Pepperoni, Sausage, and Mushroom Pizza

Pepperoni, Sausage, and Mushroom Pizza

The DOUGH

Start dough at 4pm for dinner between 8pm and 9pm
1 cup warm water
2 tsp instant-rise yeast
3-1/4 C bread flour
1 tsp salt
1/4 cup olive oil (EV not necessary)
2 to 3 tbs dried oregano or Italian herb
mix (optional)
Combine ingredients and knead by hand for 10 minutes or machine
for 5 minutes. Coat dough ball in a thin film of olive oil, cover in plastic wrap and let rise in warm place.

The SAUCE

28 oz. can tomato puree
1 tbs dried parsley or 3/4 cup of fresh
1 tbs dried basil or 3/4 cup of fresh
1 tsp dried oregano
1 tsp dried thyme
1 tsp dried marjoram (optional)
1/4 – 1/2 tsp ground black pepper
1/4 cup olive oil
10 cloves minced fresh garlic, lightly sauteed in the olive oil above
1/4 cup red wine vinegar
1-/1/2 tsp salt
Simmer all ingredients on low in a large pot for 30 minutes.

THE PIZZA

About an hour before service, turn the oven up as high as it will go.
Twenty to thirty minutes before service, roll dough out to 16” circle. [Or divide dough if you want to make two smaller pizzas.] Place on pizza screen if available, being careful not to press the dough into the mesh.

Half of large white onion, minced
As many garlic cloves as you like, minced
8 oz. fresh mushrooms, sliced
12 oz. Italian sausage, hot or mild
4 – 6 oz. pepperoni, casing removed, sliced thin
1 bell pepper, green (more authentic) or red (more flavorful), diced
1 can sliced pitted black olives, or 3/4 cup brined black olives, like kalamata, if you want to kick it up a notch.
1/2 to 1 lb grated mozzarella or, even better, fontina

Add 2 tbs olive oil to large skillet. Over medium heat, saute onion, garlic, and pepper until softened, about 5 minutes. Transfer to a bowl, leaving as much oil in pan as possible. Add sausage and saute until browned, breaking up into coarse chunks.

Brush dough with olive oil. Cover evenly about 1″ from the edge with all ingredients except mushrooms and cheese. Ladle on enough sauce to generously cover. Distribute mushrooms on top of sauce, and finish with cheese.

Bake in oven until crust nicely browns, about 10 minutes.

Serves 4 to 6.

The dough for this recipe was derived from James McNair’s excellent New Pizza.  Don’t be discouraged by the one-star reviews on Amazon, they are bogus, imho.  One dweeb complained that McNair didn’t cover such arcane techniques as cold fermentation.  Geez.  If you want a cold ferment, use room temperature water and let the dough rise in the refrigerator for 24 hours.  But, you’re not going to have pizza tonight, and you won’t taste the subtleties a cold ferment brings to dough under all those toppings anyway.

Back to blog posts: winervana.com/blog/