Let’s talk about pizza. I’m a serious pizza lover, but I must say that I rarely opt for the Chicago deep dish variety. Normally these are just really doughy and too heavy and filling. I’ve had some good deep dish in Chicago, and I like that, but 99% of the deep dishes I’ve had elsewhere I find to be pretty miserable.
This recipe was seriously a game changer for me. This deep dish pizza was the first thing I’ve made out of my new Cook’s Illustrated subscription and they hit this one out of the freakin’ galaxy. The toppings are perfect, the crust is flaky, and the whole deal is just scrumptious.
When you think about it, even if you are making this from scratch, it’s really only a few steps! Make the crust. Make the sauce. Grate some cheese. Bake the pizza!
How hard could that be? As you can imagine, the devil is in the details as they say.
The one thing I would not recommend skipping for this recipe is the crust. It really makes it happen. If you had to save time, you could buy jarred sauce I guess.
Deep Dish Pizza with Ricotta and Olives
Ingredients
Deep Dish Pizza Dough:
- 3 ¼ Cups 16.25 ounces unbleached all-purpose flour
- ½ Cup 2.75 ounces semolina flour (original recipe uses yellow cornmeal)
- 1 ½ Teaspoons salt
- 2 Teaspoons sugar
- 2 ¼ Teaspoons instant yeast
- 1 ¼ Cups water, 10 ounces, at room temperature
- 7 Tablespoons unsalted butter, (3 melted, 4 softened)
- 1 Teaspoon olive oil, for bread
- 4 Tablespoons olive oil , for pans
Sauce:
- 2 Tablespoons unsalted butter
- 1 medium onion, grated in grater
- ½ Teaspoon dried oregano
- 2 cloves garlic, minced
- Pinch of salt
- ¼ Teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes, my addition
- 1 28 ounce can crushed tomatoes
- ¼ Teaspoon sugar
- 2 Tablespoons coarsely chopped fresh basil
- 1 Tablespoon olive oil
- Ground pepper to taste
Toppings: (Enough for 2 pizzas)
- 1 pound whole milk mozzarella cheese, shredded
- ¼ Cup grated Parmesan cheese
- ½ Cup kalamata olives, coarsely chopped
- ½ Cup ricotta cheese
- ½ Cup chopped arugula, optional
Instructions
- Add all dry ingredients to a bowl and mix well, then slowly add water and melted butter until the dough ball comes together. Knead this for 8-10 minutes until the dough is glossy and smooth.
- In a mixer, beat dough for 5-6 minutes with the dough hook on medium.
- Let ball of dough rise in a lightly oiled bowl for about an hour or until it doubles in size.
- Turn dough out onto a lightly floured surface and roll it out to roughly a 16 by 12 rectangle.
- Spread on softened butter leaving about 1/2 inch around the edges of the dough.
- Roll up the dough like a cigar. Cut the dough roll in half. For each half fold into thirds. Pinch the seams around the dough to form a ball.
- Let dough rise a second time in your fridge for 60 minutes.
- For sauce, melt butter in a pan over medium-high heat. Then add onions (grated with a box grater, not chopped) along with dried spices and pinch of salt. Let cook for a few minutes until the onions are slightly browned.
- Add garlic, tomatoes (including juice), and sugar. Bring to simmer and let it reduce for 25 minutes or so on low heat. Once it is reduced, stir in chopped basil and olive oil and ground pepper. Set aside to cool.
- Preheat oven to 425 degrees.
- Roll dough ball into about a 15 inch diameter circle.
- Add 2 Tablespoons of oil to cake pan and then add pizza crust. Mush the dough into all the corners of the pan and crimp it around the edges.
- Add about two cups of shredded mozzarella cheese to the bottom, followed by 1.5 cups (or about half) of your marinara sauce. Add a thin layer of grated Parmesan and dot the top with olives and ricotta cheese.
- Bake 425 for about 30 minutes. Let this cool for 5 minutes before chopping into it!
Notes
Nutrition
Did you make this recipe?
Kind of looks like a lot of ingredients, but the dough ingredients are pretty basic and I had most of the sauce ingredients on hand also.
Making the dough
Deep dish pizza dough has a reputation of being very bready. And not in a good way. This recipe takes a page out of the laminated doughs department (think pastry and croissant!) to produce a good dough that can hold all the toppings, but also is very flaky.
To make the dough, add all your dry ingredients to a bowl and mix well, then slowly add your water and melted butter until the dough ball comes together. Knead this for 8-10 minutes until the dough is glossy and smooth.
Now allow me a minute to gush. I We got our first wedding gift this last weekend from Betsy’s mom, a KitchenAid stand mixer! I put it to work immediately for this recipe!
Beat it for 5-6 minutes with the dough hook on medium and the dough was perfect!
Next let your ball of dough rise in an lightly oiled bowl (that’s what the 1 Teaspoon of oil is for in the recipe) for about an hour or until it doubles in size.
Laminating the dough
This is an amazing technique. I was a bit skeptical that it would work, but it worked perfectly.
Turn your dough out onto a lightly floured surface and roll it out to roughly a 16 by 12 rectangle. Then spread on your softened butter leaving about 1/2 inch around the edges of the dough. Roll up the dough like a cigar!
Then cut the dough roll in half. For each half fold into thirds (think of a business letter – lower left photo). Then pinch the seams around the dough to form a ball. If you wanted you could freeze your dough at this point for future use or return them to your lightly oiled bowl to rise again.
I froze one and used one. For the dough you are using, let it rise a second time in your fridge for 60 minutes. This will get the butter cold which will make the final crust even flakier!
Making the Marinara
This is a pretty standard marinara. The one trick they used is to grate the onion using a box grater. This was much harder (and produced many more tears) than just mincing the onion normally. I see their point though. It did make the onion almost melt into the sauce and gave it a great consistency.
To start, melt your butter in a pan over medium-high heat. Then add your onions along with your dried spices and pinch of salt. Let that cook for a few minutes until the onions are slightly browned. Then add your garlic, tomatoes (including juice), and sugar. Bring that to simmer and let it reduce for 25 minutes or so on low heat.
Once it is reduced, stir in your chopped basil and olive oil and ground pepper. Set aside to cool!
Making the Pizza!
Get all your toppings ready and preheat your oven to 425 degrees. No need for a pizza stone for this recipe! Then pull your dough ball out of the fridge. Roll it into about a 15 inch diameter circle. Mine was really easy to work with actually.
Add 2 Tablespoons of oil to your cake pan and then add your pizza crust. The oil is really important. It lightly fries the crust which produces a crispy layer on the outside while keeping the inside moist and flaky.
Mush the dough into all the corners of the pan and crimp it around the edges. It’s okay if it isn’t perfect.
Then add about two cups of shredded mozzarella cheese to the bottom, followed by 1.5 cups (or about half) of your marinara sauce. Then add a thin layer of grated Parmesan and dot the top with olives and ricotta cheese.
Bake this guy at 425 for about 30 minutes. The crust should be golden brown around the edges and the cheese should be melted.
It’ll be hard, but let this cool for 5 minutes before chopping into it!
The first piece is kind of hard to get out, but man was this a good piece of pizza. Honestly, I had pretty low expectations and they were completely blown away.
I still think I might prefer the thin crust variety of pizza over this, but this version at least reminded me how it’s possible to like deep dish pizza.
It put deep dish pizza back in the mix of awesome possibilities. And that’s all you can ever really ask from a recipe!
Dan
wow.
as a "pizza guy", and a hater of deep dish, I have to say that I am SUPER impressed by this. I have never seen a deep dish pizza with that kind of cross section / "crumb". usually its all oily and dense. nice work.
Rex
Congrats on the Kitchen Aid Mixer. You must be extremely excited. Nice looking pizza.
Kristine
mmmmmmm looks good! Nice wedding gift. I'm thinking about divorcing my husband and marrying him again so I can register for a Kitchenaid but that probably won't fly.
dawn
dude that first photo? KILLER! I love my cake pan for deep dish. I am a HUGE pizza lover too. When I'm not in the mood for making my own dough, I have used the multi-grain premade dough from whole foods. Amazing. I thought multi-grain would be horrible, no way, it was so full of taste and perfect texture. Plus it kept in the freezer perfectly.
Jason Sandeman
Very nice of you to come over to the dark side! My mother owned a pizzaria, indeed, that was my start of cooking. Thing is, you are right. A bad deep-dish pizza is a monster. The usual problem stems from people piling on way too many toppings. I have a rule: if there are more than 3 toppings (aside from the cheese,) GET BENT! Your pizza will end up soggy no matter what you do. Less is more, as in the case of the pizza you made. The only thing that would have made it better, is if you made the ricotta yourself. Trust me, nothing beats homemade ricotta!
Good job Nick!
Mimi
Someone should have warned me it would be bread porn week on Macheesmo. Great looking pie, man!
Sarah @ Semi-Sweet
I have been craving pizza all a.m. (not unusual) and then this pops up in my reader . . . cruel. I am making this Sunday night for sure. I am a huge Cook's Illustrated fan. As for the mixer – my dear grandma, an awesome baker, gave me my KitchenAid stand mixer for my wedding and to this day it is one of my all-time most cherished possessions. I'm going on 10 years of wedded bliss – to my dear husband and my mixer . . . mazel tov to you, Betsy & The Mixer!
Nick
Hmmm… I don’t know Kristine… might be worth it!
William
I have been eyeing this recipe in CI and am so glad to hear it is worth making! I love pizza, but like you, deep dish is not the first style I reach for. I can't wait to give this a try.
Nick
@William. Yea. This pizza made me reconsider some of my life choices….
Bec
Man! That looks fabulous, now I'm craving pizza! ;-) Congrats on the mixer, they are pretty awesome…no fair on you getting your wedding present early though! I had to wait until I was married to get MY mixer, so I'm jealous!
The Wind Attack
Oh man that pizza looks sublime. Especially the crust. You are right, most deep dish pizza outside of chicago fails to get the crust right, but yours looks oh so nice and flakey. And the olives on there… swoon!
Jim
Wow! You hit it right on! That layering with the butter has to be the trick! I'd like to share a couple things with you. The tomatoes used are from a California company called Escalon, they sell a heavy puree called "6 in 1" that is used by all the big name restaurants that sell deep dish. Also, "yellow" food coloring is used to make you think corn meal is an ingredient, but cornmeal is too "gritty!" I'm going to try that layering with butter, maybe some light olive oil?
donrahi
I must say that this pizza looks amazing!! My wife and I live in manhattan and are trying to find the perfect delivery pizza with garlic and mushroom (fresh) toppings. Can't find anything close to what we had in Brooklyn. So, we are making lots of our own pizza to great success. And our girls are beside themselves!
Thanks!
donrahi
I'm going to make this tomorrow night for after the tree trimming. Cheers and thanks!
Becky
This looks amazing!! I just got my wisdom teeth pulled today but when I can chew again I am making this pizza! Love your photography too.
Chris
Now THAT is a pie, isn't it?
Kevin
That deep dish pizza looks so good!
Thrifty DC Cook
I got my first Kitchen Aid mixer this week for my birthday. I've made cookies so far and I LOVE IT! Can't wait to make some pizza dough.
Emily P.
Damn that looks good. Gotta love Cook's Illustrated–New Best Recipe is my bible.
Angela@SpinachTiger
I'm very much like you. I only like thin crust, but this recipe has me totally intrigued to try.
corinne
My friend Sean and I made mushroom bacon and sausage pizzas tonight loosely based on this. Sean declared it the best pizza ever.
We also made cheesecake salad. I am ever so fat!
Debbie
Thanks so much for this recipe and the pics do help! I am making this tomorrow and cannot wait!
cami
I'm italian…this is a cake…pizza is pizza.
MikeFresnoUrban
Wow this looks so so good I can't wait to try it out for myself.
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