But here's what I did that made it so irresistible that it makes you want to keep eating it even though you are already full.
I made it thicker than ever and bread-y instead of thin crust as I usually do, and gave it a rim. 1+1/3 cup water to 2+3/4 cups flour. Thereabout. It wasn't measured numerically. The dough was kept a bit wet and sticky. (A teaspoon of sugar to kick-start the yeast, and a few tablespoons of olive oil mixed in the dough.)
That is a lot of flour for a person to consume. The very idea is just wrong.
I coated the finished dough ball inside the bowl with finer semolina instead of with coarse cornmeal. Then pressed out the dough into a square, the shape of the parchment paper, coating the sticky dough as needed with more semolina. So this granular semolina is pressed into the surface of the flattened dough. It makes a big difference in texture. The granular semolina incorporates as the dough continues to rise as a flattened square. Parchment for ease of sliding the prepared pizza onto the pre-heated stone by way of a cookie sheet in place of wooden pizza peel.
Everything else was the usual things that you will have on any regular pizza. I like best of all fresh jalapeño. That is the main non-standard addition. It roasts in the oven and it's a lot better than tinned or jalapeño marinated in vinegar.
I would confidently serve this to snobby hard-to-please pizza elitists, if there are any such people. I would enter this in a pizza contest and win. I may as well just award myself a First Place ribbon and skip the whole effort of competing and discouraging all those other hopeful contestants.
I still have two pieces left.
2 comments:
Way too thick.
East Coast is super-thin.
I'd eat that pizza you made no problem. If you ever come to San Diego, and I personally invite you. I'll take you to a place called Pizza Port. One of the best pizza's in town for sure.
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