logo
A Chicago pizza expert's guide to the city's best pies

A Chicago pizza expert's guide to the city's best pies

BBC News30-07-2025
Getty Images
Local pizza expert Steve Dolinsky wants you to know that Chicago pizza isn't just deep dish. Just in time for Lollapalooza Chicago 2025, here are his favourite pies in the city.
The SpeciaList
Steve Dolinsky is a 13-time James Beard Award-winning food journalist whose "Food Guy" reports air Thursday nights on NBC 5 News in Chicago. He's the author of the book Pizza City, USA and The Ultimate Chicago Pizza Guide, the host-producer of the Pizza City podcast and the founder of Pizza City Tours and Pizza City Fest, which now holds events in Chicago, LA and Nashville.
Outside Chicago, the term "Chicago-style pizza" is invariably associated with the deep-dish pie that's often mocked by out-of-towners as "lasagna in a bread bowl". But true Chicagoans know that the city and its suburbs are actually home to three iconic styles of pizza: deep-dish, stuffed and Chicago thin – AKA: "tavern style".
As visitors prepare to flock to the city for the 25th edition of Lollapalooza, a massive annual four-day music festival expected to draw 100,000 people per day this year, they'll find plenty of opportunities to experience what is arguably Chicago's most famous culinary offering; in all its forms. We tapped renowned local food reporter Steve Dolinsky for his expert take.
"People think Chicago is all deep-dish and was invented by the Uno's guys," says Dolinsky, who published Pizza City, USA in 2018, documenting all of the region's delicious styles. "But there's so much more to it."
The story of Chicago pizza doesn't start with a deep dish, but with a tavern. In the 1940s, when men habitually popped into bars after work, "bartenders realised that by serving a salty snack, they'd sell more beer," says Dolinsky, whose book led to a Pizza City podcast, Pizza City tours and the wildly popular Pizza City Fest; landing this year in Chicago from 22 - 24 August. "With the advent of gas ovens, they started making thin-crust pies, which they'd cut into squares and pass around the bar on cocktail napkins for free."
Then, in 1943, when Ike Sewell and Ric Riccardo opened a bar in Chicago's busy River North area, Riccardo used cake pans inherited from the bar's previous occupant to develop a deep-dish pizza, leading the duo to open The Pizzeria (later renamed Pizzeria Uno). "Unlike its thin-crust predecessor, this dough was pressed into a pan," explains Dolinsky. "They topped it with cheese to protect the dough, then added toppings and a chunky tomato sauce."
Fast forward to 1971 and Rocco Palese's invention of the stuffed pizza at Nancy's; purportedly inspired by his mother's pizza rustica (Italian stuffed savoury pie).
"All visitors and most locals still don't understand stuffed is a sub-category of deep-dish," says Dolinsky. "It bears little resemblance to a classic deep-dish or even a deep-pan pizza, due to that thin second layer of dough. Fortunately, we have so many other styles of pizza here, you don't have to rely on just one.'
Here are Dolinsky's favourite pizzas in Chicago.
Getty Images
Quintessential tavern-style
1. Best for the thin-crust diehard: Pat's Pizzeria on North Lincoln Avenue
Pat 's opened in 1950, bringing their spin on thin-crust pizza to Chicago's North Side, where it was a smash hit.
TIPS
Less is more with any Chicago pizza, warns Dolinsky. If you want toppings, the best two are raw, bulk fennel sausage pinched and pressed onto the pie, and giardiniera (pickled vegetables), the classic condiment in Chicago's famous Italian beef sandwich. Crunchy and briny, giardiniera tastes great on all styles of pizza.
The magic here is in Pat's iconic dough, says Dolinsky, which is proofed overnight, then put through a dough sheeter (used to flatten pizza dough into large sheets), which helps to make a really thin crust. The "skins" are then cured in a cooler for about three days. "After the dough is sheeted, it's laid between sheets of paper and put on a rack to let it really dry out," explains Dolinsky.
The result is one of the thinnest pizza crusts in Chicago, which is topped from edge to edge with sauce, cheese and crumbled fennel sausage before it's baked to a crisp. Dolinsky likens it to eating "a salty cracker dipped in tomato sauce".
Website: https://patspizza.brygid.online/zgrid/themes/13142/intro/index.jsp
Address: 2679 N. Lincoln Avenue, Chicago, IL 60614
Phone: (773) 248-0168
Instagram: @patspizzachicago
Getty Images
2. Best for a true working-class pizza: The Original Vito & Nick's Pizzeria
This family business originated in 1923 as a tavern on the South Side of Chicago; in 1946, they became one of the city's first thin-crust pizza makers. "This pizza starts with a thin layer of tomato sauce topped with pinched and pressed raw bulk Italian sausage, which renders delicious fat into the pie as it's baked," says Dolinsky.
The cracker-thin pizza is finished with handfuls of whole milk mozzarella. Due to baking directly on the hot stone deck of the oven, the bottom (or "undercarriage") has blistered, charred spots that add to the texture. It's cut into squares, and whether you go for the crackly edges or cheesier middle is up to you.
Nick Barraco, the founder, declared in 1965 that they would never deliver their pizza, which is honoured to this day, as is the pizza's original recipe.
Website: https://vitoandnicks.com/index.php
Address: 8433 South Pulaski Road, Chicago, IL 60652
Phone: (773) 735-2050
Instagram: @vito_and_nicks
Getty Images
3. Best for a chef-driven tavern-style pie: Pizza Matta
Jason Vincent is the James Beard award-winning chef and owner of Giant and Chef's Special Cocktail Bar. During the pandemic, he started making pizza from a portable truck and in 2023 he opened Pizza Matta next door to Giant.
When Vincent first opened Pizza Matta, he was serving East Coast-style pizza by the wedge-shaped slice. Once he perfected that pie, he added a tavern-style pizza as a weekly special. Because it was so successful, it's now on the regular menu and customers can get both styles every day.
"Vincent's pies are perfectly thin and crispy, and being the accomplished chef that Vincent is, he finishes his pizza with SarVecchio, a dry, shredded, salty and nutty cheese from Wisconsin that resembles Parmesan in flavour," says Dolinsky. Vincent also uses sausage, ham and chicken from a farm in Michigan, premium pepperoni from Ohio and mushrooms cultivated in Chicago.
Website: https://pizzamattachicago.com/
Address: 3211 W. Armitage Avenue, Chicago, IL 60647
Phone: (773) 661-6521
Instagram: @pizzamattachicago
Getty Images
Deep dish
4. Best for vegetarians: My Pi
This famed spot was founded in 1971 by Larry Aronsen and is now run by his son, Rich. Larry opened My Pi because he loved Uno and its sister pizzeria, Due; tinkering with the pie to make his own version
TIP
Dolinsky doesn't advise getting any style of Chicago pizza to-go, but says that if you insist on taking a deep-dish or deep-pan pizza home (or to your hotel), it must be left uncut. Once sliced, everything seeps into the crevices, ruining the bottom crust.
What makes My Pi so special? "It's known for this secret spice mix, which Larry makes at home and gives to Rich to add to the tomato sauce," says Dolinsky. No one knows the recipe but Larry, who put the mysterious formula in his will so that Rich can one day make the mix. "While most pies get a ton of flavour from the rendered sausage," says Dolinsky, "this one is great for vegetarians because the spices add that flavour."
This is a one-hand pie: firm, no flopping, with a crisp-tender dough. It earns Dolinsky's stamp of OBR – optimal bite ratio – meaning every bite has the perfect mix of crust, cheese, sauce and topping.
Website: https://www.mypiepizza.com/
Address: 2010 North Damen Ave, Unit E, Chicago, IL 60647
Phone: (773) 394-6900
Instagram: @mypipizzachicago
Alamy
5. Best for a taste of 1940's original deep-dish: Lou Malnati's
Lou Malnati started his pizza-making career managing Uno and Due but after being turned down when he tried to buy the businesses, he opened his namesake pizza spot in 1971. The business now has more than 70 locations throughout Illinois, Wisconsin, Indiana and Arizona.
This deep-dish pizza is made with plenty of oil in the dough, which helps it spread in the bottom and up the sides of the pan and creates a sturdy crust. It has thin slices of Wisconsin mozzarella spread across the bottom. The sauce at Lou's gets great acidity from chunky California tomatoes and it's finished with a bit of pecorino Romano cheese. Be sure to order the fennel sausage "crumbled", or they'll press a sausage patty right into the pizza, which sits in the pie like a manhole cover. "You can upgrade to a Buttercrust (pizza crust made with butter instead of oil) for $0.75 more," says Dolinsky, "but word on the street is it's just more oil in the dough."
Website: https://www.loumalnatis.com/
Address: 6649 North Lincoln Avenue, Lincolnwood, IL 60712
Phone: (847) 673-0800
Instagram: @loumalnatis
Hannah Hornacek
6. Best for a great deep-pan pie: Labriola
In 2014, pizza in Chicago took a new course when Rich Labriola, a former commercial baker, opened Labriola just off Michigan Avenue. "Labriola ferments his dough for two to three days. This allows the yeast to eat the sugar to develop carbon dioxide during the ferment, which gives the dough some lift and airiness," says Dolinsky, explaining that this helps the dough maintain shape during baking.
TIP
Tavern-style pizza is always served as a whole pie, says Dolinsky. While places like New York are known for serving solitary slices to diners on paper plates, Midwesterners gather around the table for their pizza in a more communal style.
There's a nice Midwestern spin here with nods to corn: Labriola incorporates corn oil in the dough, and then lines the bottom of the pan with coarse cornmeal to provide some texture underneath, but also to help release the pizzas when they're finished baking.
Much like in Detroit (which has its own style of pizza), the cheese is spread to the very edge of the pie, so as it bakes, the cheese seeps down between the dough and the pan and burns a little, getting super crunchy like a frico (a crispy Italian cheese cracker). This is a thicker pizza that definitely demands to be eaten with a knife and fork.
Website: https://www.labriolacafe.com/
Address: 535 N Michigan Avenue, Chicago, IL 60611
Phone: (312) 955-3100
Instagram: @labriolachicago
Azuree Withal
7. Best for the tastiest crust: George's Deep-Dish
The award-winning pies at George's Deep Dish are based on Greek lagana, a flatbread similar to focaccia that's only eaten on Shrove Monday ahead of Easter. George Bumbaris, the eponymous founder, was inspired by the bread from Grevena, the region in northern Greece where his father was born. He uses a natural sourdough starter and cold ferments the ball of dough for at least two nights, yielding one of the tastiest crusts in Chicago. "You must get the pinched and pressed sausage here so that fat renders into the pie as it bakes," advises Dolinsky.
Bumbaris comes from the fine-dining world, so he takes a slightly more studied approach to pizza than the average pizzamaker. He's also clever with his pizza names, with fun names like Orwell's Farm (a vegetarian pie) and Clooney's ER (with sausage, meatballs, pepperoni and bacon).
Website: https://www.georgesdeepdish.com/
Address: 6221 North Clark Street, Chicago, IL 60660 (multiple locations)
Phone: (773) 801-1551
Instagram: @georgesdeepdish
Getty Images
Stuffed
8. Best pie for true pizza indulgence: Nancy's (West Loop)
There's some confusion about Nancy 's, which people often say serves deep-dish pizza. Incorrect: it's stuffed pizza. Back in 1971, when Annunziata Palese and her husband, Rocco, took over Guy's Pizza, Rocco went home to Italy and was inspired by his mother's pizza rustica. When he came back to Chicago, he built a deep-dish pizza with a bottom crust, topped it with cheese and fillings, then placed another thin layer of the dough over the pie, poked holes in it, and put tomato sauce on top of that. The stuffed pie at Nancy's was born.
You know a pizza is stuffed when it's as high as the pan in which it's baked. "These pies are heavy," said Dolinsky. "I wouldn't recommend eating more than a slice – maybe two if that's all you're going to eat for a meal."
Website: https://nancyspizza.com/locations/west-loop/
Address: 1000 West Washington Blvd., Chicago, IL 60607
Phone: (312) 733-9920
Instagram: @nancyspizza
This article was originally published in July 2024 and has since been updated.
BBC Travel ' s The SpeciaList is a series of guides to popular and emerging destinations around the world, as seen through the eyes of local experts and tastemakers.
--
If you liked this story, sign up for The Essential List newsletter – a handpicked selection of features, videos and can't-miss news, delivered to your inbox twice a week.
For more Travel stories from the BBC, follow us on Facebook, X and Instagram.
Food & Drink
City
Features
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Michelle Obama thought Barack was ‘weird' and ‘nerdy' before they met
Michelle Obama thought Barack was ‘weird' and ‘nerdy' before they met

The Independent

timea few seconds ago

  • The Independent

Michelle Obama thought Barack was ‘weird' and ‘nerdy' before they met

Michelle Obama reflected on her initial attraction to her husband, Barack Obama, during an episode of her podcast, IMO. Assigned as his mentor at a law firm, she initially anticipated Barack would be 'weird' and "nerdy" before they met. Her first spark of attraction occurred during a phone call, finding his voice "sexier" than the image she had formed of him. Upon meeting in person, she was pleasantly surprised to find him much more attractive than his photograph and impressed by his cool, self-assured manner. Despite her professional reservations about dating him, Barack eventually persuaded her to go on a date, leading to their 32-year marriage and two daughters.

Cops make disturbing find outside Grateful Dead's 60th anniversary concert in San Francisco
Cops make disturbing find outside Grateful Dead's 60th anniversary concert in San Francisco

Daily Mail​

timea minute ago

  • Daily Mail​

Cops make disturbing find outside Grateful Dead's 60th anniversary concert in San Francisco

San Francisco police made a disturbing discovery over the weekend, just outside a concert series marking the Grateful Dead's 60th anniversary. Police say they were patrolling the area of Fulton Street and 35th Avenue outside of the famed Golden Gate Park on Saturday, when they came upon an 'illuminated open trailer' with a man inside at around 11pm. As the officers got closer, they could see numerous tanks inside the vehicle. They believed the tanks may have been filled with nitrous oxide, and arrested 32-year-old Thomas Siderio, of Philadelphia, at the scene. As he was taken into custody, officers also seized about 100 metal tanks as well as numerous balloons they say point to Siderio's plan to ingest the laughing gas, and towed his vehicle. Siderio was then booked into the San Francisco County Jail on suspicion of distributing nitrous oxide and on suspicion of possessing nitrous oxide with the intent for intoxication. The substance, also commonly referred to as laughing gas, produces a feeling of relaxation, laughter and dizziness. It is typically used as a sedative at dentists offices, but is also frequently used at parties and concerts for its euphoric and hallucinogenic effects, the San Francisco Chronicle reports. While the gas is approved for use in medical settings and as a food additive for aerosol spray in products such as whipped cream, it is criminalized for recreational purposes - as its overuse can cause suffocation and death. 'Our officers will continue to patrol all areas of Golden Gate Park and the surrounding neighborhood,' police said in a statement. 'SFPD is dedicated to keeping everyone safe and will continue to ensure concertgoers have a safe time while in our city.' The 60th anniversary concert series was meant to provide a boon to the local economy, KRON reports. 'When we make space for creativity and celebration, the whole city benefits,' Mayor Daniel Lurie said at a news conference ahead of the weekend's festivities. He added that small businesses in the area had 'already seen a noticeable increase in foot traffic and fans come to the historic neighborhood.'

Aubrey Plaza's new biopic role as Heidi Fleiss leads Hollywood madam to break her silence to warn the star
Aubrey Plaza's new biopic role as Heidi Fleiss leads Hollywood madam to break her silence to warn the star

Daily Mail​

timea minute ago

  • Daily Mail​

Aubrey Plaza's new biopic role as Heidi Fleiss leads Hollywood madam to break her silence to warn the star

Aubrey Plaza 's fans were surprised on Wednesday to learn that the White Lotus actress had been tapped to portray the infamous Hollywood madam Heidi Fleiss in an upcoming biopic. And now Fleiss, 59, is speaking out about the 41-year-old actress' plans to play her in The Heidi Fleiss Story. The former madam told the Daily Mail she was 'pleasantly shocked' that the Parks And Recreation actress will be playing her in the biopic. 'It sounds fantastic,' Fleiss said on Wednesday. 'I've never met her and never even heard about it, but wow!' But she also shared a note of caution for Plaza in the wake of her legal and reputational setbacks. 'She's got her work cut out for her,' Fleiss said. 'You know, I hate to have to live with me, and now she has to play me.' However, Fleiss added: 'She's going to be great.' Fleiss has been open about her early career, in which she briefly worked as a prostitute. After she was mentored by another madam running a prostitution ring in Beverly Hills, Fleiss went solo in 1990 and launched her own prostitution ring catering to wealthy clients in Hollywood. But the organization was short-lived, as Fleiss was arrested in 1993 on charges of pandering, tax evasion, and money laundering after prosecutors accused her of laundering $1.5 million through a series of shell companies with falsified records. She was eventually convicted of federal tax evasion charges in 1996. She was sentenced to seven years in prison, but only served 20 months of her sentence at a federal correctional institution before she was released to a halfway house, where she began the rest of her sentence, which included a requirement to complete 370 hours of community service. When asked what advice she would give to Plaza, Fleiss said: 'You know what? I'm confused by the things that I do, so I don't know how to give anyone advice.' Plaza will be stepping into the role after acclaimed turns in season two of HBO's The White Lotus, as well as the crime drama Emily The Criminal and the coming-of-age dramedy My Old Ass. She shared a note of caution for Plaza. 'She's got her work cut out for her,' Fleiss said. 'You know, I hate to have to live with me, and now she has to play me'; pictured on Celebrity Big Brother UK in 2010 Plaza will next be seen in the crime comedy Honey Don't!, which is written and directed by Ethan Coen and co-written with his wife Tricia Cooke. The actress spent time out of the spotlight earlier this year after her husband, the filmmaker Jeff Baena, died by suicide. She made her first public appearance after the tragedy by briefly appearing on the Saturday Night Live 50th Anniversary Special in February, during which she donned a tie-dye shirt as a tribute to her late husband, as it was similar to the tie-dye shirts they wore at their wedding in 2021. Fleiss also gave Daily Mail an update on several projects she's working on, including a new site and app for content creators that she hopes will rival OnlyFans. It's called The List by Heidi Fleiss, and the former madam is already in talks with web developers to create it. 'OnlyFans take 20 percent of what these creators make, and very few are making money because they take so much,' Fleiss said. 'Most of them aren't making $3 million a month — they make $2,000. Creators should have more control of the money they make from their content. The List will be more favorable for the creators.' Fleiss, who lives in Pahrump, Nevada, says her priority remains on taking care of her precious birds and continuing her rescue efforts. She currently has between 30 to 40 Macaws and smaller parrots, many of which had been neglected by prior owners or breeders, and she hopes her efforts to care for them can counteract negative forces in society. 'Humanity has had one purpose, and that is to destroy everything as quickly as possible. That's our only purpose,' Fleiss claimed. 'That's how I truly see humanity, and I've always been misanthropic. But with these birds, it's so much more.' Since her release, Fleiss has been open about her past work running a prostitution ring, though she has largely stayed mum about the identities of her high-powered former clients, even as some of their identities were hinted at during her salacious trial. In 2010 she made a foray into mainstream television when she appeared on the UK's Celebrity Big Brother. In recent years, Fleiss has been the owner and manager of a private airport in Pahrump that caters only to small aircrafts. But the former Hollywood madam is also stepping back into the entertainment industry by filming a documentary directed by Andrew Renzi, who was a producer on the HBO reality series Paul American, which delves into the exploits of brothers Jake and Logan Paul.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store