, investing the

humble pie with some of the rough-hewn appeal of those hand-kneaded coal-oven pies of yore. These artisan types follow in the floury footsteps of sourdough pioneer Chad Robertson, of San Francisco’s Tartine Bakery, and Chris Bianco, who opened Pizzeria Bianco in Phoenix in 1988. (These two apostles of hand-milled heirloom grains actually joined forces earlier this year in Tartine Bianco, the all-day cafe at the Manufactory at ROW DTLA, a restaurant-bakery-market in Los Angeles.) “My ‘Tartine Bread’ cookbook is in pieces, I’ve referred to it so much over the years,” said Sarah Minnick of Lovely’s Fifty Fifty in Portland, Ore. “I was dedicated to the American-style pie, but done as Chris Bianco would, with really nice olive oil and great flour,” said Joe Beddia of Pizzeria Beddia in Philadelphia.

Some nuovo pizzaiolos bump up against the notion that pizza should be cheap. “What’s overlooked is that pizza can be an expression of agriculture,” said Rick Easton of Bread and Salt in Jersey City, N.J. “So much effort and labor goes into producing ingredients of quality. Pizza becomes this incredible way to showcase that.”

My ideal pizza road trip includes a mix of regional classics and nuovos. A knowledge of the former helps you assess the latter—which, in turn, ensures that you get your vegetables, in the form of delicious and, it must be said, highly photogenic toppings. Like their predecessors, these new-wave pizzaiolos have product to move.

These Are Not America’s Top 10 Pizzas

But they might be the most meaningful. At these classic joints across the country, dough, sauce, cheese, local history and individual inspiration converge in regional pizza styles as distinct as their respective states’ flags. How many can you sample this summer? There are many more, from Old Forge, Pa., to the Quad Cities of Illinois/Iowa.

ON THE RISE Long-fermented crusts at Bread and Salt in Jersey City, N.J. PHOTO: NICO SCHINCO FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

1. Milwaukee, aka tavern-style

The Range: Green Bay to Kenosha, Wis., with cousins around the Midwest

The Spot: Maria’s Pizza (5025 W. Forest Home Ave., Milwaukee); opened in 1957

The Context: Twinkle lights bring a magic glow to the religious-themed paint-by-numbers on the wood-paneled walls. (“They were blessed by the monsignor years ago. We can’t get rid of

Flatbreads at Tartine Bianco at ROW DTLA in Los Angeles. PHOTO: JAKOB N. LAYMAN

SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS:

them.”) Second- generation co- owner Bonnie Crivello runs the front of house in her trademark red stilettos. Her niece and co- owner Maria Story manages the kitchen.

The Pizza: An

What’s your favorite local pizza spot? What sets its pizza apart? Join the conversation below.

oblong

cracker-thin crust with a thick, slightly sweet

tomato sauce. A real Milwaukee pie has toppings of sausage, onions and mushrooms (canned, please).

The Origin Story: Maria Traxel started out making Neapolitan-style pies for her co-workers at Inland Steel. In 1957 she opened her restaurant. Her kind heart never let anyone go hungry, and her family-friendly place remains alcohol-free and cash-only.

—Christina Ward

2. Deep Dish

The Range: Chicagoland areaThe Spot: Lou Malnati’s Pizzeria (439 N. Wells St., Chicago); opened in 1986

Maria's Pizza in Milwaukee, Wis. PHOTO: ADAM RYAN MORRIS FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

The Context: Though not the first-ever location of this local chain, its first city outpost is quintessential Chicago, in a walk-up building a block from the El train. The two-story space has a red-leather-banquette and exposed-brick vibe.

The Pizza: Contrary to popular belief, deep dish doesn’t mean thick crust. At Lou’s, the flaky, buttery dough is patted out by hand and raised along the sides of the pan, then filled with sliced mozz and toppings (sausage is king), with a blanket of chunky California-grown-plum-tomato sauce on top.

The Origin Story: Lou’s father, Rudy Malnati, is rumored to have come up with his recipe while working at Chicago legend Pizzeria Uno in the ’50s. Lou trained alongside Rudy before opening his first pizzeria in suburban Lincolnwood in 1971. Lou’s sons Marc and Rick expanded operations and trademarked their flaky Buttercrust.

—Jamie Feldmar

The Range: Western New York

3. Buffalo

The Spot: Bocce Club Pizza (4174 N. Bailey Ave., Buffalo, N.Y.); opened in 1946

The Context: 15 minutes northeast of the Canalside development in this revitalizing city, the long, arched building promises a palatial dining room but is mostly devoted to ovens. This is parking-lot pizza—you’ll want to start eating in your car.

The Pizza: Imagine a New York slice with triple the cheese and twice the sauce, with a shortening-browned undercarriage and toppings spread to the edge. Baseline on these 18-inch monsters: cup-and-char pepperoni, concave rounds blackened around the ridge.

The Origin Story: The business began as a bocce club downtown. Bartender Dino Pacciotti bought it and started experimenting with a pizza oven he’s said to have found in the basement. The place was so popular, parishioners of a nearby church were skipping mass for pizza and liquor. “The priest wasn’t happy,” said owner Jim Pacciotti, “so we moved.”

—Arthur Bovino

4. Detroit

The Range: Historically, Motor City and other points in Michigan; recently, nationwideThe Spot: Buddy’s Pizza (17125 Conant St., Detroit); opened in 1946

The Lake Erie pizza at Buddy's Pizza in Detroit. PHOTO: MARVIN SHAOUNI FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

The Context: Colorful murals frame the original location of Buddy’s. Inside, long tables are covered with red- and green-checkered tablecloths. The yellow overhead lights are hardly Instagram-friendly, but that’s part of the charm.

The Pizza: Thick, airy, rectangular crust somewhere between focaccia and a classic Sicilian, topped edge-to-edge with semisoft Wisconsin brick cheese that browns, bubbles and gets dark and lacy around the edge. Toppings can be baked under or above the cheese. ”Racing stripes” of warm tomato sauce go on top.

The Origin Story: Legend has it Gus Guerra, owner of local bar Buddy’s Rendezvous, used his Sicilian mother-in-law’s pizza recipe and stuffed the dough into blue-steel pans used to hold spare auto parts, borrowed from a pal at a nearby factory. The pans gave his pies their nice caramelized crust.

—Khushbu Shah

5. Philadelphia Tomato Pie

The Range: Philly and a few other parts of the Mid-AtlanticThe Spot: Sarcone’s Bakery (758 S. 9th St., Philadelphia); opened in 1918

The Context: A short walk from the Italian Market in South Philly, Sarcone’s offers limited indoor seating. Slices come on a paper napkin or wax paper, perfect for transport to one of the nearby parks.

The Pizza: Not to be confused with the round tomato pie of Trenton, N.J., this pie is rectangular, heavily sauced with tomato “gravy” and, sometimes, dusted with a whisper of Parmesan. Typically served at room temperature, the thick, bready pizza flaunts a fluffy perimeter. At Sarcone’s, the pie is baked in a behemoth brick hearth oven until the border is a deep golden brown.

The Origin Story: At first, slices were available as a takeaway option for customers picking up bread. Fifth-generation owner Louis Sarconerecalls his great-grandmother simmering gravy in the tiny kitchen at the back of the bakery to top the pies.

—Eleanore Park

6. New England Greek

The Range: Throughout New England at Pizza House and House of Pizza jointsThe Spot: Tilton House of Pizza (298 Main St., Tilton, N.H.); opened in 1998

The Context: In this town on the Winnipesaukee River, the Katsigiannis family and their staffhustle to handle the lunch rush and still take time to catch up with regulars. The décor: a mashup of Doric columns and Boston sports memorabilia.

The Pizza: Slow baked for a thick, doughy crust; drenched in oil for a satisfying bite; covered in punchy tomato sauce and pools of browned salty cheese. Toppings are a must (especially if there’s a “Greek” option).

The Origin Story: Dan and Fanoula Katsigiannis came from Greece to Manchester, N.H., in 1973 and left their factory jobs to open a House of Pizza in 1990. In ’98 the family bought the Tilton location. Mr. Katsigiannis, 69, still starts his day at 7 a.m., making dough from scratch while his sons grate cheese, chop vegetables, delivered daily, and man the counter.

—Casey Elsass

7. Grandma

The Range: Long Island, N.Y.The Spot: King Umberto (1343 Hempstead Turnpike, Elmont, N.Y.); opened in 1976

The Context: At this suburban pizzeria, a seven-minute drive from Belmont Park, the polite wait staff will walk you through the various pie styles on offer in addition to the grandma.

The Pizza: Stretched into an oiled pan, the grandma is thinner than other square slices. Mozzarella, fresh garlic, a drizzle of olive oil and tomato sauce spooned diagonally across the pie extend all the way to the edge.

The Origin Story: In the early ’70s, Umberto Corteo, an emigrant from Monte di Procida, near Naples, opened a pizza parlor in Hyde Park, N.Y. Soon thereafter his brother Carlo arrived to work with him, fashioning pies like those their mother made back home. Initially they offered this style as an off-menu appetizer. At their second, Elmont location they landed on the name grandma, their take on alla casalinga (housewife-style).

—Eleanore Park

Ciro Cesarano of King Umberto in Elmont, Long Island.

8. New York

The Range: New York City

The Spot: Totonno’s Pizzeria Napolitana (1524 Neptune Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y.), opened 1924

The Context: Three blocks from the Coney Island boardwalk, at America’s oldest continuously running family-owned pizzeria, the line runs out the door. Don’t let that scare you—they don’t allow crowding inside, so what you see is what the wait is, and this pizza is worth it.

The Pizza: The move here is Margherita or pepperoni. The recipe hasn’t changed since day one, and they make dough daily. The pizza is topped with thinly sliced fresh mozzarella plus grated Pecorino. Fold the slice to eat it—crucial to preventing roof-of-mouth burn. Folded, a Totonno’s slice holds stiff and

exhibits an even leoparding of char.

The Origin Story: Anthony “Totonno” Pero moved to the U.S. in 1903 and worked at America’s oldest documented pizzeria, Lombardi’s, in Manhattan. Once the subway expanded, he opened his place in Coney Island. Now his grandchildren run it.

—Farideh Sadeghin

9. Ohio Valley

The Range: Western Pa., eastern Ohio and the West Virginia panhandleThe Spot: Pizza House, aka Police Station Pizza (1007 Merchant St., Ambridge, Pa.); opened

1952-53

The Context: The American Bridge Company incorporated the borough of Ambridge as a company town in 1905. On the main street, next to the police station, Pizza House does nonstop takeout trade six days a week.

The Pizza: Sold by the square cut, the incredibly light, crisp crust bakes in steel pans, then bakes again topped with tangy tomato sauce and provolone; extra cheese goes on after the pie is out of the oven. The combination of cold and hot cheese, offset by the crunch of the crust, is curiously invigorating.

The Origin Story: In the early ‘50s, as jobs at the mill dried up, Tony Dippolito bought the business with help from brother-in-law Robert Burzese, who later took over. Now at the helm, Robert’s son Alex fastidiously monitors the cooking to achieve ideal browning and crunch.

—Beth Kracklauer

10. New Haven

The Range: New Haven, Conn., and environsThe Spot: Sally’s Apizza (237 Wooster St., New Haven, Conn.); opened in 1938The Context: On historic Wooster Street, a line of patrons perpetually await tables. Inside,

lamps emblazoned with the word PIZZA light the brown vinyl booths.

The Pizza: With an oblong shape that follows the contours of the long pizza peel that conveys the dough, the pizza is deeply charred by the same coal oven that’s been huffing along here for 80-plus years. Cheese comes on the pie by request only. The clam pie is canon, though the white fresh-tomato pie clocks in at a close second.

The Origin Story: New Haven pizza patriarch Frank Pepe founded his Pizzeria Napoletana in 1925 and sold fresh clams in the alleyway outside; in the mid-1960s he began topping his pies with them. His nephew Sal Consiglio opened Sally’s Apizza down the block and continued the tradition—though clams at Sally’s are chopped, not whole as they are at Pepe’s.

—Eleanore Park

The Vanguard

These new-wave pizza makers are changing the game around the U.S.A.

PHOTO: NICO SCHINCO FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

anything but.

The Maker: Scarr Pimentel, Scarr’s Pizza (22 Orchard St., New York)

The Philosophy: “I wanted our pizza to have a New-York- slice flavor profile without cutting corners on the quality of ingredients.”

The Pizza: The dough is a mix of whole grains milled in-house and natural flour sourced upstate. It may look like your standard dollar slice; a Scarr’s slice is

PHOTO: JAKOB N. LAYMAN

The Maker: Chris Bianco, Tartine Bianco (757 S. Alameda St. Ste. 160, Los

Angeles) and Pizzeria Bianco (multiple locations, Phoenix)

The Philosophy: “Transparency about our ingredients lets customers say, I can support the farmer and a sustainable grain economy.”

The Pizza: Called flatbread at Tartine Bianco, it’s thick but surprisingly delicate. Try the lemon-rosemary-red onion.

The Maker: Joe Beddia, Pizzeria Beddia (1313 N. Lee St., Philadelphia)

The Philosophy: “My goal was to keep it simple and recognizable as an American-style pie, but elevated with nice ingredients.”

The Pizza: Finished with fresh herbs, cave-aged hard cheese and high-quality olive oil. The tomato pie, a nod to the old-school Philly staple, is not to be missed.

The Maker: Sarah Minnick, Lovely’s Fifty Fifty (4039 N. Mississippi Ave., Portland, Ore.)The Philosophy: “I work with my farmers so the pizza becomes very functional—what we get,

what we have to use.”The Pizza: A pillowy crust from a blend of five flours, with a crumb like the best bread, heaped

with seasonal toppings like morel mushrooms and marigolds.The Maker: Josey Baker, The Mill (736 Divisadero St., San Francisco)

The Philosophy: “It’s complex and reflects the subtlety and nuance of a laborious, multistage process.”

The Pizza: Wheat is sourced two hours away and milled in-house. The whole-grain, sourdough crust is hearty and chewy with subtle nutty notes, topped with cheese alone or seasonal produce.

The Maker: Rick Easton, Bread and Salt (435 Palisade Ave., Jersey City, N.J.)

The Philosophy: “All the ingredients, from flour to salt to toppings, have to be the best. Otherwise, why do it?”

The Pizza: Roman-style pizza al taglio (by the slice), long- fermented and deeply flavorful. The minimalist rossa, topped with tomatoes, perhaps best embodies Mr. Easton’s approach.

PHOTO: JASON VARNEY

PHOTO: CELESTE NOCHE FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

PHOTO: THE MORRISONS

Rick Easton, Bread and Salt PHOTO: NICO SCHINCO FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
 
The best tomato pie in the philly area is by the Corropolese Bakery. Originally from Norristown but now have Multiple locations in Montgomery County.
 
  • Like
Reactions: PennsylvaniaPride
Philly tomato pie sounds so lame. But it is soooooo good.

Not really “pizza” though imo.
 
Sorry that the pictures didn't paste in.

Pizza Quest: A Cross-Country Guide to America’s Best Pies

America has regional pizza styles all its own, and each one has a fascinating story to tell. This summer, get out there and taste them for yourself. Here’s your road map

By Eleanore Park

Updated July 25, 2019 3:52 pm ET

Imagine a world before Pizza Hut, a time before Domino’s and Papa John’s homogenized our notions of what pizza can be. Over the last century, a patchwork of idiosyncratic styles emerged in family-owned pizzerias across the U.S., each one a history written in flour, tomatoes and cheese. I’ve made it my mission to sample them all.

The Detroit style is as different from Chicago deep dish as a pug is from a poodle—though, in a strictly culinary sense, the American-born pizzas do share common features. “To me, it’s silly when you see people trying to create this taxonomy of pizza,” said Anthony Falco, formerly of Brooklyn pizza destination Roberta’s, now a self-styled international pizza consultant who’s brought “New York-inspired” pizza to Bangkok and his expertise to Kuwait, Toronto, Colombia and Ulaanbaatar. “I feel like there are only really two stories: Neapolitan immigrants and Sicilian immigrants. Squarish, pan-baked pizzas by the Sicilians and round, hearth-baked pizzas from the Neapolitans.”

EXTRA CHEESE Detroit Zoo pie with roasted tomatoes, fresh basil and tomato basil-sauce at Buddy's Pizza in Detroit. PHOTO: MARVIN SHAOUNI FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

True enough, as far as it goes. Pizza, however, is more than crust, sauce and cheese. The originators of the Detroit style did have roots in Sicily; their crust has the Sicilian square shape. But it gets a singular crunch and caramelized bottom from the blue-steel pans it bakes in— borrowed, it’s said, from Detroit factories where they held auto parts. The buttery brick cheese comes from neighboring Wisconsin. Sit down at a checker-clothed table at Buddy’s Pizza on Detroit’s east side, and you’re at eye-level with the neighborhood’s past, in black-and-white photos lining the walls. At tables all around, you’ll find a tableau of the people who followed the Sicilians to Detroit and the bordering city of Hamtramck, one of the most diverse in the nation. What museum offers such a visceral experience of history?

That said, you should tour the nearby Motown Museum and the Ford Rouge Factory, too, for a picture of the once-thriving industrial economy that provided a market for Buddy’s Pizza and an opportunity for founder Gus Guerra.

Visiting these places is a kind of time travel. In his 2005 book “Pizza: A Slice of Heaven,” Ed Levine documents two waves of pizza innovation. Around the turn of the 20th century, more than 4 million Italians immigrated to the U.S., largely from southern Italy; many found factory work on the eastern seaboard. Anthracite mines in Pennsylvania provided hot-burning coal for bread ovens repurposed for pizza. Places such as Sally’s Apizza in New Haven, Conn., (1938) still use coal ovens. Their well-charred pies offer a taste of the cooking of another century.

The pizza places that opened in the northeast between 1900 and the ’30s served growing immigrant enclaves and workers in search of cheap meals and companionship. “Sociologists talk about the need for third places in every culture, the one place people can gather besides work and home,” writes Mr. Levine. “It seems to me that pizzerias were a third place in many Italian-American communities.”

By all reports, hand-kneading dough and stoking coal were physically grueling. Commercial mixers and gas ovens set the stage for a second pizzeria boom post World War II. Some, such as DiCarlo’s Pizza—founded right after the war with locations, initially, in Steubenville, Ohio, and Wheeling, W.V.—were the projects of soldiers returning from Italy to a ready market of shift workers with disposable income to spend.

According to a 1949 article in the Wheeling News-Register, Primo Di Carlo, son of bakery owners, came home thinking of a “little ‘Pizzaria’ crowded with GIs” he’d seen overseas: “Why couldn’t they be as popular here as over there?” The writer explains what pizza is (“an Italian bread dough base...garnished with a sauce of tomatoes”) to a readership presumed to be unfamiliar with this food. Today you can try the pizza Primo and his brother Galdo came up with at DiCarlo’s and other pizzerias throughout the Ohio Valley. Sold by the rectangular slice, it’s known for the cold cheese piled on top.

Would a native Neapolitan or Sicilian recognize Chicago’s stuffed pizza—a sort of pizza pot pie with a flaky double crust—as one of their own? Perhaps the postwar pies are best understood as American, a response to available technology and ingredients and the markets they fed. The cheffy inventions of the ‘70s and ‘80s—the California pizza and Rhode Island’s grilled pizza— really belong in a class of their own.

Now a new wave of pizza innovators is shaping up into a legitimate movement, investing the

humble pie with some of the rough-hewn appeal of those hand-kneaded coal-oven pies of yore. These artisan types follow in the floury footsteps of sourdough pioneer Chad Robertson, of San Francisco’s Tartine Bakery, and Chris Bianco, who opened Pizzeria Bianco in Phoenix in 1988. (These two apostles of hand-milled heirloom grains actually joined forces earlier this year in Tartine Bianco, the all-day cafe at the Manufactory at ROW DTLA, a restaurant-bakery-market in Los Angeles.) “My ‘Tartine Bread’ cookbook is in pieces, I’ve referred to it so much over the years,” said Sarah Minnick of Lovely’s Fifty Fifty in Portland, Ore. “I was dedicated to the American-style pie, but done as Chris Bianco would, with really nice olive oil and great flour,” said Joe Beddia of Pizzeria Beddia in Philadelphia.

Some nuovo pizzaiolos bump up against the notion that pizza should be cheap. “What’s overlooked is that pizza can be an expression of agriculture,” said Rick Easton of Bread and Salt in Jersey City, N.J. “So much effort and labor goes into producing ingredients of quality. Pizza becomes this incredible way to showcase that.”

My ideal pizza road trip includes a mix of regional classics and nuovos. A knowledge of the former helps you assess the latter—which, in turn, ensures that you get your vegetables, in the form of delicious and, it must be said, highly photogenic toppings. Like their predecessors, these new-wave pizzaiolos have product to move.

These Are Not America’s Top 10 Pizzas

But they might be the most meaningful. At these classic joints across the country, dough, sauce, cheese, local history and individual inspiration converge in regional pizza styles as distinct as their respective states’ flags. How many can you sample this summer? There are many more, from Old Forge, Pa., to the Quad Cities of Illinois/Iowa.

ON THE RISE Long-fermented crusts at Bread and Salt in Jersey City, N.J. PHOTO: NICO SCHINCO FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

1. Milwaukee, aka tavern-style

The Range: Green Bay to Kenosha, Wis., with cousins around the Midwest

The Spot: Maria’s Pizza (5025 W. Forest Home Ave., Milwaukee); opened in 1957

The Context: Twinkle lights bring a magic glow to the religious-themed paint-by-numbers on the wood-paneled walls. (“They were blessed by the monsignor years ago. We can’t get rid of

Flatbreads at Tartine Bianco at ROW DTLA in Los Angeles. PHOTO: JAKOB N. LAYMAN

SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS:

them.”) Second- generation co- owner Bonnie Crivello runs the front of house in her trademark red stilettos. Her niece and co- owner Maria Story manages the kitchen.

The Pizza: An

What’s your favorite local pizza spot? What sets its pizza apart? Join the conversation below.

oblong

cracker-thin crust with a thick, slightly sweet

tomato sauce. A real Milwaukee pie has toppings of sausage, onions and mushrooms (canned, please).

The Origin Story: Maria Traxel started out making Neapolitan-style pies for her co-workers at Inland Steel. In 1957 she opened her restaurant. Her kind heart never let anyone go hungry, and her family-friendly place remains alcohol-free and cash-only.

—Christina Ward

2. Deep Dish

The Range: Chicagoland areaThe Spot: Lou Malnati’s Pizzeria (439 N. Wells St., Chicago); opened in 1986

Maria's Pizza in Milwaukee, Wis. PHOTO: ADAM RYAN MORRIS FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

The Context: Though not the first-ever location of this local chain, its first city outpost is quintessential Chicago, in a walk-up building a block from the El train. The two-story space has a red-leather-banquette and exposed-brick vibe.

The Pizza: Contrary to popular belief, deep dish doesn’t mean thick crust. At Lou’s, the flaky, buttery dough is patted out by hand and raised along the sides of the pan, then filled with sliced mozz and toppings (sausage is king), with a blanket of chunky California-grown-plum-tomato sauce on top.

The Origin Story: Lou’s father, Rudy Malnati, is rumored to have come up with his recipe while working at Chicago legend Pizzeria Uno in the ’50s. Lou trained alongside Rudy before opening his first pizzeria in suburban Lincolnwood in 1971. Lou’s sons Marc and Rick expanded operations and trademarked their flaky Buttercrust.

—Jamie Feldmar

The Range: Western New York

3. Buffalo

The Spot: Bocce Club Pizza (4174 N. Bailey Ave., Buffalo, N.Y.); opened in 1946

The Context: 15 minutes northeast of the Canalside development in this revitalizing city, the long, arched building promises a palatial dining room but is mostly devoted to ovens. This is parking-lot pizza—you’ll want to start eating in your car.

The Pizza: Imagine a New York slice with triple the cheese and twice the sauce, with a shortening-browned undercarriage and toppings spread to the edge. Baseline on these 18-inch monsters: cup-and-char pepperoni, concave rounds blackened around the ridge.

The Origin Story: The business began as a bocce club downtown. Bartender Dino Pacciotti bought it and started experimenting with a pizza oven he’s said to have found in the basement. The place was so popular, parishioners of a nearby church were skipping mass for pizza and liquor. “The priest wasn’t happy,” said owner Jim Pacciotti, “so we moved.”

—Arthur Bovino

4. Detroit

The Range: Historically, Motor City and other points in Michigan; recently, nationwideThe Spot: Buddy’s Pizza (17125 Conant St., Detroit); opened in 1946

The Lake Erie pizza at Buddy's Pizza in Detroit. PHOTO: MARVIN SHAOUNI FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

The Context: Colorful murals frame the original location of Buddy’s. Inside, long tables are covered with red- and green-checkered tablecloths. The yellow overhead lights are hardly Instagram-friendly, but that’s part of the charm.

The Pizza: Thick, airy, rectangular crust somewhere between focaccia and a classic Sicilian, topped edge-to-edge with semisoft Wisconsin brick cheese that browns, bubbles and gets dark and lacy around the edge. Toppings can be baked under or above the cheese. ”Racing stripes” of warm tomato sauce go on top.

The Origin Story: Legend has it Gus Guerra, owner of local bar Buddy’s Rendezvous, used his Sicilian mother-in-law’s pizza recipe and stuffed the dough into blue-steel pans used to hold spare auto parts, borrowed from a pal at a nearby factory. The pans gave his pies their nice caramelized crust.

—Khushbu Shah

5. Philadelphia Tomato Pie

The Range: Philly and a few other parts of the Mid-AtlanticThe Spot: Sarcone’s Bakery (758 S. 9th St., Philadelphia); opened in 1918

The Context: A short walk from the Italian Market in South Philly, Sarcone’s offers limited indoor seating. Slices come on a paper napkin or wax paper, perfect for transport to one of the nearby parks.

The Pizza: Not to be confused with the round tomato pie of Trenton, N.J., this pie is rectangular, heavily sauced with tomato “gravy” and, sometimes, dusted with a whisper of Parmesan. Typically served at room temperature, the thick, bready pizza flaunts a fluffy perimeter. At Sarcone’s, the pie is baked in a behemoth brick hearth oven until the border is a deep golden brown.

The Origin Story: At first, slices were available as a takeaway option for customers picking up bread. Fifth-generation owner Louis Sarconerecalls his great-grandmother simmering gravy in the tiny kitchen at the back of the bakery to top the pies.

—Eleanore Park

6. New England Greek

The Range: Throughout New England at Pizza House and House of Pizza jointsThe Spot: Tilton House of Pizza (298 Main St., Tilton, N.H.); opened in 1998

The Context: In this town on the Winnipesaukee River, the Katsigiannis family and their staffhustle to handle the lunch rush and still take time to catch up with regulars. The décor: a mashup of Doric columns and Boston sports memorabilia.

The Pizza: Slow baked for a thick, doughy crust; drenched in oil for a satisfying bite; covered in punchy tomato sauce and pools of browned salty cheese. Toppings are a must (especially if there’s a “Greek” option).

The Origin Story: Dan and Fanoula Katsigiannis came from Greece to Manchester, N.H., in 1973 and left their factory jobs to open a House of Pizza in 1990. In ’98 the family bought the Tilton location. Mr. Katsigiannis, 69, still starts his day at 7 a.m., making dough from scratch while his sons grate cheese, chop vegetables, delivered daily, and man the counter.

—Casey Elsass

7. Grandma

The Range: Long Island, N.Y.The Spot: King Umberto (1343 Hempstead Turnpike, Elmont, N.Y.); opened in 1976

The Context: At this suburban pizzeria, a seven-minute drive from Belmont Park, the polite wait staff will walk you through the various pie styles on offer in addition to the grandma.

The Pizza: Stretched into an oiled pan, the grandma is thinner than other square slices. Mozzarella, fresh garlic, a drizzle of olive oil and tomato sauce spooned diagonally across the pie extend all the way to the edge.

The Origin Story: In the early ’70s, Umberto Corteo, an emigrant from Monte di Procida, near Naples, opened a pizza parlor in Hyde Park, N.Y. Soon thereafter his brother Carlo arrived to work with him, fashioning pies like those their mother made back home. Initially they offered this style as an off-menu appetizer. At their second, Elmont location they landed on the name grandma, their take on alla casalinga (housewife-style).

—Eleanore Park

Ciro Cesarano of King Umberto in Elmont, Long Island.

8. New York

The Range: New York City

The Spot: Totonno’s Pizzeria Napolitana (1524 Neptune Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y.), opened 1924

The Context: Three blocks from the Coney Island boardwalk, at America’s oldest continuously running family-owned pizzeria, the line runs out the door. Don’t let that scare you—they don’t allow crowding inside, so what you see is what the wait is, and this pizza is worth it.

The Pizza: The move here is Margherita or pepperoni. The recipe hasn’t changed since day one, and they make dough daily. The pizza is topped with thinly sliced fresh mozzarella plus grated Pecorino. Fold the slice to eat it—crucial to preventing roof-of-mouth burn. Folded, a Totonno’s slice holds stiff and

exhibits an even leoparding of char.

The Origin Story: Anthony “Totonno” Pero moved to the U.S. in 1903 and worked at America’s oldest documented pizzeria, Lombardi’s, in Manhattan. Once the subway expanded, he opened his place in Coney Island. Now his grandchildren run it.

—Farideh Sadeghin

9. Ohio Valley

The Range: Western Pa., eastern Ohio and the West Virginia panhandleThe Spot: Pizza House, aka Police Station Pizza (1007 Merchant St., Ambridge, Pa.); opened

1952-53

The Context: The American Bridge Company incorporated the borough of Ambridge as a company town in 1905. On the main street, next to the police station, Pizza House does nonstop takeout trade six days a week.

The Pizza: Sold by the square cut, the incredibly light, crisp crust bakes in steel pans, then bakes again topped with tangy tomato sauce and provolone; extra cheese goes on after the pie is out of the oven. The combination of cold and hot cheese, offset by the crunch of the crust, is curiously invigorating.

The Origin Story: In the early ‘50s, as jobs at the mill dried up, Tony Dippolito bought the business with help from brother-in-law Robert Burzese, who later took over. Now at the helm, Robert’s son Alex fastidiously monitors the cooking to achieve ideal browning and crunch.

—Beth Kracklauer

10. New Haven

The Range: New Haven, Conn., and environsThe Spot: Sally’s Apizza (237 Wooster St., New Haven, Conn.); opened in 1938The Context: On historic Wooster Street, a line of patrons perpetually await tables. Inside,

lamps emblazoned with the word PIZZA light the brown vinyl booths.

The Pizza: With an oblong shape that follows the contours of the long pizza peel that conveys the dough, the pizza is deeply charred by the same coal oven that’s been huffing along here for 80-plus years. Cheese comes on the pie by request only. The clam pie is canon, though the white fresh-tomato pie clocks in at a close second.

The Origin Story: New Haven pizza patriarch Frank Pepe founded his Pizzeria Napoletana in 1925 and sold fresh clams in the alleyway outside; in the mid-1960s he began topping his pies with them. His nephew Sal Consiglio opened Sally’s Apizza down the block and continued the tradition—though clams at Sally’s are chopped, not whole as they are at Pepe’s.

—Eleanore Park

The Vanguard

These new-wave pizza makers are changing the game around the U.S.A.

PHOTO: NICO SCHINCO FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

anything but.

The Maker: Scarr Pimentel, Scarr’s Pizza (22 Orchard St., New York)

The Philosophy: “I wanted our pizza to have a New-York- slice flavor profile without cutting corners on the quality of ingredients.”

The Pizza: The dough is a mix of whole grains milled in-house and natural flour sourced upstate. It may look like your standard dollar slice; a Scarr’s slice is

PHOTO: JAKOB N. LAYMAN

The Maker: Chris Bianco, Tartine Bianco (757 S. Alameda St. Ste. 160, Los

Angeles) and Pizzeria Bianco (multiple locations, Phoenix)

The Philosophy: “Transparency about our ingredients lets customers say, I can support the farmer and a sustainable grain economy.”

The Pizza: Called flatbread at Tartine Bianco, it’s thick but surprisingly delicate. Try the lemon-rosemary-red onion.

The Maker: Joe Beddia, Pizzeria Beddia (1313 N. Lee St., Philadelphia)

The Philosophy: “My goal was to keep it simple and recognizable as an American-style pie, but elevated with nice ingredients.”

The Pizza: Finished with fresh herbs, cave-aged hard cheese and high-quality olive oil. The tomato pie, a nod to the old-school Philly staple, is not to be missed.

The Maker: Sarah Minnick, Lovely’s Fifty Fifty (4039 N. Mississippi Ave., Portland, Ore.)The Philosophy: “I work with my farmers so the pizza becomes very functional—what we get,

what we have to use.”The Pizza: A pillowy crust from a blend of five flours, with a crumb like the best bread, heaped

with seasonal toppings like morel mushrooms and marigolds.The Maker: Josey Baker, The Mill (736 Divisadero St., San Francisco)

The Philosophy: “It’s complex and reflects the subtlety and nuance of a laborious, multistage process.”

The Pizza: Wheat is sourced two hours away and milled in-house. The whole-grain, sourdough crust is hearty and chewy with subtle nutty notes, topped with cheese alone or seasonal produce.

The Maker: Rick Easton, Bread and Salt (435 Palisade Ave., Jersey City, N.J.)

The Philosophy: “All the ingredients, from flour to salt to toppings, have to be the best. Otherwise, why do it?”

The Pizza: Roman-style pizza al taglio (by the slice), long- fermented and deeply flavorful. The minimalist rossa, topped with tomatoes, perhaps best embodies Mr. Easton’s approach.

PHOTO: JASON VARNEY

PHOTO: CELESTE NOCHE FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

PHOTO: THE MORRISONS

Rick Easton, Bread and Salt PHOTO: NICO SCHINCO FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

I love reading about regional cuisine and its origin. As a Western PA native, I'm a diehard Ohio Valley pizza guy (and am so happy I can get it in Virginia), but definitely need to get out to some of these other places - you know, for science.
 
There is also the always forgotten or maybe unknown to others, the jersey bar pie. Cracker thin, nothing fancy. Best had at pete and eldas, Vic’s or star tavern
 
There is also the always forgotten or maybe unknown to others, the jersey bar pie. Cracker thin, nothing fancy. Best had at pete and eldas, Vic’s or star tavern
Jersey Bar Pie sounds like a venereal disease.
 
Sorry that the pictures didn't paste in.

Pizza Quest: A Cross-Country Guide to America’s Best Pies

America has regional pizza styles all its own, and each one has a fascinating story to tell. This summer, get out there and taste them for yourself. Here’s your road map

By Eleanore Park

Updated July 25, 2019 3:52 pm ET

Imagine a world before Pizza Hut, a time before Domino’s and Papa John’s homogenized our notions of what pizza can be. Over the last century, a patchwork of idiosyncratic styles emerged in family-owned pizzerias across the U.S., each one a history written in flour, tomatoes and cheese. I’ve made it my mission to sample them all.

The Detroit style is as different from Chicago deep dish as a pug is from a poodle—though, in a strictly culinary sense, the American-born pizzas do share common features. “To me, it’s silly when you see people trying to create this taxonomy of pizza,” said Anthony Falco, formerly of Brooklyn pizza destination Roberta’s, now a self-styled international pizza consultant who’s brought “New York-inspired” pizza to Bangkok and his expertise to Kuwait, Toronto, Colombia and Ulaanbaatar. “I feel like there are only really two stories: Neapolitan immigrants and Sicilian immigrants. Squarish, pan-baked pizzas by the Sicilians and round, hearth-baked pizzas from the Neapolitans.”

EXTRA CHEESE Detroit Zoo pie with roasted tomatoes, fresh basil and tomato basil-sauce at Buddy's Pizza in Detroit. PHOTO: MARVIN SHAOUNI FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

True enough, as far as it goes. Pizza, however, is more than crust, sauce and cheese. The originators of the Detroit style did have roots in Sicily; their crust has the Sicilian square shape. But it gets a singular crunch and caramelized bottom from the blue-steel pans it bakes in— borrowed, it’s said, from Detroit factories where they held auto parts. The buttery brick cheese comes from neighboring Wisconsin. Sit down at a checker-clothed table at Buddy’s Pizza on Detroit’s east side, and you’re at eye-level with the neighborhood’s past, in black-and-white photos lining the walls. At tables all around, you’ll find a tableau of the people who followed the Sicilians to Detroit and the bordering city of Hamtramck, one of the most diverse in the nation. What museum offers such a visceral experience of history?

That said, you should tour the nearby Motown Museum and the Ford Rouge Factory, too, for a picture of the once-thriving industrial economy that provided a market for Buddy’s Pizza and an opportunity for founder Gus Guerra.

Visiting these places is a kind of time travel. In his 2005 book “Pizza: A Slice of Heaven,” Ed Levine documents two waves of pizza innovation. Around the turn of the 20th century, more than 4 million Italians immigrated to the U.S., largely from southern Italy; many found factory work on the eastern seaboard. Anthracite mines in Pennsylvania provided hot-burning coal for bread ovens repurposed for pizza. Places such as Sally’s Apizza in New Haven, Conn., (1938) still use coal ovens. Their well-charred pies offer a taste of the cooking of another century.

The pizza places that opened in the northeast between 1900 and the ’30s served growing immigrant enclaves and workers in search of cheap meals and companionship. “Sociologists talk about the need for third places in every culture, the one place people can gather besides work and home,” writes Mr. Levine. “It seems to me that pizzerias were a third place in many Italian-American communities.”

By all reports, hand-kneading dough and stoking coal were physically grueling. Commercial mixers and gas ovens set the stage for a second pizzeria boom post World War II. Some, such as DiCarlo’s Pizza—founded right after the war with locations, initially, in Steubenville, Ohio, and Wheeling, W.V.—were the projects of soldiers returning from Italy to a ready market of shift workers with disposable income to spend.

According to a 1949 article in the Wheeling News-Register, Primo Di Carlo, son of bakery owners, came home thinking of a “little ‘Pizzaria’ crowded with GIs” he’d seen overseas: “Why couldn’t they be as popular here as over there?” The writer explains what pizza is (“an Italian bread dough base...garnished with a sauce of tomatoes”) to a readership presumed to be unfamiliar with this food. Today you can try the pizza Primo and his brother Galdo came up with at DiCarlo’s and other pizzerias throughout the Ohio Valley. Sold by the rectangular slice, it’s known for the cold cheese piled on top.

Would a native Neapolitan or Sicilian recognize Chicago’s stuffed pizza—a sort of pizza pot pie with a flaky double crust—as one of their own? Perhaps the postwar pies are best understood as American, a response to available technology and ingredients and the markets they fed. The cheffy inventions of the ‘70s and ‘80s—the California pizza and Rhode Island’s grilled pizza— really belong in a class of their own.

Now a new wave of pizza innovators is shaping up into a legitimate movement, investing the

humble pie with some of the rough-hewn appeal of those hand-kneaded coal-oven pies of yore. These artisan types follow in the floury footsteps of sourdough pioneer Chad Robertson, of San Francisco’s Tartine Bakery, and Chris Bianco, who opened Pizzeria Bianco in Phoenix in 1988. (These two apostles of hand-milled heirloom grains actually joined forces earlier this year in Tartine Bianco, the all-day cafe at the Manufactory at ROW DTLA, a restaurant-bakery-market in Los Angeles.) “My ‘Tartine Bread’ cookbook is in pieces, I’ve referred to it so much over the years,” said Sarah Minnick of Lovely’s Fifty Fifty in Portland, Ore. “I was dedicated to the American-style pie, but done as Chris Bianco would, with really nice olive oil and great flour,” said Joe Beddia of Pizzeria Beddia in Philadelphia.

Some nuovo pizzaiolos bump up against the notion that pizza should be cheap. “What’s overlooked is that pizza can be an expression of agriculture,” said Rick Easton of Bread and Salt in Jersey City, N.J. “So much effort and labor goes into producing ingredients of quality. Pizza becomes this incredible way to showcase that.”

My ideal pizza road trip includes a mix of regional classics and nuovos. A knowledge of the former helps you assess the latter—which, in turn, ensures that you get your vegetables, in the form of delicious and, it must be said, highly photogenic toppings. Like their predecessors, these new-wave pizzaiolos have product to move.

These Are Not America’s Top 10 Pizzas

But they might be the most meaningful. At these classic joints across the country, dough, sauce, cheese, local history and individual inspiration converge in regional pizza styles as distinct as their respective states’ flags. How many can you sample this summer? There are many more, from Old Forge, Pa., to the Quad Cities of Illinois/Iowa.

ON THE RISE Long-fermented crusts at Bread and Salt in Jersey City, N.J. PHOTO: NICO SCHINCO FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

1. Milwaukee, aka tavern-style

The Range: Green Bay to Kenosha, Wis., with cousins around the Midwest

The Spot: Maria’s Pizza (5025 W. Forest Home Ave., Milwaukee); opened in 1957

The Context: Twinkle lights bring a magic glow to the religious-themed paint-by-numbers on the wood-paneled walls. (“They were blessed by the monsignor years ago. We can’t get rid of

Flatbreads at Tartine Bianco at ROW DTLA in Los Angeles. PHOTO: JAKOB N. LAYMAN

SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS:

them.”) Second- generation co- owner Bonnie Crivello runs the front of house in her trademark red stilettos. Her niece and co- owner Maria Story manages the kitchen.

The Pizza: An

What’s your favorite local pizza spot? What sets its pizza apart? Join the conversation below.

oblong

cracker-thin crust with a thick, slightly sweet

tomato sauce. A real Milwaukee pie has toppings of sausage, onions and mushrooms (canned, please).

The Origin Story: Maria Traxel started out making Neapolitan-style pies for her co-workers at Inland Steel. In 1957 she opened her restaurant. Her kind heart never let anyone go hungry, and her family-friendly place remains alcohol-free and cash-only.

—Christina Ward

2. Deep Dish

The Range: Chicagoland areaThe Spot: Lou Malnati’s Pizzeria (439 N. Wells St., Chicago); opened in 1986

Maria's Pizza in Milwaukee, Wis. PHOTO: ADAM RYAN MORRIS FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

The Context: Though not the first-ever location of this local chain, its first city outpost is quintessential Chicago, in a walk-up building a block from the El train. The two-story space has a red-leather-banquette and exposed-brick vibe.

The Pizza: Contrary to popular belief, deep dish doesn’t mean thick crust. At Lou’s, the flaky, buttery dough is patted out by hand and raised along the sides of the pan, then filled with sliced mozz and toppings (sausage is king), with a blanket of chunky California-grown-plum-tomato sauce on top.

The Origin Story: Lou’s father, Rudy Malnati, is rumored to have come up with his recipe while working at Chicago legend Pizzeria Uno in the ’50s. Lou trained alongside Rudy before opening his first pizzeria in suburban Lincolnwood in 1971. Lou’s sons Marc and Rick expanded operations and trademarked their flaky Buttercrust.

—Jamie Feldmar

The Range: Western New York

3. Buffalo

The Spot: Bocce Club Pizza (4174 N. Bailey Ave., Buffalo, N.Y.); opened in 1946

The Context: 15 minutes northeast of the Canalside development in this revitalizing city, the long, arched building promises a palatial dining room but is mostly devoted to ovens. This is parking-lot pizza—you’ll want to start eating in your car.

The Pizza: Imagine a New York slice with triple the cheese and twice the sauce, with a shortening-browned undercarriage and toppings spread to the edge. Baseline on these 18-inch monsters: cup-and-char pepperoni, concave rounds blackened around the ridge.

The Origin Story: The business began as a bocce club downtown. Bartender Dino Pacciotti bought it and started experimenting with a pizza oven he’s said to have found in the basement. The place was so popular, parishioners of a nearby church were skipping mass for pizza and liquor. “The priest wasn’t happy,” said owner Jim Pacciotti, “so we moved.”

—Arthur Bovino

4. Detroit

The Range: Historically, Motor City and other points in Michigan; recently, nationwideThe Spot: Buddy’s Pizza (17125 Conant St., Detroit); opened in 1946

The Lake Erie pizza at Buddy's Pizza in Detroit. PHOTO: MARVIN SHAOUNI FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

The Context: Colorful murals frame the original location of Buddy’s. Inside, long tables are covered with red- and green-checkered tablecloths. The yellow overhead lights are hardly Instagram-friendly, but that’s part of the charm.

The Pizza: Thick, airy, rectangular crust somewhere between focaccia and a classic Sicilian, topped edge-to-edge with semisoft Wisconsin brick cheese that browns, bubbles and gets dark and lacy around the edge. Toppings can be baked under or above the cheese. ”Racing stripes” of warm tomato sauce go on top.

The Origin Story: Legend has it Gus Guerra, owner of local bar Buddy’s Rendezvous, used his Sicilian mother-in-law’s pizza recipe and stuffed the dough into blue-steel pans used to hold spare auto parts, borrowed from a pal at a nearby factory. The pans gave his pies their nice caramelized crust.

—Khushbu Shah

5. Philadelphia Tomato Pie

The Range: Philly and a few other parts of the Mid-AtlanticThe Spot: Sarcone’s Bakery (758 S. 9th St., Philadelphia); opened in 1918

The Context: A short walk from the Italian Market in South Philly, Sarcone’s offers limited indoor seating. Slices come on a paper napkin or wax paper, perfect for transport to one of the nearby parks.

The Pizza: Not to be confused with the round tomato pie of Trenton, N.J., this pie is rectangular, heavily sauced with tomato “gravy” and, sometimes, dusted with a whisper of Parmesan. Typically served at room temperature, the thick, bready pizza flaunts a fluffy perimeter. At Sarcone’s, the pie is baked in a behemoth brick hearth oven until the border is a deep golden brown.

The Origin Story: At first, slices were available as a takeaway option for customers picking up bread. Fifth-generation owner Louis Sarconerecalls his great-grandmother simmering gravy in the tiny kitchen at the back of the bakery to top the pies.

—Eleanore Park

6. New England Greek

The Range: Throughout New England at Pizza House and House of Pizza jointsThe Spot: Tilton House of Pizza (298 Main St., Tilton, N.H.); opened in 1998

The Context: In this town on the Winnipesaukee River, the Katsigiannis family and their staffhustle to handle the lunch rush and still take time to catch up with regulars. The décor: a mashup of Doric columns and Boston sports memorabilia.

The Pizza: Slow baked for a thick, doughy crust; drenched in oil for a satisfying bite; covered in punchy tomato sauce and pools of browned salty cheese. Toppings are a must (especially if there’s a “Greek” option).

The Origin Story: Dan and Fanoula Katsigiannis came from Greece to Manchester, N.H., in 1973 and left their factory jobs to open a House of Pizza in 1990. In ’98 the family bought the Tilton location. Mr. Katsigiannis, 69, still starts his day at 7 a.m., making dough from scratch while his sons grate cheese, chop vegetables, delivered daily, and man the counter.

—Casey Elsass

7. Grandma

The Range: Long Island, N.Y.The Spot: King Umberto (1343 Hempstead Turnpike, Elmont, N.Y.); opened in 1976

The Context: At this suburban pizzeria, a seven-minute drive from Belmont Park, the polite wait staff will walk you through the various pie styles on offer in addition to the grandma.

The Pizza: Stretched into an oiled pan, the grandma is thinner than other square slices. Mozzarella, fresh garlic, a drizzle of olive oil and tomato sauce spooned diagonally across the pie extend all the way to the edge.

The Origin Story: In the early ’70s, Umberto Corteo, an emigrant from Monte di Procida, near Naples, opened a pizza parlor in Hyde Park, N.Y. Soon thereafter his brother Carlo arrived to work with him, fashioning pies like those their mother made back home. Initially they offered this style as an off-menu appetizer. At their second, Elmont location they landed on the name grandma, their take on alla casalinga (housewife-style).

—Eleanore Park

Ciro Cesarano of King Umberto in Elmont, Long Island.

8. New York

The Range: New York City

The Spot: Totonno’s Pizzeria Napolitana (1524 Neptune Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y.), opened 1924

The Context: Three blocks from the Coney Island boardwalk, at America’s oldest continuously running family-owned pizzeria, the line runs out the door. Don’t let that scare you—they don’t allow crowding inside, so what you see is what the wait is, and this pizza is worth it.

The Pizza: The move here is Margherita or pepperoni. The recipe hasn’t changed since day one, and they make dough daily. The pizza is topped with thinly sliced fresh mozzarella plus grated Pecorino. Fold the slice to eat it—crucial to preventing roof-of-mouth burn. Folded, a Totonno’s slice holds stiff and

exhibits an even leoparding of char.

The Origin Story: Anthony “Totonno” Pero moved to the U.S. in 1903 and worked at America’s oldest documented pizzeria, Lombardi’s, in Manhattan. Once the subway expanded, he opened his place in Coney Island. Now his grandchildren run it.

—Farideh Sadeghin

9. Ohio Valley

The Range: Western Pa., eastern Ohio and the West Virginia panhandleThe Spot: Pizza House, aka Police Station Pizza (1007 Merchant St., Ambridge, Pa.); opened

1952-53

The Context: The American Bridge Company incorporated the borough of Ambridge as a company town in 1905. On the main street, next to the police station, Pizza House does nonstop takeout trade six days a week.

The Pizza: Sold by the square cut, the incredibly light, crisp crust bakes in steel pans, then bakes again topped with tangy tomato sauce and provolone; extra cheese goes on after the pie is out of the oven. The combination of cold and hot cheese, offset by the crunch of the crust, is curiously invigorating.

The Origin Story: In the early ‘50s, as jobs at the mill dried up, Tony Dippolito bought the business with help from brother-in-law Robert Burzese, who later took over. Now at the helm, Robert’s son Alex fastidiously monitors the cooking to achieve ideal browning and crunch.

—Beth Kracklauer

10. New Haven

The Range: New Haven, Conn., and environsThe Spot: Sally’s Apizza (237 Wooster St., New Haven, Conn.); opened in 1938The Context: On historic Wooster Street, a line of patrons perpetually await tables. Inside,

lamps emblazoned with the word PIZZA light the brown vinyl booths.

The Pizza: With an oblong shape that follows the contours of the long pizza peel that conveys the dough, the pizza is deeply charred by the same coal oven that’s been huffing along here for 80-plus years. Cheese comes on the pie by request only. The clam pie is canon, though the white fresh-tomato pie clocks in at a close second.

The Origin Story: New Haven pizza patriarch Frank Pepe founded his Pizzeria Napoletana in 1925 and sold fresh clams in the alleyway outside; in the mid-1960s he began topping his pies with them. His nephew Sal Consiglio opened Sally’s Apizza down the block and continued the tradition—though clams at Sally’s are chopped, not whole as they are at Pepe’s.

—Eleanore Park

The Vanguard

These new-wave pizza makers are changing the game around the U.S.A.

PHOTO: NICO SCHINCO FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

anything but.

The Maker: Scarr Pimentel, Scarr’s Pizza (22 Orchard St., New York)

The Philosophy: “I wanted our pizza to have a New-York- slice flavor profile without cutting corners on the quality of ingredients.”

The Pizza: The dough is a mix of whole grains milled in-house and natural flour sourced upstate. It may look like your standard dollar slice; a Scarr’s slice is

PHOTO: JAKOB N. LAYMAN

The Maker: Chris Bianco, Tartine Bianco (757 S. Alameda St. Ste. 160, Los

Angeles) and Pizzeria Bianco (multiple locations, Phoenix)

The Philosophy: “Transparency about our ingredients lets customers say, I can support the farmer and a sustainable grain economy.”

The Pizza: Called flatbread at Tartine Bianco, it’s thick but surprisingly delicate. Try the lemon-rosemary-red onion.

The Maker: Joe Beddia, Pizzeria Beddia (1313 N. Lee St., Philadelphia)

The Philosophy: “My goal was to keep it simple and recognizable as an American-style pie, but elevated with nice ingredients.”

The Pizza: Finished with fresh herbs, cave-aged hard cheese and high-quality olive oil. The tomato pie, a nod to the old-school Philly staple, is not to be missed.

The Maker: Sarah Minnick, Lovely’s Fifty Fifty (4039 N. Mississippi Ave., Portland, Ore.)The Philosophy: “I work with my farmers so the pizza becomes very functional—what we get,

what we have to use.”The Pizza: A pillowy crust from a blend of five flours, with a crumb like the best bread, heaped

with seasonal toppings like morel mushrooms and marigolds.The Maker: Josey Baker, The Mill (736 Divisadero St., San Francisco)

The Philosophy: “It’s complex and reflects the subtlety and nuance of a laborious, multistage process.”

The Pizza: Wheat is sourced two hours away and milled in-house. The whole-grain, sourdough crust is hearty and chewy with subtle nutty notes, topped with cheese alone or seasonal produce.

The Maker: Rick Easton, Bread and Salt (435 Palisade Ave., Jersey City, N.J.)

The Philosophy: “All the ingredients, from flour to salt to toppings, have to be the best. Otherwise, why do it?”

The Pizza: Roman-style pizza al taglio (by the slice), long- fermented and deeply flavorful. The minimalist rossa, topped with tomatoes, perhaps best embodies Mr. Easton’s approach.

PHOTO: JASON VARNEY

PHOTO: CELESTE NOCHE FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

PHOTO: THE MORRISONS

Rick Easton, Bread and Salt PHOTO: NICO SCHINCO FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

Some of the best slices of pie I've ever had have been mom and pop places in NYC.
But then I'm a thin crust type of guy.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Bob78
I read the article yesterday. It missed two of the iconic pizza’s for me. Brier Hill pizza from Youngstown, OH and Pitz bar pizza from Hazleton, PA (Senape’s and Longo’s). Brier Hill has it’s own Wikipedia page.
 
  • Like
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I've never had deep dish but it looks awesome. I should make it a priority to travel to Chicago and try the real thing.

I've read that in Italy, American pizza is considered to be junk food and a poor imitation of the real thing. I guess it all depends on what you're used to. Where I live there is a small third generation family joint which is locally famous for its semi-thin crust pizza with a sweet sauce and American cheese. They do a great business. People who grew up here but have left the area often order several partially cooked pies and freeze them so they can take them home after they come back to visit. OTOH, people who didn't grow up here and taste the pizza for the first time generally don't like it.
 
Grew up outside of New Haven so I am very partial to New Haven-style pizza, Sally's, Pepe's, Modern. Or as they actually say there, apizza, not just pizza. If you've never had it, I highly recommend it. It is a thin crust style. My brother still lives in the area, and I always endeavor to have pizza from one of those places when I'm there.
 
I love reading about regional cuisine and its origin. As a Western PA native, I'm a diehard Ohio Valley pizza guy (and am so happy I can get it in Virginia), but definitely need to get out to some of these other places - you know, for science.

Western Pa? Specifically what area? Did you ever eat Tony's pizza in Sharon or Luigi's in Hermitage?
 
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I read the article yesterday. It missed two of the iconic pizza’s for me. Brier Hill pizza from Youngstown, OH and Pitz bar pizza from Hazleton, PA (Senape’s and Longo’s). Brier Hill has it’s own Wikipedia page.
Big O - you're from over the hill from Sharon. Did you ever have Tony's in Sharon or Luigi's in Hermitage?
 
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Have been to most of those; my mom's favorite is Buzzi's - you can buy the pizza uncooked and then cook it at your house, which is what she always preferred. I thought the business was for sale recently too. I'll add that Antony's at the Beaver Valley Mall has been there since I was a kid - they don't do a typical 'Ohio Valley' pizza style but it's always been solid and one of my favorites. Their Italian hoagies are fantastic too.
 
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Dominos, Pizza Hut, and Papa John's get all the national attention, but Tony's pizza is clearly the largest chain based on the above.
 
I can’t NOT get a Santucci’s pie when I’m driving around in north east Philly!
 
A few friends and I once ordered Papa John's, Pizza Hut, Domino's, and Little Caesar's at the same time. One medium cheese pizza and one medium pepperoni pizza. They were barf-ably bad, as I recall. I can't imagine why they make so much money -- 61% of all pizza sales go to the national chains. There is so much good pizza out there....
 
Grew up outside of New Haven so I am very partial to New Haven-style pizza, Sally's, Pepe's, Modern. Or as they actually say there, apizza, not just pizza. If you've never had it, I highly recommend it. It is a thin crust style. My brother still lives in the area, and I always endeavor to have pizza from one of those places when I'm there.
New Haven is the best American style pizza imo.
Can get it in Michigan at Tomatoes Apizza.
Not far from AA if you come out for a game.

And can we all agree that Chicago style pizza:
1 tastes like shit
2 is not pizza
 
Western Pa? Specifically what area? Did you ever eat Tony's pizza in Sharon or Luigi's in Hermitage?

Beaver County - so, that’s a little more north than my neck of the woods.
 
I've never had deep dish but it looks awesome. I should make it a priority to travel to Chicago and try the real thing.

I've read that in Italy, American pizza is considered to be junk food and a poor imitation of the real thing. I guess it all depends on what you're used to. Where I live there is a small third generation family joint which is locally famous for its semi-thin crust pizza with a sweet sauce and American cheese. They do a great business. People who grew up here but have left the area often order several partially cooked pies and freeze them so they can take them home after they come back to visit. OTOH, people who didn't grow up here and taste the pizza for the first time generally don't like it.

I've been to Italy and prefer American-style pizza by a mile. Italy has a big edge in pasta though.
 
There is also the always forgotten or maybe unknown to others, the jersey bar pie. Cracker thin, nothing fancy. Best had at pete and eldas, Vic’s or star tavern

I live 15 mins from Star. Their pizza is very good. Also like thin crust at Town Pub in Bloomfield.
Coming from Brooklyn, nothing really comes close to what we got in our neighborhood. Coney Island was 10 mins away, but no reason to go there when we had great pizza within walking distance.
 
I grew up eating Trenton tomato pies and love them still today. Spent some time in Chicago and still salivate over a deep dish from Lou Malnati's. I avoid all the chains and will always prefer a mom and pop. Life's too short to be eating crappy pizza.
 
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Dicarlos in wellsburg wv is my favorite. Been to various dicarlos all over including one in York pa, which was the worst of them. Burnt crust and not enough cheese.
 
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I love reading about regional cuisine and its origin. As a Western PA native, I'm a diehard Ohio Valley pizza guy (and am so happy I can get it in Virginia), but definitely need to get out to some of these other places - you know, for science.

New Haven pizza - delicious! Pepe’s vs Sal’s - the great debate (although Bar has a great pizza too, across from Louis Lunch)
 
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I'll take New Haven over anything else, but there is a lot of good pizza in the Northeast. Corning NY has Aniello's which is excellent
 
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I've never had deep dish but it looks awesome. I should make it a priority to travel to Chicago and try the real thing.

I've read that in Italy, American pizza is considered to be junk food and a poor imitation of the real thing. I guess it all depends on what you're used to. Where I live there is a small third generation family joint which is locally famous for its semi-thin crust pizza with a sweet sauce and American cheese. They do a great business. People who grew up here but have left the area often order several partially cooked pies and freeze them so they can take them home after they come back to visit. OTOH, people who didn't grow up here and taste the pizza for the first time generally don't like it.
It's different. Just got back from Italy. They have regional varieties too (both round and square and thin and thick crusts). Many types don't even use tomato sauce. But it's all good. Excepting perhaps the eggplant pizza I got at a Carrefour in Pompeii (I thought it was a large mushroom).
 
Mac and Manco (i’ll never call it anything else) OCNJ. The best.

We also liked Dewey’s pizza in the Cincy area when we lived there. The sauce had a kick. Maybe a little hot?

West Chester area now, hard to find good pizza. Anthony’s Coal Fired the other night was pretty good but they burn it per policy. WTF.
 
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Grew up outside of New Haven so I am very partial to New Haven-style pizza, Sally's, Pepe's, Modern. Or as they actually say there, apizza, not just pizza. If you've never had it, I highly recommend it. It is a thin crust style. My brother still lives in the area, and I always endeavor to have pizza from one of those places when I'm there.
I ate at Modern today. Excellent. The slightly charred crust is right up my alley.
 
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Western Pa? Specifically what area? Did you ever eat Tony's pizza in Sharon or Luigi's in Hermitage?
Can’t say that I have. Only Carmen’s and Sunrise Pizza in Warren.
 
I’ll second Judge on Manco and Manco in OCJN, in spite of their tax evasion conviction. They do a great thin crust pie and their help is required to cover their tattoos. Pacinnis on West Ave is also very good for their specialty pies.
 
I move from the NorthEast about 20 years ago. Outside of cheesesteaks, Pizza is the other food that the rest of the country just cant make properly. I was raised on greasy NEPA pizza and nothing else tastes right. Some great little hole in the wall , mom and pop pizza joints in NEPA. Nino's was a mainstay for us in HS because the owners daughter went to school with us. I enjoyed Brothers in State college back in the day. I stopped in while in town a few years ago and it just wasn't as good as I remembered.
 
Mac and Manco (i’ll never call it anything else) OCNJ. The best.
We also liked Dewey’s pizza in the Cincy area when we lived there. The sauce had a kick. Maybe a little hot?
West Chester area now, hard to find good pizza. Anthony’s Coal Fired the other night was pretty good but they burn it per policy. WTF.
Anthony’s Coal Fired is very good pizza. It’s not burnt, it’s well done! Also, it’s partially owned by jerot’s boy Cocaine Danny
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Does this guy look like he partied too much? Wait, don’t answer that! ;)
 
That article mentioned Pizzaria Bianco in Phoenix/Scottsdale several times. I have been to the restaurants several times. It’s awesome. I was there just last week.
I was at a pizzeria in the Phoenix area about 15 years ago that was also a brewery. The pizza was good but the beer was excellent. I know that's vague but any idea what the name might be?
 
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