I think I've posted a similar looking pizza before, but what can I tell you, I know what I like
make stuffed crust instead.
also, crust does not require cheese, its good on its own.
if your crust is bland and unappealing without cheese make better dough maybe try using some herbs and seasonings in there
make stuffed crust instead
This sort of exotic American extravagance hasn't really made its way to Northern Europe yet
imagine being in a country without stuffed crust.
gorbachev would be horrified
Onions are so good on pizza. I think it may be the best way to prepare them.
Incredibly simple, apologies for the metric measurements if you're American:
- 2 dl* water
- 5 dl pizza flour (I imagine regular wheat flour could also work, the kind I use seems to be a mixture of regular wheat flour, durum wheat flour and yeast bread flour looking at the packaging)
- 15 grams of fresh yeast
(*1 decilitre equals 0,42 US cups)
Warm up the water, throw in yeast, mix in flour until the dough becomes nice and stretchy and stops sticking to your hands and the bowl. You'll most likely end up using slightly more flour than the stated 5 dl before the dough starts to feel right. I always add a little bit of olive oil into the dough which also helps if it starts feeling too dry and cement-y. Cover the bowl with a cloth and leave to rise for about 30 minutes. (I like to fill my kitchen sink with hot water and leave the bowl floating there for the duration)
Once the dough has doubled in size, get out your rolling pin. Unless you've got a huge oven and the huge oven pans to go along with it, you'll probably discover that there's enough dough for two pizzas. Roll the dough out into one or several pleasing pizza shapes and place them on baking paper. Cover with cloth and leave to rise for another 30 minutes.
Cover with tomato sauce and toppings of your choosing and bake for 12-15 minutes at 250C (482F), though I have to turn the heat down slightly in my oven or my pizzas will get a bit too burnt
I don't usually plan that far ahead with my pizzas, though I don't doubt the results would be even better if you took your time with the dough.
When I'm in the mood for pizza, I want to be consuming it as soon as possible
instead of slathering tons of oil in the pan, lightly oil and then put down some cornmeal on top of the oil
prevents sticking and it will also make your crust crispier and more flavourful
Looks excellent, is that one of them famous pan pizzas I've been hearing about?
I meant the shape of your pizza, it looks to have that deep dish thing going on
What the fuck is a deciliter? Also, grams? Grams? How is a humble American like myself going to make heads or tails of this recipe? I'm just playing, most of us are very aware of grams 😉. DLs kinda shook me though.
A dl is one tenth of a litre, they're a very common unit of measurement in Nordic kitchens and probably not anywhere else- all the UK recipes I've seen have used mls instead.
Here stuff like cream and sourcream is also commonly sold in 2 dl containers
Beautiful pizza. I only ask for triple olives next time, humbly.
You gotta leave some in the jar to impulsively snack on later
Dude stoooop I'm on a diet and this looks too gooood. I love olives on pizza 😩
I saw someone post a picture of some sort of Ohio-style pizza on Matt Christman's twitter that was intended to be disgusting but the only thing it made me do was to crave pizza instantly.
Also I agree, olives are lovely, wish I'd appreciated them earlier
Looks good! Does anybody have a pizza stone? I just acquired one but I haven't really figured out how to use it yet. If I start with it in the oven then how do I transfer the pizza into it?
put pizza dough on hot stone and then apply sauces and toppings OR transfer already topping-filled pizza to stone with other large flat surface such as an edgeless baking sheet
you can also precook the dough such that it can handle being maneuvered more, but thats not really a solution so much as its an added help if youre having difficulty transfering a floppy uncooked pizza
Parchment paper is your friend on the transfer if you haven't solidified your peel skills yet.
tbh parchment paper can be your friend for basically everything in the kitchen. pls use sparingly tho