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Marcello's: Satisfying Chicagoans for More Than 60 Years

Daniel Zemans, our man in Chicago, checks in with another piece of intel on the Windy City pizza scene. Daniel also blogs about Chicagoland pizza with his friends on the Chicago Pizza Club blog. The Mgmt.

200905120FatherAndSonOutside.jpg

Marcello’s (Father & Son)

2745 N. Milwaukee Avenue, Chicago IL 60647 (map); 773-275-7080‎; marcellos.com/
Getting There: Blue Line to Logan Square, walk 1/3 of a mile south on Milwaukee or take #56 Milwaukee Avenue Street bus to Sacramento
Pizza Style: Thin crust and pan/deep dish
Oven Type: Gas
The Skinny: Classic Chicago thin crust is definitely worth a visit; deep dish/pan pies are an added bonus
Price: 14-inch thin and crispy pies start at $10.45; 12-inch pan/deep dish pizzas start at $13.95

Father & Son has been selling classic Chicago thin crust pies in Logan Square since it first opened in 1947 at the corner of Diversey and Whipple. Seven years later, 24-year-old Marshall Bauer became the pizzeria's third owner, and the restaurant has truly been a family affair ever since. Upon taking over, Bauer was guided in the ways of the pizza business by family members who owned Rossi's, a southside pizzeria. A few years later, Bauer brought his father into the business, where he would stay until he passed away 30 years later. In 1962, the restaurant was doing so well that Father & Son relocated to the larger Milwaukee Avenue location I visited for this review. Today, the company is still in the Bauer family, with Marshall's son Bill in charge of day-to-day operations. Marshall’s other son, Jay, runs Nation Pizza Products, which makes frozen pizzas and related products. Marshall Bauer remains the CEO and Chairman of both companies. His third son, Jack, is not directly involved with either company, but he does keep the pizza-eating world safe by fighting terrorists.

In addition to the Logan Square location, there is a huge restaurant and banquet hall on the border of Old Town and Lincoln Park as well as a new place (2 years old) in the northern suburb of Northbrook. Twelve years ago, Father & Son added a catering division it dubbed Marcello's, a name the company applied to its pizzerias two years ago. While the name has changed, the pizza is still very good and understandably popular. And between the catering business and three spread out pizzerias, Marcerllo's serves the entire Chicago area. They were the first or one of the first pizzerias in Chicago to offer delivery and today, they make between 8,000 and 10,000 deliveries per week.

200905120FatherAndSonThin.jpg

200905120FatherAndSonThinSide.jpgMarcello’s offers three different styles of pizza: Thin and Crispy, New York Style and Pan/Deep Dish. My first pizza of the night was a Thin and Crispy, Marcello's original style, with mushrooms on the whole pie and sausage on half of it. As is common for tavern-cut pizzas, this one had a thin, cracker crust. It had some nice toasted flavor and more, importantly, a solid, crispy texture. That texture was necessary to balance the overflowing amounts of tangy, herbalicious sauce, the nice layer of whole milk mozzarella, the piles of fresh mushrooms and the large chunks of garlicy sausage.

Marcello’s does not have the best thin crust pizza in Chicago. I actually don’t think it’s really in the discussion. But for really satisfying classic tavern-cut pizza, it’s definitely worth checking out if you are in the slowly gentrifying neighborhood.

The New York Style is billed as being like the Thin and Crispy, but with a thicker crust, more sauce and more cheese. While New York slices do have a thicker crust than traditional tavern cut Chicago pies, they rarely have more cheese and, in my experience, never have more sauce. I was curious about their version of New York pizza, but opted for the pan/deep dish pizza instead.

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I was intrigued by Marcello’s categorization of pan/deep dish. I have noticed that the two terms are often used interchangeably in Chicago. In my mind, the distinction used to be pretty clear: deep dish had a thick crust, often made with some corn meal, and was topped with cheese and toppings with sauce on top; pan had thick flour crust (though not nearly as thick as deep dish) and was covered with toppings and sauce, all of which was topped with cheese. But there are so many variations of both styles the distinctions in my mind do not (and may never have) held true. It is certainly true that there are pizzerias that serve pies that fall under my definition of deep dish, but refer to them as pan pizzas. Marcello’s does nothing to help clarify the situation.

The pan/deep dish pizza is what I think most people would refer to as deep dish, though the crust is a bit thinner than is common. Places like Uno’s
(reviewed here for Slice) and Lou Malnati’s (reviewed here for Slice) offer the deep dish archetype with a thick crust, but there are plenty of places that offer the same construction, albeit on a thinner crust; Pizano’s
(reviewed here for Slice) and Burt’s Place (reviewed here for Slice) jump to mind. 200905120FatherAndSonSidePan.jpgThe corn-meal infused crust at Marcello’s is buttery and light. It is thin enough that eating multiple pieces in one sitting is easy, but flavorful and sturdy enough to stand up to generous amounts of sauce and cheese and, in this case, a pile of fresh shredded spinach. In addition to the mozzarella, Marcello’s adds a nice serving of Parmesan on top of the pizza which gives the pies an added tang that I enjoyed, but could have done without.

The deep dish at Marcello’s is good, but if you are going there for one pie, I’d recommend sticking with the Thin and Crispy that made them famous. And you may want to check out one of their dessert pizzas that I was too full to try. They offer both Hot Toffee Apple and Very Berry.

Related


Pizano's: More Greatness from the First Family of Chicago Pizza

Burt's Place: Home of the Pizza King of Chicago
Lou Malnati's: Home of Flawless Deep Dish
Uno’s, Chicago’s Original Deep-Dish Pizza

12 Comments:

That's a beautiful looking building and a nice photo. It would look even better if there was a 1940s era automobile out front rather than the jeep.

Ciao,

Paulie Gee

Unless someone can prove me otherwise, this is the best place to get pizza (delivered) in Logan Square. The New York style is just weird, and has way too much cheese, it's best that you didn't get it.

Additionally, your definition of deep dish is almost correct. What they served you is deep dish -- a thinner crust than pan, with high sides, and ingredients piled inside, really like a pie. Sometimes deep dish is "stuffed", meaning it has that extra layer of dough like Giordano's (from bottom to top: dough, toppings & cheese, dough, sauce).
When I think pan pizza I think Pizza Hut (sad, I know), but also, Pequod's is a pan pizza (only with the toppings in reverse similar to deep dish).

@anysuchname: The point I was trying to make is that the definitions of the two are somewhat fluid. There are multiple exceptions to every hard and fast definition I've seen offered, including yours. There are deep dish pizzas like Malnati's that are certainly thicker than most pan pizzas (including your proposed archetype of Pizza Hut).

I do have to correct your impression, shared by many, that stuffed pizza is merely a subset of deep dish. Stuffed pizza, first served at Nancy's and soon thereafter at Giordano's is, according to the founders of both companies, based on a Pizza Chena (sometimes called Pizza Gaina), a savory pie served around Easter in some parts of Italy. It's probably no accident that they developed stuffed pies in Chicago, where deep dish pizzas were and are popular, and they were likely influenced by deep dish stylings, but that does not make their invention a subset of the deep dish category.

In addition to the different historical roots, there are plenty of differences between the typical deep dish and stuffed pies: 1) The bottom crust of typical stuffed pizzas are thinner than the deep dish crusts at places like Uno's and Malnati's. 2) The ratio of cheese to bread is weighted much more heavily towards cheese in a stuffed pizza than it is in most, if not all deep dish pies. 3) I have never seen a stuffed pizza with a corn meal crust and if it exists, it is rare. Corn meal is common in most deep dish pies. 4) Even those deep dish pies that do not use corn meal tend to have a crumbly texture that no stuffed pizza has.

You are killing me! I'm flying to Chicago on Saturday and already have way too many recommendations, and then I see this!!! LOL

How many meals can a girl eat a day?
Will add this to my list.

PS I'm definitely a thin crust girl.

Hmm, yeah, Father & Son isn't that bad. I'd written them off a while ago for a couple of reasons:

--the place where I worked five years ago constantly ordered it for dinner, so their pizza is charged with memories of working late on a crappy project.

--their steak sandwiches are pretty awful. Tough, stringy meat on dried-out, brittle bread. Served with one-note teriyaki sauce.

But no, if you stick with pizza, they're good.

We get stuff from their catering division occasionally at work---its always been really bad although some people just love it, but then we haven't ever had the pizza---maybe I should push for that next time.

Daniel -- point taken on the origins of stuffed vs. deep dish, but I still think that they are closer than any other two types, hence the common understanding.
As for the finer details of the differences in your last paragraph, I will agree with all but point one, that being the thickness of the bottom crust. A quick google image search turns up Malnati's, as well as Giordano's, wherein using these pics and my memory, I fail to see a discernable difference between crust thickness.

I've never actually eaten their pizza. Maybe I will try it. But everything else I have ever eaten there was really gross. (I will ballpark this figure at about 8-10 meals, when I worked in Logan Square and there weren't a ton of options, so we kept ordering it...)

@anysuchname: I definitely agree that there's a lot of overlap and the size and the fact that both have sauce on top certainly leads to a lot of confusion. As for the thickness, you could be right. I think I'll have to measure each one next time I try them.

@skizziks, sally559 and marinelm: I've never had anything other than pizza from Father & Son/Marcello's so I'll take your word for it. I will say that I rarely order non-pizza items from pizzerias and I think that's generally a good rule of thumb.

I go by the one on North Avenue all the time, but I've NEVER been tempted to go in and eat. It looks so suburban-mall-food-court-bad-pizza-ish.

@Daniel: I totally agree, that's a good rule of thumb. And steak sandwiches are probably the worst thing to order anywhere: if the place doesn't take their meat seriously they'll screw it up, and if they do take their meat seriously it's a waste (and an insult) to ask them to throw it in a sandwich. So yeah, it's dumb that I have this compulsion to order steak sandwiches from pizzerias; at least I'm not in the habit of ordering the ribs.

I found this place on my own in 1983. They had three types of pies. Chicago, NY and extra thin. I liked the thin pie the best. It was sliced into checkerboard type square slices.

This is the best pizza that I have found in Chicago.

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