Started By
Message

re: What's the key to good home made pizza?

Posted on 11/2/15 at 7:51 pm to
Posted by fightin tigers
Downtown Prairieville
Member since Mar 2008
73674 posts
Posted on 11/2/15 at 7:51 pm to
quote:

black spots on it.

I gotcha, was the same way as a kid. Scared of black pepper.
:racist:
Posted by WorldsGreatest
Lafayette
Member since Jan 2011
2428 posts
Posted on 11/2/15 at 9:29 pm to
Get that mini wood fired oven!

Uuni 2
This post was edited on 11/2/15 at 9:32 pm
Posted by ChEgrad
Member since Nov 2012
3261 posts
Posted on 11/3/15 at 12:05 am to
I do Peter Reinhart's dough. Store bought doughs will never be as good.

LINK

Let cold ferment 3 days in fridge. In proofing trays (these make your life easier) if you are doing more than a couple of pizzas.

LINK

Practice, practice, practice to slide in oven from pizza peel. Work fast -have all ingredients ready. You don't want dough sitting in one spot too long. A wetter dough makes better pizza, but it can get difficult to handle if you don't know what you are doing.

Pizza steel is great. Better than a stone. Hottest temp your oven can get. Preheat minimum 45 minutes.
Posted by NEMizzou
Columbia MO
Member since Nov 2013
1369 posts
Posted on 11/3/15 at 9:20 am to
I bought a cast-iron pizza pan like this one (there are cheaper versions on amazon now):

Amazon Link

I preheat the oven to as hot as it will get,and then about 5-10 minutes before I put the pies in the oven I put the cast iron pan on the stovetop on high...it gets pretty hot pretty quickly (you do deal with hot spots but that's OK) and then throw it into the oven when you are ready to cook pies.

Get a pizza peel! I've got a plastic one and use cornmeal on the bottom to keep the dough from sticking. Lots of cornmeal. Gives the pizza a nice crunch and is dirt cheap.


Our local pizzeria uses Stanislaus pizza sauce, which I love, so I bought a case of it online and then freeze it in quart bags when I open a can:



I live in the middle of nowhere and there's an Amish/Mennonite grocery store that gets all kinds of weird "almost-expired" stuff all the time and they had whole milk mozzarella for dirt cheap (as in 5 pounds for $7 dirt cheap). It makes a big difference when you use whole milk mozzarella vs. partial-skim which is all we have in grocery stores around here.

Dough is a big issue for me too. I have used Sam's Club frozen dough balls for years, which are easy and cheap (one dough ball is about $1 and you can easily get a couple of pizzas from that) but on the advice of folks here I tried the Lahey no-knead dough recently. The first time I didn't use enough water and it wasn't great, but last week I tried it and it was the best I'd ever made.

If you like thicker crust pizza, use a cast-iron skillet...do some experimenting on how much dough you need (weigh it each time) until you figure out how much you can use without it being undercooked.

Finally, if you want something a little different, whip up a little alfredo sauce, add some grilled chicken, a can of artichokes, a bit of bacon, mozzarella, spinach and red pepper and you've got a fantastic pizza. That's currently our favorite.
This post was edited on 11/3/15 at 9:22 am
Posted by KarlMalonesFlipPhone
Member since Sep 2015
3848 posts
Posted on 11/3/15 at 12:19 pm to
Appreciate all the responses

first pageprev pagePage 2 of 2Next pagelast page
refresh

Back to top
logoFollow TigerDroppings for LSU Football News
Follow us on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram to get the latest updates on LSU Football and Recruiting.

FacebookTwitterInstagram