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The Home Made Pizza Thread

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Cast iron fry pan pizza, kind of Detroit-style. Recipe loosely based on this one on ATK. I used instant yeast, rather than doing the overnight in the fridge thing. Used whole milk mozzarella with a little shredded cheddar mixed in, and monterey jack around the edges.

Only gripe: I didn't have enough pepperoni on hand to cover the thing. More pepp next time.

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I’ve had a pizza craving lately so I tried this atk recipe. Made the dough yesterday and put it in the fridge for 24 hours. Just a plain sauce/cheese pizza, but it hit the spot....plus leftovers!!

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Making pies today on my Vision kamado grill and have an abundance of spinach in the garden. Should I put on as is and top with cheese or should I wilt it first. I always wilt it in the pan before adding the eggs for a fritata.
 
Making pies today on my Vision kamado grill and have an abundance of spinach in the garden. Should I put on as is and top with cheese or should I wilt it first. I always wilt it in the pan before adding the eggs for a fritata.
I'll do fresh arugula and/or basil, but I only do cooked/sauteed/wilted spinach. I'm sure fresh would okay though.
 
I've been working on my pizza sauce (a work in progress). This is for my standard 8" Neopolitan pizza.
  • 20g Filippo Berio Sun Dried Tomato Pesto
  • 24g Rao’s Pizza Sauce (or other Marinara)
  • 1g Amore Anchovy Paste (be careful this can overpower the flavor of the sauce)
  • 2g+ Amore Chili Pepper Paste (adds a hint of spice)
 
Sorry I can't do photos. I went with using spinach fresh and it was mounded pretty high,but came out flat and bubbly. The flavor was more toward fresh and had some tooth to it. I will forever use it fresh on pies!
 
Chicken sausage and mushroom.
Looks good, but it also looks like my efforts with pizza stone in gas BBQ. Crust turns out awesome, toppings look like a bit more heat would have been better. Don't take this as a critique, my partner offered to get an Ooni for Father's day but I decided to stick with pizza stone on the gas grill - its less fiddly and can turn out a big (14-15") pizza every 4 minutes without much rest if I am doing a crowd. An Ooni requires probably as long to come back to heat after each pie as it takes to cook and if you push it you get soggy center crust. (Ooni style ovens do make great pizza)
I am at max heat in my grill, but I did pizza on a friends and had to drop heat to avoid burning crust - a second thin pizza stone or steel would probably make that grill perfect.
I think it is a good way to make pizza
 
Looks good, but it also looks like my efforts with pizza stone in gas BBQ. Crust turns out awesome, toppings look like a bit more heat would have been better. Don't take this as a critique, my partner offered to get an Ooni for Father's day but I decided to stick with pizza stone on the gas grill - its less fiddly and can turn out a big (14-15") pizza every 4 minutes without much rest if I am doing a crowd. An Ooni requires probably as long to come back to heat after each pie as it takes to cook and if you push it you get soggy center crust. (Ooni style ovens do make great pizza)
I am at max heat in my grill, but I did pizza on a friends and had to drop heat to avoid burning crust - a second thin pizza stone or steel would probably make that grill perfect.
I think it is a good way to make pizza
No criticism taken, you are correct. I don’t enjoy blackened crust, (though for many is is an hallmark of a great pie) and some caramelization of the toppings and cheese is always welcomed. I’ve seen some grill top pizza “ovens” that might work to capture heat and reflect down but they’re about $50 and seems like a lot of stuff to move for the maybe once a month pizza night. Sam’s club has a propane “knockoff“ Ooni for $200.
 
Ok, I love this thread. Not sure how I missed it, but I’ve only got 10 more years to get through to catch up!

we love homemade pizza and here’s our latest. We use a Blaze grill with a rear burner and put the pizza on a stone. Typically put the pizza on when stone temperature hits 600F. 7-8 minute cook, rotating every couple of minutes.
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pizza dough was King Arthur pizza flour in a food processor. Some room to grow here for sure.
 
Ok, I love this thread. Not sure how I missed it, but I’ve only got 10 more years to get through to catch up!

we love homemade pizza and here’s our latest. We use a Blaze grill with a rear burner and put the pizza on a stone. Typically put the pizza on when stone temperature hits 600F. 7-8 minute cook, rotating every couple of minutes.
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pizza dough was King Arthur pizza flour in a food processor. Some room to grow here for sure.
At first I was thinking the yellow things were french fries. Then some looked like long pasta noodles. Then I realized they are probably (hopefully) yellow bell peppers.
 
At first I was thinking the yellow things were french fries. Then some looked like long pasta noodles. Then I realized they are probably (hopefully) yellow bell peppers.
Indeed they are!

our next pizzas will be using a smoker to bake with a propane torch to give some char to the crust and toppings. Stay tuned!
 
Ok, unique pizza situation. In our RV, using a Green Mountain Davy Crockett pellet grill. Temperature 450ish, on a pizza pan, took about 15 minutes.

Dough with all purpose flour, rapid rise yeast.

Toppings: RAO marinara, Jimmy Dean hot sausage, onions, orange bell peppers, mushrooms, whole milk mozzarella, and pepperoni.

Char: after the bake, used a propane torch to give some char to the crust, cheese, and pepperoni.
 

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Review: toppings were good, crust was ok. A more artisanal approach to the crust would be a plus. Might also try a pizza stone in the pellet grill. The ”char assistance“ technique is a keeper.
 
So went to a local Detroit Style Pizza place I haven't had in years. I sent the 1st pizza back and explained Detroit style is supposed to be light and airy. They made me another but basically got the same thing. When we went years ago it was not like this at all it was light and airy. This just seems raw and gooey. Anyone with information would be helpful. Thanks!

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Review: toppings were good, crust was ok. A more artisanal approach to the crust would be a plus. Might also try a pizza stone in the pellet grill. The ”char assistance“ technique is a keeper.
Or a steel which may travel better, no worries about it breaking. That way you place the raw pizza on a hot surface. Even though most metal pans transfer heat quickly it’s just won’t give the same result.
 
I agree about the pans; results were good, but not like a pizza oven

I tried reverse side grill grates (essentially a perforated aluminum griddle for those not familiar), but burned the bottom of the crust, so the pan came next. Could be there’s a way to do it with grill grates, but not sure. Pizza steel sounds like a good option.
 
I think I posted about my Lodge Cast Iron pizza pan in this thread. I love it, whether is in the oven or on the grill. Heat it up, throw the pizza dough on it, throw the toppings on it, and let it cook. The grill can reach higher temps than the oven, so it only takes about 8 minutes to get a perfectly cooked pizza. 12 minutes in the oven, so still not bad.

They apparently changed the handle design, but it's pretty much the same as mine. You can see the old handle design in my picture above.
 
Finally got around to setting up our Walmart Ooni knock off oven. First time using it, we didn’t too bad. Made a plain pizza, a pepperoni pizza and a white pizza with broccoli. Didn’t get pictures of the pepperoni.
 

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About a month ago, I made a sour dough starter. I've since been trying to perfect my pizza dough using the sour dough. I'm still not there yet, but it is very tasty.

My sour dough started with 1 cup whole wheat flour, and a little over 1/2 cup water. I added water to it by the tablespoon to get the starter at the right consistency. I feed it with whole wheat flour, and water measured the same way.

My pizza dough is 1 cup all purpose flour and 1 cup of the sourdough, 3 tablespoons of olive oil, plus salt and pepper to taste. The crust is sticky, but crumbly. I use AP flour to reduce the stickiness when I roll it out, but trying to pick it up to put on the pizza pan, it crumbles apart. Anyone have any advice?
 
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