Giant Homemade Pizza For 6 Dollars | But Cheaper
Why is delivery pizza so expensive? Sure homemade pizza will always be cheaper, but we really went barebones while preserving and maximizing flavor and it's easy to make factor. So basically... Sicilian pizza.
Recipe:
KitchenAid - KP26M1XNP Professional 600 Series Stand Mixer - Nickel Pearl:
Cuisinart® Stainless Steel Box Grater:
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Most Underrated Pizza I’ve Ever Had (Roman Thin Crust Pizza)
TO GET FREE STEAKS FOR A YEAR, click this link and sign up for ButcherBox. To me, Roman-style thin crust pizza is one of the most underrated pizzas out there. It’s somehow crispy and floppy at the same time. It’s kind of like a mix between Neapolitan and New York style pizzas, only a little less fussy. Let me know what you think of this one in the comments.
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OONI PRO PIZZA OVEN:
METAL PIZZA PEEL:
TURNING PEEL:
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PIZZA STEEL:
KITCHEN AID MIXER:
GLASS BOWLS w/ LIDS:
HALF SHEET TRAY + RACK:
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MY FAV STAINLESS BOWL:
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RECIPE (makes 4 pizzas)
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▪295g water (86F/30C)
▪3g instant yeast
▪10g sugar
▪12g olive oil
▪475g AP flour (11.7% protein)
▪10g salt (for dough)
▪Fresh mozzarella
▪Pecorino Toscano (or cows milk fontina)
▪Parmigiano Reggiano
▪Squeeze/glug of nice olive oil
▪Pinch of flaky salt
Measure water, yeast, sugar, olive oil, and flour into the bowl of a stand mixer with the dough hook attachment. Mix on medium for 30-45 seconds or until a dough forms. Allow dough to rest for 30 minutes in the mixing bowl. Add 10g salt to dough and mix on high for 3-3.5 more minutes to incorporate the salt. After 3min, be sure gluten is developed using the “tug test” (see video @1:18).
Divide into four into 4 equal (approx 200g pieces), shape as shown @1:45, and place each into an oiled/sprayed container with lid (or onto an oiled sheet tray and covered with plastic wrap). Place covered in fridge to cold ferment for 24hrs-4 days. When you’re ready to make pizza, pull dough balls from the fridge and allow to come to room temp, covered, for 3-4 hours.
Cut mozzarella into medium chunks (½” or 1.5cm) and cut pecorino into about ¼” or 1/2cm chunks.
Preheat oven - 750F/400C if using pizza oven or if using your conventional oven, as high as it will go (550F/280C for me) with pizza steel/stone on the top rack closest to broiler.
To shape dough into pizza, see video @5:32 into a 12”/30cm round. Place onto your semolina dusted loading peel and add about 3 large spoonfuls of sauce (recipe below), spread edge to edge, followed by about 40pc of mozzarella and about 20pc of toscano followed by a generous amount of grated parm. Finish with a squeeze of olive oil and pinch of flaky salt. Add and load into your oven of choice.
Cook for 120-140 seconds if using pizza oven, rotating 30 degrees every 10-15 seconds + checking the bottom to be sure it’s not burning. Rest on wire rack.
If using home/conventional oven, load onto pizza steel/stone then switch oven to broil setting on high. Rotate 180 degrees after about 2 minutes and cook for another 60-90 seconds or until done. Rest on wire rack.
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SAUCE:
▪1 28oz/795g can nice crushed tomatoes
▪7g salt (for sauce)
Add salt to can of tomatoes and blend for a few seconds.
#romanpizza #romanstylepizza #pizza #butcherbox
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I Make This Almost EVERY WEEK! ???? Turkish Borek In 15 Minutes & TWO EASY WAYS
Let's make a famous Turkish borek in a pan on the stovetop in 15 minutes! Make your tea ready and enjoy ???? Here is the written recipe:
Hand rolled yufka sheet recipe:
You might also like to watch these borek recipes:
2 ingredient easy borek from puff pastry:
Turkish Rolled Borek Recipe from scratch
Rolled Spinach Borek:
Rolled Borek With pastrami Pachanga:
Tepsi Böreği Borek in a pan with yufka sheets:
Ingredients:
about 300-350 gr. thick phyllo sheets, yufka sheets. (I showed you how you can make your own in the previous episode: )
1 egg
1/3 cup milk
1/3 cup vegetable oil
pinch of salt
For the filling:
About 200gr. Turkish white cheese or feta cheese (You can mix it with some shredded mozzarella as well)
about tbsp chopped parsley
vegetable oil or butter to cook
22-24cm nonstick pan
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Homemade Pizza Dough from Salty Diver
If you want to make the best pizza dough you have ever tasted watch how we cover the flour, yeast, salt and tips on proofing the dough and how to put together an awesome pizza
Homemade crusty loaf, with or without a dutch oven
Thanks to Magic Spoon for sponsoring this video! Use my code RAGUSEA to get $5 off your delicious, healthy Magic Spoon cereal by clicking this link:
***RECIPE***
2 cups (474mL) water, divided in two
2 teaspoons (10g) salt (based on the Morton Kosher I use)
1/8 teaspoon dry yeast (two small pinches)
bread flour (you'll need maybe 5-6 cups, 500-600g, but this recipe is not based on firm quantities)
a little whole wheat flour, if you want (I like to replace maybe a tenth of the white bread flour with whole wheat — I just eyeball it)
The night before you want to bake, mix a poolish by combining half of the water (1 cup, 237mL) with the yeast and enough flour to get a thick batter / pudding consistency. I think a wooden spoon is the best utensil to use for this, but whatever spoon you use, use something rigid. You can just leave the spoon in the poolish overnight. Cover the poolish and let it ferment 8-24 hours.
About four hours before you want to bake, uncover the poolish and mix in the remaining cup (237mL) of water, salt, and as much flour as you can stir in with a spoon (no hand kneading). Again, you can leave the spoon in there. Cover and let rise/hydrate for about an hour.
Check it again and see if you can stir in a little more flour now that the previous addition has hydrated. When you're done, you can get rid of the spoon. Cover and let rise/hydrate for another hour.
These next steps I do in the bowl, just to keep the mess contained, FYI. Sprinkle the dough with a little flour to keep it from sticking to you. Grab one side of it and pull it out until just before it's going to tear, then fold it back in on itself. Rotate the dough 90 degrees and repeat until you've done this four total times. Position the dough so that the seems are on the bottom and the smooth surface is on top. Cover and let rest for about 20 minutes.
Do the whole folding and stretching procedure again, rest 20 minutes, and then do it a third time.
The following instructions are for baking this with a dutch oven. If you're using a baking sheet with a heat-safe metal bowl, skip to that part now.
Get a sheet of parchment paper, crumple it up into a ball, un-crumple it and stuff it down into the bottom of your dutch oven. Transfer in the dough, smooth-side up. Cover the dutch oven (but not with the lid). Put the lid in your oven and get it heating to 500ºF/260ºC (some people get better results with slightly lower temperatures, but every oven is different). Let the dough proof for about a half hour while the oven heats up.
When the dough is looking puffy, score the surface — I find a few quick, confident slashes with a serrated knife work ok. Put the dutch oven over a burner on your stove, turn the heat on high, and cove it with the hot lid from the oven. When the side of the dutch oven feel hot (it should just take a couple minutes), transfer the whole situation to your oven and let bake for a half hour undisturbed, so as to not let any steam escape.
Carefully remove the hot lid, reduce the heat to 450ºF/230ºC and let the surface of the bread brown while the interior finishes baking, 10-20 more minutes. You can test the interior with a thermometer — anything in the neighborhood of 200ºF/93ºC is good. Let the bread cool before slicing.
The following instructions are for doing this with a baking sheet and a heat-safe metal bowl.
Line a baking sheet with parchment paper. After you've done the whole folding thing three times, position the dough on the baking sheet, smooth-side up. Cover it with a heat-safe metal bowl that's big enough to not touch the dough as it rises and/or bakes. Get your oven heating to 500ºF/260ºC (some people get better results with slightly lower temperatures, but every oven is different). Let the dough proof for about a half hour while the oven heats up.
When the dough is looking puffy, score the surface — I find a few quick, confident slashes with a serrated knife work ok. Move the whole pan/bowl rig into the oven and let bake for a half hour undisturbed, so as to not let any steam escape.
Carefully remove the hot hot bowl. If your oven has a convection fan, turn it on. If not, just crank your oven to its highest temperature, if it can go any higher. Let the surface of the bread brown while the interior finishes baking, 10-20 more minutes. You can test the interior with a thermometer — anything in the neighborhood of 200ºF/93ºC is good. Let the bread cool before slicing.
Why I didn't know this method before! Just found the EASIEST way to make croissants!
No fold! No machine! I just found the easiest way to make croissants! Important tips are below here
*Ingredients
300g (2 cups) Bread flour
4g (1/2 tbsp.) Instant yeast
25g (2 tbsp.) Sugar
1pc (50 g+-) Egg
145g (0.6 cup) Milk
3g (1/2 tsp) Salt
20g (1.4 tbsp.) Unsalted butter
90g (6 tbsp.) Unsalted butter
200°C (390°F) bake for 10 minutes, then 180°C (355°F) bake for 6 minutes
*Important tips.
1. Croissant dough is harder than normal bread dough, which is good for shaping, so the amount of milk should not be too much.
2. Divide the dough into 9 parts, each small dough is about 60 grams, the diameter is about 20cm
3. the butter for the interlayer should be 90 grams in total, about 11 grams for each layer
4. If it is summer, the dough should be frozen in the freezer for about 20 minutes, if it is winter, refrigerate for 20 minutes.
5. Use a thicker rolling pin to roll the dough, that it is more evenly stressed. Roll it for a while on one side, then flip it over and roll it for a while. The dough will come out more evenly, and finally roll it into a round shape of about 40cm in diameter.
6. Here only needs one fermentation, about 2-3 hours. It is recommended that the fermentation temperature should not exceed 28°C. The croissant dough will be fat and can be moved if shaken.
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