A First Look at Sean Brock’s New Nashville Spot, Sho Pizza
Chef Sean Brock's highly anticipated Sho Pizza is opening in East Nashville on April 14, and you'll never guess where his inspiration came from! We've got the inside scoop. Image: Jenna Bratcher
βIβm warning you, weβre getting nerdy in here.β That was Sean Brockβs opening remark, as I sat down to an intimate unveiling of his new East Nashville restaurant, Sho Pizza. Officially opening on April 14, itβs a neighborhood spot with a 12-seat chefβs counter that overlooks all the action β the perfect opportunity to ooh and ahh over dough-tossing and homemade stracciatella-making. You might even catch Sean himself slinging pizzas.
But this isnβt your average pepperoni-and-cheese joint. If youβre picturing deep-dish or New York-style slices, think again. Sho brings a Tokyo-inspired, chef-driven take on neo-Neapolitan pizza β with a whole lot of flair.

And what is a neo-Neapolitan pizza, you ask? Fair question. In short, itβs the stylish younger cousin of traditional Neapolitan pizza, honoring its old-school roots but unafraid to break a few rules for the sake of flavor and creativity.
Chef Brock didnβt exactly grow up dreaming of pizza ovens and fermented dough. Interestingly, his inspiration came from the late culinary icon Anthony Bourdain. βHe told me Japan was making the best pizza in the world, and I had to check it out. Iβd never really even made pizza before,β Chef Brock admits. βI hadnβt gotten bitten by the bug yet.β
That bug bit hard in Tokyo after a visit to Savoy β a life-changing and crust-altering restaurant. βI saw that as my opportunity to figure out how to do it,β explains Chef Brock, βso I started sending direct messages on Instagram. The chef was so kind. He shared some of his secrets.β

It took several years of flour-dusted trial and error before Chef Brock officially launched his pizza venture. βIt probably took me about two years before I had enough courage to serve it to the public β what my rendition was,β he says. βAnd we would just set up at the Nashville Farmerβs Market every Tuesday to make pizza.β
That started the journey of a thousand pizzas. Literally. Collaborating with Nashville natives Mary Carlisle and Ben Gambill sealed the deal; the trio bonded over their mutual obsession. The result? A pizza bar that blends traditional Italian technique, Japanese precision, and Southern hospitality. Cue the applause.
At the heart (and hearth) of Shoβs magic is Brockβs signature dough, which is fermented over three days in a temperature-controlled dough room, producing a crust thatβs light and airy with just the right amount of crunch.

βWhat blew my mind about that pizza in Tokyo was how elegant it was,β he says. βLight, fluffy, and also crunchy somehow. It wasnβt soggy like a lot of Neapolitan pizza. Its style developed because people were messing with finer grounds of flour and manipulating the stretching process to create a gigantic crust. We combine those two styles to create something unique to us, and weβre chasing multiple textures simultaneously. So, youβll hear this crunch β Neapolitan pizzas donβt have crunch.β
And thereβs more magic in the middle: βThereβs garlic β paper thin β right in the center, so your first bite is this punch of garlic,β he explains. βAnd that continues to season each bite after that. We have a lot of variables that go into something that looks βsimple.β Thatβs why I love it.β

Sourcing plays a starring role, too. βWeβve been scouring the towns and countryside for these special, generational farms with incredible ingredients,β he shares.
Technique is where it all comes together β or crimps together, in this case. Crimping may sound like a trendy TikTok thing, but itβs serious pizza business. βOne of the things weβre interested in playing around with is getting more crunch by creating more angles. You can almost see a topographical map,β he explains. βThereβs a technique behind it. The hardest thing about Tokyo-style pizza is how they stretch and crimp the dough. Itβs very unusual, but it creates all of the beautiful craters β the crunchies and crispies.β
So, whatβs on the Sho Pizza menu besides awesome dough? Expect creative pies topped with mozzarella from Italy and meats and veggies from local farms. Favorites include the ever-changing βSHO Stopperβ of the day, the βCountry Boyβ (with ham and smoky wood-fired onions), and go-to classics like Margherita, Marinara, and Bianca. But pizza isnβt the only star β Sho also serves fresh salads, small plates like tuna crudo, and charcuterie.


So, is it Neapolitan? Neo-Neapolitan? Brock thinks it may be something altogether new. βItβs making its way to America, and itβs fun to look at it from a generational standpoint. Youβve got the first generation of Neapolitan, then thereβs neo-Neapolitan, and this is a separate generation. I think itβs its own new thing.β
Weβre here for it, Chef.
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Jenna von Oy Bratcher
Jenna von Oy Bratcher is StyleBlueprint's Editorial Operations Manager and Lead Content Editor. The East Coast native moved to Nashville almost two decades ago, by way of Los Angeles. She is a lover of dogs, strong coffee, traveling, and exploring the local restaurant scene bite by bite.