How to Make Detroit-Style Pizza at Home (Crispy Edges, Fluffy Inside)
You know that moment when you pull a pizza out of the oven and the cheese has crept all the way to the edge, caramelized into this dark, crunchy, almost addictive border? That’s not a mistake. That’s the whole point. Welcome to Detroit-style pizza — the rectangular, pan-baked legend that’s been quietly winning the pizza wars for decades.
If you’ve only ever made round pizzas, Detroit-style is going to feel like a revelation. It’s genuinely forgiving, ridiculously satisfying to make, and delivers results that look like they came out of a proper pizzeria kitchen. The crispy bottom, the airy dough, the cheese-to-edge caramelization, the stripes of sauce on top. It’s a whole different universe from Neapolitan or New York-style, and honestly? It might become your new favorite weekend project.
I’ve been obsessed with this style for a while now, and in this guide I’m going to break down everything — the history, the pan, the cheese, the dough, the assembly order, and exactly how to nail it at home without any specialist equipment. Let’s get into it.
What Actually Makes It Detroit-Style
Detroit-style pizza has a very specific set of characteristics that separate it from every other style. This isn’t just “thick pizza in a rectangle.” There are rules, and those rules produce something genuinely unique.
- Rectangular shape — always baked in a deep rectangular pan, traditionally around 10×14 inches
- Thick, airy, focaccia-like crust — light and chewy inside, crispy and almost fried on the bottom
- Cheese goes to the edges — this is non-negotiable. The cheese touches the pan walls and caramelizes into a frico-style crust border
- Sauce goes on top — the iconic “racing stripes” of sauce are applied after the cheese, not underneath
- Wisconsin brick cheese — traditionally used, though mozzarella works well too (more on this below)
- High heat, deep pan — the pan itself conducts heat to create that signature fried-bottom texture
It sounds simple, but every one of those elements matters. Skip the cheese-to-edges step and you lose the caramelized border. Put the sauce under the cheese and you lose the visual identity entirely. This style is as much about technique as it is about ingredients.
The Style’s Surprisingly Industrial Origin
Detroit-style pizza was invented in 1946 by Gus Guerra at Buddy’s Rendezvous, a bar on the east side of Detroit. The original pans he used weren’t pizza pans — they were blue steel automotive parts trays used in the local car factories. Detroit was, after all, the Motor City. Those thick-walled steel trays conducted heat beautifully, produced a crispy fried bottom, and held enough dough to make a thick, filling pizza that worked perfectly as bar food.
Buddy’s Pizza still operates in Detroit today and is widely considered the gold standard for the style. As Serious Eats has documented in detail, the style remained a regional Detroit secret for decades before exploding nationally in the 2010s when chains like Little Caesars and Jet’s Pizza started bringing it to a wider audience. Now it’s everywhere — and for very good reason.
The industrial origin is also why the pan matters so much. The original trays were heavy-gauge blue steel, which retained and distributed heat in a way that standard baking pans simply don’t replicate. That’s why investing in the right pan is the single biggest upgrade you can make to your Detroit pizza game.
The Pan Is Everything
Genuinely, more than the recipe, more than the cheese, more than the oven temperature — the pan determines the outcome of a Detroit-style pizza. This is not an exaggeration. The right pan gives you a crispy, almost fried base and caramelized cheese edges. The wrong pan gives you a soggy, steamed bottom that’s deeply disappointing.
Your Best Options
You’ve got a few solid paths here depending on your budget and how serious you’re getting about this style.
- Blue steel Detroit pizza pan — this is the OG. Lloyd Pans makes excellent ones and they’re used by serious pizzerias. They’re worth buying if you’re going to make Detroit pizza regularly. Season them like cast iron.
- Well-seasoned cast iron pan — a 10×10 or 9×13 cast iron baking pan works brilliantly. Heavy, retains heat well, and produces a phenomenal crispy base.
- Dark, heavy-gauge non-stick pan — in a pinch, a dark anodized aluminum pan (like the ones used for brownies) will do a decent job. Avoid light-colored pans — they reflect heat and ruin the base.
🔴 Pan Rules You Cannot Skip
- Oil generously. Pour 2–3 tablespoons of oil into the pan before adding dough. The dough essentially fries in this oil as it bakes — that’s the texture you want.
- Preheat the pan. If you’re using cast iron or steel, preheat it in the oven before adding dough. Cold pan = soggy base.
- Never use a light-colored pan. Shiny aluminum reflects heat. Dark steel or cast iron absorbs it. The difference is enormous.
- Don’t line it with parchment. You want the dough directly on the oiled metal surface to get that fried-bottom effect.
The Cheese Situation (It’s a Big Deal)
Traditional Detroit pizza uses Wisconsin brick cheese — a mild, semi-soft cheese with good melt and browning properties. It’s slightly tangy, melts beautifully, and caramelizes at the edges to form that signature dark, crunchy cheese border. If you can find it, use it. It genuinely makes a difference.
That said, most of us outside the Midwest aren’t going to find Wisconsin brick cheese at the corner shop. FYI — here’s what works as a substitute:
- Low-moisture whole-milk mozzarella — the best widely available option. Melts well, browns nicely, mild flavor that lets the sauce shine
- 50/50 mozzarella and white cheddar — adds a bit of sharpness and helps with browning. Solid option.
- Muenster cheese — the closest widely available substitute to brick cheese. Mild, creamy, great melt. Highly recommended if you can find it.
- Colby Jack — not traditional but works well, melts easily, good flavor
The critical thing about cheese in Detroit-style pizza: it has to go all the way to the pan edges. Don’t leave a border. Pack it in. The bits that touch the pan walls will caramelize into what’s called a “frico” edge — crunchy, salty, intensely flavored. This is the defining characteristic of the style and it’s completely non-negotiable IMO.
Detroit Pizza Anatomy — Infographic
The build order on a Detroit pizza is the opposite of what you’re used to. Here’s how the layers actually stack up, plus a quick comparison with the two styles it gets compared to most often.
The Dough: Focaccia Vibes, Pizza Results
Detroit dough is higher hydration than your average pizza dough — typically around 65–70%. That extra water is what gives you that open, airy crumb with the big irregular air pockets inside. If you’ve ever made focaccia, the texture and handling is very similar. It’s wetter, stickier, and a bit more relaxed than a standard Neapolitan or New York dough.
The good news: because this dough goes straight into an oiled pan and isn’t hand-stretched or spun, it’s incredibly beginner-friendly. There’s no technique to master. You just mix it, let it ferment, then press it gently into the oiled pan with your fingertips (like you’re dimpling focaccia) and let it rest for another 30 minutes before topping.
You can use a cold fermentation approach for this dough and it works brilliantly — 24–48 hours in the fridge produces a more complex, slightly tangy flavor that pairs incredibly well with the savory cheese and sweet sauce. If you’re new to that technique, check out the ultimate homemade pizza dough guide for a full breakdown.
For a same-day bake, a 2–3 hour room temperature rise works perfectly. The dough doesn’t need to be as developed as you’d want for a thin-crust style because the texture comes from the pan and the high hydration, not from extensive gluten development.
“The beauty of Detroit dough is that its forgiving, high-hydration character rewards beginners just as much as it rewards experts. The pan does the heavy lifting.”
6 Mistakes That Ruin a Detroit Pizza
I’ve made all of these at least once. Learn from my pain.
- Bread flour350g
- Warm water (100°F)245ml
- Instant yeast5g
- Salt8g
- Olive oil (in dough)2 tbsp
- Olive oil (in pan)3 tbsp
- Brick / whole-milk mozz300g
- Pepperoni (optional)80g
- Crushed San Marzano tomatoes200g
- Garlic cloves, minced2
- Dried oregano1 tsp
- Olive oil (sauce)1 tbsp
- Combine flour, salt, and yeast in a large bowl. Add warm water and olive oil. Mix until a shaggy dough forms, then knead 5–6 minutes until smooth. It should feel tacky but not sticky, pulling cleanly off your hands.
- Cover with plastic wrap and let rise at room temperature 2–3 hours, until roughly doubled. The surface should look domed and slightly bubbly — push a finger in and it should spring back slowly.
- While dough rises, make the sauce: cook minced garlic in olive oil 60 seconds over medium heat, add crushed tomatoes, oregano, salt to taste. Simmer 10 minutes. Cool completely.
- Pour 3 tablespoons of olive oil into your pan and spread evenly. Transfer dough to pan and press gently to the edges with oiled fingertips. It’ll fight you at first — that’s fine. Let it rest 5 minutes then try again.
- Let dough rest uncovered in the pan 30–45 minutes until puffed and relaxed. Meanwhile, preheat oven to 550°F (or as high as it goes) with a rack in the lower third.
- If using pepperoni, lay it directly on the dough surface. Cover completely with cheese, pushing right to the pan edges and walls — no gaps. It should look like too much cheese. It’s not.
- Ladle sauce in two or three thick stripes across the top of the cheese. Don’t spread it — keep the lines distinct for the classic racing-stripe look.
- Bake 15–18 minutes until cheese edges are deeply caramelized (dark amber, almost burnt-looking) and the bottom sounds hollow when tapped. The cheese border should be crunchy and pulling slightly from the pan walls.
- Cool in the pan 3–4 minutes, then run a spatula around the edges and slide onto a cutting board. Cut into rectangular slices and serve immediately.
Tips, Swaps & Variations
Once you’ve nailed the base recipe, here are the best ways to riff on it.
Watch It in Action
If you’re a visual learner (same), this is the best YouTube video I’ve found for showing the full Detroit process — particularly useful for the cheese-packing step and understanding what proper caramelization should actually look like.
Detroit-Style Pizza at Home — a solid walkthrough of the full process from dough to finished pie
Keep Exploring Pizza Styles
If Detroit-style has lit a fire in you for exploring different pizza traditions, here are some great next reads. Want to understand where Detroit sits in the broader pizza landscape? The popular pizza styles guide covers everything from Neapolitan to Grandma-style in one place. If you’re torn between going thick or thin, the thin crust vs thick crust breakdown walks through the tradeoffs honestly. And if Detroit feels like too big a leap, the best pizza styles for beginners guide will help you find your starting point.
FAQ
Can I make Detroit-style pizza in a regular baking pan?
What’s the difference between Detroit and Sicilian pizza?
Why does the sauce go on top in Detroit pizza?
My cheese edges aren’t caramelizing — what am I doing wrong?
Can I use pre-made dough for Detroit-style pizza?
Final Thoughts
Detroit-style pizza is one of those home cooking projects that pays back every bit of effort you put in — and then some. The caramelized cheese border, the crispy-bottomed, airy interior, the stripes of bright tomato sauce. It’s a genuinely exciting pizza to make and an even more exciting pizza to eat.
The biggest things to remember: use a dark, heavy pan with plenty of oil, pack the cheese to the absolute edges, and put the sauce on top. Everything else is details. Once you’ve made it once, you’ll understand why Detroit pizza has been quietly winning fans for over 70 years — and why it’s finally getting the national recognition it always deserved.
Tag @ThatPizzaKitchen when you make this. I genuinely want to see those cheese edges. 🍕
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