After stopping by the local Z-pizza chain resturaunt I decided to have some home made pizza. I used my sourdough recipe and made some pies.
I used Romanella pizza sauce,Mozzarella,sharp provolone,hot coppa,salami,onion,mushroom,olive,and some anchovy. It was like eating pizza and sourdough bread at the same time.
My Miele oven was pre-heated for an hour at 550 degrees with a thick pizza stone. The oven spring was excellant.
Amir the one great thing about the Miele oven is that using the surround bake mode with the stone it can get to about 600 degrees and that's all the temp you really need. The pies were cooked for 9 minutes and the 2nd one could have been taken out a little sooner. I personally like a dark bake.
Steve, up in Reno there's only one good place to get pizza and that is Sonny's Italian resturaunt. He was closed on Monday when I tried Z pizza, not bad but not anywhere close to the kind of pizza I'm use to eating. That's what I get for growing up in the Bay Area,you get spoiled. If I was younger I might think about about trying a boutique bread and pizza shop, as my Uncle has told me my bread is better than anything he can get over in the east bay.
Our Dacor in the primary home barely gets to 500. So cooking time is 11 to 13 minutes and worse with the second and third batch.
Our wood fired oven does the same in 90-120 seconds! Dome temp gets to 1,000 degrees+ (maxes out the temp gun). We keep the floor temp at 650 or so.
We have a new dough recipe which is amazingly light and is based on some whole wheat flour we grind ourselves. I plan to do a write-up one day on the whole affair.
Our Dacor in the primary home barely gets to 500. So cooking time is 11 to 13 minutes and worse with the second and third batch.
Our wood fired oven does the same in 90-120 seconds! Dome temp gets to 1,000 degrees+ (maxes out the temp gun). We keep the floor temp at 650 or so.
We have a new dough recipe which is amazingly light and is based on some whole wheat flour we grind ourselves. I plan to do a write-up one day on the whole affair.
Amir that would be great to read about you home ground flour. I have thought about getting a out door oven,but I would have to find a suitable type to setup on my deck. A pizza nuked in 90-120 seconds,don't blink or you'll have charcoal for dinner.
I haven't made pizza in a while and my friend Jim the restaurateur and pizza maker closed his doors after 10 years in business. So I have to make my own to get good pizza in Reno.
This pie had all kinds of italian cheeses and salami,sopressata, toscano salami,and italian hot sausage among other goodies. It was cooked at 550 degrees for 9 minutes and was killer.
I haven't made pizza in a while and my friend Jim the restaurateur and pizza maker closed his doors after 10 years in business. So I have to make my own to get good pizza in Reno.
This pie had all kinds of italian cheeses and salami,sopressata, toscano salami,and italian hot sausage among other goodies. It was cooked at 550 degrees for 9 minutes and was killer.
The Pizza looks great. As we have said many a time on the telephone, too bad we are about 2500 miles apart to get together and sharing our audio interests and eating, in this case Pizza.
The Pizza looks great. As we have said many a time on the telephone, too bad we are about 2500 miles apart to get together and sharing our audio interests and eating, in this case Pizza.
Thanks for the good word. We would have a wonderful time,great food ,good wine and the best in sound,you can't ask for more to share with friends,one of us has to move!,lol.
I am a believer in simple toppings for pizza. This allows each ingredient to be more assertive This one is a mushroom, taleggio, and chermoula pizza. The mushrooms are first sauteed with some thyme, olive oil, and a dash of pernod. The taleggio accentuates the earthiness of the mushrooms, the Pernod adds a slight bitter note, while the chermoula (which is sprinkled on after cooking) lightens it up with a hint of lemon. The pizza is mis-shapen because I believe that the dough should be pushed out by hand rather than rolled out with a pin.
That looks like some California foo-foo pizza that would get you arrested in Italy if you tried to sell it as pizza. I would jump over 10 of these in order to eat a cold Big Mac.
Looks great Keith! I usually do the mushrooms in our wood fired pizza oven first and then top the Pizza with it. I only put salt an pepper plus some olive oil. The wood fire provides the rest of the flavor . I will have to try your recipe though. As always, you are the chef and we are the cooks. .
I have two recipes - one for when tomatoes are in season, the other for when they aren't. Both recipes only use tomato and nothing else.
If you can't get fresh tomatoes, use 2x 400g can of whole tomatoes. Seperate the tomatoes from the liquid. Boil the liquid down. The tomatoes will continue to weep fluid - add the fluid to the pot. Remove the skin from the tomatoes while waiting. When the liquid starts to form big bubbles (a sign that most of the water has boiled off), add the drained tomatoes. If you would like a coarser texture, mash with a potato masher or fork. For a finer texture, give it a few whizzes with a stick blender. I do not recommend adding the whole can and boiling it, because it will bubble and spit tomato sauce all over your kitchen. Taste and adjust with salt as required.
If you have fresh tomatoes, peel 1kg of tomatoes and remove the seeds. Salt the seeds and leave it on a strainer (Heston's trick) - the liquid that oozes out is full of tomato flavour. Heat your oven to 100C, spread some olive oil on a roasting tray, and roast your tomatoes for 90 minutes, turning your tomatoes halfway. When done, discard the seeds and add the roasted tomatoes along with the seed liquid into a pot. Give it a few pulses with a stick blender (or mash with a potato masher) and bring to the boil. When hot, add the vines of the tomato and allow to cool down. Taste and adjust with salt as required.
If you can't get fresh tomatoes, use 2x 400g can of whole tomatoes. Seperate the tomatoes from the liquid. Boil the liquid down. The tomatoes will continue to weep fluid - add the fluid to the pot. Remove the skin from the tomatoes while waiting. When the liquid starts to form big bubbles (a sign that most of the water has boiled off), add the drained tomatoes. If you would like a coarser texture, mash with a potato masher or fork. For a finer texture, give it a few whizzes with a stick blender. I do not recommend adding the whole can and boiling it, because it will bubble and spit tomato sauce all over your kitchen. Taste and adjust with salt as required.