Monday, March 30, 2009

Alton Brown's pizza dough

This is another pizza sauce, pizza dough recipe from how to eat a cupcake
Basic Pizza Sauce (For the sauce, she kinda made up my her own recipe)
Makes enough for 2 12-inch pizzas, plus some for dipping!

1 14.5-ounce can diced tomatos, drained
1 8-ounce can tomato sauce
2 garlic cloves, minced
Red pepper flakes, optional

Simmer all ingredients over medium-low heat for 15 minutes, stirring occasionally. Cool to room temperature. Pour sauce into a food processor and pulse until it reaches the texture you desire. I like a slightly chunky sauce!


Pizza Dough (This is a double batch of Alton Brown's recipe with some minor adaptions)
Makes 2 12-inch pizzas

4 tablespoons sugar (I reduced it to 3)
2 tablespoons kosher salt (I reduced it to 1 tablespoon)
2 tablespoons olive oil
1 1/2 cups warm water (approx. 110 degrees F)
4 cups bread flour (approx. 22 ounces)
2 teaspoons instant yeast (rapid rise worked for me!)
1 tablespoon + 1 teaspoon olive oil, for the bowl (This was too much; just use enough to coat the dough ball)
Olive oil, for the pizza crust
Flour, for dusting the pizza peel (I baked mine on parchment, so I didn't need any extra flour)

Place the sugar, salt, olive oil, water, half of flour, yeast, and remaining flour into the mixer's work bowl.

Using the paddle attachment, start the mixer on low and mix until the dough just comes together, forming a ball. Lube the hook attachment with cooking spray. Attach the hook to the mixer and knead for 15 minutes on medium speed (I mixed on speed 4, not quite medium). Tear off a small piece of dough and flatten into a disc. Stretch the dough until thin. Hold it up to the light and look to see if the baker's windowpane, or taut membrane, has formed. If the dough tears before it forms, knead the dough for an additional 5 to 10 minutes.

Roll the pizza dough into a smooth ball on the countertop. Place into a stainless steel or glass bowl. Add olive oil to the bowl and toss to coat. Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate for 18 to 24 hours.

Split the pizza dough into 2 equal parts using a knife or a dough scraper. Flatten into a disk onto the countertop and then fold the dough into a ball.

Wet hands barely with water and rub them onto the countertop to dampen the surface. Roll the dough on the surface until it tightens. Cover one ball with a tea towel and rest for 30 minutes. Repeat the steps with the other piece of dough. If not baking the remaining pizza immediately, spray the inside of a ziptop bag with cooking spray and place the dough ball into the bag. Refrigerate for up to 6 days.

Place the pizza stone or tile onto the bottom of a cold oven and turn the oven to its highest temperature, about 500 degrees F (I put my pizza stone in the lower half of my oven, not the lowest rack). If the oven has coils on the oven floor, place the tile onto the lowest rack of the oven.

(I don't have a peel, so for this next step I stretched my dough to a 12-inch round on the counter, no extra flour needed. Then I put it on a piece of parchment to dress it. I put the parchment directly on the pizza stone.) Sprinkle the flour onto the peel and place the dough onto the peel. Using your hands, form a lip around the edges of the pizza. Stretch the dough into a round disc, rotating after each stretch. Toss the dough in the air if you dare. Shake the pizza on the peel to be sure that it will slide onto the pizza stone or tile (or slide the parchment right onto the stone). Dress and bake the pizza immediately for a crisp crust or rest the dough for 30 minutes if you want a chewy texture. (I baked mine immediately and still got a chewy crust.)

Brush the rim of the pizza with olive oil. Spread the pizza sauce thinly onto the pizza and top with whatever you like. Slide the pizza onto the stone and bake for 7-9 minutes, or until bubbly and golden brown. Rest for 3 minutes before slicing.

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