How to Make Chicago Deep Dish Pizza at Home
How to Make Chicago Deep Dish Pizza at Home
The full guide to buttery crust, layered cheese, chunky tomatoes, and the pan technique that makes it legendary.
There’s pizza, and then there’s Chicago deep dish — the kind of meal that makes you genuinely reconsider your life choices in the best possible way. A proper slice weighs as much as a small dumbbell, takes 45 minutes to bake, and contains enough cheese to make a cardiologist nervous. It is, objectively, one of the greatest things humans have ever created.
I’ve been making deep dish at home for years, and I’ll be straight with you — the first few attempts were rough. The crust was either too bready, the sauce was too watery, or I forgot the layering order and ended up with cheese soup. But once you nail the technique, it’s genuinely life-changing pizza. And yes, you absolutely can pull this off in a regular home kitchen. No pizza oven required.
This guide covers everything: the buttery crust, the cheese-first layering method, the chunky tomato sauce, and every little trick that separates a restaurant-quality deep dish from a disappointing casserole. Let’s get into it.
What Actually Is Chicago Deep Dish?
Before we cook anything, let’s clear something up — deep dish is not thick crust pizza. It’s a completely different beast. The crust is relatively thin, but it climbs up the sides of a well-oiled pan to create a deep well. Everything lives inside that well: first cheese, then toppings, then a thick blanket of crushed tomatoes on top. It’s basically a pizza pie — which is exactly what Chicagoans sometimes call it.
The dish was invented at Pizzeria Uno in Chicago in 1943, reportedly by Ike Sewell and Rudy Malnati. The Malnati family name still dominates Chicago pizza culture — if you’ve eaten at Lou Malnati’s, you know exactly the style we’re going for. Rich, filling, structurally impressive. A dinner event, not a quick snack.
What makes it work differently from thin-crust pizza? A few key things:
- The pan: A deep, round, well-seasoned cast iron or dark steel pan. The dark colour helps conduct heat and crisp the bottom crust.
- The crust oil content: Deep dish dough has more fat — often butter or corn oil — which gives it a flaky, almost pastry-like texture.
- The inverted layering: Cheese goes on the dough first, toppings in the middle, sauce on top. This protects the cheese from burning during the long bake.
Deep dish isn’t thick pizza. It’s a complete rethink of what pizza can be — closer to a savory pie than anything a New Yorker would fold and eat on the street.
— Zach Miller, ThatPizzaKitchen.comThe Crust — Where It All Starts
Deep dish crust is the element that trips most people up. It needs to be strong enough to hold a mountain of toppings without getting soggy, but it also needs that signature buttery richness that makes it taste like something between pizza dough and a pie crust. The secret? Butter and cornmeal.
Unlike a standard pizza dough — which is usually just flour, water, yeast, oil, and salt — deep dish dough gets a dose of melted butter folded in, sometimes a touch of semolina or cornmeal for texture, and a slightly shorter knead time so it doesn’t develop too much gluten. You want it pliable and a little tender, not chewy.
What Flour to Use
All-purpose flour works great here. Some recipes call for a blend of all-purpose and semolina, which gives the crust a slightly grainier texture — closer to what you’d get at Lou Malnati’s. If you want to nerd out on flour choices, check out the breakdown on bread flour vs 00 flour — though for deep dish specifically, all-purpose is your friend.
The Pan Makes All the Difference
You need a 9–12 inch deep-dish pan, cast iron skillet, or dark steel cake pan with at least 2-inch sides. Generously coat it with butter — not oil, not cooking spray. Butter. This is what creates that slightly caramelized, almost fried exterior on the crust that makes deep dish so addictive. If you want to learn more about how different baking surfaces affect your base, the pizza stone vs baking steel post is worth a read — though for deep dish you’ll skip the stone entirely and use the pan directly on a lower oven rack.
After pressing your dough into the buttered pan, refrigerate it for 15–20 minutes before adding toppings. This helps the butter firm up and prevents the crust from sliding down the sides during the first part of baking.
The Layering Order (This Part Is Non-Negotiable)
This is the single most important thing to get right. If you put the sauce directly on the dough like a regular pizza, you’ll end up with a soggy mess. If you put the cheese on top, it’ll burn before the center is cooked through. The correct deep dish layering order exists for very good reasons:
- Dough — pressed into buttered pan, up the sides
- Cheese — sliced whole-milk mozzarella directly on the raw dough
- Toppings — sausage, vegetables, pepperoni, whatever you’re using
- Tomato sauce — thick, chunky, on top like a lid
- Parmesan — a grating over the sauce to finish
That cheese layer acts as a moisture barrier between the dough and the wet toppings. Without it, you get steam buildup and the base turns gummy. FYI, this is also why deep dish reheats so well — the structure stays intact in a way that regular pizza simply doesn’t.
For the cheese, don’t use pre-shredded mozzarella. Pre-shredded mozzarella contains anti-caking agents that prevent it from melting cleanly. Slice a block of whole-milk, low-moisture mozzarella into ¼-inch rounds and layer them across the dough. You want full, even coverage — no bare spots. For a full rundown on which cheeses work best, the best cheese for homemade pizza guide has you covered.
The Sauce — Chunky, Not Smooth
Here’s where deep dish parts ways with every other pizza style. The sauce doesn’t go under the cheese — it goes on top, and it’s thick. Really thick. We’re talking barely-cooked crushed tomatoes with herbs, not a blended smooth marinara. The texture should hold its shape when you spoon it on.
The classic approach: crush whole San Marzano tomatoes by hand into a bowl. Season aggressively with salt, dried oregano, and a pinch of red pepper flakes. That’s it. No cooking required — the sauce cooks on top of the pizza in the oven, and the residual heat from everything below it does the rest. Making homemade pizza sauce is straightforward, but for deep dish, resist the urge to cook it down beforehand.
Some people add a little garlic, some add sugar to balance acidity. IMO the simpler the sauce, the better. San Marzano tomatoes — one of the most prized canned tomatoes in pizza-making — are sweet enough that you rarely need anything else.
Drain the canned tomatoes briefly before crushing them. Deep dish takes a long bake time, and excess liquid will make your sauce watery and cause the top to look broken and thin. A quick drain through a fine mesh strainer for 5 minutes makes a real difference.
Baking It Right
Deep dish bakes at 425°F (220°C) for 35–45 minutes, depending on the depth of your pie and the toppings. This is significantly longer than thin-crust pizza, and it’s the reason you need the sauce on top — it protects the cheese and keeps it from going nuclear.
Place your pan on the lower third of the oven, not the middle. You want maximum bottom heat to crisp that crust. If the top starts browning too quickly, tent it loosely with foil for the last 10 minutes. You’re looking for:
- A golden-brown crust that’s visibly pulling away from the sides of the pan
- Sauce that’s bubbling aggressively at the edges
- An internal temperature of around 200°F (93°C) in the center
And here’s the part everyone ignores: let it rest for 10 minutes before slicing. I know. You’ve just baked a masterpiece and you’re absolutely ravenous. But deep dish needs that rest time to set up. Cut it too early and the filling will collapse out of the slice like a molten disaster. Patience. It’s worth it.
If your pizza base consistently undercooks in the middle, check out why pizza is undercooked in the middle for a thorough troubleshooting guide.
Classic Chicago Deep Dish Pizza
Buttery cornmeal crust · Italian sausage · whole-milk mozzarella · crushed San Marzano
The Dough
The Filling
The Sauce
Instructions
- In a large bowl, combine flour, cornmeal, yeast, sugar, and salt. Add the warm water and mix until shaggy, then knead in the softened butter a tablespoon at a time until fully incorporated — the dough should feel smooth, slightly tacky, and smell faintly buttery. Rest covered for 1 hour until roughly doubled.
- Preheat your oven to 425°F (220°C) with a rack in the lower third. Generously butter your deep-dish pan, making sure the sides are coated — you should see butter pooling at the base slightly.
- Press the dough into the pan and work it up the sides to create a 1.5–2 inch wall. It’ll be resistant — let it rest for 5 minutes, then continue. Refrigerate for 15 minutes while you prep toppings.
- Lay sliced mozzarella in an even layer directly on the raw dough, covering the entire base with no gaps. It should look like a white blanket covering the whole interior.
- Add the Italian sausage in crumbles over the cheese — scatter it evenly rather than pressing it down. Add any additional toppings now.
- Mix crushed tomatoes with salt, oregano, and pepper flakes. Spoon over the top of the filling, spreading to the edges. It should sit like a thick lid. Finish with grated Parmesan.
- Bake for 35–45 minutes until the crust is deep golden-brown and pulling from the sides, and the sauce is bubbling vigorously at the edges. Your kitchen should smell intensely of toasted butter and herbs.
- Rest for a full 10 minutes before slicing. Run a butter knife around the edge, then cut into wedges with a sharp knife. Serve directly from the pan.
Variations: Skip the sausage and load up with roasted mushrooms, bell peppers, and black olives for a killer vegetarian version. A layer of pepperoni between the cheese and sausage is very Chicago and very delicious. For a white deep dish, swap the tomato sauce for homemade white pizza sauce and top with spinach and ricotta.
Pro Tips & Common Mistakes
After making this more times than I can count, here are the lessons that cost me the most to learn the hard way:
Frequently Asked Questions
Final Thoughts
Chicago deep dish is one of those recipes that rewards patience and punishes shortcuts. The butter in the dough, the cheese-first layering, the thick chunky sauce — every element exists for a reason, and skipping any one of them degrades the whole thing. But get it right, and you have one of the most impressive, satisfying pizzas you can make in a home kitchen.
It’s not a weeknight project. It takes the better part of an afternoon, and you will absolutely eat too much of it. But that’s the point. Deep dish was designed to be an event. A family gathering. A celebration. The kind of meal people talk about afterward.
If this is your first time tackling it, start with the basic sausage version in the recipe above — it’s the most forgiving and the most classic. Once you’ve nailed the technique, experiment: white sauce, roasted vegetables, even a dessert deep dish (trust me — Nutella and strawberry in a buttery crust is not as weird as it sounds).
Go make it happen. And if you want to keep exploring pizza styles, the popular pizza styles explained guide is a great next read — there are more rabbit holes to go down than you’d think. 🍕
Hungry for More Deep Dish Secrets?
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