a variation of summer veggie with spinach, mushrooms, zuchini, tomatoes, peppers, and parmesan cheese.
A few years ago a friend of mine told me that she had to go vegan for health reasons and was asking me what kinds of food she could make. I told her two things: Mexican food and pizza! Pizza is what I consider the white canvas of the food world-- a good pizza crust is just the starting point for your imagination, and in todays world anything goes! No matter what your dietary restrictions, you can eat pizza, just as long as you think outside the proverbial Dominoes and Pizza Hut box.
I have made pizza about once a week for the past 2 1/2 years!
This pizza dough recipe makes enough dough for two large thin crust pizzas. My directions include an overnight rise in the refrigerator (which I think makes the texture better), but you can still use this recipe as long as you have at least an hour before baking time. I like doing the dough the night before because the next day I don't have to think about it, and I can just take out the perfectly risen dough a couple of hours before baking. I also just use normal baking pans for the most part. I had a horribly tragic pizza stone experience on my birthday and the scars have yet to heal.
Pizza dough:
1 1/4 cup warm water
1 1/4 tsp yeast
1 tsp sugar or brown sugar
2 TSB olive oil
1 tsp salt
3 cups all purpose flour
Combine the sugar, water and yeast in a large bowl. After a few minutes, the yeast should "bloom" and become alive and frothy. Add in the olive oil. In a separate bowl combine the flour and salt. Add in the flour mixture in two or three installments to the yeast/water mixture and mix with a wooden spoon until the dough is mostly combined and still a little sticky. Turn out the dough onto a floured surface, spray your hands with cooking spray and start kneading the dough (basically just folding the dough back onto itself and pressing out the air, rotating the dough, and folding it again, etc.). If you need to, add a little more flour, but the dough should be a little tacky. The longer you knead the dough, the easier it will be to work with. After 5 or 6 minutes of kneading, leave the dough alone for a minute or two before coming back and kneading it again for another minute. During that paused interval, the dough will have become fairly smooth and elastic (probably something to do with gluten and bonding) and should make the last minute or two of kneading very easy and satisfying. When you are finished kneading the dough, put it into a large oiled bowl, cover with plastic wrap, and place in the refrigerator overnight.
Take out the dough about two hours prior to baking so that the dough can come to room temperature. Preheat your oven to 450 degrees and place an oven rack on the lowest setting in your oven. When you are ready to top your pizzas, just divide the dough in half, spray cooking spray on each baking sheet, and stretch the dough to fit your pan, using your hands to shape it and push it in place. I don't ever use rolling pins.
I have gone away from using red sauced pizzas and now prefer just a sauce that is just a drizzle of olive oil, salt and garlic.
Summer Pizza: (pictured in the right side of the top pizza)
olive oil
salt
minced garlic
mozarella cheese
tomatoes, sliced
zuchini, quartered and sliced
red or green pepper, chopped
corn, preferably roasted
basil, torn or chopped
feta cheese
Once you stretched out your dough to fit your pan, drizzle some olive oil on your crust and sprinkle with salt and minced garlic, spreading with your fingers or a brush if you have one. Sprinkle with mozarella, then top with zuchini, sliced tomatoes, chopped peppers, corn, basil, and then feta cheese, Cook in the preheated oven for 10-15 minutes until the crust looks golden brown.
I love pizza. I will try your dough recipe the next time I make pizza for dinner!
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