Jul 9, 2007

Italian Pizza

Eating out in Rome can be very expensive. Touristy restaurants with English menus tend to be more expensive than restaurants a block or two away from touristy areas. If you go to a trattoria or a pizzeria on side streets, you don´t have to eat a full meal, and you don´t have to pay for a full meal. Certain places sell food by weight. They have a counter with different types of pizzas (and other dishes). You choose a piece or two, they will weigh it, and you pay for the weight.

A large pizza cut into slices can be shared by two or three adults. So, for us pizza was great for lunch. Simply thin bread garnished with small amounts of flavorful tomatoes and cheese. Most Swedish pizzerias serve monstrous pizzas. They are larger than the plate, and covered with fat toppings such as Bearnaise sauce and fried meat. I get a food coma after such a meal.



Pizza (originally a Neapolitan dish) is simple. I haven´t baked a real pizza at home for ages. Once I had a recipe, which was full proof. Even my father liked that pizza. But I have lost the recipe. Now I have tried to recreate it from my memory.

INGREDIENTS:
* 1 teaspoon salt
* 25 g yeast
* 150 ml warm water
* 5 dl (500 ml) flour
* 2 ½ tablespoons extra virgin olive oil

FOR THE TOPPING:
* 400 g tinned tomatoes, chopped
* 4 tablespoons tomato pure
* 10-12 tinned Swedish anchovy fillets, or some sardelles (real anchovy)
* 2 garlic cloves, finely chopped
* 24 olives
* 300 g Grevé cheese, grated
* 50 g Parmesan cheese, grated
* 3 teaspoons oregano (or more)
* 4 tablespoons olive oil

METHOD:
* Crumble the yeast in a bowl, and add lukewarm water.
* Stir until yeast is dissolved.
* Add oil, salt, and sieved flour.
* Mix well with a wooden spoon to blend everything together.
* Place the dough on a clean, floured surface, and kneed until smooth.
* Transfer dough to a clean bowl, and cover with a towel.
* Leave it in a warm place for ab. 60 min.
* Preheat oven to 250°C [480°F].
* Turn out the dough onto a floured surface, and shape it into four balls.
* Roll out each ball thinly.
* Brush two baking trays with olive oil and place the pizzas on the trays.
* Mix the tomato puré with the chopped tomatoes.
* Spread the mixture all over the dough.
* Sprinkle with chopped garlic.
* Garnish with drained anchovies and olives.
* Sprinkle with cheese and oregano.
* Drizzle with extra virgin olive oil.
* Cook in the oven for 15 - 20 minutes, or until edges are golden brown and crispy.

You can put two baking trays in an hot air oven at the same time. In an ordinary oven, just swap the positions of the trays after ab. 10 minutes.

May I recommend my Swedish pizza salad? It goes not only with pizza; it goes with almost anything. Here it is: Pizza Salad

12 comments:

Online Recipe Collections said...

Man, this pizza looks enticing. I haven't tasted homemade pizza before. I think this is the time to do it.

Karin said...

o c r: I´m usually too lazy to make homemade pizza, but bringing ingredients together, creating a pizza to your own taste with your favorite toppings, and make it for fun, that´s great. It doesn't take much time.

hopeforafrica said...

Hi Karin,
welcome back, talking of pizza, I love the home made, I make every friday and I'm not into eating pizza out anymore. Once you make it, you woun't stop.

I have posted my recipe in my blog, my son loves mozzarella and blue cheese one!

i'm off to Italy friday!
Hope you had a great time there.
Mary

Patricia Scarpin said...

I love pizza, Karin. So much. Every Saturday night it's pizza night in my house - I make a smaller pizza for me and my husband and we have some wine, too.

This pizza sounds delicious!

Karin said...

Mary: I had forgotten how easy it is to make a home made pizza. When my kids were small, I used to make large trays with pizza. However that was about 1970.

Rome was warm, but I watched TV and saw that Romania was warmer. Extreme temperatures. Well, the high temperatures didn´t scare me, but it was nessecary to always carry a large bottle of water, while walking in Rome, and we did a lot of walking.

Karin said...

Patricia: Every Saturday night? That often? I make pizza once, or maybe twice a year. I could make it more often, though.

Cynthia said...

Your pizza looks fantastic Karin, I am not a big pizza lover but I would like a slice of yours. :)

Karin said...

Cynthia: Having kids around you I suppose pizza is a "must". Homemade or not. When we are sitting at our local pizzeria (they have other dishes too), we can watch many young people fetching pre-made pizzas at the counter.

Nora B. said...

Hi Karin, I've lost many recipes when I moved to different countries. Did this recipe turn out the same as the recipe you lost?

Karin said...

Nora: I´ve lost many of my old recipes too. Scraps of paper with printed or hand written recipes. This pizza turned out to taste much the same as the lost one. Maybe I could have added a few more herbs, perhaps some Italian herb mix.

EquineSpirit said...

MMMMMMMMM!

Afsana said...

I cooked this pizza but overcooked it.my fault! and its so problematic to find even flour in sweden when you dun know the language!