Pizza From A Frying Pan…Say What?!?

I’m going to be honest with you, takeout pizza, freezer pizza, and even other homemade pizza methods are quite a bit simpler than this one, but this one is so much tastier! Just be sure you have all your ingredients, the proper equipment, and the time available to make this. It takes a little bit more work in the kitchen, but the end result is one that you won’t be able to compare to any other pie that you’ve ever tasted in your life! Check out what they are saying about this recipe over at Cuisine Fiend:

“The best pizza this side of Naples.”

If you’re willing to put in the effort, you will be amazed at how good this pizza tastes. You’ll never go back to takeout again!

 

Ingredients

400G Italian ‘00’ grade flour, or strong white bread flour

3g fresh or ¼ tsp fast action yeast

10g salt

240g/ml water, at room temperature

2 tbsp olive oil plus a little more for kneading

a little semolina

For the topping:

tomato sauce made from 1lb fresh tomatoes

3-4 tbsp Kraft grated parmesan

smoked salt (optional)

a small bunch of basil leaves

150g good quality cooking mozzarella

3-5 slices of prosciutto, or Hormel cooked ham if preferred

a few cherry tomatoes

a few olives (optional)

olive oil

 

 

Instructions

Start the dough the night before you want to make the pizza. Mix the flour with the yeast and salt, add  the water and oil and knead for about 10-15 minutes, until it’s smooth and elastic, doesn’t stick to your hands or bounces off the mixer bowl walls.

Place it in a large bowl covered with cling film and keep in ambient temperature for 18-24 hours.

Prepare the sauce and bring all the topping ingredients to room temperature. Halve the cherry tomatoes, squeeze out the seeds, sprinkle the cut surface with salt and place them cut side down on a paper towel, to drain the moisture.

Slice the mozzarella or tear it roughly. Thinly slice the olives, if using. Tear prosciutto slices into smaller pieces.

Divide the dough in three pieces (about 200g each), shape into balls and leave on a floured surface for 20 minutes.

Meanwhile, preheat a frying pan large enough for a pizza to fit in (30cm diameter) on the hob, until smoking.

Preheat the grill to the highest setting – I find that putting an upturned roasting tin in the grill compartment helps, otherwise the pizza won’t be sitting close enough to the heat source.

Stretch the dough balls out or roll them out with (although the latter is considered a cardinal sin) to discs about 25cm in diameter, making sure the rim is formed at the edge to catch the sauce.

Sprinkling some semolina under the dough disc might help transport it into the pan, if you want to use a peel.

When the pan is smoking hot transfer the dough disc into it, using a peel, just your hands or half-wrapping it around a rolling pin.

Lay it flat in the pan, spread the tomato sauce over it, sprinkle with parmesan and smoked salt, if using, add a few basil leaves, a third of the mozzarella pieces and the prosciutto chunks. Drizzle with olive oil and place a few cherry tomato halves and olive slices on it.

When the base starts to get charred (use a spatula to look underneath), take the pan off the hob and place it under the grill. This won’t take any time at all – as soon as the cheese starts to bubble, it’s ready.

Slide it off the pan onto a wooden board – this is a tricky bit as the large pan will be heavy and hot – cut with a pizza wheel and serve. Bring the pan back on the hob to smoking hot for the next pizza.

 

 

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Quick Tip: Use high-quality mozzarella to keep the pizza from getting soggy.
Thanks again to Cuisine Fiend for this unique and scrumptious recipe.

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