‘You hungry?’ I asked, one lazy Saturday afternoon, ruffling my kid’s messy mop. An innocent question, but not really. With a preteen, it’s Russian Roulette.
‘Yeah…’ Child replies, and then with an intensity that came out of nowhere, ‘But, like for pizza, you know? With a really good cheese pull.’
I blink. ‘Cheese pull?’
‘Yeah, you know …’ Child mimics biting into a slice of pizza and pulling away and there’s imaginary cheese dangling in the air.
‘Um…’ I literally had no idea what else to say. I’ve made a 1000 pizzas. This is not a brag or an exaggeration; I worked at my dad’s pizzeria for most of high school and college. What the beans is a cheese pull?
Hoping this wasn’t going to turn into a thing, I retreat to my office to do a little research. And that’s when the rage started. The cheese pull? Yeah, it’s a food stylist gimmick. Which turned into a Tic Tok meme. I HATE Tic Tok. And Memes.
‘Child!’ I yell from my office.
‘What?’ She pokes her head in.
I spin around, jabbing my finger at the screen. ‘It’s just a gimmick! It’s not a real thing.’
Child, not quite sure how hot the water is yet, sticks her toe. ‘Yeah, but that’s what I’m craving …’
My right eye twitches. Child tenses, squares shoulders, and sticks out chin. Child is brave.
‘You know what mimics good pull, Child? Elmer’s glue,’ I hiss. ‘You want I should make you THAT!’
‘Uh …’ But it’s too late. I’ve already swiveled around in my chair, muttering. It’s turned into a thing.
Child quietly retreats to the safety of the lair – double barriers this time – as I hear the distinctive click of the closet door.
So I did what any mildly unhinged, emotionally activated parent would do: I built a cheese pizza worth pulling. Not for the camera. For my sanity. And Child, too. I guess.

Cheese Pizza
Special Equipment
- Pizza Screen
- Parchment Paper
- Box Grater (recommended)
- Casserole Dish (recommended)

Ingredients
- 1-12 inch Pizza Crust
- 1/4 cup Rustic Tomato Sauce
- 1 cup Part Skim Mozzarella Cheese, shredded
- *Brand Matters! Alert: Purchase a brand made in Italy, such as Galbani’s or Grande.
- *Function Note: Milky, salty; gooey and stretchy when melted. The backbone of the cheese pull.
- 1/4 cup Fontina Cheese, shredded
- *Function Note: Nutty, buttery; softens the blend and adds creamy depth without overpowering.
- 3 slices Provolone Cheese, torn
- *Function Note: Mild tang, nut and butter undertone; bridge between mozzarella’s softness and parmesan’s punch.
- 1/4 cup Parmesan Cheese, grated
- *Function Note: Sharp, salty, and savory; finishes the pie with umami and browning power. Doesn’t melt – it punctuates.
- 2 tbsp Extra Virgin Olive Oil
Preparation
- Using your box grater, place it inside the casserole dish. Grate 1 cup of Mozzarella cheese. Next, grate about 1/2 cup of fontina.
- Drizzle the olive oil on your pizza crust and spread around with a pastry brush, if you have one, or the back of a spoon.
- Dump a cup of your mozzarella and fontina blend in the middle of the pie and spread outward with your fingers. Leave about a 1/4-inch edge of crust.
- Grab your three slices of provolone and tear it with your hands. Layer it around the pie as evenly as you can.
- Using a spoon, drop dollops of the rustic sauce on top of the cheese, again, trying to be even.
- *Note: Don’t spread it! When I said dollops, I meant dollops.
- Sprinkle the last of the shredded cheese over the pie to create a light seal over the sauce.
- Bake the pie at 500 degrees in a traditional oven, or 450 degrees in a counter top oven with the convection setting on, for 10 minutes.
- Pull the pie out, sprinkle the grated parmesan cheese all over the pie like an angel from heaven sneezing savory salt, and pop the pie back in for 1-2 more minutes to formally seal the deal.
Plating Notes
- If ya broke, sprinkle some dried parsley.
- If ya flush, rough-torn fresh basil leaves – fresh oil released from herbs is never not rad.
So I slide that in front of Child. The cheese pull was real, the flavor was there, and what turned into a thing? Yes. You want I should serve you that.
Nom On,
~Crunchy









