Pizza

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Pizza

Ingredients

  • 3 1/2 to 4 cups flour
  • 1 1/3 cup warm water
  • 2 oz, plus some olive oil
  • yeast
  • dash of sugar
  • 1 tsp salt (or to taste)
  • 28 ounces (large can) unseasoned tomato sauce
  • 2 to 6 cloves garlic
  • one small to medium onion
  • some olive oil
  • 1 to 4 tsp each basil, thyme, oregano, black pepper, paprika
  • 1/2 tsp salt (or to taste)
  • 1/2 to 1 lb mozzarella, or less with other cheeses added (jack
  • and/or feta are good, cheddar makes for an oily pizza)
  • toppings to taste
  • some cornmeal or any coarse ground grain

Instructions

First I make the dough. I mix the water, sugar, and yeast and set aside. I measure out 3 1/2 cups flour and mix in the salt. Then I pour in the oil and yeast water together, stir to a dough, and knead in more flour until it is not sticky, then knead some more. Then I pour some more oil in the bottom of a bowl, put the dough in and rotate to cover the dough surface with oil, cover with a damp cloth and put aside to rise. The oil, both in the dough and on the surface, and the damp cloth help a lot. While the dough is rising I prepare the sauce. The garlic and onion get chopped finely and lightly sauteed in the oil. I prefer to start the garlic first, the co-habitant of my kitchen prefers onion first. Cook until lightly browned then add the sauce. Stir in the spices and salt, turn the heat way down and let simmer uncovered. By doing all of the prep work for the sauce, cheese and topings after the dough is made it doesn't feel like letting the dough rise is a slow point. At this point I start to preheat the stone. I feel that the proper tempature to cook pizza is about 700F, but since my oven doesn't go that high, I just use the highest temperature. The stone needs ten to to fifteen minutes to heat. After that make sure your oven mits are thick to handle it. Skillets need not be preheated but cook the pizza slower. Next I grate the cheese. If I do it by hand then the dough will be ready to shape when I'm done. I divide the dough in half and shape it on a *well* floured surface. No kneading is needed at this point, just stretching the dough out to a thin disc with a thicker rim. If the dough gets too thin, it can be thickened by pinching a bit to fold over the thin spot. Usually I make one entire pie and start it cooking before I begin the other. After the dough is shaped I transfer it to peel, which I've floured for easy removal. I put the sauce and cheese on. Toppings likely to dry out are best placed under the cheese. Corn meal should be sprinked on the stone to prevent the dough from sticking and the pie put on it to cook. I find it helpful to rapidly jiggle the peel to loosen the pie before I try to put it on the stone. This can cause loose toppings to scatter but I think it is better for this to happen outside the oven than in. Figure ten to to fifteen minutes to cook the pie. I think it is done when the crust begins to turn a medium brown. I make the second one during this time. I also make sure I have a clear space to put the hot pizza when it comes out. The best way to get pie off the stone is probably a very thin peel. I don't have one though. So I take the stone out of the oven (with thick mitts) and slide it off. The stone needs some more corn meal and is then ready to cook on again.

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