"Detroit-style pizza was originally baked in rectangular steel trays designed for use as automotive drip pans or to hold small industrial parts in factories."
I live in Ohio and have no idea what Ohio-valley style Pizza is. Is that a thing? Is this a joke? Am I a joke to you? (I mean, it's justifiable. I live in Ohio after all)
The only places I’ve heard of that have the balls to speak their names in proximity to NYC and Chicago are Detroit and New Haven, CT.
Detroit Pizza is fucking great, especially with extra sauce and I haven’t had New Haven pizza but have been told it’s too big of a range to say that it’s all good pizza.
This person must be from Chicago if they are describing their tomato casserole as a pizza. If Chicago can have their pizza crime, let others do as they please and get off your high horse.
Let's not even get into how overrated New York pizza is.
St. Louis-style pizza is one of the most disgusting things I've ever eaten.
The style has a thin cracker-like crust made without yeast, generally uses Provel cheese, and is cut into squares or rectangles instead of wedges.
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Provel is a trademark for a combination of three cheeses (provolone, Swiss, and white cheddar) used instead of (or, rarely, in addition to) the mozzarella or provolone common to other styles of pizza.
In Steubenville, Ohio, and other Ohio River towns, local pizzerias dole out square pies covered with piles of cold — uncooked — grated cheese. Known as Ohio Valley-style pizza, these crisp-crust pies come out of the oven with just a coating of tomato sauce and are then covered with fresh cheese and often pepperoni. Each bite is warm, cool and crunchy all at once.
I've said it before and I'll say it again: I love Pizza Hut. Please don't kill me.
I'm kind of an anti-snob, though. I'll try just about any pizza and enjoy it. Some are certainly better than others, but most of them are pretty great.
Yeah, I know. I'm a philistine.
How do people feel about the places that make quick pizzas to order like Mod and Blaze?
Ohio Valley pizza is not what I thought it was. I grew up in Ohio and the only time I ate something that even reminds me of that was actually in Florence, Italy, oddly.
I grew up on Central Ohio tiny-pepperoni'd, square-cut pizzas.
Today, Detroit is probably my fave, followed by what is more-or-less a tie between NY and Chicago Deep Dish depending upon my mood. Ohio pizza still holds a place in my heart, but it's definitely not in the top 3.
I'm a born and raised Californian, but even I would not eat or endorse a Californian style pizza.
I would, however, endorse the local brewery's spicy Hawaiian style pizza. Spam, pineapple, and pickled and caramelized jalapenos with a spicy marinara sauce. The jalapenos are what makes it. They are so freakin' good.
AFAIK, Milwaukee makes no claim to a particular style of pizza. We just make beer that goes damn well with any style - Lakefront Brewery’s Riverwest Stein being my top pick.
Cincinnati has a pizza with fucking chilli on it. It was on the menu at the place I was at, and the bartender said it's somewhat of a local delicacy. I asked her if there was anything special about the chilli. Yeah, there's sugar in it, and it's sweet. I laughed in her face and took a hard pass. Apparently they also put it on spaghetti. Fuck both of those dishes, I don't need any Cincinnati "culture".
PA has "Altoona style" and "Old Forge style", both hailing from miserable coal bust towns and consisting more or less of a slice of american "cheese" and red sauce on a sheet crust, I think one has a green pepper under it.
This popped up in my recommendations yesterday. There's a ton of regional styles I've never heard about. Ohio Valley is in there. At least that's recognizable as pizza. Some of these stretch the definition pretty thin.
New York pizza is absolute fucking trash. If it's thin crust it needs to be crisp like Neopolitan. NY style has the mouthfeel of microwaved day old paper bags.
the hilarity here is that nyc pizza is pedestrian trash. any 'pie' you can fold like a newspaper isn't worth the time. detroit, chicago, hell, give me classic Neapolitan pizzas, so much more interesting than weakly sauced floppy dough 'from the city'.