09-23-2022, 12:49 PM
(09-22-2022, 10:53 PM)Mexas Joe Wrote:(03-28-2022, 12:02 AM)Trub Lou Wrote:(03-27-2022, 11:52 PM)Gusso Wrote:(03-26-2022, 01:27 PM)Trub Lou Wrote: Alright. Got a 2 day fermented crust going, and about to start some sauce. Wind is 26mph today. Ugh.
What's your sauce recipe?
This is maybe... approximate, but I almost always do some variation on this:
28-ounce can of crushed tomatoes, or coarsely chop a whole can of San Marzanos.
2T kosher salt
1T fennel seed, ground in mortar
1t black pepper
1t crushed red pepper
2t oregano
1/2t rubbed sage
3 cloves of garlic, smashed
1t onion powder
1-4 T brown sugar, depending on how sweet I'm feeling - 4 gives a good St. Louis sauce, 1 leaves it pretty bright
Get all of this at a very low simmer and then heat just barely bubbling for 3-4 hours until it darkens substantially. Stir regularly.
What's the yield on this meaning approx how many pies? Do your store extra or chunk it?
Would also be interested in dough recipe.
Sauced generously, that's probably good for 4 12 inch pies. You could stretch it easily to 6 I think.
For dough, I almost always just do a simple neopolitan with 48 hour fridge ferment. I like higher hydration for a bubbly crust, but it's ESSENTIAL, in my experience, to dust your peel heavily with coarse semolina. Not corn meal, as the high heat makes that bitter.
This is for a larger recipe, maybe 6-8 approx 12 inch pies that I just press out by hand:
1300 g high gluten bread flour
750 g water
7 g yeast
25 g salt
Proof the yeast, then add salt and flour and knead. Sometimes I add a tsp of white sugar or up to 2T of olive oil. This will soften the dough.
Refrigerate the dough in an oiled covered bowl for 2 days or so. A few hours before you need them, divide it into 6-8 pieces and form them into balls, putting each into a separate oiled covered bowl, and leaving at room temp until you're ready to cook. This last step makes it WAY easier to keep the crust roundish as you stretch it.
Don't roll/ stretch it on the peel. Only put it on the semolina dusted peel right before you top it and the oven is ready to go. Having it stick as you're trying to shoot it onto the oven is the biggest disaster in this process.