Discover the authentic Chicago-style deep dish pizza, made with a crunchy flaky crust and garnished with thick layers of cheese and tomato sauce. This deep dish pizza recipe is an attempt at recreating Lou Malnati’s pizza, which in my opinion, is the best deep dish pizza in Chicago. I am very proud of the result as it is very close to the original recipe, while still being a very easy deep dish pizza recipe.
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My favorite Chicago-style pizza!
For my Chicago birthday
To celebrate 1 year as a foodie in Chicago, I baked a giant Chicago-Style Deep Dish Pizza. I have tried countless deep dish pizza recipes them since I moved to Chicago, but it was my very first attempt to bake it myself. Being a huge fan of deep dish pizzas, I was quite exigent with the result I expected both in terms of taste and texture. While reviewing the existing deep dish pizza recipes, I found out that there were many different ones that had nothing to do with each other. It’s easy to get lost! So I simply tried to recreate my very favorite deep dish pizza, the one from Lou Malnati’s. No need to wait longer here to tell you the result. A complete success. I’m so happy I found how to make the perfect (in my own opinion) deep dish pizza.
An easy recipe for an amazing result!
Thing is, there are plenty of different recipes trying to recreate the Lou Malnati’s pizza. I looked at different forums and found many passionate people competing about it. Some of the recipes seemed a little bit advanced to make, and I wanted an easier version, something everyone could do at home, no matters the cooking skills, advanced or beginner and that is what I created for you here.
So first things first, you may wonder:
What’s a Chicago-style deep dish pizza ?
And what makes it different from the classic Italian pizza? That’s a good question actually, as they have absolutely nothing to do with each other. The look is different, the texture is different, the taste is different. To begin with, a Chicago-style deep dish pizza is baked in a deep dish cake pan (!). It consists of a crunchy flaky crust with edges going up in the pan, and garnished with generous layers of cheese and tomato sauce. Not your regular flat and thin pizza.
The crust is very different in taste and texture from the classic thin-crust pizza. Even between the different deep dish pizzas you can try in Chicago, the crust is different from one place to another, some of them can be soft, other crunchy. I definitely go for the very thin crunchy buttery one, that is by far my favorite.
An easy version of Lou Malnati’s pizza dough recipe
The important thing to have in mind is that there is an ingredient that makes all the difference: the use of yellow cornmeal, that bring this crunchy texture to the crust. Another difference between a deep dish pizza recipe and a classic pizza crust is the use of butter. Some recipes use butter only, other prefer to use a mix of butter and oil to get a perfect crunchy texture. This last option is what I went for, also because it makes the dough easier to work with. While the use of butter only, implies that you laminate the dough (a specific technique that takes a little bit longer and can discourage some of you – which I didn’t want), my deep dish pizza crust recipe does not require any special technique which makes it a version everyone can make in less than 10 minutes, even when you are a beginner!
Once the dough is ready, stretch it out just enough to fit the pan. Then, in order to give the crust its perfect texture on the edges, we usually recommend to use your fingers to press the dough into cake pan. You want to make sure this is nice and tight fitting inside the pan.
Talking about the pan, what pan to use for a deep dish pizza? You’ll notice here that I used a cast-iron skillet, but traditionally you would bake your pizza inside a 9-inch deep dish pan with at least 2-inch height. Or just use your regular cake spring form.
Now, the Chicago-style pizza sauce
Deep dish pizza is not only about the crust, it’s all about the generous and thick layers of cheese and tomato sauce. Because of it, you need fork and knife to eat your Chicago-style deep dish pizza. Again, this is not a regular pizza from which you grab a slice with your hands. With a deep dish pizza, you’re pretty sure to make a big mess around if you want to try. Regarding the tomatoes, make sure you use a can of crushed tomatoes (don’t go for diced tomatoes!), as it makes a big difference in texture. Also, you’ll want to do a quick drain of the crushed tomatoes beforehand (about 10 minutes in a colander).
In my deep dish pizza recipe here, I used Italian sausage, as it is my very favorite version at Lou Malnati’s (surprisingly enough, as I am usually not a huge fan of meat).
Then it’s all about the layers! Make sure you always start with the layer of mozzarella (use sliced mozzarella, not shredded) rather than using it last. This ensure that the cheese on top doesn’t burn because of the longer baking time this pizza requires compared to a thin crust. Then, add a layer of Italian sausage, the tomato sauce, and finish up with some grated parmesan cheese on top.
To go the extra mile…
FAQ about the Chicago-style deep dish pizza
- Can you skip the meat in the recipe? Absolutely. For a vegetarian version (called “The Lou” at Lou Malnati’s), skip the sausage and replace with a mix of spinach, mushrooms or artichokes. For this version, I would sauté the veggies beforehand to remove any liquid. Now that I told you everything, it’s your turn to bake your own Chicago-style deep dish pizza. Hope you’ll like it!
- Can you freeze/reheat the deep dish pizza? Yes, the deep dish freezes indeed very well. Just place the slices (or half of the pizza) into a ziploc bag, then place in the refrigerator up to 3 months. When ready to eat, remove from the freezer and reheat in a 350°F (180°C) oven until thawed and warm, about 15-20 minutes.
- Can you bake the dough in advance? I wouldn’t recommend it as the dough will loose its crusty texture. However, you can prepare the dough in advance, store it wrapped with cling film in the fridge overnight and then bake the following day.
And for thin crust pizzas, try also:
- 100% Whole Wheat Pizza Dough
- Whole Wheat Mediterranean Pizza Star Ring
- Butternut Squash and Brussels Sprout Whole Wheat Pizza
- Smoked Salmon Pizza with Capers
- Feta and Red Onion Pizza
- Fig & Goat Cheese Pizza
Chicago-Style Deep Dish Pizza
- Prep Time: 2 hours
- Cook Time: 20 mins
- Total Time: 2 hours 20 mins
- Yield: 1 large pizza 1x
- Category: Savory
- Cuisine: American recipes
Discover the authentic Chicago-style deep dish pizza, made with a crunchy flaky crust and garnished with thick layers of cheese and tomato sauce.
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Ingredients
For the crust:
- 1 1/4 teaspoon instant dry yeast
- 1 teaspon sugar
- 1/2 cup (120 ml) lukewarm water
- 2 cups (240g) all-purpose flour
- 1 1/2 Tablespoon yellow corn meal
- 3/4 teaspoon salt
- 2 Tablespoons (30g) butter, melted and slightly cold
- 1 Tablespoon canola oil
- 1 Tablespoon olive oil (for greasing the bowl only)
For the tomato sauce:
- 2 Tablespoons olive oil
- 1 small onion, grated or minced
- 1 Tablespoon dried oregano
- 1/2 Tablespoon crushed red pepper flakes (optional)
- 3 garlic cloves, minced
- 1 can (28 oz/793g) crushed tomatoes with basil
- 2 teaspoons tomato paste
For the filling:
- 6 oz (170g) mozzarella cheese, sliced
- 2 Italian sausages, sliced (optional)
- 2–3 Tablespoons (30-45g) parmesan cheese
Instructions
For the crust:
- In a small bowl, combine the active dry yeast, sugar, and lukewarm water together and let sit for one minute. In a large mixing bowl, combine the flour, cornmeal, and salt. Add the yeast mixture, melted butter and canola oil into the dry ingredients and stir until dough forms.
- Bring the dough to a floured surface and knead until it forms a smooth ball.
- Move the dough to large bowl drizzled with olive oil. Coat the dough in oil and cover and let rest for 1 hour.
For the tomato sauce:
- In the meantime, prepare the tomato sauce: heat the olive oil in a medium saucepan and add the grated onion, salt, oregano, and red pepper flakes. Once the onion has slightly browned, add the garlic, tomato sauce*, and tomato paste. Turn the heat down to low-medium and allow to simmer until it’s hearty, fragrant, and thick- about 30 minutes, or until the amount has reduced. It has to be thick Remove from heat and set aside until ready to be used.
For assembling the deep dish pizza:
- Preheat your oven to 425°F (215°C).
- Remove the dough and bring it onto a floured surface. Roll it out into a 12-inch (30 cm) circle. You want to stretch it out as much as you can to make a large circle. The dough needs to be stretched out enough to cover the bottom and sides of the baking pan.
- Using a rolling pin as a guide, place over a 9×2-inch (23×5 cm) deep dish cake pan or cast-iron skillet. Using your fingers, press the dough into the cake pan. Make sure it is nice and tight fitting inside the pan. Trim any excess of dough off the edges with a small knife. Brush the top edges of the dough with a little olive oil, which gives the crust a beautiful sheen.
- Fill the pizza with a first layer of mozzarella cheese, a second layer with the slices of Italian sausage if using, and a third layer of tomato sauce on top. Sprinkle with grated parmesan cheese on top.
- Bake for 20-30 minutes, or until the crust is golden brown and the filling is set. To prevent the edges from burning, cover with foil after 15 minutes baking.
Notes
* Quick drain of the crushed tomatoes beforehand (about 10 minutes in a colander).
Did you make this recipe?
Lastly, if you make this Chicago-Style Deep Dish Pizza, be sure to leave a comment and give this recipe a rating, letting me know how you liked it. And of course, don’t forget to tag me on Instagram! Thank you and enjoy!
Katrina
Hi Del! I made this tonight and am impatiently waiting for it to come out of the oven now! I was wondering if the dough is supposed to be very dry when you begin kneading. I added a few more tablespoons of water to get the dough to what I thought was the correct consistency but wondering if I just needed to keep working it with your suggested amount of water. Thanks!
Delphine Fortin
Hi Katrina! Sorry for my late reply and I hope you all liked the deep dish pizza! The crust is supposed to be crispy, especially on the edge. I hope this helps! Del
Corey
I’m glad I found this recipe. It wasn’t too far off previous pizzas I made to remind me of growing up near Chicago in NW Indiana. My Aussie guests loved it and a local butcher had some good pork and parsley sausage that substituted okay since I cannot buy Italian sausage in Australia. Nothing like the original but I loved this for the homemade goodness that it was.
Corey
Delphine Fortin
Hi Corey and thank you for your feedback! I’m so happy you liked the recipe and found all the ingredients from Australia. It’s always best with high quality ingredients. Happy New Year! Del
Sky
Great flavors in this recipe. Here are my tweaks:
1) it definitely needed more water in the beginning. Not nearly enough to have the dough come together. I probably added 4-5 tablespoons extra.
2) it definitely needed to cook longer. Did the full 30 mins and the crust was super doughy with no crunch and I’m not entirely certain the sausage was cooked. I’d probably do 45 mins next time.
3) probably needs a decent rest time too. We rested for around 10 mins, but as soon as I cut it all slid around. The additional cooking time may help this as well.
Overall, I will save this and make it again. Great flavors. All comments above are just refinements to try to get it closer to Chicago’s best.
Eszter
This was absolutely amazing! My husband is a huge Lou Malnati’s fan, and I impressed him with the pizza I made… it is not easy, believe me 🙂
Thank you for sharing!
Delphine Fortin
I’m so glad you loved it. Thank you! 😀
Jason
I made this over the weekend and it was incredible! Pretty easy recipe overall actually.
A couple of changes: I sauced a bag of spinach and garlic in a little butter and used this as my first layer. I couldn’t find crushed tomatoes with basil so I just added a tablespoon of basil to the onions as they cooked.
I didn’t add quite enough cheese, next time I’ll add about 50% more (I didn’t measure the cheese, just went for it). I cooked the pizza for 15 minutes uncovered and 10 covered. Next time I’ll do 15 and 15, the crust could have been just a bit crisper. Otherwise fantastic recipe, we devoured the pizza in a one day 🙂
steve
ok I got the pizza in the oven, I only made the crust I did not go for the sauce. will report back since I have already invested two hours into this
steve
Ok so I made a big mistake not using a fine crushed corn meal and I was punished with a bad texture. This recipe still seems dang close to the real thing- I think my fix will be to use Corn Oil as I have read Chicago deep dish does not have corn meal in it contrary to popular belief but that they use corn oil which gives it that flavor. Still a good recipe none the less it was close enough that I will definitely try something similar to this again.
Thanks for the write up
Delphine Fortin
Hi Steve, and thanks for the heads up! Feel free to let us know how it turns out with the use of corn oil too. We’re all curious minds here! Del
Chris Callahan
Corn oil worked like a charm
Chris Callahan
Fantastic im a chicagoan born and raised.. this is the closest to the real thing I’ve tried.. crust was almost exact same my only substitute was corn oil instead of canola
Chris Callahan
Fantastic recipe im a lifelong chicagoan this is first time trying homemade pizza and it was very close to real thing as far as crust is concerned, only changes i made was using corn oil instead of canola and i let dough rest for 3 1/2 hours and i oiled the cast iron pan with corn oil.
Tami
Hi Del. I have commented before. This is my 5th time making it. Like the recipe a lot. On your crust ingredients and instructions, I am confused about adding 1 Tablespoon olive oil and 1 Tablespoon canola oil to the dough…both?
Delphine Fortin
Hi Tami! I’m so glad you like the recipe. As for the choice of oil, I like to combine both olive oil and canola oil for a healthier mix (olive oil is healthier, obviously) without any impact on the final taste (olive oil has deep, strong flavors). If you only have canola oil however, it works too. Just use 2 Tablespoons and it will do. I hope I answered your question. All the best. Del
Paul Powers
Oh, I forgot one awesome tip that is non traditional. Heavily coat the pan in olive oil or soft butter (or both), then pop it in the freezer. Once the butter or oil is solid, put the dough in the pan. This keeps the fat in place so when it cooks it gets a nice crisp crust!
Bvavo
I usually use both for the pan. I’m not stingy when it comes to a nice crisp flavorful crust!
The cornmeal adds that flavor like Lous has too.
Paul Powers
Ok. This is pretty close, in fact I’m using it as the base recipe for a new chi pizza dough. But I have a few notes from my last year of making this type of pizza. 1) most places do nott use corn meal. If you do use it get the fine ground. 2) use corn oil, not canola. It’s is what gives it that corny taste. 3) knead very little, keeps it soft and tender. 4) immediately after kneeding, let it rise in the fridge for 24hrs. This is CRITICAL and not optional. Great recipe!
Susan
Bonjour foodies..
Made this wonderful recipe yesterday.
Silly me burnt the garlic and onion mixture while making the sauce..I should have started over.
My husband , who orders Lou Malnatis pizza online and ships it to our home in Buffalo, NY, prompted me to find the perfect home made version…this it it pretty much…I just wonder if I use a higher grade of flour the crust may become flakier…I used Gold Medal flour…
Oh, one last thing..my husband claimed the cooking time should be doubled…well, I disagree…thus the pizza crust was a bit burned..we are perhaps too passionate about food.. haha…but I L.o.v.e.d. this recipe and will make again..
Now to upload pix..
Can I???
Delphine Fortin
Hi Susan! I’m so glad you liked the recipe! There are always a few things to adapt along the way, depending on the type of flour (I use Bobs Red Mill or King Arthur) or depending on the oven for instance, but it seems you did a really good job! You sure can post your photos on my Facebook group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/879272445556257/?ref=bookmarks I can’t wait to see them! 🙂
Paul Powers
I would recommend a soft flour. White Lilly or any southern flour, if available, these are the preferred flours for biscuits because they are low protein. If not, up to 20% whole wheat or white pastry flour will lighten up AP flour, making the crust tender and flaky. I almost excusivky use King Aurther, but their AP flour is very strong (high proteins= chewy and not tender, like a baguette), so pastry flour is a must. I like whole wheat cuz it adds tooth to the crust.
Wendy Fages
Bonjour, Il fait corrigir la quantité de tomate concassé.. 28oz fait presque 800g ! Je vais fair que la sauce ce soir, a la reste demain pour dejeuner er vers midi . Ca a l’aire super bon!
Delphine Fortin
Bonjour! En effet il y avait une petite erreur dans la conversion, voilà qui est réparé. Merci de me l’avoir signalé! 🙂
Karly
Has anyone tried incorporating spinach into this recipe? We are trying it for a Christmas pizza extravaganza and hoping to make one with spinach. Debating whether to buy fresh or frozen. Either way I assume we will heat up/saute and drain as much as possible.
Delphine Fortin
Hi! I sometimes use spinach in my deep dish, use it fresh and saute it. I hope this helps! 🙂
Carolyn Fenner
Again, the comments about “sliced mozzarella are very confusing. Do you mean the pre-sliced packages of deli-style mozzarella? Or do you mean the large ball of fresh mozzarella and slice it yourself? Please help me clarify. Thank you!
Channy
Deli style…A good Wisconsin cheese.
Erik
Being originally from Chicago, I made this last night in my new home in the Pacific Northwest for people that haven’t had Chicago deep dish. This nailed it. Great homemade version.
Thank you.
My-lady
Thank you Delphine for the amazing pizza recipe. My husband and I will make it often. Thumbs up!
Matthew
Loved the recipe! One thing you can do if the crust is too floury out of the oven is have some melted butter ready and brush it on the crust straight out of the oven. Brush it on ASAP so that way the melted butter soaks in and cools with the pizza. Thanks for posting Delphine!
-Matthew
Delphine Fortin
Thank you for this great and useful tip, Matthew. I’m glad you liked the deep dish!
Joshua
I made this a few days ago and it turned out EXCELLENT. As others have noted, my dough was incredibly dry and crumbly and I actually had to add a few tablespoons extra of water in order to make it form a ball. I used a pound of Italian sausage from a local grocery store, and it was very good but did not have the flavor of an actual Lou Malnati’s pizza. I baked mine in a cast iron pan.
I will for sure make this again, but next time I’ll likely make the dough a day ahead, and perhaps the sauce as well. It was time-consuming, but amazing. Nothing even close to this is available in South Dakota! Thanks for the amazing recipe!
Delphine Fortin
Oh wow, thank you so much, Joshua! I’m so happy you liked the recipe! And thank you for sharing these great tips with us too! All the best from Chicago. Del
Amy
Hello! If I were to make this dough a day ahead, would I just store it in the fridge overnight? Would I take it to room temp before putting it into the pan and oven? I am so excited to try!
Delphine Fortin
Hi Amy! Oh yes you would need to take it to room temperature afterwards to ensure you can roll it out. I hope you’ll like it 🙂
Laura
There are errors in the recipe that left me confused and messed up the overall result. For example, I added the olive oil to the dough because the recipe makes it seem that both oils are put together. It wasn’t until I read through the comments that I realized that the dough had been made wrong. Even with the extra oil, my dough was way too dry to form. I had to add small parts of water to get it to even ball up. The recipe also instructs you to add salt while making the sauce, but there is no mention of salt in the ingredients list of the sauce, so I was left not knowing which was an error, and if salt was added how much would be included. Overall based on my experience, I am disappointed in the vagueness of the recipe and will be using another source in the future.
Delphine Fortin
Well, I think you should take every recipe with a pinch of salt 😉
Jack
Hello. I tried your pizza recipe. I didn’t think it was just like Lou Malnati’s, but it still was very good. There are a couple things I may do differently. My crust came out undercooked on one side and crunchy on the other. That’s not the fault of your recipe. My oven heats inconsistent. Still it came out really well for my first attempt and I made my Chicago native husband very happy. Thank you for sharing this wonderful recipe.
Delphine Fortin
Hi Jack! I’m glad you liked the pizza, thank you for your positive feedback. Yes, I tried to make it as close as possible to the one from Lou Malnati’s, not an easy thing but I did my best 🙂 When it comes to the undercooked bottom of the crust, a tip would be to add a layer of dried grated parmesan cheese, and then add the other layers. This way the bottom should stay dry during baking. I hope it helps! Del.
Samantha Cummons
AMAZING recipe! Thank you, Delphine!
Delphine Fortin
I’m so glad you liked it. Thank you!