I am a self pronounced pizza snob. I admit it! I enjoy a chemical free, crispy pizza made with only the freshest ingredients. Don't you? Rather than paying $20 every time I want to treat myself, I just whip out the trusty ol' rolling pin and most prized kitchen tool- my kitchenaid mixer :)
I urge you to make this for your friends and family and serve it with a side salad. The pizza is simple and very fun to make so you might just find yourself with some additional helping hands in the kitchen when this is on the menu.
If you don't make your own dough, I suggest purchasing the pre-made dough ball from your local grocer rather than the soft pre-rolled crusts that are packaged in plastic wrap. You will thank me for it... These not-so-tasty bread pies range from $2-$7 for just one crust, and who knows how long they have been hanging there.
*Kitchen Must Have* A Pizza stone! Pizza stones absorb excess moisture which result in a delicious crispy crust. Plus, since the stone is absorbent, you need only wipe the stone clean after use, rather than scrub with soapy water.
*Field Roast sausage is a vegan meat substitute which requires no previous cooking before being placed in the oven. If you were to use real meat, cook on separate pan on stove top while cooking the peppers and onions.
Spicy Pepper and *Sausage* Pizza
1 ball of pizza dough
1 cup marinara sauce (give or take depending on the size of your stone)
*1 spicy chipotle Field Roast sausage or sausage of your choosing
1 medium onion, chopped
1 red bell pepper, sliced into 1/4" slivers
mozzarella cheese (I used Follow Your Heart Vegan cheese)
olive oil
salt
pepper
red chili flakes
corn meal
Preheat the oven to 500 degrees.
Roll out the pizza dough on a floured surface and transfer rolled out dough to a cornmeal dusted pizza stone.
Pan saute the pepper and onions for about 10 minutes on medium heat. While the peppers and onions are cooking, lightly drizzle enough olive oil on the dough to give the surface a thin coating.
Spoon sauce onto pizza and then top pizza with peppers and onions. Slice up Field Roast sausage and add to pizza. Add cheese.
Bake pizza for 15 minutes or until crust begins to brown. Once out of the oven, let cool for 5 minutes before serving.
Yummy yummy!
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The best part of this recipe is the heat from the red chili flakes. If you don't do spicy, I still suggest trying it! You'd be surprised what a little heat can do to your pizza or pasta dinner.
If I'm not planning on cooking with marinara sauce in the near future, I throw the extra sauce into a ziplock and freeze it. Frozen sauce will keep for over a month.
Marinara Sauce
2 16 oz cans of organic tomato puree
1 large onion, diced
6 cloves of garlic, diced
14 oz of water
3 Tbsp dried parsley
3 Tbsp dried oregano
4 Tbsp olive oil
1 Tbsp dried basil
1 tsp sugar1/8- 1/4 tsp red chili flakes
salt and pepper to taste
In a large sauce pan, heat olive oil, onions and garlic over medium and cook until onions are translucent. Add tomato puree, water, parsley, oregano, sugar and chili flakes and stir together.
Turn heat down to low and cover; let simmer for about 1 hour which will allow sauce to thicken.
Yummy yummy!
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Pizza Dough
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This recipe was given to me by a friend back in Boston. I believe it was found in The Bread Bakers Apprentice: Mastering the Art of Extraordinary Bread Making. The original recipe calls for unbleached bread flour but I like to use 1/2 whole wheat flour and 1/2 unbleached bread flour. This recipe makes about 5-6 dough balls for pizza or 1 17X12" focaccia. This recipe is what convinced me to invest in a kitchenaid stand up mixer since the dough is very sticky and hard to work by hand.
Makes 5 dough balls
3 cups whole wheat flour
3 cups unbleached bread flour
2 1/4 tsp salt
1 3/4 tsp instant yeast
*2 1/4 cups of ice cold water
*For ice cold water, add a few ice cubs to the water and let sit for 2 minutes. Remove ice.
Combine flour, salt, yeast and water in the bowl of the mixer and with the paddle attachment mix for 2 minutes on a low speed. Switch to the dough hook attachment and mix for an additional 5-6 minutes on medium speed. The dough should be sticky on the bottom of the bowl but it should release from the sides of the bowl. If not, sprinkle some flour on the sides of the bowl or add some more water if the dough appears to be to stiff.
Lightly oil a large bowl and transfer the dough to the bowl. Mist with oil, cover with plastic wrap and immediately set in refrigerator for at least 8 hours or overnight.
Next day check to see how much the dough has risen (which will depend on your temperature in the fridge and how often the door was opened). Remove from fridge and let sit at room temperature for 2-3 hours. Once the dough has doubled from its original size you are ready to go!
On a floured surface, dived dough into 5 or 6 pieces (I normally divide into 5 pieces since I have a large pizza stone). Roll each piece into a ball and flour lightly.
On a floured surface again, roll out the dough ball until you achieve your desired size. For a demonstration, I really like this link:
Place remaining dough balls into zip lock bags and refrigerate for up to one week.
Yummy Yummy!