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Pizza Pizzas

Alton Brown

Recipe courtesy Alton Brown

Rated: 4 stars out of 5Rate itRead users' reviews (13)

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Times:

Prep
18 hr 30 min
Inactive Prep
--
Cook
10 min
Total:
18 hr 40 min
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Ingredients

  • 2 tablespoons sugar
  • 1 tablespoon kosher salt
  • 1 tablespoon pure olive oil
  • 3/4 cup warm water
  • 2 cups bread flour (for bread machines)
  • 1 teaspoon instant yeast
  • 2 teaspoons olive oil
  • Olive oil, for the pizza crust
  • Flour, for dusting the pizza peel

Toppings:

  • 1 1/2 ounces pizza sauce
  • 1/2 teaspoon each chopped fresh herbs such as thyme, oregano, red pepper flakes, for example
  • A combination of 3 grated cheeses such as mozzarella, Monterey Jack, and provolone

Directions

Place the sugar, salt, olive oil, water, 1 cup of flour, yeast, and remaining cup of 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.

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 2 teaspoons of olive oil to the bowl and toss to coat. Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate for 18 to 24 hours.

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. If the oven has coils on the oven floor, place the tile onto the lowest rack of the oven.

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.

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. (Dress and bake the pizza immediately for a crisp crust or rest the dough for 30 minutes if you want a chewy texture.)

Brush the rim of the pizza with olive oil. Spread the pizza sauce evenly onto the pizza. Sprinkle the herbs onto the pizza and top with the cheese.

Slide the pizza onto the tile and bake for 7 minutes, or until bubbly and golden brown. Rest for 3 minutes before slicing.

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Read more Comments & Reviews (13)

Comments & Reviews

  • recipe Pizza Pizzas
    S Canton, OH 11-09-2009

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    Dense, salty, borderline yuck.

    Rated: 2 stars out of 5
    My pregnant wife said, "I don't care. I'm hungry. I'm eating it anyway." But it WAS definitely too salty. I love Alton,... and he loves salt, but I do not love salt as much as he does. The dough mixed together wonderfully. Pulled it apart, did the light test - great. Went in the fridge and came out the next day and it seemed to be the exact same size. But I marched on, the ever faithful soldier. I'm trying again, but this time I'm proofing the yeast and might even let it rise for a little bit before throwing it in the fridge. Even taking into account a yeast problem (which is by no means Alton's fault) I still found it entirely too salty and not all that flavor-rich.Read more
  • recipe Pizza Pizzas
    Shannon Portland, TX 10-31-2009

    Flag

    great dough

    Rated: 5 stars out of 5
    I've been making pizza dough for about 6 months and decided to try Alton's formula. While the salt content is pretty high, if... you use a basic tomato sauce, it balances out. If you found it to salty, just reduce the amount and use a more intense sauce. I am an avid breadbaker and feel the overnight retarding of the dough brings out a flavor most formulas sorely lack. Read more
  • recipe Pizza Pizzas
    Ken Rancho Cordova, CA 10-20-2009

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    Salt qty is incorrect

    Rated: 5 stars out of 5
    Obviously a whole tablespoon of salt to two cups of flour is wrong, even though it's kosher salt which is less dense. I... believe the correct measurement is 1 teaspoon, not 1 tablespoon.Read more
  • recipe Pizza Pizzas
    Laura Bryan, TX 10-10-2009

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    Pay attention to your flour type

    Rated: 4 stars out of 5
    I had my husband go out and get the ingredients for this, and he came back with regular bread flour, rather than MACHINE... bread flour. I think that people who are finding this to be too wet should check what kind of flour they have. The extra protein in machine flour appears to be vital. I am having to kneed for about twice as long to produce the proper gluten. Read more
  • recipe Pizza Pizzas
    roger knoxville, TN 08-30-2009

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    Always Great

    Rated: 5 stars out of 5
    I read the 1 & 2 star ratings from people like Jeff from CT, and realize that just because there's a set of steps and... ingredients, it doesn't make everyone a cook, at least not a good one. Plus, it takes a slight bit of experience at best to make a good pizza. I used the same Gold Medal BF and 3/4 C. water and mine has been perfect all 30 times or so that I've made this. I did cut the salt back to a half TBS. Take baby steps, you know, like making a bowl of cereal and graduating on to harder things. 5 Stars here.Read more
  • recipe Pizza Pizzas
    JC Sacramento, CA 04-28-2009

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    Definitely good eats.

    Rated: 5 stars out of 5
    It's funny how there's an update on the recipe page because of the complaints of saltiness. What saltiness? I also... followed the recipe (except the instant yeast) and it turned out great. I couldn't find the instant yeast except online so we used the "super mutant" rapid rise we had in the pantry. I didn't get a burnt crust either and the pizza stone we bought (from a restaurant supply house) only cost us $11, and it hasn't cracked albeit stained but that's great -- shows usage. I used a plastic cutting board in lieu of a peeler. The pizza peeler is around $20 or so, even $30, same size as the one used in the show. That's really peeling the pocket. I don't know why people are having issues with the dough. Ours always look like the one on the show. The only problem we encounter is using the hook too quickly when the dough needed more time to form with the paddle. But that was in the beginning. We made a new batch earlier after baking the old batch we made about three days ago and it came out perfectly. Thanks for the recipe, Good Eats! Great show! I'll be sad when the show reaches its last episode.. but there are endless possibilities! Still.. there's only one AB. Read more
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