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Receta The Pizza Trilogy – Chicago Style.
by Mary Cokenour

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The Pizza Trilogy – Chicago Style.

Chicago Style Pizza can be mistaken as a deep dish pan

pizza. While both are baked in a deep,

round heavy aluminum pan, the crust and technique cannot compare between the

two. The dough is made differently from

regular pizza dough; thicker and moister to keep from drying out and burning

during baking. The assembly of the pizza itself is unique; the cheese on the

bottom, additional ingredients in the center, and a tomato mixture on top. With Chicago style pizza, the cheese goes

beneath the sauce to create a barrier between the crust, sauce and additional

ingredients.

Is this type of pizza Italian or American in origin? The answer is both. In 1880, while the Hole in the Rock pioneers

were traveling to, and settling in, Bluff; Italian immigrants were moving to

Chicago from the east coast. Like other

ethnic groups before and after, they were being subjugated to economic,

political, social, and religious discrimination. By 1920, Chicago housed the third largest

population of Italians, and American born descendants; and I bet many are

hearing in their minds…Mafia. With the

Prohibition Era (1920-1933), Al Capone and many of his cohorts were able to

come into power; but this article is about pizza, not alcohol and crime lords.

1940s, World War 2 in full rampage, food being rationed;

concerns over “bringing our boys home safe” and “how do we feed our families

here at home”. Wheat flour, corn oil,

salt and yeast were not as severely rationed as meats, fruits and

vegetables. The first four ingredients

were necessary for making dough; adding the few bits of meats and vegetables, a

complete meal could be created…pizza!

However, to feed hungry laborers, it had to be more substantial than a

thin crust Naples slice, or breadier Sicily square. At home, to ease some of the tension of war,

families ate meals together; at the set table, plates, utensils, linen

tablecloth and napkins. The dough was

covered with thick cheese, the minimal meats and vegetables chopped and layered

next, a rich tomato sauce poured over all; baked and served in a deep pan, like

a casserole. Bellies became full,

stories were told of daily events at school and work; war was forgotten about,

if only for a brief time.

So, you go to pizza places, like Pizza Hut and Old

Chicago (Grand Junction, CO), that use basic dough and the assembly is the same

as a standard pizza: dough, sauce, cheese, toppings (if any). It is baked in a

deep dish pan, called “Deep Dish” or “Chicago style”, but are you getting the

real deal? If you want authentic Chicago style, then travel

to Chicago! Cannot fit that into your

travel plans, order online for home delivery.

No, I am not kidding, a few Chicago restaurants will deliver all over

the USA!

Uno Pizzeria and Grill, established 1943 (http://www.unos.com/)

or Lou Malnati’s, established 1971 (http://www.loumalnatis.com/) are

two of the best when it comes to pizza.

The pizza is assembled, frozen, shipped and each comes in oven ready,

aluminum lined paper baking pans.

Intrigued with other delicacies of the Chicago, Illinois region? Tastes of Chicago (http://www.tastesofchicago.com/)

makes it possible to order online to have pizza, and many other goodies,

delivered to your front door. While

supermarket shopping, check the pizza frozen section; once in a great while,

Chicago pizza can be found and that is definitely a treat.

Now if you are a daring type, like me, then you will take

on the challenge of making this type of pizza yourself.

Here is the basic information, so have fun:

Pizza Dough for

Chicago Style Pizza

This type of pizza dough is thicker; it cooks in a deep

dish pan and would burn if it was thinner like New York style pizza dough.

However, the exposed dough, not covered with sauce, cheese and other

ingredients, comes out crispy and light. This dough is best made using a stand

mixer and the dough hook attachment due to the thickness and moistness of the

dough.

come out perfectly the first time. Trial

and error are all part of the learning experience which only becomes more fun

as time and practice go on.

Mary Cokenour