What Is Grandma Pizza? (And Why Every Home Cook Should Try It)
What Is Grandma Pizza?
And Why Every Home Cook
Should Try It
Thicker than a New York slice, thinner than a Sicilian, crispier than both — grandma pizza is the most underrated square pie in America. And it’s practically made for your home kitchen.
Ask most pizza fans to name a thick square pizza and they’ll say Sicilian. Ask them about grandma pizza and you might get a blank stare. That’s a shame — because grandma pizza is arguably the more approachable, more interesting, and more delicious of the two, and it’s one of the best things you can make in a regular home kitchen with no special equipment whatsoever.
The style comes from Long Island, New York, where Italian-American home cooks — and yes, often literal grandmothers — baked pizza in well-oiled rectangular pans on the stovetop or in a standard oven. If you’ve already tried our Sicilian pizza at home guide, think of grandma pizza as its more laid-back, faster, equally delicious cousin. No pizza stone. No blistering heat. Just a good pan, a simple dough, plenty of olive oil, and a lot of love. The result? A pizza with a golden, almost fried crust on the bottom, a soft and airy crumb, and a sauce-forward top that somehow manages to be crispy and tender at the same time.
According to Serious Eats’ landmark deep-dive on grandma pizza, this style flew under the radar for decades because it never left the home kitchen — it was cooked at home, eaten at home, and passed down through families rather than commercialized like New York or Sicilian pies. That’s changing fast. And once you’ve made one, you’ll understand exactly why the buzz is growing.
What Exactly Is Grandma Pizza?
Grandma pizza is a square, pan-baked pizza cooked in a well-oiled rectangular baking pan — traditionally a standard 9×13″ or half-sheet pan you’d already have in your kitchen. The dough is pressed directly into the oiled pan, given a relatively short rest, topped with sauce and cheese, and baked at high heat until the bottom is deeply golden and slightly fried-tasting from the oil.
The defining characteristics:
- Square or rectangular shape, cut into square slices
- Sauce goes on first (or simultaneously with cheese, depending on tradition), giving it a distinctly sauce-forward bite
- Cheese on top of the sauce — the opposite of Sicilian’s typical order
- A moderately thick crust — thicker than New York, thinner and denser than a full Sicilian
- A genuinely crispy, almost pan-fried bottom from olive oil in the pan
- Baked in a home oven — no pizza stone, no commercial deck oven required
It’s worth noting that the Eater history of grandma pizza traces the style specifically to Long Island pizzerias that began commercializing what had always been a home-kitchen tradition — shops like King Umberto in Elmont, which has been credited with popularizing the term “grandma pie” on a menu. The style has roots in Sicilian-American immigrant cooking but evolved distinctly in New York’s outer boroughs and suburbs.
Quick Overview
- Origin Long Island, New York
- Star feature Crispy olive-oil bottom, sauce-forward top
- Dough style Medium hydration (~60%), slightly enriched
- Best occasion Family dinner, weeknight pizza, beginner project
- Pan needed Standard 9×13″ or half-sheet baking pan
- Difficulty Easy — genuinely one of the simplest serious pizza styles
Grandma vs. Sicilian: Settling the Debate
This is the question that comes up every single time grandma pizza is mentioned online, and honestly — it’s a fair one. Both are thick. Both are square. Both use olive oil in the pan. So what’s actually different? Quite a bit, as it turns out. And understanding the differences will help you decide which one to make (spoiler: make both, eventually).
| Grandma Pizza This Guide | Sicilian Pizza | Detroit-Style | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hydration | ~58–62% — manageable and forgiving | 70–75% — wetter, stickier, more open crumb | 70–75% — similar to Sicilian |
| Crust Thickness | ~¾–1″ — medium thick | 1–2″ — noticeably thicker and airier | 1–1.5″ — thick with caramelized edges |
| Sauce Order | Sauce on top of dough, cheese on top of sauce | Often cheese first, sauce on top | Sauce added after baking, in stripes |
| Cheese Style | Mozzarella on top — browns and bubbles | Mozzarella under sauce — stays gooey | Cheese to the edges, caramelizes against pan |
| Pan | Standard aluminum rectangular pan | Same — rectangular, well-oiled | Blue steel pan — key to the style |
| Rest / Rise | Shorter — 1 hour total is enough | Longer — 2+ hours, benefits hugely from overnight | Longer — similar to Sicilian |
| Beginner-friendliness | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ — very forgiving | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ — easy but wetter dough | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ — needs the right pan |
The short version: grandma pizza has a denser, chewier crumb than Sicilian (which is airier and more bread-like), and its sauce goes on before the cheese instead of after. It’s also more forgiving on timing — you don’t need an overnight ferment to get a great result, though it certainly helps. If you’re making your first thick-crust pizza ever, grandma is the one to start with. For a full comparison of the thick pan styles, our thin crust vs. thick crust guide breaks down what actually separates these categories.
“Grandma pizza is what happened when Italian-American home cooks applied everything they knew about bread-making to a pizza pan. It’s honest, unpretentious, and genuinely delicious.”
— Zach Miller, ThatPizzaKitchen.comWhy Home Cooks Are Tailor-Made for This Style
Here’s something you don’t hear often: a home kitchen is better for grandma pizza than most restaurant setups. This is genuinely a style that was designed to be made at home, on home equipment, with no special tools. A standard residential oven, a regular baking pan, all-purpose flour — that’s your starting lineup. Nothing exotic required.
Compare that to Neapolitan pizza, which technically needs 900°F+ heat that no home oven can reach. Or New York-style, which benefits from professional deck ovens and years of dough-handling practice. Grandma pizza sidesteps all of that. The best pizza styles for beginners all share one thing in common: they’re forgiving, and grandma pizza might be the most forgiving of all the “serious” styles.
Built for Home Ovens
Standard 450–500°F oven temp is all you need. No pizza stone, no baking steel — though both help if you have them.
Faster Than Sicilian
One hour of rise time is genuinely enough. Same-day pizza is achievable without compromising the result.
Dough Is Manageable
Lower hydration means less sticky, less fussy. First-time dough makers will have a much easier time than with Sicilian.
Big Crowd-Feeder
One half-sheet grandma pie feeds 6–8 people generously. Scale up easily by doing two pans side by side.
The Dough: Simpler Than You Think
Grandma pizza dough runs at a relatively approachable 58–62% hydration — meaningfully lower than Sicilian’s 70–75%. What that means in practice: the dough is easier to handle, less sticky, and more predictable. You can knead it by hand without it coating every surface in your kitchen. It’s the sweet spot between “too dry and cracker-like” and “too wet to work with.”
The Flour
All-purpose flour works perfectly here. Unlike Neapolitan, which benefits hugely from 00 flour, or Sicilian, which shines with bread flour, grandma pizza is genuinely happy with whatever flour you’ve already got. That said, bread flour adds extra chew that some bakers love in this style — it’s worth experimenting with once you’ve made the base recipe a couple of times.
A Touch of Oil in the Dough
Grandma dough is slightly enriched with olive oil — typically a tablespoon or two per 500g of flour. King Arthur Baking’s research on olive oil in dough confirms what grandmothers already knew: the fat tenderizes the crumb and extends the keeping quality of the finished pizza. It also contributes to that characteristic chew — soft without being bready, with a slight richness you don’t get from a lean dough.
Rise Time
An hour at room temperature is the minimum. Two hours is better. An overnight cold ferment in the fridge — as with any pizza — produces a noticeably more complex, slightly tangy flavor. But unlike cold fermentation for Sicilian or Neapolitan, it’s genuinely optional here rather than near-mandatory. Grandma pizza is the style you make when you decide at 4pm that you want pizza for dinner. That’s not a bug — it’s the whole point.
The Pan Is Everything
If there’s one thing that separates a great grandma pizza from a good one, it’s what happens at the bottom — and that comes down to the pan and how you oil it. A well-oiled aluminum rectangular pan is the classic choice, and the goal is for the olive oil to essentially shallow-fry the base of the pizza as it bakes, creating that signature crunch.
According to Serious Eats’ breakdown of pizza pan science, aluminum conducts heat more evenly than steel for pan pizzas, making it the practical choice for grandma-style baking. Don’t use non-stick — the coating degrades at high heat and, crucially, non-stick pans don’t get the base hot enough for a true fry. And don’t be shy with the oil — 2–3 tablespoons coating the entire base and sides is not excessive. It’s necessary.
Unlike Detroit-style pizza, which really benefits from its specific blue steel pan to get those caramelized cheese edges, grandma pizza is genuinely pan-agnostic. Use what you have. Our pizza stone vs. baking steel comparison also covers how placing your pan on a preheated surface can give you an extra crispy bottom boost if you want to go the extra mile.
Sauce First, Cheese on Top — and Why It Matters
Here’s the layering detail that defines grandma pizza and sets it apart from Sicilian: sauce goes directly on the dough, then cheese on top of the sauce. This means the cheese browns and bubbles beautifully during baking, giving you those golden, slightly crispy cheese edges and a visually gorgeous top. It also means the sauce stays vibrant and a little tangy underneath, rather than cooking into the dough.
The Sauce
Grandma pizza sauce is typically a crushed tomato sauce — bright, relatively loose, and barely cooked. You’re not looking for a thick, slow-simmered ragu here. Crushed San Marzano tomatoes with a pinch of salt, dried oregano, a crushed garlic clove, and a glug of good olive oil is all you need. The oven does the rest of the cooking. Some Long Island–style grandma pies use a very light sauce, almost a smear — enough to flavor the top without weighing it down. Our homemade pizza sauce recipe is the perfect base to start from.
The Cheese
Low-moisture mozzarella, shredded. Full stop. This is not the place for fresh buffalo mozzarella — its water content will steam the pizza from the inside and give you a soggy mess. Block mozzarella, shredded by hand, melts evenly and browns magnificently. Food Network’s guide to pizza cheese confirms: the pre-shredded bags contain cellulose anti-caking agents that interfere with proper melt. Buy the block, shred it yourself — it takes three minutes and makes a visible difference. Our full rundown on the best cheese for homemade pizza covers every option in detail.
The Toppings
Grandma pizza is traditionally fairly minimal on top — the sauce and cheese are the stars, not a mountain of toppings. A classic finish: dried oregano, fresh basil added after baking, and a drizzle of good olive oil. If you’re adding pepperoni, keep it sparse and let it cup and crisp. Freshly grated Parmesan or Pecorino over the top right out of the oven is non-negotiable in my house. For inspiration on what works well on this style, our 9 best pizza topping combinations has you covered.
Classic Grandma Pizza
Crispy olive-oil bottom, sauce-forward top, golden bubbling cheese — this is the Long Island classic made properly at home. Choose your pan size and ingredients scale automatically.
- All-purpose or bread flour450g
- Warm water (100°F)270ml
- Active dry yeast7g (1 pkt)
- Fine sea salt9g
- Olive oil (dough)1 tbsp
- Olive oil (pan)3 tbsp
- Crushed San Marzano tomatoes240ml
- Garlic cloves, crushed2
- Dried oregano1 tsp
- Low-moisture mozzarella, shredded280g
- Pecorino Romano, finely grated35g
- Fresh basil (to finish)handful
- Red pepper flakes (optional)½ tsp
Key notes: Block mozzarella shredded by hand melts far better than pre-bagged. San Marzano tomatoes are worth the extra spend — sweeter, less acidic, and they make the sauce sauce. Don’t use fresh mozz here.
- 1Activate the yeast. Stir yeast into warm water and leave for 8–10 minutes. 👃 It should foam and smell yeasty — if nothing happens, start over with fresh yeast
- 2Mix the dough. Add flour, salt, and olive oil to the yeast water. Mix until a dough forms. It should feel slightly tacky but manageable — not wet like Sicilian dough. ✋ It should pull away from the bowl cleanly
- 3Knead. Turn onto a lightly floured surface and knead for 6–7 minutes until smooth and elastic. The dough should pass the windowpane test — stretch a small piece thin enough to see light through without tearing. ✋ Smooth, springy, barely tacky
- 4First rise. Place dough in an oiled bowl, cover with plastic wrap or a damp cloth. Rise 1 hour at room temperature until visibly puffed and airy. For overnight: refrigerate here and remove 1 hour before using. 👁️ Should roughly double in size
- 5Oil the pan & press. Pour olive oil into your pan, coating base and sides thoroughly. Transfer dough and use your fingertips to press outward, dimpling as you go. If it springs back, cover and rest 10 minutes then try again. ✋ Dough should feel relaxed and not fight back
- 6Second rest in the pan. Cover the pan and rest at room temperature for 30–45 minutes. The dough will puff slightly again and relax fully to the edges. Preheat oven to 500°F (260°C) now. 👁️ Should look a bit bubbly and relaxed
- 7Make the sauce. Mix crushed tomatoes with crushed garlic, oregano, a pinch of salt, and a drizzle of olive oil. No cooking needed — it goes on raw and finishes in the oven. Taste it. It should be bright and punchy.
- 8Top the pizza. Spoon sauce evenly over the dough, leaving a small border. Scatter mozzarella over the sauce. Finish with a light dusting of Pecorino and red pepper flakes if using. 👁️ The sauce-to-cheese ratio should favour the sauce slightly
- 9Bake. Place on the lowest rack for 18 minutes. Move to the middle rack for 6–7 minutes until cheese is deeply golden and bubbly. Lift a corner with a spatula — the base should be mahogany-brown. 👁️ Deep golden bottom, bronze cheese top. No pale spots.
- 10Finish & slice. Drizzle olive oil over the hot pizza. Tear fresh basil across the top. Rest 4 minutes in the pan before sliding onto a board. Cut into squares. Grate more Pecorino over each slice if you’re a reasonable person. 👂 You should hear a distinct crunch when the first slice is lifted
Tips, Variations & Swaps
- White grandma pizza: Skip the tomato sauce. Use a garlic-heavy olive oil base, ricotta dollops, mozzarella, and fresh lemon zest after baking. Incredible. Try our white pizza sauce guide as the base.
- Cold overnight ferment: After step 4, refrigerate the dough ball for 24–48 hours. Pull it out 1 hour before pressing. The flavor difference is significant — nuttier, more complex, slightly tangy.
- Pepperoni variation: Add cupped pepperoni (not flat) under the cheese so the cups fill with rendered fat during baking. Trust me on this one.
- Reheating leftovers: A dry skillet on medium heat for 3–4 minutes brings the base back to full crunch. Never microwave it. Full method in our crispy pizza reheating guide.
- No yeast option: It won’t be quite the same, but our no-yeast dough recipe can work in a pinch for a same-day flatbread-style result.
Common Grandma Pizza Mistakes (And the Easy Fixes)
Even an easy pizza style has a few ways to go wrong. Here’s what trips people up most often, and how to avoid it:
- Under-oiling the pan: This is far and away mistake number one. You need a visible coat of oil in that pan — we’re talking 2–3 tablespoons minimum. Thin oil = pale, soft base. Generous oil = the golden, crispy bottom you’re after.
- Over-saucing: Grandma pizza is a relatively thin layer of sauce — not piled on like a Chicago deep dish. Keep it to a tight smear that you can still see the dough through at the edges.
- Using fresh mozzarella: I’ll keep saying this until it sticks. Fresh mozz is too wet. It releases water as it melts and steams the dough rather than crisping it. Low-moisture block mozzarella only.
- Not letting the oven fully preheat: A half-preheated oven is one of the most common causes of pale, soft pizza bases. Give your oven a full 30 minutes at 500°F before the pizza goes in. More on this in our oven preheating guide.
- Pulling it out too early: Trust the process. If you’re nervous the cheese is going too dark, move the rack down — don’t cut the time. The base needs every one of those minutes. Lift a corner and check the colour before you take it out.
For a comprehensive rundown of general homemade pizza pitfalls across all styles, our 10 homemade pizza mistakes guide covers everything in one place. And if you’re brand new to homemade pizza altogether, the ultimate beginner’s pizza starter guide is the place to start.
Frequently Asked Questions
Your Oven Is Ready. Is Your Pan? 🍕
Grandma pizza is the style you’ll come back to every time you want something genuinely great without a three-day production. Make it this weekend. Take a photo. Tag us. And if you loved it, explore the rest of the family — there are a lot of great styles worth knowing.
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