The elements of pizza Unlocking the secrets to world-class pies at home

Ken Forkish

Book - 2016

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Subjects
Genres
Cookbooks
Published
Berkeley : Ten Speed Press [2016]
Language
English
Main Author
Ken Forkish (author)
Other Authors
Alan (Alan S.) Weiner (photographer)
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
249 pages : color illustrations ; 27 cm
ISBN
9781607748380
  • Introduction
  • Chapter 1. The Soul of Pizza
  • Chapter 2. Pizza Styles
  • Chapter 3. Eight Details for Great Pizza Crust
  • Chapter 4. Ingredients and Equipment
  • Chapter 5. Methods
  • Chapter 6. Pizza Dough Recipes
  • Saturday Pizza Dough
  • "I Slept in but I Want Pizza Tonight" Dough
  • Single Dough Ball
  • Enzo's Pizza Dough
  • Saturday Pan Pizza Dough
  • Refrigerated Long Doughs
  • 24- to 48-Hour Pizza Dough
  • 48- to 72-Hour Biga Pizza Dough
  • 48- to 72-Hour New York Pizza Dough
  • Naturally Leavened Doughs
  • Wild Yeast (Levain) Culture
  • Overnight Levain Pizza Dough
  • Specialty Doughs
  • Al Taglio Pizza Dough
  • Bar Pizza Dough
  • Gluten-Free Pizza Dough
  • Chapter 7. Pizza Recipes
  • Sauces
  • Basic Tomato Sauce, Two Ways
  • FWSY Sauce
  • Vodka Sauce
  • New York Pizza Sauce
  • Italian & Italian-Inspired
  • Pizza Marinara
  • Pizza Margherita
  • The Ferdinando
  • Pomodoro Royale (with Cheese)
  • Prosciutto and Bufala
  • Mortadella and Pistachio Pizza
  • Zucchini Blossom Pizza
  • River Po Pizza
  • Carbonara Pizza
  • Pizza Bianca and Pizza Rossa
  • New York & New York-Inspired
  • New York Cheese Pizza
  • Simple Tomato Pie
  • Meatball Pizza
  • A.J.'s Pie
  • Vodka Sauce and Sausage Pizza
  • Brooklyn Hot Honey Pie
  • Pepperoni, Mushroom, and Onion Pizza
  • Grandma Pie
  • Adam Kuban's "Love Supreme" Ear Pizza
  • Ken's Artisan Pizza Classics
  • Margherita and Arugula, Two Ways
  • Arrabiata Pizza
  • Prosciutto Pizza
  • Fennel Sausage and Onion Pizza
  • Spring Onion Pizza
  • Trifecta Flatbreads
  • Oregon Basil Pesto and Burrata Flatbread
  • Tarte Flambée
  • Nettle Pesto Flatbread With Morel Mushrooms
  • Vegetables & Just Because
  • The White Owl
  • Escarole Pizza
  • Delicata Squash Pizza
  • Butternut Squash Pizza
  • Artichoke and Bacon Pizza
  • Chanterelle and Garlic Pizza
  • The Tommy Habetz Pizza
  • The Pie Hole Skillet Pizza
  • Hawaiian Pizza
  • Raclette Pizza
  • Measurement Conversion Charts
  • Acknowledgments
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

For most Americans, the telephone is the primary appliance required to put a pizza on the table. Those who do bake pizzas in their houses and apartments usually start at a local grocery by selecting among the dozens of varieties that take up more cubic footage in freezers than vegetables. Forkish aims to raise the bar on home pizza consumption by showing just how possible it is to bake extraordinary pizza to rival the artisanal output of any pizzeria. No pizza is better than the dough beneath, so Forkish guides his charges through the basics of yeast dough science before outlining how different styles of pizza arise from different approaches to doughs. He then gives complete instructions on equipment and techniques that yield Roman, Neapolitan, New York, and other pizza styles. Committed bakers will find plenty here to keep ovens hot and families' plates filled with honest versions of one of the nation's most beloved foods.--Knoblauch, Mark Copyright 2016 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.

INTRODUCTION  IT'S REALLY UP TO YOU.  The hidden reality of pizza is that you can easily make better pizza at home than you can buy at any but the best independently owned, quality-focused pizzerias. All you need are good ingredients--flour, canned tomatoes, and cheese--plus a few tools and a standard home kitchen oven. And some good instruction. Even if you live somewhere that has great pizzerias, imagine making your own--a pizza that you can be proud of and is exactly how you like it. Discover for yourself what different cheeses are like on pizza: splurge on water buffalo mozzarella, see what happens when you seek out caciocavallo cheese, or try adding freshly grated Pecorino Romano. Master thin-crust and Neapolitan-style pizza. Bang out a couple of killer pan pizzas to eat with Sunday football. Serve it with confidence to your family and friends. Making it yourself will give you a greater appreciation for the craft of the pizzaiolos at your favorite pizzeria: you will probably find yourself looking more closely at their shaping technique; the dough they use and its texture; and how it's topped, loaded into the oven, and baked. By making pizza yourself, you become more intimate with it. It's seductive. You are more informed, and that understanding leads to better pizza, great pleasure, and plenty of pride.  THE FERDINANDO Makes one 12-inch pizza  Imagine yourself as the king of Naples in 1782. You want pizza, but you don't want your wife, Queen Maria Carolina, to find out. So you disguise yourself as a commoner, sneak out of the castle, and slink through the streets to a pizzeria called Ntuono (Tony's) to satisfy your craving. Pizza is for common folk, not for royalty like you; don't you know that? You order the same pizza everybody else orders, topped with olive oil, garlic, oregano, and salt, with a little bit of cheese sprinkled on after it is baked. DUDE, she's going to smell the garlic on your breath!  If it was good enough for Ferdinando to sneak out for, risking the wrath of his royal lady, then it must have been pretty tasty. And this historic pizza of Naples is also a delicious model of simplicity. Like all of the very simple pizzas, it demands an excellent crust.  To bake this pizza, you'll pass on the broil stage I recommend for most of the pizzas in this book, removing the pie after 5 minutes of baking. The oil and the garlic should be completely done at this point. Any extra baking, or finishing with a broil stage, will burn both the garlic and the bubbles in the crust.  1 dough ball  Extra-virgin olive oil  3 or 4 cloves garlic  0.5 gram ( 3⁄4 teaspoon) dried oregano  Sea salt  15 grams (about 1⁄4 cup) finely grated pecorino cheese  1. If you use a dough recipe that calls for refrigeration, remove your dough ball from the refrigerator about 60 to 90 minutes before baking pizza. Put your pizza steel or stone on an upper rack in your oven no more than 8 inches below the broiler. Preheat the oven to 550°F (290°C) for 45 minutes.  2. Slice the garlic thinly, place it in a small bowl, and drizzle just enough olive oil over it to coat the slices. Use your fingers to ensure each slice is coated--this prevents the garlic from burning. Set aside.  3. Set up your pizza assembly station. Give yourself about 2 feet of width on the countertop. Moderately flour the work surface. Position your peel next to the floured area and dust it lightly with flour. Have the olive oil, garlic, oregano, sea salt, and cheese at hand. Switch the oven to broil 10 minutes before loading the pizza.  4. To shape the pizza, put the dough ball on the floured work surface and flip to coat both sides moderately with white flour. Use the shaping method shown on pages 92 to 95. Transfer the disk of pizza dough to the peel. Run your hands around the perimeter to relax it and work out the kinks.  5. Drizzle about 20 grams (1 1⁄2 tablespoons) of olive oil over the dough. Sprinkle the garlic and then the oregano evenly over the pizza. Sprinkle with sea salt. Turn off the broiler, then gently slide the pizza onto the pizza steel or stone. Close the oven door and change the oven setting to bake at 550°F (290°C). Let the pizza bake for about 5 minutes, until the crust is golden with spots of dark brown. The garlic color rules when to remove this pizza--don't let the garlic go beyond medium brown, and skip the broil step for this pizza, as it tends to scorch the garlic. Use tongs or a fork to slide the pizza from the pizza steel or stone onto a large plate.  6. Top the pizza with the grated cheese and drizzle a small amount of extra-virgin olive oil over it, and serve whole or sliced. Excerpted from The Elements of Pizza: Unlocking the Secrets to World-Class Pies at Home by Ken Forkish All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.