Tuesday, September 11, 2012

I Think We Need to Talk... About Pizza.

          Listen, I'm not unaware of what's going on here. I see you out there, sitting on your laptops and tablets thinking about dinner. I know you're thinking that you could order-in and have pizza delivered and it wouldn't take much. Admittedly any delivery or frozen pizza isn't as good even as going to a local place and getting a pie fresh out of the oven but it's just so easy. Making Pizza at home can't possibly be that easy. Right? You have important TV to catch up on. Big Brother season 8 is crazy. Did you miss the mid-season finale of Breaking Bad too? Man, you have got to catch up. Just do it after you make your own pizza. At home. In your very own kitchen. With a little bit of advanced prep you'll be free and clear to stun your significant other and be the envy of your friends and neighbors.
Mini Portobello Mushroom, sauteed leeks, and bacon

Before you go all getting ahead of yourself there are some very important rules.

Think of them as: The Bastard Chef's Commandments for making Pizza at home. These are fundamentals that you shouldn't ever screw up lest you dare take on the wraith of the pizza gods, or your families ,or partners, or roommates, or anyone that ever ate a good pizza. Ready?

1. Don't buy a store-bought crust.  Those Boboli crusts at Walmart are worthless. You may as well just cut a circle out of that empty Amazon box you keep meaning to recycle. If you can't be bothered to make your own then you shouldn't waste you money putting fresh ingredients on that mess. I'm serious. Don't do it.
2. Pre-Heat your oven.  Let's take a moment and pretend that you're trying to burn your house down. Crank it up to 500 Degrees and leave it there til you almost forget that it's on and wait. When you forget it's still on your oven is ready. 30 minutes is ideal. 
3. Don't over-sauce it. According to the board of pizza practitioners at home (BPPH) 9 out of 10 people over-sauce.  Over-saucing is the death of many a good pie and ruiner of many homemade crusts.
4. K.I.S.S. (Keep It Simple Stupid) Let the delivery chains and the local spots overload your pizza with their over-priced specialty pies. Have some respect for your pie and yourself.
5.  Buy a baking stone.  If you're going to do this more than once (which you will). To get the crust to cook the way you want nothing works better. Get a Pizza peel while you're at it. I got both items at TJ Maxx for $25. Why's it worth it?  No soggy bottom pies and a way transport your masterpiece from your cutting board to your oven. Gone are the dark days when magical forces were the only way to transport your pie to  the oven without having to mangle or completely dismantle it. Trust me. I've been there.