SAUSAGE, RICOTTA, AND FENNEL PIZZA
This flavorful pizza loaded with sausage, ricotta, and fennel is sure to be a family favorite.
Provided by SunnyDaysNora
Categories Meat and Poultry Recipes Pork Sausage
Time 45m
Yield 8
Number Of Ingredients 13
Steps:
- Preheat the oven to 400 degrees F (200 degrees C).
- Heat a frying pan over medium heat. Add olive oil. Add tomatoes, garlic, Italian seasoning, red pepper, and salt. Cook, stirring often, until tomatoes have mostly broken down, about 5 minutes. Spread tomato mixture over the pizza crust.
- Heat the same pan over medium-high heat. Add sausage and cook until browned, about 6 minutes. Remove cooked sausage from the pan and set aside, reserving grease in the pan. Add onion and fennel to the pan and cook until softened, about 5 minutes. Add spinach and cook until leaves begin to wilt, about 30 seconds.
- Spread sausage and vegetable mixture over tomato-covered crust. Scatter dollops of ricotta cheese on top. Sprinkle with shaved Parmesan cheese.
- Bake in the preheated oven until cheese is melted and top is beginning to brown, 8 to 10 minutes.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 277.3 calories, Carbohydrate 30.4 g, Cholesterol 26.8 mg, Fat 11.7 g, Fiber 2.3 g, Protein 14.3 g, SaturatedFat 4.2 g, Sodium 682.7 mg, Sugar 2.6 g
GRILLED PIZZA
Neapolitan-style pizza is typically baked in ovens heated past 900 degrees to achieve its signature crackly, thin, charred crust with a moist, stretchy crumb. But you can easily yield similar textures and flavors at home by baking pizza dough directly on the grates of a hot grill until it's bubbly and crisp. Once the dough is baked, it can be topped and finished via indirect heat. Because grilled pizzas cook mainly from below, the cheese should be layered underneath dollops of hand-crushed tomatoes and toppings to get a good melt.
Provided by J. Kenji López-Alt
Categories pizza and calzones, main course
Time 2h45m
Yield 3 (10-by-12-to-14-inch) pizzas
Number Of Ingredients 9
Steps:
- Two to three hours before grilling, transfer the dough to a lightly floured work surface. Using a sharp knife or a bench scraper, divide the dough into three even pieces. Drizzle a teaspoon of neutral cooking oil into three soup bowls. (Each bowl should be able to hold at least twice the volume of the dough pieces.)
- Working with one piece of dough at a time, shape each into a ball by stretching it and pinching it into a point at the bottom, forming a sort of "skin" that wraps the whole ball. Lightly dust your hands with flour as necessary to prevent excessive sticking. Transfer the ball to one of the oiled bowls and turn it a few times to completely coat the surface in oil, then let it rest seam side down. Repeat Step 2 with remaining dough pieces, then drape a damp kitchen towel over all three bowls. Let the dough balls rest until roughly doubled in volume, about 2 hours.
- Transfer the tomatoes to a fine-mesh strainer set over a large bowl and shake the strainer, allowing the tomatoes to drain thoroughly. Still working in the strainer above the bowl, season well with salt, and, using clean hands, squeeze them through your fingers until a rough purée is formed. (The pieces of tomato should end up ranging from 1/4 inch to roughly 1 inch in size.) Allow any excess liquid to drain (you can save the strainer tomato juice for another use), then transfer the crushed tomatoes to a bowl and set aside.
- Turn out one ball of dough onto a floured work surface and dust thoroughly with more flour. Using a rolling pin, roll the dough into a 10-inch-by-12-to-14-inch oblong. Dust both sides thoroughly with flour, then transfer to a parchment-lined rimmed baking sheet. Repeat with remaining two dough balls, stacking them on top of the first with a layer of parchment paper between each.
- To cook, ignite a full chimney of charcoal. When the coals are mostly covered in gray ash, spread evenly under half of the grill. (If using a gas grill, set half the burners to high, leaving the remaining burners off. Cover, and allow to heat for 10 minutes.)
- Using your fingers, carefully lift one piece of rolled-out dough from the stack and drape it quickly on the grill grates directly above the fire. Let it cook without moving until the top starts to bubble and the bottom is lightly browned, about 20 to 30 seconds. Continue cooking, using metal tongs and a large spatula or thin metal pizza peel to move and rotate the crust as it cooks, until the bottom is evenly browned all over with a few charred spots, 1 to 3 minutes.
- Flip the crust, and brush the cooked side with a thin layer of olive oil. Continue cooking until the second side is browned, charred and crisp. Flip again (so that the bubblier side faces up), transfer to a clean baking sheet, and brush the second side with olive oil. Repeat Steps 6 and 7 with remaining two pizza skins, stacking the crusts as they finish cooking. (If using coal, the heat may start to dip. Extend cooking time to compensate, or add 15 to 20 fresh coals to the top of the embers and allow them to ignite before continuing.)
- Working one pizza at a time, transfer the crust to the pizza peel. (A cutting board or the back of a baking sheet will also work.) Spread a thin layer of shredded cheese across the surface of the crust (about 1 cup should do it). Using a spoon, add tablespoon-size dollops of crushed tomatoes, spaced an inch or two apart, across the whole surface of the pizza. Add toppings as desired (see Tips). Slide the pizza onto the cooler side of the grill, cover, and cook until the cheese is melted and the crust is crisp, 1 to 5 minutes total, rotating the pizza occasionally to encourage even melting and crisping. Transfer to a cutting board, drizzle with olive oil, sprinkle with basil or scallions, cut into squares, and serve immediately. Repeat Step 8 with remaining pizza crusts.
GRILLED PIZZA WITH COPPA, FENNEL, ONION, BURRATA AND RICOTTA
Pizza Night! When regular weeknight dinner feels lackluster, shake it up with a dinner that can be done DIY, and get everyone on board with a toppings bar or a make-your-own component. Pizza night is perfect for this-everyone can get involved and help and have a blast doing it. If you have a big family or littler ones, this can get super messy, so I'm a big fan of the mantra 'take the mess outside.' This is one project that we always take outside, in almost any season. We use our large zinc table like a giant family work station. Each person in the family gets their own dough, a tray to work on and a bunch of different toppings to scatter on top of their pie. You can absolutely cook your pizzas indoors in a super hot oven (475 degrees F or higher, as high as your oven will go!), but a good $25 pizza stone is an excellent investment in turning your regular outdoor grill into a genius pizza oven, since it's easy to get the grill super hot. It works like a wood-burning oven, giving the crust a nice char from the intense heat. A huge 'aha' for me was the idea of toasting the pizza dough first to get a little blister on both sides before topping it, for more of that wood-fired pizza finish. As for the toppings: The kids usually end up with lots of cheese and tomatoes, ala Margherita pizza. Andras and I get a little more adventurous and I recently landed on my new favorite: coppa, fennel, onion, burrata and ricotta. Other topping ideas: for summer, grated zucchini, salami and green olives; for winter, red onion and shaved winter squash. Anything goes. Avoid anything too wet that will make your crust soggy because the oven is super hot and the cook time is short. Sometimes I make my own pizza dough, but just as often I use the dough from our local pizza shop, which does the trick perfectly. The key is to let it set at room temperature for a good long while-at least an hour-so it is warm and puffy, and takes to stretching like a dream. If you want to go the extra mile and DIY your ricotta, it's super simple. All it takes is some good quality milk, lemon juice and some time. I make my red sauce from scratch too (recipe below) which is a cinch and so versatile!
Provided by Sarah Copeland
Categories main-dish
Time 55m
Yield Two 12-inch round pizzas or 8 servings
Number Of Ingredients 25
Steps:
- Prepare a grill for medium-high heat and add a pizza stone (if your grill has a thermometer, look for temperatures above 600 degrees F). Alternatively, position a pizza stone on a rack in the lower third of the oven and heat the oven to 525 degrees F. (If your oven only goes to 500 degrees F, that's fine.)
- Oil 2 large baking sheets, or if you have a pizza peel, dust it lightly with flour and cornmeal. Working with 1 ball of dough at a time, gently stretch or roll the dough into a 12-inch round on a lightly floured surface. Transfer to the baking sheet or pizza peel to carry to the grill or oven. Transfer to the pizza stone and cook until the dough is lightly charred and set on the bottom, 2 to 3 minutes. Flip and toast the other side, 1 to 2 minutes more.
- Return to the baking sheet, top with the All-Purpose Red Sauce evenly over the top, sprinkle with the burrata and top with the coppa, fennel, ricotta and Parmesan.
- Return to the pizza stone and cook until crisp and brown on the bottom and around the edges, about 5 minutes more (about 12 minutes or so in the oven). Sprinkle with flaky salt, pepper and red pepper flakes, top with the greens and drizzle lightly with more oil. Serve warm.
- Pulse the tomatoes, anchovies if using, garlic, oil and basil in a food processor or blender until mostly smooth (some texture is okay). Season with red pepper flakes if using, salt and pepper. Makes 3 1/2 cups.
- Pour the milk and cream into a large pot and bring to a boil. Remove from the heat, add in the lemon juice and stir gently a few times (too much stirring yields a grainy ricotta). Once the curds start to separate and set, after about 1 minute or so, let the mixture stand without stirring for at least 5 minutes.
- Line a colander with cheesecloth and set it over a large bowl. Drain the ricotta, 5 to 10 minutes for a looser, wet ricotta, or up to 1 hour for a tighter, firm ricotta (I go somewhere in the middle for pizza, depending on how patient I feel).
- Taste the ricotta and season with sea salt and fennel seeds if desired. Scoop into clean jars or airtight containers with lids and use at room temperature or refrigerate for up to 5 days. Makes 1 1/2 cups.
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