Sure, you've heard of Chicago and New York style pizza, but did you know that Miami has a Cuban-style that is completely unique? Here's its history.
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Reporting mistakes helps us improve the experience. Miami's unique Cuban-style pizza features a puffier pan crust, sweet tomato sauce, a blend of mozzarella and Gouda cheese, and toppings like bananas, picadillo, and sweet plantains. Cuban pizza is assembled with toppings underneath the cheese, which is generously arranged over the edges to create a crispy, savory edge, and the small personal-sized pies are typically folded in half for eating.
The origins of Cuban pizza are disputed, with one story attributing it to a Miami restaurant founder who brought the style from Cuba, while another credits a different Miami shop's founder who learned the recipe in Cuba and pioneered it in the U.S.If you were flying to Miami for the weekend and wanted to have some real Cuban food, there are some things you'd be expected to do — like go tothat's in the city, and have a bracing cafecito after your meal. However, getting pizza probably wouldn't be on your list.
Although there are, and everyone's heard of some of them, like New York's and Chicago's, Miami's Cuban-style isn't really known much outside the area and the community. The pizza has several characteristics that define it. Starting with the base, it's a pan pizza, and the dough is puffier and higher than others, like New York's thinner version. It's also a smaller personal-size instead of a bigger traditional pie.
The tomato sauce is a little sweet as well, which contributes to the whole pizza's characteristic touch of sweetness. While mozzarella alone is the classic cheese, and, Cuban pizza is made with both mozzarella and Gouda, so the blend is extra creamy. It's actually less surprising than it might seem, as Gouda is in different dishes in Cuba, like the Cubano. You may see some unique toppings, too.
Some of them include bananas, seasoned ground beef called picadillo, chorizo, shrimp, and sweet plantains. One well-known Miami spot for Cuban pizza, Polo Norte, even uses guava, cheese, and bacon. The method of assembling the pizza is also different from what Americans are used to. Instead of being added over the cheese, the toppings go under all of it, sealing them in.
Additionally, the cheese is generously arranged over the edges, which forms a crispy, savory edge around the top of the dough. Once the pizza is done, Cubans usually fold these small personal-sized pies in half and eat them that way, rather than slicing them into triangles. Since the toppings are safely ensconced under the melted cheese, there's no risk that they'll fall out. As with many foods, there is a dispute over this style's origins.
One story is that the founder of a well-known Miami Cuban pizza place, Montes de Oca, was selling it in a Cuban beach town and continued when he came to the Florida city. But the way another famous Miami shop, Rey's Pizza, tells it, its founder was running restaurants in Cuba and learned how to make pizza from a man from Argentina, and he pioneered the style when he came to the States.
Whoever was first, there are now many restaurants, like Polo Norte, making it too.
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