These are my go to recipes:
Detroit Style:
https://www.brianlagerstrom.com/recipes/detroit-pizza
- This guy (Brian) has instructions for lots of different styles. I find him recipes are normally doable without needing too much work.
"New York" Style (Seems like just regular style to me)
https://www.joshuaweissman.com/recipes/easy-new-york-style-pizza-at-home-recipe
- This guy (Josh) is entertaining, but most of his recipes are over the top for home cooks that aren't retired. Too much involved. The pizza isn't too difficult and it's great.
Josh had the idea to use a 25% mix of whole wheat flour in his dough. I now do that for the NY style and the Detroit style. It adds a subtle twist in the dough flavor.
Brian has a technique for rolling out a round pizza dough this video:
. It's on parchment paper and it works really well so I use it with Josh's NY Style.
So I said it's not a lot of work to do either of these. It does take some calendar and clock time. For both of these, I make the dough at least a day in advance. The long fermentation time adds great flavor. In both cases the dough takes about 30 min to form into balls. That's all in time, getting out the blender, ingredients etc. It then needs to rest for a couple of hours where you only rework the dough a couple of times over those couple of hours. I work from home so I do the dough assembly during lunch and it can sit out for a couple of hours. The dough is then in the fridge for a 1-3 or 4 days when I'm ready to make it.
Making the pizza with the prepped dough is probably another hour-ish tbd on ingredients that may need pre-cooking. I make big batches of sauce that I freeze so that's normally just unthawing them, or taking the 10 min to make them if I'm out.
The oven takes a long time to preheat, so that gives me time to shred cheese, prep ingredients. It's a pretty active 1 hour. I can't recommend enough doing your own food prep. Shred your cheese, get a stick of pepperoni and slice it yourself, get decent quality ingredients. Any one of these small details by itself isn't going to make a difference. Put them all together and you have something that is noticeably better.
So, I think I may have oversold the ease of this. But to me, it's not really difficult, it just takes some time which is spread out. I will caveat that by adding that tools really help this process. A weigh scale for measuing ingredients, a mixer for the dough, a good pizza steel (better than a stone) help this process.