Friday, March 19, 2010

Making your OWN homemade pizza

Sorry, I couldn't figure out the blogger option to make this into a scratch-n-sniff sticker. 

This here is homemade combination pizza with one side being the fantastic green bell pepper, LOADS of sliced fresh mushrooms, shredded mozzarella and pepperoni slices side, and the other side being Gabbers friendly - no mushrooms, no bell peppers. 

How do you make sure you don't accidentally throw off the balance of the universe and egads! serve your Gabbers bell peppers and mushrooms? 

You put one sliced mushroom on the mushroom side and one sliced olive on the olive side (both being on top the pepperoni) to identify it correctly.  

Time to make your own homemade pizza.  First of all, start with a decent dough.  This dough is what we use.  We like it.  It works great.  It's pretty inexpensive. 
You can even prepare the dry ingredients weeks and weeks ahead of time and save in the freezer in quart containers. This will make pizza night prep even easier.

Now you need a good sauce.  Please do not use a jar of spaghetti sauce-- unless you want it to taste like the pizza in elementary school.  Use Mom's recipe. 
Sauce:
one 8-ounce can tomato sauce
one 6-ounce can tomato paste
1 tablespoon olive oil (optional)
1 teaspoon oregano or 2 teaspoons Italian seasoning
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon sugar
1 clove of garlic, peeled and crushed
1/8 teaspoon crushed dried hot red chili peppers (optional)

Warm all ingredients together in a covered saucepan over lowest heat about 20 minutes, stirring occasionally.  Keep warm until ready to use.  Makes enough sauce for 2 to 3 pizzas.

It's easy, it's frugal, and freezes well.


I like to make a big batch and freeze it for future use. This way I only take the time to make it once, but use it on a dozen pizzas.

Assembling Pizza:
1.  Preheat oven to 500 degrees.

2.  Divide dough in half.

3.  Roll each piece of dough on a very lightly floured surface until it is about 12 to 14 inches in diameter (about the size of your pizza pan).  (NOTE:  Do not make dough too thin in the middle.)

4.  Pick up dough carefully, folding it over your arm.  Gently place dough onto pizza pan, being careful not to press dough into pan.  Form crust by rolling edge of dough, again being careful not to press dough into pizza pan.

5.  Spread sauce onto dough very carefully.  (NOTE:  Too much sauce will allow cheese to slide off after pizza is cooked.)  Evenly spread shredded (or thinly sliced) mozzarella cheese (6 ounces maximum per pizza) onto pizza.  If desired, sprinkle parmesan cheese over mozzarella.

Now add your favorite toppings!  Try not to use thick-sliced pepperoni; it makes for a greasy pizza.  Make sure if you do use pepperoni, it's on the top layer. 

Our favorite toppings:
sliced mushrooms- I prefer fresh but will used canned versus none at all
sliced black olives
sweet onions
pepperoni
green bell peppers
mozzarella
Jimmy Dean sausage (browned and crumbled first)

Bake for about 7 to 15 minutes or when crust starts browning and cheese in the middle of the pizza is bubbly. 

Remove pizza from oven, slide pizza from pan onto serving pan or large cutting board.  Slice and serve.

TIP:  Pizza pans with holes in the bottom will allow crust to have a better texture and not be soggy.  I'm not a fan of using pizza stones.    


 What's on YOUR pizza?





This post is linked at:  LifeasMom's Frugal Friday and Frugalicious Friday

4 comments:

Leslie said...

Yummy! Just yummy! I haven't made any in a while but now I'm feeling cravings. I had Costco pizza today and can I just say - bleh. Never again.

bebe said...

We have a favorite pizza--Garden Ranch! HRH hates tomato sauce of any kind. So I make a ranch dressing seasoned sauce with mayo. We include chopped veggies of nearly every type, the favorites being olives, broccoli, carrots, cauliflower, mushrooms... I usually throw some grilled chicken on for good measure. And instead of pizza crust, I smear it all over a halved loaf of french bread! YUM

A. said...

My only issue with homemade pizza is that it always seems to come out chewy or doughy. How do you avoid that? We like our a tad crispy on the eges and still somewhat firm all along the bottom (not hard, but just not ...well, chewy or doughy. lol).

Thanks for the dough and sauce recipes!

Nikki said...

Amy- I can't believe I never responded to this. So, if anyone else looks up this post-- here's your answer:

Using a pizza pan with holes in the bottom makes it not doughy or chewy. The chewiness might still be there if your dough is pretty thick. Roll it a little thinner and see how you like it better.

This is another reason I don't like pizza stones for homemade pizza. I can't seem to make it crispy and firm using pizza stones.