Val’s Pizza Serves up Perfect Pies

Former Detroit Free Press Restaurant Critic Mark Kurlyandchik on the pandemic-born pop-up pizza shop
val's pizza
Try Pepperoni, Spinach Cream 鈥 or both at Val鈥檚 Pizza

Food is often a canvas for love. For Vallery Markel, that canvas is preferably round and filled with curly, crispy-edged pepperoni cups. 鈥淧izza really matters to people in a way that maybe we don鈥檛 understand,鈥 says Markel, the eponymous pizzamaker of Val鈥檚 Pizza, one of the city鈥檚 buzziest new pop-ups.

鈥淧izza is universally just such a beloved food and it brings people so much joy,鈥 she explains. 鈥淎nd one of my favorite things is taking care of people and being hospitable and being able to create something that people love to eat more than anything in the world.鈥

This former newspaper restaurant critic can attest to both Markel鈥檚 ambitions and her early successes on those fronts.

We all have our own criteria for a perfect pie, but mine seem to align exactly with what Val鈥檚 Pizza offers. It鈥檚 Neapolitan-inspired but cooked at a slightly lower temperature and for longer. Markel鈥檚 dough 鈥 just flour, water, salt, and yeast 鈥 ferments for at least four days, though she鈥檚 experimented with pushing it even longer. The result is a blistered pie almost shellacked with lacey crunch that still manages to deliver a satisfying chew beneath.

Toppings can range from those of the simple margherita, to smoked short rib and mushrooms, Gruy猫re cheese, caramelized onions, and fried shallots for a pizza-fied riff on the French dip, complete with a side of au jus.

But Val鈥檚 own backstory is as full of love as the pizza is an expression of it.

val's pizza
Erin Wilson (left) and Vallery Markel with daughter Norma, 2.

A native of Columbus, Ohio, Markel went west after culinary school at Le Cordon Bleu Institute of Culinary Arts in Pittsburgh, where she rose through the ranks of what was then a still burgeoning food scene in Portland, Oregon, eventually running the East Glisan Pizza Lounge and even hosting her own pizza-focused podcast.

Portland is also where Markel met Sterling Heights native Erin Wilson. The pair fell in love fast and dreamed up a future together, imagining kids, a house, and a pizza parlor of their own. But Portland鈥檚 rapid gentrification made that dream seem impossible, so they struck out for opportunities in Detroit with family nearby.

After initially renting in Woodbridge, the newly married couple bought a big old house in the Old Redford neighborhood with a big old yard to raise chickens in and, soon after, a newborn daughter.

Though opening a pizza joint in Detroit had always been the goal, life and other jobs at places like Selden Standard and Mink kept it perpetually in that realm. But the ample free time created by the COVID-19 pandemic turned Val鈥檚 Pizza into a reality, leading to its community-driven ascent.

During the doldrums of the first statewide indoor dining ban, Markel ordered a tabletop pizza oven. There was a three-month wait, and in that time she was called back to work at Mink, where she was kitchen manager. But when the second shutdown hit in November, Markel told herself she would keep busy.

鈥淭here鈥檚 no point in just sitting around the house and thinking things suck all the time,鈥 Markel says. 鈥淪o I just started making pizzas with this oven that finally arrived. And I was planning a pizza night just to sell it to some friends. We did it the very next day and we were super stoked because we made a couple hundred dollars.鈥

Val's Pizza
Marrow sausage tops Val鈥檚 Lamb Merguez

That was the week before Thanksgiving, and it went so well they decided to give it a name and an Instagram account 鈥 .

By January, the operation had grown to three tabletop pizza ovens and a social media buzz that began attracting perfect strangers. The small crew cranked out 70 pizzas every Monday from the back porch of the Old Redford house, running them out to people waiting in their cars who鈥檇 placed their orders four days in advance. Additional pop-ups at Kiesling in February and Folk in March sold out quickly.

The response allowed Markel and Wilson to trade in the tabletop setup for a much larger wood-burning oven affixed to a trailer.

Newly mobile, the couple hopes to bring Val鈥檚 Pizza to a wider audience this summer, including at regular Monday pop-ups at Kiesling, a Milwaukee-Junction bar that became a haven for food operators during the pandemic.

Things are moving fast, though, and Val鈥檚 is on the hunt for a permanent home a little closer to Old Redford. 鈥淓very neighborhood deserves a decent pizzeria that people can walk to and hang out at, where they sponsor softball leagues and they鈥檙e just part of the community,鈥 Markel says.

And while Val鈥檚 remarkable pizza is certainly the main draw, Markel feels the overwhelming early support might come from the fact that she and Wilson are carving out an inclusive, accessible space in an arena long dominated by macho men.

鈥淚t feels very familial to people and it is unique,鈥 Markel says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not every day that two gay women are running a pizzeria together. It鈥檚 really important to the queer community that we鈥檙e two queer people doing this together. When I analyze it, I think we鈥檙e just doing something a little different. But I鈥檓 not inventing anything. I鈥檓 just making good pizza.鈥 Perfect pizza, if you ask me.