A fluffy sourdough focaccia pizza crust is topped with pizza sauce, melty cheese, cup and char pepperoni, fresh basil, and a drizzle of hot honey.
This content contains affiliate links. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.
Up until the last couple of years, I never liked thick crust pizza. Mostly because my exposure was limited to Pizza Hut’s deep dish pan crust which I found to be oily and stale tasting – granted that was in the early 90s so I cannot report how it compares to the current times. I stuck to hand tossed or thin crust for the majority of the first 30 years of my life.
What is Columbus-style pizza?
My love of thin crust came in handy when I first moved to Columbus in 2003 and met their crunchy, thin, pepperoni-loaded, square-cut (aka party-cut or tavern-cut) pizza slices. But despite all the flak Columbus-style pizza gets nationally for it’s cracker-like crust, according to a book about Columbus pizza history one of the best nationally recognized pepperoni brands (and family-owned), Ezzo Sausage, is also made here! Even Alton Brown gives it his stamp of approval.
Of course Columbus pizzerias do not exclusively sell thin crust pizzas, there are plenty of other styles to go around including the more American-traditional hand-tossed triangle-cut slices. In fact, the first pizza served in Columbus was a thicker crust, and recently more varieties have come on the scene including those inspired by Chicago, Detroit, and even Sicily.
The first I had was Detroit-style and that’s the one that turned me over to the dark side of enjoying thicker crust pizza. Compared to my childhood memories, the crust was buttery, crispy on the edges, but also fluffy inside. It kind of reminded me of focaccia.
Enter the sourdough focaccia pizza crust.
Fast forward to a year long commitment to my sourdough starter (we’ve been on an off for years but this is our longest running relationship thus far), and I’ve now perfected both focaccia and a focaccia pizza crust. Of course, topped with Ezzo’s cup-and-char pepperoni that I am lucky enough to find at a local grocery called Weiland’s in my neighborhood. Those crispy, thicker pepperonis literally turn into cups and collect little pools of grease (no blotting allowed).
Don’t forget the drizzle of hot honey, a post-oven topping that has also taken Columbus by storm thanks to Paulie Gee’s, that also takes up residence in those cups. I used to drizzle balsamic reduction all over my pizzas, but now I oscillate between that and hot honey. Other favorite post-oven toppings include: fresh basil (pictured here), ricotta, burrata, and fresh greens (especially arugula).
Six years ago: Redheads
Seven years ago: Sausage and Egg Breakfast Casserole
Ten years ago: Funfetti Cheesecake Pudding Dump Cake
Source: Adapted from King Arthur.