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The Forgotten Slices: Why These Once-Popular Pizza Styles Are Fading Away

This article was inspired by content originally published by Chloe James on The Takeout

Introduction

Across America’s pizza landscape, some regional styles that once defined local tastebuds are quietly fading from menus. As tastes narrow and trends evolve, pizza fans, suppliers, and operators are all feeling the ripple. Let’s dig into what’s slipping away, why it matters and how you can keep that slice of history alive.


🍕 Enthusiasts: Rediscover Forgotten Favorites

Sicilian Pizza

Once beloved for its thick, square crust and gooey mozzarella, Sicilian-style pizza has morphed from its rich Italian roots sfincione into a thinner, mass-produced version Passionate home cooks can revive this classic with a quarter-sheet pan and high-hydration dough recipe along with a quick olive oil and garlic finish.

French Bread Pizza

The quintessential 90s comfort food French bread pizza has mostly vanished from freezers and grocery shelves Bring it back: start with a fresh baguette bundle and a DIY seasoning pack, ready to toast in under 10 minutes for that nostalgic, cheesy goodness.

St. Louis & California Styles

St. Louis-style (ultra-thin, Provel cheese) and California-style (inventive toppings) now make up just a fraction of America’s pizza orders Try reviving them at home using Provel-style cheese blends or experimenting with CPK-inspired toppings on a pizza steel for a locally flavored twist.


📦 Suppliers: New Openings in Old Classics

These disappearing styles show untapped demand for regional and nostalgic niches:

  • Artisanal crusts: Sfincione and French-bread specific pans with custom crust mixes.
  • Cheese blends: Small-batch Provel or regional dairy partnerships.
  • Sauce & dough kits for home ovens delivered with DIY instructions.

Affiliate pitch: Consider stocking historical recipe kits including Provel cheese blends or heritage wheat flours to bring bygone pies back into homes and shops.


🏪 Shop Owners: Why Bring Back the Past?

Offering vintage pizza styles can set your pizzeria apart:

  1. Stand Apart: Sell historic slices as seasonal features a “Retro Sicilian September,” for instance.
  2. Storytelling: Connect with local foodies by framing menus as culinary history lessons, tapping into nostalgia.
  3. Flexibility: These recipes are simple Parisian pans and minimal toppings mean fast prep and flexible pricing.

Pizza Pro Tip: Use your POS system (like Toast or Square) to test limited-time offerings. If St. Louis Thin-Thin Tuesdays sell out twice bring them back monthly.


🍃 Expert Insight

Chef and pizza historian Elena Marino says:

“These styles may be niche, but they anchor us to the pizza tradition. They remind us there’s more to pizza than just New York and Chicago.”


🔁 Trend Watch: Retro Revival

Retail nostalgia is real frozen green bean casseroles, anyone? Vintage pizza styles are ripe for revivals in today’s artisanal and craft-focused food culture. Expect “heritage crust” pizza nights in 2025, and home cooks embracing revival recipes.


✅ Final Slice—Why It Matters

AudienceWhy It Counts
Pizza FansRediscover old favorites with simple tools like baking steels and kits
SuppliersIntroduce niche products like Provel blends, heritage flours, sauce and kit packs
Shop OwnersUse nostalgia to differentiate, boost off-peak sales, and deepen community ties

Crusts may fade, but heritage never goes stale. By honoring and reviving forgotten pizza styles, we keep our culinary roots and our menus richly layered.


Affiliate Disclosure: This article contains affiliate links. Pizza Magazine may earn a commission if you purchase through them. We only recommend products that help preserve or elevate your pizza journey.

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