I've been baking bread for several years now and have gotten pretty good with the process. After shelling out 24 bucks for our last pizza I started thinking it might be interesting to make an earnest attempt to learn that process as well. It seems a bit more daunting than a loaf of bread due to the special handling of the dough to stretch, apply toppings, side into the oven and then cook properly in a home oven.
Thanks to America's Test Kitchen I learned of an interesting style of deep dish pizza that eliminates many of the complexities I'd been concerned with - a Detroit Style Pizza. This is, as I said, a deep dish style pizza cooked in a cake pan (or traditionally a rectangular steel pan). It has a Focaccia style dough that is covered with a very generous dose of cheese that goes right to the edge of the pan and creates a burnt cheesy bread like crust. Cheese is put down on top of the dough in this style of pizza and then the sauce (which is a very boldly flavored herb sauce) it put down in strips on top of the cheese. So, a very odd sort of pizza.
Ingredients:
- Dough:
- 12 oz All Purpose Flour
- 1 tsp Instant Dry Yeast
- 1 tsp Table Salt
- 1 tsp Sugar
- 1 cup Spring Water
- 1 tbs Extra Virgin Olive Oil
- Sauce:
- 1 cup Crushed Tomato
- 1 tbs Extra Virgin Olive Oil
- 1 tbs Fresh Basil/Basil Paste
- 1 large garlic clove minced
- 1 tsp Oragino
- 1 tsp Dried Basil
- 1/2 tsp Sugar
- 1/2 tsp Black Pepper
- 1/2 tsp Red Pepper (makes for medium-high level of spice)
- 1/4 tsp Salt
- Toppings:
- 10 oz Monterey Jack Cheese
- 5 oz Peperoni
- Pan:
- Oil spray
- 1 tsp Extra Virgin Olive Oil
- 1/16/21
- Combined the dry ingredients into a large bowl and mixed them together so that everything was evenly distributed
- Added the water and oil and stirred until a cohesive mass of dough is formed. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap
- Performed a few stretch and fold operations on the dough over the next 2 hrs. The dough is very sticky so, with a wet hand you grab one side of the dough, pull it up and stretch the dough and then fold it over the top. I usually do this 4 times per session one at each of the 90 degree. This seems to help make the dough a little stronger and less sticky for the next steps.
- After 2 hr rest I removed the dough from the bowl and onto a floured work surface where it is formed into a ball. Added a bit of flour to make it a bit more workable
- Then we prepare the cooking pan - I'm using an 13x9x2 cake pan. It has round corners rather than square ones but works just fine for this pizza. I sprayed it with olive oil spray to keep from sticking and put 1 tbs of additional Olive oil on the bottom of the pan
- Moved the doughball to the pan and let this sit for 20 min to relax the dough after shaping
- Then stretched the dough out to cover the bottom of the pan. I ended up having to do a few cycles of this with 10-15 breaks in between before the dough would stretch enough to cover most of the pan. I didn't quite make it to the corners but decided to leave it be as the dough will continue to expand as it proofs. Put plastic wrap over the top of the pan to prevent the dough from drying out
- After 2.5 hrs the dough had spread to the corners and increased in size to a nice amount (2x or more maybe)
- Pre-heated the oven at 500 F
- Made the sauce and set aside
- Grated the cheese
- Sliced the Peperoni. This is cut to between 1/8th and 1/4th of an inch
- Added Cheese to the dough first. There is a lot of cheese for the pizza - it is added right to the edge of the dough. This will get cooked onto the side of the crust which makes the best part of this pizza
- Then added the sauce on top of the cheese. This put in thin stipes rather than all over the pizza
- Then added the Peperoni fairly evenly
- Moved to the oven and cooked for 15 min
- Removed from the oven and let sit for 5 min to cool
- Pulled it out of the pan with a spatula and onto a cutting board
- Cut the pizza into 8 rectangular slices
- Ate with a nice spinach salad. The crust on this pizza is delicious - especially the cheesy outer crust. The sauce is a very boldly flavored, between the basil and garlic, which compensates for there being a relatively small amount of it. The cheese is very nicely cooked and golden brown and creates a nice crunch on the surface along with the bubbly dough. I think the peperoni is a nice addition which adds a bit of complexity and spice - 5 oz seems like a good amount (might be tempted to go a bit higher next time)
I'll let this be a fair warning not to eat pizza should I ever be in Detroit... ;)
ReplyDelete(I think your craftsmanship is solid; it's just an altogether different style of pizza from what you get in Italy)
Haha :). Americans are a irreverent group with both beer and pizza - taking European classics off in our own direction. Maybe if you told yourself it was "cheesy bread" rather than pizza. It is a combo I couldn't imagine anyone who likes cheese and bread wouldn't love.
ReplyDelete