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My favorite pizza of all time is a St.Louis Style Pizza, specifically, a copycat Imo’s St. Louis Style Pizza. This traditional pizza is nestled on a paper thin, crisp crust (no yeast!), covered lightly in a sweet sauce, and then smothered in tangy provel cheese. The cheese is so gooey and delicious, it sticks right to the top of your mouth. So delicious!
If you’re not into St. Louis Style Pizza, be sure to check out our Best Pepperoni Pizza which is a classic New York-style pizza with a chewy crust, plenty of whole milk mozzarella and truffle honey. If specialty pizzas are your thing, don’t miss this Bruschetta Chicken Pizza, and if you like just a little bit of a spin on a classic, check out this Best Meatball Pizza Recipe.
St.Louis Style Pizza (Imo’s Copy Cat)
St.Louis style pizza. Love or it hate it?
I’ve found that most people are very passionate one way or the other, if you hate it, the mere thought of it elicits cringes and a crinkle of your nose; on the other hand, if you love it, the mere thought of it will make you burst into tears of joy and send your stomach into a hunger-induced tizzy. As you can imagine, I’m on the love the side, in fact, I think I feel a tear welling up in my eye right this very minute…
I happen to LOVE the super-thin crust, sweet, sparingly used sauce, and ALL the melty, in-your-face provel cheese. The fact that the cheese is so sticky and gooey, it practically adheres to the roof of your mouth when you take a bit is not a nuisanceto me, but a mere perk of the delicious pizza.
Because of the thin nature of the crust, each pizza is usually cut into squares instead of the typical triangular pizza shape to ensure all toppings stay safely on said crust and not on the ground.
What is Provel cheese?
This is an absolute essential ingredient in St. Louis Style Pizza. Basically it’s a processed cheese made of provolone, Swiss, and white cheddar. It’s a wonderful melting cheese, and gets gooey and sticky when heated, unlike mozzarella, which gets stringy. You can find it in most grocery stores these days in the specialty cheese bin.
Nowww, I’m not really one to go for processed cheese on anything (unless it’s a classic grilled cheese of course), but here, I wouldn’t have it otherwise. – it makes the pizza. BUT this is also what turns some people off, it’s a very pungent cheese, which I, happen to think if fabulous, but other, stinky cheese haters might think otherwise.
How to make Imo’s Pizza Crust
So this also where people go, “Huh??”
This particular crust in unlike any pizza crust you’ve encountered. It’s paper thin, has no chew to in, and this version, uses only a touch of baking powder and no yeast. It’s more a cracker consistency than a pizza dough.
Here’s what you need:
- all-purpose flour
- salt
- olive oil
- corn syrup
- water
Mix all the ingredients together, give it a few kneads and roll it out. Ready for toppings!
How to Make St. Louis Style Pizza
- Make the crust
- Mix tomato puree, tomato paste, oregano, basil, garlic powder, sugar, and salt together in a large bowl.
- Roll the pizza crust out and divide the sauce between to two pizzas.
- Cover with cheese.
- Bake! (For great instruction on how to make perfect pizzas every time, check out our Best Pepperoni Pizza post.)
Toppings for St. Louis Style Pizza
I’m a purist when it comes to topping on most pizzas, this one is no exception. Because the crust is relatively thin, it really can’t stand up to a lot of toppings. Two is the most I’ll ever put on, but you can try your hand at more. My very favorite is plain ol’ cheese, but pepperoni or pepperoni and chopped green peppers is a close second.

St.Louis Style Pizza (Imo's Copycat)
Ingredients
- 10 oz. crushed tomatoes
- 3 oz tomato paste
- 1 tbsp sugar
- 1 tsp dried basil
- 1/2 tsp dried oregano, plus more for sprinkling
- 1 tsp garlic powder
- 1 1/2 tsp. kosher salt, divided
- 2 cups + 2 tbsp. all-purpose flour
- 1 tsp baking powder
- 2 tsp olive oil
- 2 tsp corn syrup
- 1/2 cup + 2 tbsp water
- 4 cups shredded provel cheese, about 3/4 lb
Equipment
- pizza stone
Instructions
- Place a pizza stone in the oven and preheat to 550 degrees.
- In a medium bowl, whisk together, tomato puree, tomato paste, sugar, 1 teaspoon salt, basil, garlic powder and oregano. Set aside.
- In another bowl, whisk flour, remaining salt and baking powder. In a liquid measuring cup, whisk water, oil and corn syrup. Mix into flour mixture until combined. Gently knead to bring together. Split the dough in two equal pieces and roll each piece out to make a 12-inch pie.
- Transfer to a pizza peel covered in cornmeal. Spread half the sauce on each pizza. Cover with cheese and desired toppings. Sprinkle with a little basil, oregano and kosher salt to taste. Bake on pizza stone for 8-10 minutes until crust is crisp and cheese is melted, bubbly and golden brown. Cool for a few minutes before slicing.
Nutrition Information
*Pizza recipe adapted from Food.com
Michael says
You can order frozen ones online at this site.
https://shop.imospizza.com/category-s/1851.htm
They’re not cheap. About 12″. I order 10 or 20 at a time to make the shipping worthwhile. The Pep & sausage are great.
Living in Colorado & hating to go to MO for any reason, they are the next best thing. I have some of the cheese so I will defiantly try this recipe though.
Donna says
The ingredients call for Crushed tomatoe
The recipe says tomatoe puree
Which is it
Katherine says
Absolutely delicious! I am trying to save money right now so I wanted to make pizza at home rather than ordering Imo’s (which can be a little pricy) and this was perfect. I only had tomato sauce on hand so substituted that for the puree and paste, but it still turned out. I also baked the crust for 2-3 minutes by itself like others have suggested which definitely helped make the crust extra crispy.
Chef Tom says
Yes! I am a St. Louis to Chicago transplant. I miss Imo’s so bad! Don’t know why they haven’t opened any up here. Chicagoan’s really don’t like Chicago style pizza. This recipe will help my cravings. I am a chef, and i never really thought about making my own provel cheese till now.
Mike Darrish says
Make your own Provel, if you can’t buy it. I substitute some white American for the cheddar and some half and half or cream or whey, to get the processed Provel taste and very moist texture.
Christiane Grau says
I’m from St. Louis – moved away when I was 37 and I crave St. Louis pizza all the time! Yes Provel is an absolute necessity! That’s why when family visits I make them bring it with them! Thank you for your recipe!!!
Erin says
The ingredients call for crushed tomatoes, but the recipe instructions say tomato purée – which do you use? Thank you very much – these pizzas look delicious!
Nicole says
Crushed Tomatoes!
Erin says
Thank you so much!
Doogan says
Unfortunately, this wasn’t a hit for us. The crust remained doughy in the center and it could use a bump in flavor. Head’s up: for easier rolling, let the dough rest about 5-10 minutes first.
If we try this again, I’ll be sure to parbake the crust first and probably add more salt or something. Sounds terrific in theory, hopefully I can get it right.
Bill Redmann says
Provel is the worst cheese I have had on pizza
Nicole says
I think it’s the best! Why are you on a St.Louis Style Pizza post? It’s only made with Provel. 🙂