Homemade Pizza {Recipe}

tossing pizza doughHomemade pizza sometimes begins with the suggestion from Alex that we order in. I remind him that we always regret the greasy crusts. Other times, we have an abundance of vegetable odds and ends in the fridge and pizza sounds like a good way to use them up.

Or we want a fun meal to make with friends or family. One of our recent pizza parties including dough tossing by Alex's brother Ben, a pizza maker at Whole Foods.

Whatever the reason, when pizza making time comes, we have our routine down to a science.

A pizza stone is a must. Careful direction to kids and newbies during the 'decorating' phase is necessary, as too much sauce is a surefire beginning of an unpleasant soggy crust. We use a wooden paddle to shimmy the dough into the oven but a large thin cutting board dusted with cornmeal works fairly well.

Finally, and this is the hardest, the oven door must stay shut during cooking.  The perfect pizza is cooked at consistently high temperature and every opening loses massive amounts of heat.

We can cook only one or two pizzas at a time in our single oven. We start with Lil's pizza (cheese, basil, and capers) and then make one to please the adults in the crowd. After each comes out and rests, we serve slices family-dinner style on a big cutting board in the middle of the table. The oven stays on as other guests make their individual pizzas, sharing pieces as they are ready.

Delivery just can't compete!

home pizza cooking with paddle and stone

Pizza Crust Recipe for 4 10-inch pizzas

1 package (2 ¼ teaspoons) active dry yeast 1 cup warm water 3 cups all purpose flour, or a mix of bread flour and whole wheat flour 4 tablespoons olive oil 2 1/2 teaspoons salt

  1. Dissolve yeast in water in a medium bowl.
  2. Stir in flour, olive oil, and salt.
  3. Mix until well combined, at least 20 strokes. Add more flour if necessary until dough does not stick.
  4. Cover with saran wrap or a towel and let rise for 30-60 minutes, until double in bulk.
  5. If making pizzas immediately, follow assembly steps below. Dough can be portioned and frozen in individually wrapped pieces at this point. To use after freezing, allow to thaw completely and rise a little more before shaping and topping. Allow 3-4 hours at room temperature or allow to thaw in the fridge overnight.

Quick Pantry Pizza Sauce makes approximately 3 cups, enough for 6-8 pizzas

1 tablespoon olive oil ½ medium onion, diced 2 cloves garlic, minced 1 15 ounce can diced tomatoes 2 6 ounce cans tomato paste 1 tablespoon balsamic vinegar 2 tablespoons fresh oregano, minced (or 1 teaspoon dried) 2 tablespoons fresh basil, minced (or 1 teaspoon dried) ½ teaspoon salt, to taste ½ teaspoon black pepper, to taste

1. Heat olive oil in a heavy bottomed pan. Add onions and garlic and cook on medium low heat until onions are translucent, about five minutes. 2. Add remaining ingredients. Cook until sauce is thick and herbs are wilted, about 15 minutes. 3. Use on pizza. Leftovers can be stored in the fridge for one week or in the freezer in an air tight container for up to 6 months.

Assemblyhomemade cheese pizza

1. Heat oven to 450 degrees F. Heat baking stone in oven if you have it. 2. Punch down dough and divide into four equal pieces. 3. Form a ball with one piece. Press it into a small round. Gently thin the center by holding it perpendicular to the ground and pressing with your thumbs together while turning the dough like a steering wheel. Continue to stretch into a bigger round by moving your thumbs out from the center. 4. Place the dough on a paddle, thin cutting board, or the back of a cookie sheet dusted in cornmeal. Do not press the dough onto the surface. 5. Spoon no more than ¼ cup tomato or pesto sauce onto the dough. Spread the sauce with the back of a spoon evenly across the dough. 6. Top with toppings. If toppings are too thick, the bottom of the dough will burn before the top is thoroughly cooked. Try to keep them evenly spread and not too thick. 6. Slide pizza from the cornmeal covered surface by wiggling it gently onto the baking stone in the oven. 7. Close the door and leave it shut for 7 minutes. Check to see if cheese is melted as desired. Try to minimize door openings to keep oven hot. 8. When pizza is done, remove from oven and allow to cool 3-5 minutes before cutting. Keep stone in oven to keep cooking more pizzas!

One final suggestion: If you have leftover dough but not enough to freeze, try topping a final pie with thinly sliced apple, a dusting of cinnamon and bit of shredded cheddar cheese. If you can resist it as dessert, it is the perfect breakfast pizza, warm or straight from the fridge.

How do you 'za?

 

Added to Hearth and Soul

THANK YOU times two

Kids Linked just announced winners of their Best Parent Blogger award. Thanks to your votes, I am the first runner up! I very much appreciate your support in selecting me among a field of awesome Columbus bloggers.

I also owe thanks to the fantastic Hounds in the Kitchen community on Facebook. We are only 15 'likes' away from 600! Thank you to everyone who participates in sharing and learning about food and gardening from each other.

In gratitude,

Rachel

Scenes with Anna {Friday Five}

Our 20 year old Japanese exchangee, Anna, left for Japan this morning. We'll remember her stay as a busy time filled with lots of cooking and dining. Here are five images from her visit: Japanese student making rice ballsAnna making rice balls for us.

Anna eating dirty frank's ohioana hot dogThere's nothing more American than eating an Ohioana hotdog from Dirty Franks!

Japanese student at the WildsAnna with giraffe at the Wilds.

Child's Lemonade StandLil insisted on holding a lemonade stand and Anna helped her.

Anna's Watercolor of LilI will measure and frame this watercolor for Lil's room. I'll miss most the beautiful drawings Anna made.

Zucchini Pronto {Recipe}

zucchini recipe mise en placezucchini pronto recipeSummer means two things in Ohio: an abundance of zucchini and heat. The savvy home cook needs an equal amount of creative recipes that come together in quick minute so as not to warm up the kitchen and make the cook sweat. Zucchini Pronto is one such dish. Basi Italia introduced me to the concept, the same restaurant that inspired my home version of their marinated kale salad.

Like many quick-cooking meals, this recipe requires thorough mise en place. Shred and prepare all ingredients so they are ready at hand. Use a heavy bottomed or cast iron skillet heated very hot and have bowls or plates set out before cooking so the zucchini can be plated instantly.

What are your favorite ways to prepare a plethora of zucchini?

 

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Zucchini Pronto serves two as an appetizer or side dish

2 tablespoons high quality olive oil 1/4 cup slivered almonds 2 cloves garlic, minced 2 cups shredded zucchini (about 1 medium) white pepper 8-10 very thin 3 inch shreds of Parmesan or Peccorino cheese (use the very best you can afford)

1. Heat a large cast iron pan over high heat. 2. Add olive oil. Then layer almonds, garlic, and zucchini in pan. 3. Heat for one minute and then flip sections with a spatula. Keep heat on high to sauté, not stew. 4. After two minutes, when zucchini is heated through, pile into a shallow plate or bowl. 5. Cover immediately with cheese. Allow it to melt with the heat of the zucchini for approximately one minute before serving.

NB: If you want to double or triple this recipe, use more pans. If you pile more zucchini into a single pan it will stew and juices will run instead of the quick sear/sauté that is key to this dish.

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PS. I am a nominee for a central Ohio blog award. May I have your vote?

 

Added to Hearth and Soul.

Almost All-Ohio Mousseline {Charcutepalooza}

ohio trout mousseline ingredient map

It's hard to be a native Ohioan and have an appreciation for seafood. I rarely ate fresh fish as a child and when I did, it wasn't very good. It wasn't that my parents were poor cooks; twenty years ago it was hard to find seafood worth cooking.

These days, life is different. Fish is flown in from all over the world to several places in the city. Seafood can be great here now but my old biases remain: my palate isn't trained to love seafood.

I cannot fault Ohio for my anti-pescetarian ways. My heartland state is doing everything it can to create world-class ingredients of all sorts. When tasked with the Charcutepalooza binding challenge, I wanted to tackle a fish mousseline featuring Ohio ingredients.

My daughter Lillian, exchange student Anna and I set our sights on a little spot that raises shrimp amidst ubiquitous tracts of corn fields near Urbana Ohio, population 11,600.

 

ohio freshwater shrimppetting sturgeon at freshwater farm

 

We started our visit to Freshwater Farms of Ohio with a self guided tour. We saw thousands of trout raised in indoor and outdoor tanks but the star attraction was the sturgeon. These dino-fish are over a decade old and tame to humans. After the requisite petting of the sturgeon, we made our way into the store.

I saw no shrimp in the cases. I asked the monger and was disappointed to learn that this year's shrimp would not be ready until the Shrimp Festival held in mid-September. (Y'all come! My dad's bluegrassy band is playing Saturday and if the last two years are any indication it will be a fun time.)

measuring snowville creammouselline mixturetrout layer in mousellineweighting mouselline

we came away with some smoked farm-raised trout for the mousseline. I had to substitute far-away shrimp for the emulsion but all other ingredients were raised by my family or my friends at Snowville Creamery. Fresh backyard pimentos (roasted, skin removed) and kale studded the shrimp mousseline and it bound together with a city chicken egg white.

ohio trout mouselline

We un-molded and sliced the mousseline at a family dinner. Anna and Alex ate a quarter of the shrimp and trout creation alone. Alex's parents enjoyed it as well. Lil and I only tolerated our bites. I guess we're still Ohioans not quite ready for treasures of the (aquaculture) sea.

 

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Trout and Shrimp Mousseline an interpretation of the Shrimp and Salmon Terrine with spinach and mushrooms in Michael Ruhlman's Charcuterie

1/2 pound raw shrimp, peeled and deveined 1 medium egg white 1/2 cup heavy cream twist of freshly ground white pepper 1/2 tablespoon kosher salt 1/2 cup fresh kale, stems removed and chiffonade 1/2 fresh pimento pepper, flame roasted and skin removed, diced 3 ounces smoked trout

1. Preheat oven to 300 degrees F. Have roasting pan ready to fit your terrine mold. 2. Put shrimp and egg white into food processor bowl with freezer chilled blade. Process until pureed. 3. With food processor still running, pour in cream in a steady strem. Season with salt and white pepper. 4. Transfer shrimp to a freezer chilled bowl and gently stir in pimento pepper and kale. 5. Line chilled terrine mold with plastic wrap. Place one half of shrimp mixture into terrine pan. 6. Cover with smoked trout fillets. Cut one fillet in half to form two slim trianges and rearrange around a whole fillet as shown to fit a rectangular terrine. 7. Top with remaining shrimp mixture. 8. Pull plastic wrap over the top and place in ban marie pan. Fill with water to within an inch of the top of the terrine mold. Cover with mold lid or foil. 9. Place terrine in pre-heated oven and cook until the internal temperature measures 140 degrees F, approximately 30 minutes. 10. Remove terrine from oven and water bath. Cover with a weight on top. A board or other flat object weighted to two mason jars filled with water or two beer bottles works well. 11. Allow to cool to room temperature and then place in the fridge until thoroughly chilled, at least four hours. 12. Unmold gently. Serve in 1/4 inch slices on crackers, bread, or as part of a charcuterie plate.

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This post is my seventh in the Charcutepalooza challenge. Catch up on the whole series: Salt Cure, the Story of the Rachel, Why I Had to Kill a Pig to Eat Meat Again, Taco Truck Chorizo Sopito, Mint Lamb Sausage, and How to Make Hot Dogs like a Girl.

Rest In Peace Sussie, 2009-2011

This week, we lost our speckled sussex hen, Sussie. Suss had not been active, or laying eggs, for a few weeks. We tried several recommended treatments but she continued to lose weight and strength. On Thursday, Alex found her dead in the coop.

In life, Sussie was the most skittish and shy of our hens. She had a funky gait and I wonder if she battled a weak heart or other congenital defect. Lil loved Sussie and frequently engaged her in silly acts, like riding a bicycle.

child and hen on a bike

With the two noisy Orpingtons sent to a farm (not a euphemism; they are happily squawking on a friend's spacious piece of land now), Australorp Austra is a single backyard chicken. She is healthy and producing one egg a day but clearly saddened to be without a flock. Her black-feathered self spends much of her day close to our back door, greeting us with endearing coos when we step outside.

Only time will tell the future for our city chicken coop. We eventually want more hens and are possibly ready for the experience of raising them from chicks. The roost and run can use a redesign, so perhaps we'll focus our efforts there first.

In the meantime, we mourn Sussie and are thankful for the time we were able to spend with her. Rest in peace, sweet speckled bird.

Peanut Butter Pie for a Guy I Will Never Know

peanut butter pie for mikeyI wasn't going to make Peanut Butter Pie for Mikey. I heard about his sudden death via the twitter account of his food writer wife, Jennifer Perillo. The story touched me and I hugged my husband and daughter more tightly than usual that day.

When Jennifer urged readers to make peanut butter pie and think of Mikey today, Friday, I still wasn't going to make it. I didn't know the family and definitely don't need another dessert in my diet.

But the recipes from food friends started appearing. My taste buds watered at all the various interpretations of peanut butter pie.

I looked a little more seriously at the recipe. I didn't have everything called for in Jennifer's recipe, but I had most ingredients, enough to make it work.

So after Lil's bedtime, I whipped together peanut butter, cream cheese, sugar and more. I served Alex dessert. We toasted a guy we can never know but whose memory is inspiring home cooks around the world to enjoy dessert with their loved ones tonight.

We should all be remembered so well.