How Totino's Got Its Start
From a neighborhood pizzeria to a billion-dollar brand.
From a neighborhood pizzeria to a billion-dollar brand.

Long before frozen pizza was a freezer-aisle staple, Totino’s was born in a real kitchen, fueled by real passion and an unwavering belief that great food should bring people together.
That belief started with Rose Totino.
In 1942, Rose tasted pizza for the first time while visiting her aunt in Pennsylvania and it left a lasting impression. Driven by her passion for good food, she returned home to Minnesota and began recreating the experience in her own kitchen, making pizzas for family and friends. The response was immediate and enthusiastic. People didn’t just like it, they wanted more.
In 1951, Rose and her husband Jim took a leap of faith. Armed with a $1,500 loan – and as legend has it, a freshly baked pizza for the loan officer – they opened Totino’s Italian Kitchen in Minneapolis.
Their small pizza shop, originally intended to just sell take-out pizzas, was soon transformed into a sit-down restaurant in response to overwhelming customer demand. Before long, Totino’s Italian Kitchen became a neighborhood sensation, turning out 400 to 500 pizzas a day. What made it special wasn’t just speed or scale, it was consistency, care and food that felt homemade, even when it was busy.
A decade later, Rose and Jim saw an opportunity to bring that same kitchen-table experience into American homes. In 1962, they started Totino’s Finer Foods, mass producing and selling frozen pizza that could be baked at home.
It didn’t take long for the Totino’s brand to become the first big name in the frozen pizza industry and a national phenomenon.
In 1975, Totino’s was acquired by the Pillsbury Company. Rose became Pillsbury’s first female corporate vice president in its 106-year history, a milestone that reflected not just her business success, but her role as a true food innovator.
Rose worked closely with Pillsbury to make a pizza crust that stayed crispy after freezing, thawing and baking. The result was Totino’s signature ‘Crisp Crust’ – patented in 1979 the dough innovation helped make Totino’s Party Pizza the first nationally distributed frozen pizza and a household name.
When General Mills later acquired Pillsbury in 2001, Totino’s legacy continued to grow. In 2008, Rose was inducted into the Minnesota Inventor’s Hall of Fame for inventing frozen pizza and revolutionizing its crust.
Today, Totino’s continues to build on the brand foundation that Rose and Jim laid, showing up in epic ways that bring excitement and convenience to consumers:
From a small mom-and-pop shop to a billion dollar brand, Totino’s continues to bring joy to consumers through innovation. And to think it all started with a pizza worth bringing to the bank.