Pizza

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Homemade Pizza

by Careman71 28/3/10 AUTODESK Instructables

Okay, I've been making pizza at home for a long time. I've only recently discovered the perfect homemade dough, which I will share with you in this instructable (it also happens to be my first instructable ever).

Free Expression-Cooking

How to Make Pizza Dough

by WikiHow

To make pizza dough, first add 2 ½ cups (325 g) of flour and 1 tsp (3 g) of instant yeast to a bowl. Then, add 2 tsp (8 g) of sugar, ½ tsp (3 g) of salt, 1 tbsp (3 g) of dried oregano, and ½ tbsp (5 g) of garlic powder and whisk the dry ingredients together. Add in 2 tbsp (15 ml) of olive oil, and then gradually pour in 1 cup (240 ml) of warm water, folding it into the dry mixture. Continue to mix everything until it sticks together and start to form dough. Flour your work surface and knead the dough for 5 minutes. Shape the dough into a ball with your hands. Next, coat the inside of a bowl with oil, place the dough in it, and cover the bowl with a cloth. Let the dough rise for 1 hour before using it in your recipe.
23 Pizza Recipes for All of Your Game Day Needs

by CLAIRE LOWER 23/1/25 MILK STREET

According to self-proclaimed “pizza freak” Peter Reinhart, pizza is just “dough with stuff on it.” And whether you agree with that taxonomy or not, you can’t argue with the fact that dough with stuff on it usually is pretty delicious, regardless of its country or state of origin.
9 Rules for the Best Homemade Pizza OF YOUR LIFE

[www.bonappetit.com/story/best-homemade-pizza by JOE BEDDIA @*?#?!& bon appetit]

My methods are old-school: Use the highest quality ingredients, make almost everything from scratch, and take the time to do it right. You can make the same great pizza that I make at the restaurant in your home, using your regular oven. That’s how I got my start, and it’s why I wrote a book, Pizza Camp, which comes out this month. Practice—and, okay, a few straightforward guidelines—makes pizza.
The United States of Pizza: Where to Eat Pizza in California (Part 1, Northern California)

by ADAM KUBAN 9/8/18 serious eats

And it's back! Once again, it's been a while since we dropped an installment of this 50-part series on you. Today we begin the C's with California. Yeah, it's a doozy, so we split it in two — Northern and Southern. Let's get this show on the road.
Foolproof Pan Pizza

by J> KENJI LOPEZ 13/2/25 serious eats

A pan pizza recipe for those who love a thick and crispy crust that's golden on the bottom, but puffy and soft under the layers of sauce and mozzarella.
Pizza Recipes

by KING ARTHUR BAKING COMPANY

Crispy Cheesy Pan Pizza
Crimes Against Pizza: An Opinionated Guide to Not Messing Up Your Pie

by NIKI ACHITOFF-GRAY 10/8/18 serious eats

Pizza may be one of the most universally beloved foods known to mankind. How many other dishes have inspired thousands of books, super weird music, entire clothing lines, and their very own museums?
Pizza Crust

by PJ HAMEL KING ARTHUR

What a treat — hot homemade pizza, with exactly the toppings you like. And this crust adapts to YOUR schedule: make the dough now, and serve fresh pizza up to 2 days later. Please read this recipe all the way through before starting. It gives you a lot of baking options, and you want to choose the one that best fits your schedule.
A Slice of Heaven: A History of Pizza in America

by ED LEVINE 9/8/18 serious eats

Once upon a time, around the turn of the last century, pizza in America was an inexpensive peasant food, made casalinga (home-style) by southern Italian immigrant women in their kitchens.
The United States of Pizza: Where to Eat Pizza in California (Part 1, Northern California)

by Adam Kuban 9/8/18 Serious eats

As LAPM points out in many of his posts on Slice, the Bay Area pizza scene has caught fire in the last decade and is a far cry from when he lived there in the '80s. Heck, it's a far cry from what it was when I started Slice almost seven years ago in 2003.
Finally! A Pizza Dough That Is Chewy, Crisp and Easy to Work With

by Christopher Kimball 10/17 MILK STREET

This is a story about heat, and it begins on a muggy August day at my hunting cabin in Vermont. It sits atop a small mountain surrounded by 2,500 acres of forest, streams and abandoned pastures gone wild with milkweed, goldenrod and timothy grass. That day, I threw together a quick batch of pizza dough—nothing fancy—to grill later to feed an influx of in-laws.
Pizza Obsessives: J. Kenji Lopez-Alt

by Adam Kuban 9/8/18 serious eats

My first memories of eating pizza were from one of two places (I can't remember which came first). The first was Pizza Town on Broadway up near Columbia. It doesn't exist anymore, but it was a typical New York slice joint that served regular pies, garlic knots (five for a dollar), and had a big Wings poster on the wall (that's the band, not chicken). Greasy, with a nice, well-charred crust.
Broccoli Rabe, Pecorino, and Anchovy Pizza

by Andrew Janjigian 29/10/24 serious eats

One thing I sought to do with these composed pizza recipes for outdoor ovens was look for ways to use the high heat of the oven for things other than just baking the pizza. For this recipe, as well as the burst cherry tomato, shallot, and herb one, my goal was to use the oven for some of the pre-bake topping prep while it heated up for firing pies. In this case, I wanted to get serious char on some broccoli rabe, a process that adds complex flavor to bitter greens like rabe, while also helping to temper some of their bitterness.
Crimes Against Pizza: An Opinionated Guide to Not Messing Up Your Pie

by Niki Achitoff-Gray 10/8/18 serious eats

So why is so much of the pizza out there just plain terrible? I'm talking crusts that run the gamut from soggy and undercooked to rock-hard and stale; sugary sweet, gloppy tomato sauce; and topping combinations that can only have been auto-generated by a maniacal computer algorithm in order to send our entire species into a spiral of madness and despair.
Easy At-Home Pizza Dough (from the Guys at Roberta's) Recipe

by Adam Kuban 9/10/18 serious eats

This is the recipe for the dough I made at the Brooklyn Kitchen's at-home pizzamaking class with Anthony Falco and Angelo Womack. They were kind enough to share it with us here.
A Slice of Heaven: A History of Pizza in America

by Ed Levine 9/8/18 serious eats

Once upon a time, around the turn of the last century, pizza in America was an inexpensive peasant food, made casalinga (home-style) by southern Italian immigrant women in their kitchens.
Pizza Hack: Broil Your Pies

by The Paupered Chef 13/6/19 serious eats

You want what?" The confused Domino's employee stared at us, scared, then turned his back and looked in desperation for the manager. No, we hadn't asked for all the money in the register. Or even a pizza with fresh buffalo mozzarella and rare black truffles shredded on top. We had simply asked him for some pizza dough. Raw pizza dough. You know, before it goes into the oven.
What to Expect at a Neapolitan Pizzeria

by Adam Kuban 9/8/18 science eats

First thing you're going to want to know is how much to order. This is probably the No. 1 issue I've see other customers struggle with. A typical Neapolitan pizza is about 12 inches in diameter—slightly larger than a frisbee. A person of average appetites will be able to eat an entire Neapolitan pizza by him- or herself.
Peter Reinhart Only Has One Pizza Rule

by Claire Lower 18/6/24 MILK STREET

Peter Reinhart is not a pizza snob, though he certainly has earned the right to be one. The educator and author is considered to be one of the country’s leading authorities on bread and dough, and he has written 13 cookbooks on the subject, including the 2002 James Beard Book of the Year, “The Bread Baker's Apprentice,” as well as two books entirely devoted to pizza—"Pizza Quest” and “Perfect Pan Pizza.”
Pour-in-the-Pan Pizza

by Christopher Kimball 10/20 MILK STREET

My journey started at L’Antica Pizzeria da Michele in Naples. A visit to da Michele, first opened in 1870, is an act of pilgrimage, even appearing in “Eat, Pray, Love.” That meant a raggedy line extending well down the sidewalk. After 45 minutes, our family nabbed a small table near the mouth of the wood-fired oven.
Jim Lahey's Pizza Bianca

by Caroline Russock 5/4/19 serious eats

Beginning nine to twelve hours before you plan on baking, the dough comes together, sitting and fermenting until just about doubled in size. The super sticky dough is then divided into two portions and allowed to rise again for an hour or two. When you're ready to bake and your oven is preheated and blazing hot, the dough is shaped, dimpled with your fingertips, sprinkled with rosemary, and slid onto a pizza stone.
Pizza Recipes

by serious eats

Our crisp, crunchy, chewy, and cheesy pizza recipes include everything from classic Neapolitan and New York pies to Sicilian and Detroit-style.
The Pizza Interview: Chris Evans and Dakota Johnson

by Victoria Chen 16/6/25 cooking

Dakota Johnson and Chris Evans, two stars of the movie “Materialists,” visited The New York Times Cooking studio last week to make pizzas and talk love triangles. In the film, Ms. Johnson plays a matchmaker torn between her ex-boyfriend, played by Mr. Evans, and a charming millionaire played by Pedro Pascal.
Rick Easton’s Pizza With Peppers

by Rick Easton cooking

In order to bring out all their flavor and sweetness, you must sauté bell peppers before putting them on this variation of the Pittsburgh-based baker and cook Rick Easton's pizza; but that’s hardly any work at all. (If you like, add a couple of semihot peppers to the mix.) The mozzarella is a nice touch, as is the rosemary, but almost any herb will work beautifully here. Don’t skimp on the olive oil, and don’t underbake the pie; it should be good and brown on the bottom. —Mark Bittman
The Best Pizza by the Slice in San Francisco

by J. Kenji López-Alt 31/7/19 serious eats

Wanna skip the intro and jump right to the best? Jump on down!

I moved to San Francisco back in September and thus far, it's been nothing but lovely. The weather's great, the people are friendly, the mountains, oceans, and vineyards are a short drive away, it's the most dog-friendly city I've ever lived in, and the food has been fantastic. Yes, even the pizza. Whether it's one of those wacky California-style things from the Cheese Board in Berkeley, a slice of Focaccia from Liguria Bakery, a world-class Neapolitan pie from Una Pizza Napoletana or Delfina, or a crisp-crusted neo-Neapolitan from Ragazza or PizzaHacker, San Francisco has not left me wanting when it comes to sauce and cheese-topped bread.

Sausage and Radicchio Pizza

by J. Kenji López-Alt 9/4/25 serious eats

The first time I had radicchio on a pizza was about a decade ago in the old converted barn that my good friend and food writer Deborah Krasner calls home, up in Putney, Vermont. Her gorgeous kitchen is dominated by a wood-fired stone oven that she spent all day heating up to Neapolitan pizza temperatures while we were on the slopes. I still remember her exact words, because I didn't believe them at the time: "The leaves become just wonderfully sweet when they're roasted and charred," she said. In what was, at that point, my very limited experience, charring things always made them more bitter, not less.
Pizza Oven Detroit Pizza

by Martin Philip KING ARTHUR

Countertop pizza ovens aren’t just for puffy-edged Neapolitan-style pizzas. Detroit pizza, best known for its thick dough and cheese-encrusted edges, also benefits from the high heat of a blazing oven. You’ll get all the good parts of a pan pizza (fluffy dough, crispy crust, no need to use a rolling pin) without heating up your whole kitchen. Be aware that using a pizza oven is more similar to cooking than baking: You’ll need to be vigilant and adjust the heat and pan position as necessary. For the full method and accompanying tips, please refer to our YouTube video, and to bake in a conventional oven, see the “tips” below.
Rick Easton’s Pizza With Peppers

by Rick Easton Cooking

In order to bring out all their flavor and sweetness, you must sauté bell peppers before putting them on this variation of the Pittsburgh-based baker and cook Rick Easton's pizza; but that’s hardly any work at all. (If you like, add a couple of semihot peppers to the mix.)
Pizza Oven Detroit Pizza

by Martin Philip KING ARTHUR

Countertop pizza ovens aren’t just for puffy-edged Neapolitan-style pizzas. Detroit pizza, best known for its thick dough and cheese-encrusted edges, also benefits from the high heat of a blazing oven.
Clam, Chili, and Parsley Pizza from 'Franny's'

by Kate Williams 15/3/19 serious eats

Franny's famous clam pizza recipe has appeared in Serious Eats before, but this revamped recipe in the restaurant's new cookbook shows what good a few years of tweaking can do. The concept is the same: steam clams in a wine and garlic broth till they open, reduce the juices, fortify with cream, and use both the clam meat and thick glaze to paint a slowly proofed round of pizza dough. But now the dough recipe has been improved, accompanied by detailed instructions for rolling, topping, and baking the pie. A final stint under the broiler gives the pizza a well-blistered crust, caramelizes the cream glaze, and singes the tips of the clams.
Juliana's: Patsy Grimaldi's New Pizzeria in Search of a Legacy

by Ed Levine 9/8/18 serious eats

Ihave been eating Patsy Grimaldi's pizza for a long, long time. How long? Long enough to have thoroughly enjoyed his pizza before the added emotional spice of pizza lawsuits. Long enough to have eaten the pies that he himself made in the original incarnation of Grimaldi's, back in 1990 when it was still called Patsy's.
Pizza, 50 Ways

by Food

It's not delivery, it's all you. Classic, kicked-up and even as dessert: Plan your own pizza party and let guests pile on the toppings the way they like.
Watch ‘The Fantastic Four’ Make Pizza (Without Superpowers)

by Victoria Chen 29/7/25 Cooking

Pedro Pascal, Vanessa Kirby, Ebon Moss-Bachrach and Joseph Quinn are superheroes charged with saving a retro-futuristic Earth from the space god Galactus in “The Fantastic Four: First Steps.” Beyond the action, the story explores the deep bonds and challenges faced by Marvel’s first family, and kicks off a new chapter in the Marvel Cinematic Universe.
Sicilian-Style Pizza

by Charlotte Rutledge KING ARTHUR

Although Sicilian pizza is often used to refer to a pie with a thick, rectangular, sheet pan-sized crust, there can be a little more to it than just its shape and size. In Sicily, a generous, almost focaccia-like crust is commonly topped with an abundance of strong cheese and sauce (in that order), along with onions, anchovies, and herbs. Our version here is a riff on these Sicilian toppings, layered onto a golden, crispy bottomed, soft and chewy crust.
Sourdough Pizza Dough

by Roberta's Cooking

This is a varsity-level take on the classic pizza dough recipe from Roberta’s in Brooklyn, using sourdough starter to help the dough rise — and give it great taste. If you feed your starter regularly, you can use it in this recipe right out of the crock in which you store it.
The Easiest Pizza You'll Ever Make

by Brinna Sands KING ARTHUR

This recipe makes a terrific "do-it-yourself-party." All you do is make this simple dough and provide plenty of toppings and grated cheese; your guests will have fun doing the rest. This recipe makes three or four 12" pizzas (depending on how thick you like the crust). For a larger party, you can easily double it.
Pizza With Cherry Tomatoes, Garlic, Basil, and Mozzarella

by J. Kenji López-Alt 5/3/25 serious eats

Ibaked this pizza not more than a mile away from Una Pizza Napoletana, Anthony Mangieri's San Francisco pizzeria. Fitting, as the original New York East Village location of the restaurant was the first place I'd tried this particular combination of ingredients. Known on his limited menu as the filetti, it consists of split cherry tomatoes added raw along with mozzarella, basil, sliced garlic, and extra-virgin olive oil.
Easy And Quick Homemade Pizza

by MizzNezz Food

"Pizza from scratch in under an hour. Much better than the ones you buy! Use your favorite toppings."
New England Greek Style Pizza Recipe

by J. Kenji López-Alt 17/2/25 serious eats

There's a good reason why Greek pizza, a style found mostly in the "Pizza Houses" and "Houses of Pizza" in New England is not more popular, and the reason is this: It's not very good.
Stuffed Pizza

by PJ Hamel KING ARTHUR

This recipe is a project, no doubt about it. Homemade crust, slowly simmered sauce, even homemade sausage — all contribute to the pizza's wonderful marriage of flavors and textures. When time is a challenge, substitute store-bought bulk sausage, and 2 cups of your favorite pizza or spaghetti sauce from a jar. But please don't substitute a ready-made crust for this delightfully different homemade crust, featuring many of the same elements as Chicago deep dish crust — with the addition of golden semolina.
Mexican Pizza

by Food

Easy And Quick Homemade Pizza

by MizzNezz Food

"Pizza from scratch in under an hour. Much better than the ones you buy! Use your favorite toppings."
Homemade Pizza

by PCrocker Food

"This homemade pizza and a movie is a Friday night tradition at our house. It makes two pizzas but sometimes it's fun to make smaller ones so everyone can put their favorite topping on their own pizza. I use Easy Pizza Sauce #98804."
Our Favorite Homemade Pizza

by Karen Food

"My family loves this pizza so much, they request it more often than ordering pizza parlor pizza. It's quick to put together and you can have fun using up ingredients in the fridge. Feel free to use different cheeses and add toppings like pepperoni, sausage, mushrooms, etc."
Thin Pizza Crust

by Margo59 Food

"I'm a thin crust person and I found this on a web site (not sure which one). Very easy and bakes up crispy not soggy."
From-Scratch Pizza

by COOKieCOOKer Food

"A classic thin pizza with an absolutely delicious taste. I recommend that you do not follow my 3/4 cup of cheese exactly, and instead, sprinkle as much as your desire. You can cut your slices however you want, but I recommend in 8 slices. Bon Appetit!"
Easy Peezy Pizza Dough (Bread Machine Pizza Dough)

by Karin Food

"This is a really easy way to make a good "yeasty" pizza dough! As well as using this recipe for when I'm making pizza, I also use it for when I'm making a focaccia or a calzone. (The preparation time I have given includes the time it takes to make the dough in the machine and the time it takes for the pizza dough to proof - after removing it from the bread machine, 30 minutes.)"
Fabulous Food's Pizza Dough

by lolablitz Food

"I found this on FabulousFoods.com and it is The Best pizza dough I've made yet. I just love that you make it all in your food processor with practically zero mess! Perfectly textured, crispy on the outside, soft on the inside without being bread-like. It's from Cheri and was made by her in a year-long friendly competition for the best dough. I'm not very familiar with the website, but I've been trying to find the best dough for months and so far, this is it! I'm reposting it here for safe-keeping! Cheri calls for 2 3/4 cups bread flour and 1/2 cup of semolina flour, but you can also (as I did) just use 3 1/4 cups of plain old white flour. Still awesome. The dough is sticky, don't be alarmed, just slather some EVOO onto your hands and you're set! Makes 2 medium pizza doughs."
Pizza à la Mexicana with Corn, Chorizo, and Jalapeños

by Pati Jinich KING ARTHUR

This corn, chorizo, and jalapeño pizza combines Mexican flavors with a puffy and charred Neapolitan-style pizza crust. The dough is topped with a fresh tomato sauce spiced with chile de arbol, and then it’s piled with cheese, spicy chorizo, sweet corn, and pickled jalapeños, which bring acidity and heat.
Salsa Verde Pizza With Goat Cheese and Chorizo (Rick Bayless)

[https://www.food.com/recipe/salsa-verde-pizza-with-goat-cheese-and-chorizo-rick-bayless-472980 by flower7 Food]

"I saw this on Rick Bayless's show "Mexico - One Plate at a Time" and it looked delicious and relatively easy. Resting time for the dough is included in the prep time. Be sure to use the fresh Mexican-style chorizo not the smoked Spanish-style."