Posted on 02/07/2017 10:42:28 PM PST by nickcarraway
With few exceptions, New York has always been a round-pie, thin-crust town. (They dont call it a regular slice for nothing.) Recently, though, the square has stepped into the spotlight, thanks largely to an obscure midwestern interloper called Detroit-style pizza, which arrived in Williamsburg last spring and proceeded to give our hometown Sicilian something of an inferiority complex. Luckily, a local movement was happening at the same time, with talented bakers reinvigorating old forms like the grandma pie and the upside-down Sicilian, and rogue Italian pizzaioli rebelling against the Neapolitan orthodoxy with newfangled Roman pizza al taglio and souped-up focaccia. The hottest pies of the moment dont sag or flop or fold. And who can resist pizza dough thats essentially fried to a crisp along the edges and on the bottom in a well-oiled pan? Thats the beauty of the square. Its made of sturdier stuff for worrisome times firmer crusts, deeper doughs, longer bakes, and heartier toppings. Here, a taxonomy of styles and where to find them.
The Unrounds
GRANDMA
Thin-to-medium-thin pan pizza that references the pies nonnas baked at home for their families. Its said that the name, if not the style, made its debut at King Umbertos on Long Island in the 80s. Brooklyn-born pie man Nino Coniglio, whose passion for pizza takes both retro and newfangled forms, has spread the grandma gospel around town at both locations of Williamsburg Pizza (265 Union Ave., Williamsburg, and 277 Broome St.) and at Brooklyn Pizza Crew (758 Nostrand Ave., Crown Heights).
DETROIT
Its twice baked, and the sauce goes on top of the cheese, but Detroit-style pizza is all about the racy, lacy, Friulian-frico-like fence of fromage that forms around the edges. Cooked in special steel pans with tall, angled sides (originally, trays for holding automotive parts), its not unlike some ethereal cross between Sicilian and Chicago deep dish. Buddys Rendezvous in Detroit invented it in 1946, and Emmy Squared (364 Grand St., Williamsburg) made it a thing in Brooklyn 70 years later. Emmy chef Matt Hyland shared tips and resources with Dale Talde, who serves several creatively topped versions at Massoni (11 E. 31st St.), and Williamsburg Pizzas Coniglio occasionally offers a semi-secret riff he calls Not Detroit Style, so as not to provoke puristsor maybe its to dismiss them.
PIZZA AL TAGLIO
Roman-style bakery pizza, long planks of dough cooked in pans or directly on the oven floor and cut into crisp, thin squares (al taglio means by the slice). Antico Forno on Romes Campo dei Fiori is famous for it, and in New York, so is Sullivan St Bakery (533 W. 47th St.). At Grand Centrals Prova Pizzabar (89 E. 42nd St.), Donatella Arpaia makes an impressive (and much more robust) hybrid version from great ingredients more often associated with Naples-style pizza.
SICILIAN
Tall, soft, and spongy, the Sicilian square is characterized by a dough thats given ample time to rise. L&B Spumoni Gardens in Bensonhurst (2725 86th St.), where they heap the tomato sauce on top of the cheese instead of the other way around, is a mecca for aficionados of this New York style that, oddly enough, some say doesnt really exist in Sicily. (See sfinciuni.)
SFINCIUNI
This focaccialike Sicilian-bakery pizza garnished with onions, anchovy, and bread crumbs is the precursor to the New York Sicilian style. If you time it right, you can get it at Prince Street Pizza in Nolita (27 Prince St.), where it goes under the alias Broadway Breadcrumb, and also at Brooklyn Pizza Crew.
THIN-CRUST SICILIAN
Its a bit of an oxymoron in that the defining characteristic of the New York Sicilian style is its puffy height. Essentially, TCS is what is now more commonly referred to as grandma style. But Rizzos in Astoria (30-13 Steinway St.) has been calling its exceptionally crunchy squares thin-crust Sicilian since 1959.
FOCACCIA
Flatbread ancestor to pizza of many permutations. The variously topped version at Eataly (200 Fifth Ave. and 101 Liberty St.) is soft and springy with a superrich flavor derived from great olive oil and long fermentation. Strictly speaking, it may not be pizza, but it looks like pizza, it tastes like pizza, and its among the most delicious squares of dough youll find in New York or anywhere.
PIZZA IN PALA
Twice-baked pizza served on a wooden pala (paddle), and similar in style to hearth-baked pizza al taglio, but thicker and softer with a thick, slightly pronounced cornicione. At the otherwise Neapolitan pizzeria, Ribalta (48 E. 12th St.), it starts off square, but ends up sliced into triangles funnily en ough, the exact opposite of those round midwestern-style pizzas served sliced into tiny squares known as party cut.
well as long as you don;t comment on New York Cheesecakes, we will survive
GOT ME GOOD!!! :(
Milford, Penna.- Deep Dish Sicilian (square)
75 minutes West of NYC, right across the river from Port Jervis , NY
maybe they got to say when all the non Italians order :)
Square hamburger? Wendy’s. Bun is still round.
Thanks for the molto yummy ping.
The first pizza place in my neighborhood - and my introduction to pizza as a kid - was a family-run carryout, and the pizza was always rectangular. I’ve never had such a good pizza since, but I don’t think it was the shape ;-)
They made great meatballs, too.
Youngsters will not remember, but in the 70’s during the era of the Pet Rock, there was a thing called the Square Egg. It was like a tiny grape press on a tiny Lucite box, iirc, and you put a hard boiled egg into it.
I only bring this up because I sense a comeback.
In New York, you eat Brooklyn-style pizza.
Big slice you fold over to eat on the run.
we have a couple local pizza joints that do a good job...
but for a major brand... we think Round Table is still the best pizzas (very expensive nowadays, really NOT worth it.... tho you can usually get a couple dineros discount by checking at their website for coupons)
I hadn’t heard of Round Table. We don’t have them in the East.
I guess here, the Ledo’s pizza is one of the best.
once i was in the costco checkout line and a costco lady came up and asked if we’d like some pizza and we said sure (figuring she was gonna give us a “free sample” slice) and she put an entire meter-wide super-sized pizza in our cart, ha!
costco pizzas are OK but not spectacular except that their price is excellent, a bargain for what you get.
(the best things at costco are their wonderful $1.49 hotdogs at the snack bar and you can still get saurkraut too just ask is all) and their huge delicious $4.99 rotisserie chickens..both items the very best quality in town by far AND super cheap too...both features together .... but the pizzas are ok except be careful if you buy a frozen one to cook at home because it won’t fit in our oven we have to chop it up first, ha!)
Now this is the real #pizzagate...
They have been around since 1921.
I’ll have a slice of the Noriega
I have one of those, purchased solely to impress and make a conversation piece in a dish for a party. Haven’t used it yet for a party yet, but it works! You have to put the boiled egg in while it’s still warm, and then chill it for awhile. Comes out square :-)
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