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I love pizza! But first of all, there is no pizza delivery in the country. There’s takeout pizza at the little store in town, but with three hungry children (two of them being teenage boys), that can get pretty expensive. And seeing as how it takes me about 20 minutes to get to the little store in town, and another 20 minutes to get back, I might as well make it at home.
Homemade pizza is actually a great busy-day dinner. You can shortcut the sauce, either with some Basic Italian-Style Tomato Sauce you might have onhand, or with a jar of storebought sauce. Shortcut the cheese by keeping some pre-shredded mozzarella onhand, too. All it takes after that is slicing up your toppings. The pizza bread itself? That’s the last place you should cut corners because it’s the very foundation of your pizza. Great pizza bread makes great pizza. And you can make great pizza bread in one hour, from starting the dough to sliding the prepared pizza into the oven with this easy pizza dough based on the one-loaf recipe for my
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How to Make Pizza Dough:
1 1/2 cups warm water
1 teaspoon yeast
1/2 teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons sugar
1/3 cup olive oil
3 1/2 to 4 cups flour
In a large bowl, combine water with yeast, salt, sugar and olive oil. Let sit for five minutes before beginning to add the flour.


Stir in flour until the dough is stiff enough to knead. Add flour a little at a time. The amount of flour is approximate; exact amount may vary slightly. Knead dough until smooth and elastic–-just a few minutes. Place dough in a greased bowl; cover. Let rise until doubled. (Using rapid-rise yeast, unless your house is very cold, the rise time should be approximately 30 minutes.)


After dough has risen, roll out directly onto a greased pizza pan, sprinkling flour on top of the dough to keep it from sticking.


I like to use a small plastic cup to roll out pizza dough instead of a rolling pin because the smaller size is easier to manage with the raised edges of a pizza pan.


Before adding any sauce and toppings, bake pizza bread at 400-degrees for about 8 minutes. Take out pizza bread. Add sauce and toppings as desired. Put completed pizza back in the oven for another 15-20 minutes. If I’m baking two at a time, halfway into the baking time I switch the pizzas on the oven racks.
For dessert pizza, use melted butter and a mix of sugar and cinnamon, or add fruit!
Another of my favorite ways to fix pizza is to skip the sauce entirely. I sprinkle olive oil on top of the prepared, pre-baked pizza bread (in place of sauce) then add my toppings. I like to use Swiss cheese, crumbled bacon, and onions and/or peppers. Yum! How about you? What’s your favorite pizza?
See this recipe at Farm Bell Recipes and save it to your recipe box.
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I like olive oil, Italian seasoning and very thinly sliced Roma tomatoes instead of sauce, then a mix of mozzerella/provolone, then…
artichokes, spinach, sausage
or
mushroom, spinach, bacon
I make my own crust usually, but I also keep “Mama Mary’s” thin crusts on hand for a quick pizza.
Suzanne, those pizzas are making my mouth water, though!
9:04
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Taco pizza is tasty too.
A little salsa as a base, taco meat, corn, cheddar cheese, jalepino peppers, chopped tomato and after it’s cooked, some sour cream and shredded lettuce.
9:19
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I would really love for you to do a post on making dessert pizzas (especially the cherry fruit ones). These are my all time favorite pizzas and although I am an experienced cook, I can’t seem to master these. Thanks is advance!!
grace and peace,
julie
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Those look sooooo good. I could eat a big ol slice right now, this morning! :mrgreen: :fryingpan:
I love pizza combos such as: goat cheese and tomato, basil and olive oil, or I like say vegies and Jalepeno peppers and even anchovies!!! I think the only two things I DON’T like are hamburger on it or sausage, that much.
Usually, if I order one, I’ll tell them “light on the black olives” because one place here uses alot of them. If I have pepperoni, I like it paper thin and crunchy!!! Is rapid-rise the same as active yeast or are those two different things?
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My favorites are bacon and pineapple (yum, love the contrast of salty and sweet!) or cheeseburger pizza, which starts with a crushed tomato base, ground beef, a mix of mozzarella, jack and cheddar cheese, topped off with crumbled bacon and black olives.
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Hmm, I see a dessert pizza post coming. :smile:
I like to put the toppings on top of the cheese. I’m not sure if it’s a southern thing or not! I just think it cooks up better that way.
2:11
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I love making homemade pizza dough. Yum, yum, yum.
2:13
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We also added sugar to the yeast bloom, so I’d add 1 to 2 teaspoons (we used 6 or 8 oz to 25 lbs of flour).
Did we use a different dough recipe for the deep dish? Don’t remember, but it was very good.
The big secret really was cooking them at about 550 degrees on stones. You’ve got the second rise covered.
Thanks a lot for your blog. It’s my first daily stop. Just love chickens and goats a bunch.
2:59
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you made me hungry. The pizza looks good!
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I love homemade pizza! My favorite is White Pizza with veggies.
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catslady – no you’re not!
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In out house toppings have always gone on top of the cheese. I grew up in the north. The cheese helps hold the toppings on.
Love your site!
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I like pepperoni and onions. I am a cheese fan so I usually put mozzarella cheese on, a little sprinkling of cheddar cheese and parmesan (spelling?)then add the pepperoni and onions, then add more cheese on top of that. I like a thin crust too. Papa Murpheys here makes a d’lite pizza crust that is practically paper thin, I love it! It is one of those places where you go in, they build your pizza for you, then you take it home and bake it.
Hmmm…think its going to be pizza for lunch now!
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My favorite pizza is a garlic basil while sauce, with italian sausage and pineapple. Oh, yum! For decadant pizza, I add red onion. Simply divine!
I’m ready to try your recipe out for tomorrow night. Wish me luck!
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The correct water temp for making bread is 110-115 degrees. You can use a thermometer to test your water if you need to.
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I also used the Basic Italian Tomato Sauce, so I have lots of sauce!
Thanks, Suzanne for this great pizza recipe!
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But for me I have found a keeper.
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