Hopefully discussions of pizza styles other than Chicago-style are not verboten on LTH.
A couple weeks ago, my friends and I embarked on a tour of some of the classic Detroit-style pizza places in Detroit - Buddy's, Loui's, Cloverleaf and Detroit Style Pizza Co.
For the unitiated, the defining characteristics of a Detroit-style pizza are the soft and airy square crust, the crunchy exterior, and the caramelized cheese that edges the pizza. The pizzas are baked in a square steel pan - the original purpose of the pans was for spare parts in the auto factories.
The square pans give the pizza the unique cheese crust a layer of sharp cheese is spread all the way to the edges, which crisps up perfectly during baking.
Buddy's is the gold standard for pizza in Detroit. It was at Buddy's original location at 6-Mile and Conant where Detroit-style pizza was invnted by Gus Guerra. The "Detroiter" with pepperoni and shaved parmesean is the pinnacle of pizza in the D.
Gus later left Buddy's and founded Cloverleaf and was our second stop on our tour. You can see in the pic below that Cloverleaf's crust was very well done, almost to the point of being burnt. It was nice and crunchy. The pepperoni didn't crisp up as nicely as Buddy's though and the bottom of the crust didn't get all that crispy either.
Next on our tour was relative newcomer Detroit Style Pizza Co, founded by Gus Guerra mentee Shawn Randazzo. Shawn previously ran two locations of Cloverleaf, but took ownership of them recently and opened up them under the new name of Detroit Style Pizza Co. Shawn does a bit of an updated take on the classic with his Marghertia in the D pizza with fresh basil, roasted garlic, red onions and plain crushed tomatoes. The crust was just about perfect, crispy on the outside and soft and airy on the inside.
Finally, we made it to Loui's in Hazel Park. Loui's was founded by a long-time chef of the original Buddy's. Not surprisingly, the crusts at both places were remarkably similar - which is to say delicious. I think Loui's uses a milder cheese. Detroit-style pizza typically does not use plain mozzarella. Although no one knows for certain, most places seem to use either a wisconsin "brick" cheese or a mild white cheddar. Buddy's ups the sharpness on theirs with shaved parmesean.
A couple weeks ago, I was asked by the people behind the Pure Michigan campaign to write a post for them on something food-related that is uniquely Michigan. My post went up today on the Pure Michigan site:
All Square: A History of Detroit-Style Pizza.
The director's cut can be found at my blog
Great Lakes, Better Food.Buddy's (various locations around the Detroit area)
http://www.buddyspizza.com/Loui's - Hazel Park
http://louispizza.net/Cloverleaf - Eastpointe, MI
http://www.cloverleafrestaurant.com/Detroit Style Pizza Co. - St. Clair Shores and Clinton Township
http://detroitstylepizza.co/I still can't believe there isn't any Detroit-style pizza in Chicago with all the displaced Michiganders living there.
Tony