Cooking Pizza...

@deep1608 (321)
India
January 9, 2007 12:00am CST
Can anyone help me in the recipe of making pizza...I want to learn cooking pizza at home...Help....
1 person likes this
2 responses
@mariojt (199)
• Brazil
10 Mar 07
try this friend: INGREDIENTS: 4 3/4 - Cups white flour 2 - Cups warm water; 105° F. 3 - Teaspoons dry yeast 1 - Teaspoon salt 1 - Tablespoon olive oil Olive Oil Kosher salt Dried Rosemary DIRECTIONS Dissolve yeast in the warm water. Add yeast/water mixture to 3 cups of the flour. Mix, adding regular salt and olive oil a little at a time. Add the rest of the flour bit by bit until the dough "feels right". Turn dough onto a floured board and knead; adding more flour if necessary to keep the dough from sticking to your fingers. Put the dough in a greased bowl and rotate to distribute the grease all over the dough. Let rise until about double in size (approx. 2 hours). Remove the dough, punch down and roll out on the floured board to a thickness of 3/8 to 1/2 inch (make it any shape you desire). Put dough in a pan or cookie sheet. With a pastry brush, paint liberally with additional olive oil. Use your thumb and 2 fingers to make dimples over the entire surface. Sprinkle the Kosher sea salt and rosemary over the surface of the dough. Let rise a little more. Bake at 375° F for about 25 minutes. When done, paint liberally again with olive oil.
@maferick (1583)
• Brazil
28 Feb 07
i found in a site a recipe that i think that will help you,hope you like it:) This recipe will make enough pizza dough for two, 12" deluxe pizzas. It's a good place to start if you've never hand-made dough before, and, it's not too large a portion to work with at one time. No special machinery is required, (except your hands). You will, however, need to have a large mixing bowl, a measuring cup, measuring spoons, a large whisk or wooden mixing spoon and some kitchen film at the ready before you start, along with the following ingredients. You may also want to have a dish cloth, dish towel or paper towels handy, too. You will quickly find that once you start making pizza dough by hand that it is a challenge, and an unnecessary interruption, to have to stop mid-process in order to go looking for needed supplies. If you are prepared, then let the fun and the magic begin... HOW TO MAKE PIZZA Making Pizza Dough Ingredients 1 - 1/4 Oz Envelop - Active Dry Yeast, (or 2 1/4 Tsp) 1 1/2 Cups - Warm Water (110°F - 115°F) 4 Cups - Bread Flour 1 1/2 Tsp. - Salt 2 Tbsp. - Extra Virgin Olive Oil 1 Tbsp. - Sugar Extra flour Extra Olive Oil Instructions Pour the warm water in a large mixing bowl. Add the sugar and stir until dissolved. Add the yeast and gently stir the mixture until the yeast is dissolved. Let the mixture sit for 10 minutes to allow the yeast to become "active." The mixture will become foamy at the surface and appear cloudy, and, it will begin to release its familiar, "yeasty" aroma.v Add the salt and olive oil and stir again to combine the ingredients. Add 1 cup of flour to the mixture and whisk in until dissolved. Add the second cup of flour and whisk it in until the mixture is smooth. Add the 3rd cup of flour and combine evenly. The dough mixture should now be fairly thick. Add the last cup and flour and, with your hands, begin to combine the dough until all of the dry flour has moistened into a mass. You may need to add a dusting of flour from time to time to reduce the stickiness of the dough as you work it with your hands. Be patient, folding the dough mixture in on itself, over and over again. When the flour has absorbed all of the moisture and congealed into a firm mass, remove it from the bowl to a floured tabletop to knead it. Press the dough out with the balls of both of your hands. Then, fold the mass in half and "push it into itself." Fold it in half again and push it into itself, again and again for perhaps 10 to 12 minutes or so, or about 200 cycles. It is very important that the dough is very well kneaded. Over knead it rather than under knead it or you will be disappointed that it will not rise to its full potential when baked. The dough ball will eventually loose its stickiness, and become pliable and elastic. Kneading is complete when the dough transforms into a silky, smoothly-textured ball slightly larger than a large grapefruit. Coat the dough ball with a thin layer of olive oil, and place it in the bottom of a large mixing bowl which has also been coated on the inside with olive oil. Stretch a piece of kitchen film over the top of the bowl and set it in a warm place such an as un-lit oven, (ambient temperature of 70° F to 80° F). Allow the dough to rise, undisturbed, for 60 to 75 minutes. The dough will have grown to at least twice its original size. Take the raised dough mass out of the bowl and cut it in half with a knife. Take the raw dough portions and separately pat them down flat on a cutting board to press out and release the air that has developed inside them. Hand-mold each portion into a ball, smoothing the outer surface and tucking each portion into itself from underneath. (This action can be likened to stuffing or folding a sock into itself.) Set the two dough balls apart, momentarily, and consider the next steps. If you choose to continue with making the pizzas now, (recommended), here's how. Some dough makers "proof," (or re-raise), the dough balls at this point. They can be set apart in bowls or plastic trays and covered at room temperature, to "rest" for an additional 15 or 20 minutes, if you wish. Some recipes call for up to an additional hour of "proofing." For practical purposes, this pizza dough recipe does not have to be put through a complete second rise cycle. Try this alternative. Working with the dough at room temperature, roll out each dough ball into a 3/8" thick circle, about 14" in diameter. "Pan" the dough into a pizza pan, then let the panned dough "proof" for 5 to 10 minutes in the pan before adding your sauce, cheese and toppings. This step will give the dough a chance to "blossom," resulting in a thicker, fuller and chewier crust edge. If you wish to store the dough for later use, by either freezing or refrigeration, you can place the dough balls in zip-lock bags. Squirt a little olive oil into each of the bags to keep the balls moist and pliable and to ease removal when ready for use. If you choose to freeze or refrigerate: the dough balls may continue to rise until they are substantially cooled down or frozen, which is OK as long as they don't break out of their bags. If they do, mold them back down into balls and re-bag them. When you are ready to used the stored dough, allow the dough to warm, (thaw), to room temperature before attempting to roll out and pan. The refrigerated dough balls, (held at 36°F to 42°F), should remain usable for 24 to 48 hours, but will begin to "deteriorate" or "ferment," thereafter. Frozen dough balls, (held at -10°F to 0°F), should remain usable considerably longer, weeks perhaps, as long as they are well-wrapped, (to prevent freezer burn), and are air-tight. :)