by komputodo ➕follow (1) 💰tip ignore
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We like to make deep dish pizza in the oven using cast iron skillet as the pan. But not during summer, gets too hot in the house then. Might have to try it on the grill outside.
Yes, wife used to make them all the time and I really liked that. Now her job gets in the way, but maybe I'll ask how she used to make the dough.
That's something I want to do.
Sam's here has mozzarella at least.
Edit: people are grossed out but I like anchovies for some reason
That's something I want to do.
Sam's here has mozzarella at least.
Edit: people are grossed out but I like anchovies for some reason
I also make a mean pasta with anchovies, onions, garlic, hot peppers etc. (no tomato sauce on this one).
mell says
I also make a mean pasta with anchovies, onions, garlic, hot peppers etc. (no tomato sauce on this one).
No clams?
I'm making dill pickles now - good lord, I had no idea how much I missed them. Super easy to make, but two weeks before you can eat them.
richwicks says
I'm making dill pickles now - good lord, I had no idea how much I missed them. Super easy to make, but two weeks before you can eat them.
I like the NEW YORK deli style pickles that seem somewhere between a plain cucumber and a dill pickle...crunchy and not nearly as sour as a dill... you could eat 3 or 4 of them... But you are right, easy as hell to make
I used to hack my cleaning cycle so I can bake the pie at 800 F. These days, I just use clay tiles and broil them to 650 F. I also use the broiler to cook the pie itself. 650 floor and broiler does well. You have to have a great source of Mozz. My sauce is a high quality tomato (Bianco di Napoli, Alta Cucina, Cento DOP), crushed by hand, salt, california olive oil added. Then I put a stalk of basil in to infuse into the sauce.
For the dough, I just run it through the food processor real quick. 80% 00 Italian Flour, 10 % King Aurthur 00, and 10% Heritage Grains from Arizona (Like Hayden Mills Flour). Although, there's plenty of formulas that produce great dough. Italian flour is the best IMO. I use a sourdough culture but yeast is ok. 24 hour rise.
I used to hack my cleaning cycle so I can bake the pie at 800 F.
I'm making dill pickles now - good lord, I had no idea how much I missed them. Super easy to make, but two weeks before you can eat them.
Have you made sauerkraut too? Its just as easy..
I make hot pockets with flour tortillas, shredded motz, marinara sauce, and pepperonis.
No - that's fermented.. Little worried about making that. I know there are a few pickling recipes to make "sauerkraut:" though, but it's not technically sauerkraut unless it's fermented.
Also, there's a Korean store right next to me. Kimchi is basically the same thing, and they have lots of it.
When my first-born was 1yo old, we hired a new graduate with Master's degree in early childhood education as our full-time baby sitter
theoakman says
I used to hack my cleaning cycle so I can bake the pie at 800 F. These days, I just use clay tiles and broil them to 650 F. I also use the broiler to cook the pie itself. 650 floor and broiler does well. You have to have a great source of Mozz. My sauce is a high quality tomato (Bianco di Napoli, Alta Cucina, Cento DOP), crushed by hand, salt, california olive oil added. Then I put a stalk of basil in to infuse into the sauce.
For the dough, I just run it through the food processor real quick. 80% 00 Italian Flour, 10 % King Aurthur 00, and 10% Heritage Grains from Arizona (Like Hayden Mills Flour). Although, there's plenty of formulas that produce great dough. Italian flour is the best IMO. I use a sourdough culture but yeast is ok. 24 hour rise.
Can you give more details on this cooking technique? How much tile, tile location relative to pizza. Then ...
With regard to pizza, I suggest naan bread as a base
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