Authentic Pizza

Americans have adopted Italian pizza as their own. While Americans heavily load the pizza with toppings, to Italians it is as much about the pizza dough as it is about the toppings. The challenge for American cooks is creating an authentic crust in a home oven—not a wood-fired pizza oven that reaches temperatures in excess of 800 degrees. In this cooking class, we’ll cover some basics that include working with yeast, coaxing the most flavor from the dough, and reviewing techniques for shaping and topping pizza. You will then learn to prepare both thin-crust and deep-dish pizza that rivals anything you can get in Italy.
- Introduction
- Course Overview
- Test Your Pizza IQ
- How Pizza Works
- Equipment
- Types of Flour
- Working with Flour
- Canned Tomatoes 101
- Steps to Making Pizza
- The Science of Yeast
- Types of Yeast
- The Yeast We Recommend
- The Mechanics of Yeast
- Tips for Success
- Shaping and Topping a Pizza
- Shaping and Topping a Pizza
- Concept Review
- Quiz
- Recipe Lesson: Thin-Crust Pizza
- Recipe Overview
- What You’ll Need
- Common Mistakes
- Cook Along in the Test Kitchen
- Share Your Dish
- How Did You Do?
- Printable Recipe
- Recipe Lesson: Deep-Dish Pizza
- Recipe Overview
- What You’ll Need
- Common Mistakes
- Cook Along in the Test Kitchen
- Share Your Dish
- How Did You Do?
- Printable Recipe
- Recipe Lesson: Thick-Crust Sicilian-Style Pizza
- Recipe Overview
- What You'll Need
- Printable Recipe
- What Can Go Wrong
- Cooking Along With The Test Kitchen