As with all of my doughs, I make this one in the bread machine. I've found that this recipe is plenty for the whole family. After the bread machine has done its work, I cut the dough into three equal pieces and then cut one of the thirds in half - this results in two smaller pieces (one for each of the kids) and two larger pieces (one for each of the grownups). We usually have leftovers for lunch the next day (except me - who apparently doesn't think one piece will be enough for lunch so it might as well be eaten now). After trying several different recipes, I like this one best - I found it online, but can't remember where.
Pizza Dough
1 cup lukewarm water
2 Tbsp honey
¼ cup olive oil
3½ cups bread flour
½ tsp salt
2 Tbsp yeast (this is quite a bit of yeast - you can use less, but I like the rise and taste this much yeast gives)
1) Place all ingredients, in order, into bread machine (or use your standard dough-kneading technique and skip ahead)
2) Set on dough cycle - watch and amend with more water or flour as needed after 4-5 minutes
3) When bread machine is done, remove dough from pan and punch it down
4) Cut dough into individual servings, form each serving into a ball, cover and let sit for 15-20 minutes
5) Pre-heat oven and pizza stone (if using) to 400-450°
6) Roll, pull, push, toss, or otherwise shape your pizza dough
7) Top with sauce (we use our standard tomato sauce - Pastene Kitchen-Ready tomatoes), cheese and toppings of your choice
8) Cook until dough is slightly browned and cheese is melted and bubbly
9) Cool for a few minutes, cut, eat, enjoy
A tip that I find works really well - if you are going to use a pizza stone, make and cook your pizza on parchment paper. After a few minutes in the oven, you can easily pull the parchment paper out and let the pizza finish cooking directly on the pizza stone.
4 comments:
If pizza night is a regular thing in your house, then you really need to try making your own mozzarella. It's easy and a lot of fun.
Doug - My wife, Linda, is the cheese-maker of the family (I don't like cheese enough to make it). She's made mozzarella once - and it came out fantastic. She's had two failed attempts since though - she thinks it was the milk - trying to find organic milk that isn't ultra-pasteurized has been difficult.
It is mentioned in a medical text by al-Razi in the 10th century and also by Ibn Wahshiya and Qustus al-Rumi in two agricultural studies dating from the same period. The Arabians introduced the vegetable to Spain in the 12th century. It was a favorite of Catherine de Medici. By the 15th century, it was well established in Provence, where its popularity was only exceeded by cabbage.
5. the advantages of smooth leaf or flat leaf spinach is that it is easier to clean. It has a slightly sweet taste that becomes acidic when cooked. Among this type you will find Malabar spinach, New Zeeland spinach, Space spinach and a quick-growing variant known as Red Cardinal, because of its red-veined leaves
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