There is something reassuring about watching pizza being made well. Not fast-food well. Not novelty well. But traditionally, almost reverently well—dough stretched by hand, tomatoes treated with restraint, a blistering-hot oven doing what centuries of Italian cooks have trusted it to do. At PizzaPazza in Ann Arbor’s Kerrytown, that confidence is the point.
PizzaPazza doesn’t shout. It doesn’t chase trends. It simply makes very good Neapolitan-style pizza—and does so with the kind of focus that suggests this was always the plan
PizzaPazza is located at 407 N. Fifth Avenue in the Kerrytown Market & Shops. Owned and operated by veteran chef Jeff Condit, the eatery marks his successful transition from a popular food truck to a permanent brick-and-mortar home in Kerrytown. PizzaPazza opened in late 2023, and its name—Italian for “Crazy Pizza”—hints at both the playful spirit and bold flavors that define the menu..
After firing up its wood-burning oven on the streets of Ann Arbor during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, PizzaPazza steadily built a loyal following one blistered Neapolitan pie at a time. Founder and chef Jeff Condit, drawing on years of experience in Michigan’s wood-fired pizza scene, launched the food truck as a pandemic pivot — and by December 2023, the mobile operation had grown into a permanent home inside Kerrytown Market & Shops. The brick-and-mortar location, opened quietly without a splashy debut, marked a new chapter for the locally loved brand while the original truck continued catering events across the region into 2024, preserving the scrappy, community-driven spirit that started it all.
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The pizzas themselves are personal-sized—classic Neapolitan proportions—meant to be eaten hot, ideally moments after leaving the oven. The crust arrives lightly charred, leopard-spotted in places, airy but elastic, with just enough chew to remind you that this dough has been handled by someone who knows exactly when to stop touching it. The oven, clocking temperatures near 900 degrees, does its work in about 90 seconds. That speed isn’t for show; it’s essential. Too long and the crust dries. Too short and it lacks character. PizzaPazza gets the timing right.

We’ve enjoyed PizzaPazza on two different occasions—once as takeout and once dining in—and the experience held up beautifully both ways. Our selections included the Margherita, prosciutto and arugula, mushroom, and a salmon pie with added sausage. Each was stellar, generously topped without being overworked, and thoughtfully balanced. The portions are more than satisfying—easily enough for two people, or for leftovers that make a second meal something to look forward to. The salads deserve equal praise. Both the arugula and chopped salads proved ideal companions to the pizzas: fresh, well-composed, and far from an afterthought.

The menu stays intentionally tight, a choice that signals seriousness rather than limitation. This is pizza that trusts its ingredients. The sauce—bright, lightly salted, never sweet—lets the tomatoes speak for themselves. The mozzarella melts into creamy pools without drowning the pie. Toppings are thoughtfully restrained. Pepperoni curls just enough at the edges. Mushrooms retain their earthiness. A Margherita here is not a default order; it’s a statement. Unconventional toppings are also available.
What makes PizzaPazza especially appealing in Ann Arbor’s crowded pizza landscape is its refusal to overcomplicate. There’s no need for novelty drizzle or ironic excess. Instead, the kitchen leans on fundamentals: flour, water, salt, yeast and fire. That simplicity invites you to slow down and pay attention—to texture, balance and the subtle difference between “good” and “right.”
The space itself mirrors that ethos. Casual, welcoming and unpretentious, PizzaPazza feels designed for real life rather than social media. It’s the kind of place where students wander in between classes, Kerrytown regulars stop by after a market run, and families share slices without ceremony. The energy is local, lived-in and comfortably Ann Arbor.
There’s also something quietly communal about eating here. Neapolitan pizza is not meant to linger; it’s meant to be eaten fresh, shared and discussed. PizzaPazza encourages that rhythm. Order, wait, watch the oven flare, eat. Repeat if necessary. You don’t rush, but you also don’t overstay. The pizza sets the pace.
In a city that prides itself on food consciousness—on knowing where ingredients come from and why methods matter—PizzaPazza fits naturally. It doesn’t try to be everything to everyone. It simply offers one thing done extremely well. And in doing so, it reminds us why pizza became beloved in the first place: because when treated with respect, it is endlessly satisfying.
PizzaPazza may not bill itself as a destination, but it has become one. Not because it demands attention, but because it earns return visits. This is pizza you crave again—not louder, not bigger, not reinvented—just right.
And sometimes, especially in Ann Arbor, that’s exactly what we’re hungry for.
Donna Marie Iadipaolo is a writer, journalist, and State of Michigan certified teacher, since 1990. She has written for national publications like The Village Voice, Ear Magazine of New Music, Insurance & Technology, and TheStreet.
She is now writing locally for many publications, including Current Magazine, Ann Arbor Family, and the Ann Arbor Independent. Her undergraduate degree is from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, where she graduated with an honors bachelor’s degree and three teacher certificate majors: mathematics, social sciences, English. She also earned three graduate degrees in Master of Science, Master of Arts, and Education Specialist Degree.

