Honey Butter Brown Sugar Detroit-Style Dessert Pizza

Honey butter Detroit-style dessert pizza with golden crust and caramelized edges in a rustic kitchen setting

A Different Kind of Ending

There’s a moment at the end of a meal where you realize you don’t need more.

Not more weight. Not more richness. Not something trying to outdo what came before it.

Just something that settles in gently.

Something warm. Slightly sweet. Familiar in a way that doesn’t ask for attention.

This comes from the same place as the main dish.

Same dough. At the same time. Same care.

It just chooses a different direction.

Ingredients

Base

Topping

  • 3 tablespoons unsalted butter
  • ¼ cup brown sugar
  • 1–2 tablespoons honey
  • Pinch of sea salt

   Method

1. Bring the dough back

Remove your overnight dough from the refrigerator about 2 hours before baking.

Let it come to room temperature.

Transfer it to your well-oiled 9×13 pan and gently stretch it toward the edges.

If it resists, let it rest.

Then come back to it.

Let it rise until it looks soft. Slightly puffy. Ready.

2. Prepare the butter

Melt the butter gently over low heat.

If you want to take it a step further, let it cook just long enough to turn lightly golden—until it smells slightly nutty.

Not dark. Not burnt. Just deeper.

3. Build the base

Brush the dough generously with the melted butter.

Sprinkle the brown sugar evenly across the surface.

Not too much. Just enough to melt into the dough as it bakes.

4. Bake

Preheat your oven to 500°F (or as high as it will go).

Bake for 12–15 minutes.

You’re looking for:

  • A golden surface
  • Light caramelization
  • Edges that crisp slightly against the pan

5. Finish

As soon as it comes out of the oven:

  • Drizzle with honey
  • Add a small pinch of sea salt

Let it rest for about 5 minutes.

Then slice.

This wasn’t the beginning.

It started with something structured. Something that took time.

Not Every Square Pizza Is Detroit Style 

And somewhere in between, there was something that brought it back into balance.

What Cuts Through the Richness 

This is just where it settles.

Kyle J. Hayes

kylehayesblog.com

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