Pathfinder Badge Meal. |
So, wanting to broaden her culinary talent horizons, we decided to make pizza from scratch, and we each made our own batch of dough. I found an easy recipe online at All Recipes (http://allrecipes.com/Recipe/Pizza-Dough-III/) ....so I will just copy it from here since we all know it isn't my original recipe (I actually wanted to make David Rocco's pizza dough for the grown up pizza since it has wine in it, but I didn't think I had any....although I found some later to enjoy with my pizza...NEXT TIME wine goes in the dough too! Yum). So, while the end result of this recipe wasn't as perfect as I wanted, I'll talk about what I think could have gone better as I go.
1 package active dry yeast
1 cup warm water
**dissolve yeast in water and let stand "until creamy", @10 minutes**
in a bowl combine
2 cups bread flour
2 T olive oil
1 t salt
2 t white sugar
yeast mixture;
beat well until a stiff dough has formed, cover, and let rise until doubled, or @ 1/2 an hour.
The recipe tells you to turn the dough onto a floured board and roll it out, but we oiled up our hands and baking sheets with olive oil (I found a baking stone for Somer to use which I've owned about five or six years but never used because I can't stand the way it feels...ugh..it's like scraping my fingernails down a blackboard...)...and stretched the dough onto the baking sheets. Anything to add more olive oil is fine with me, although it turns out I didn't use quite enough underneath because it kind of stuck around the edges...
Stretching out Dough. |
Adding Bocconcini pieces. |
While the dough was rising, we got out our Bocconcini (little fresh mozzarella balls), and split them up....she cut hers daintily, and I just ripped mine in shreds.... in hindsight, there was not enough cheese on either pizza, so one container per pizza would be great, and I ripped up a handful of fresh basil leaves.... I decided to make my own sauce for the grown up pizza, because I found a recipe online that had lots of stuff in it, including some spiciness, which I love, and since I was making a basic Margerita (just mozzarella and fresh basil leaves), I thought it would be great to have a spicy sauce, and it was super-easy to make. Here is the recipe I used, also from All Recipes:
Exquisite Pizza Sauce.
1 can tomato paste (6oz)
6oz warm water (just use the now-empty tomato paste tin)
3 T grated Parmesann (didn't have any of this either, but it was good without it too)
1 t minced garlic (I still have no fresh garlic, gasp, so I used more of the puree I had bought)
2 T honey (I had none, so used agave nectar)
1 t anchovy paste (optional...of course I didn't use any myself...but I know some people love it)
3/4 t. onion powder (I used onion salt because that's what I had, and since I didn't use the above)
1/4 t. each dried oregano, basil, marjoram & ground black pepper
1/8 t. each cayenne pepper and red pepper flakes (I used two pepperoncini)
salt to taste (I didn't add any, party because I didn't see this instruction, and I also used onion salt)
Exquisite Pizza Sauce + Bocconcini + Fresh Basil = YUM. |
So, details.... I have no idea if the dough was doubled, it looked bigger to me, and I was good to go, I always feel that things will work out all right in the end, and although the yeast mixture also didn't really look "creamy" so maybe the water wasn't warm enough the crust baked up nicely and wasn't too thick...just right...... and like I said, the cooking was a little uneven for some reason. However, it tasted GREAT (other than that the mozzarella pieces had cooked into crispy little discs on the pizza, which is so not the point of pizza!!)
The dough had a nice hint of sweetness (although I just caught Somer before she put in a whole tablespoon of salt, instead of a teaspoon).....and I love the spicy kick in the homemade pizza sauce... I also like using just some crushed tomatoes with a bit of oregano as the sauce...it is even simpler, and sometimes it is the simplest recipe which tastes the best....but I always like to change it up too. Somer used a very light coating of store-bought pizza sauce. So there we go, a Tale of Two Pizzas: One plain cheese, and one Margerita with spicy sauce.... YUM.
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