Showing posts with label pizza. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pizza. Show all posts
Monday, May 20, 2013
abondanza!!
our friends joe and marj just built a wood-fired brick oven and invited us for their first try making pizza! we were honored as marj is just about the best cook you'll ever meet and we knew it would be goooooood!
that oven is so cool. they figured it was about 1000 degrees inside. you start a wood fire in the middle of the oven , and when it is hot enough, you push the wood to the back of the oven and brush out all of the ash. then you throw in a handful of flour which gets really smoky, but it shows you where the hottest spots are. then throw in the pizza and it cooks up fast! washed down with some of joe's amazing home brew, deeeeee-licious! brian's face says it all!
thanks joe and marj!!! (let us know when you start doing take-out!)
Sunday, May 5, 2013
PINK! in yo' face, b&%ch!
| detail of vintage curtain |
you have to act a little bad-ass around pink. you know, to toughen it up!
happy cinco de mayo!
Monday, January 7, 2013
brian and rosco make pizza
we love making pizza, and we make a pretty good pie, if i do say so myself! rosco is a "big help" in the kitchen, always willing to do any taste testing and cleaning up whatever finds its way to the floor...
here is the recipe we use for pizza dough. it's from the cookbook "cucina simpatica" from the owners of al forno in providence, rhode island. it's a great recipe and works best if you use a pizza stone. preheat your oven to 450 degrees with the stone in the oven.
2 1/2 teas. active dry yeast (i use 1 T.)
1 cup warm water
pinch of sugar
2 1/4 teas. kosher salt
1/4 cup johnnycake meal or fine-ground white cornmeal
3 T. whole-wheat flour
1 T. virgin olive oil
2 1/2 to 3 1/2 cups unbleached white flour
1. dissolve the yeast in the warm water with the sugar.
2. after 5 minutes stir in the salt, johnnycake meal, whole-wheat flour and oil.
3. gradually add the white flour, stirring with a wooden spoon until a stiff dough has formed. (i always make this in a kitchen aid mixer-much easier all the way around!!)
4. place the dough on a floured board and knead it for several minutes, adding only enough additional flour to keep the dough from sticking. (again, i do the kneading in the mixer)
5. when the dough is smooth and shiny, transfer it to a bowl that has been brushed with olive oil. to prevent a skin from forming, brush the top of the dough with additional olive oil, cover the bowl with plastic wrap, and let it rise in a warm place away from drafts, until double in bulk, 1 1/2 to 2 hours.
6. punch down the dough and knead once more. let the dough rise again for about 40 minutes.
7. punch down the dough. if it is sticky knead in a bit more flour.
makes enough dough for 2 large pizzas!
yum! well worth the effort and fun to do! enjoy!!
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