Saturday, August 11, 2012

Pizza dough (p. 607) and Focaccia (p. 607)

I'm not sure what motivated me to make Pizza dough (p. 607) other than I wanted to make a bread recipe and pizza sounded good.  I usually just buy my pizza dough at Whole Foods because I hated baking at high altitude.  And Whole Foods has good pizza dough! 

(I know these posts are super late so I'm not going to backdate them.  Look forward to a lot of posts all at once)

I mixed water and yeast:

Yeasty!

I added flour, olive oil, and salt.  I omitted the sugar because I don't like my pizza dough sweet (does anyone?):


I mixed it by hand for a minute:


And started kneading.  TJOC always recommends kneading for what I think is way too long.  I kneaded until it looked good:


At this point I separated the dough into three sections because I was only going to make pizza with part of it, I was going to make Focaccia (p. 607).  I covered all the dough so that it could rise. 


It went from this: 


To this: 


   I punched it down, rolled it into a ball, and let it rise for another 10 minutes.  I flattened the ball, stretched it, brushed it with olive oil, and made a pizza!  I never use pizza stones but some people swear by them.  I would love to know your experiences in the comments....


It was really good although no better than the pizza dough from Whole Foods!  So I don't know if I would bother with it in the future.  You all know my theory--if it's not better or cheaper homemade than I might as well just buy it.  Your time is worth something, right?

I like focaccia but almost never buy it.  I took the pizza dough, rolled it out, and put it in a baking dish.  


Well, actually two dishes.  They were let raise in the pans.



I topped mine with garlic, olives, and spices!


I topped moms with mushrooms, garlic, and tomatoes:


I wish you could have smelled how terrific these were when they were cooked:


Focaccia is totally worth making.  Honestly, it was delicious and easy.  And I'm sure you could make it with store-bought pizza dough if you didn't want to make it from true scratch.  I even think mom froze some of it and ate it later and that totally worked.  Has anyone else made focaccia?  How did it turn out?

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3 comments:

  1. I swear by my pizza stone and usually make dough from scratch. That is mostly because we can't be bothered to go to the grocery store to buy crust. When I lived in Ottawa, there was a good, cheap, frozen one my housemates would get, then leave on the heat vent to thaw.
    I've made focaccia before, but not with all of your awesome toppings. I bet yours was better than the ones I've made.

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  2. I made this focaccia once and it turned out horrible but it was due to me not knowing how to work with yeast. Now that I understand it and after reading your review I think I will give it a try. I have tried the foccacia recipe from Artisan Bread in 5 minutes a day (I've posted about it on my blog) and we really liked that. I don't use a pizza stone mostly b/c I have no where to keep it in my small kitchen. I usually just use a pizza pan to make my pizzas.

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  3. It may rise better with the sugar left in - the yeast uses this and sugars in the flour as food to produce CO2 gas. I make this recipe and after a first rise it will usually fill the entire bowl. Your focaccia came out beautifully.

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