Making my first pizza from scratch

Lately, I have been trying to build my cooking skills. I recently found a YouTube channel run by a home cooking chef named Ethan Chlebowski that features approachable and very tasty recipes. It’s also nice that Ethan makes cooking feel less intimidating, much like J. Kenji Lopéz-Alt. Recently I decided to follow his weekly pan pizza recipe and make a Detroit-style ‘za with homemade tomato sauce and mozzarella.

Bottom line: I think it turned out great! Especially since I have never made dough nor tomato sauce from scratch.

The Final Result

Those brown spots are not meat, but cheese that was a little too cooked (I think).

Agh! Where’s the circle?! Yes, I too was a bit skeptical of Detroit-style rectangular pizza, but it was worth it. It took about 90 minutes, and I learned a ton about dough and sauce making. The specifics of the process are in Ethan’s video and are easy to follow. I wanted to give my thoughts about specific parts and how I troubleshot problems that arose and what specific nuggets I learned.

The Dough

I had never made dough before. I was intimidated. I have seen many people mention making doughs and it seemed like there are endless possibilities for error. However, I went in confident, and actually it was quite easy. I even put in a bit more water than was suggested, which I worried would ruin it, but seemed to not matter.

A big risen dough ball made of half bread flower and half white whole wheat flower in a glass bowl.

Ethan’s measurements are all by weight in this recipe, and that is the way to go for me. Many fewer things to clean at the end (since I just weight everything in one bowl) and less likely to screw up. The dough was extremely sticky at the beginning but seemed to come together a bit easier after some kneading. Wow, kneading is hard work. I know that seems obvious but my forearm was actually sore after only like 10 minutes worth of kneading. How do cats do it all the time?

Taste-wise, the dough was delicious. A bit chewier than I usually go for but the crisped edges and fluffy core were divine.

The Sauwce

I had never made tomato sauce from scratch. I used San-Marzano canned whole tomatoes and let them get to know some olive oil (ran out of butter!), a quarter of an onion, some basil, salt, and smashed garlic cloves. I had never really used an immersion blender before, but blending all of that was super fast.

Homemade tomato sauce blended with an immersion blender.

This stuff is so good. I have already had it on pasta, and it is 10x better than store-bought sauce. I am beginning to see where, for me, it makes sense to make certain staples regularly to have on hand for multiple meals. This is probably “doy” for most people, but I kind of have to experience something first-hand to understand it fully.

An interesting little problem I ran into was my stainless steel sauce pot. I stupidly had boiled some salted water in it a little while ago, before I knew that you were supposed to add salt to boiling water instead of dump it in before it boils. So, I had some pitting on the bottom of my pot and I wasn’t sure if it was safe to cook with still (maybe it would leech aluminum or nickel? I wasn’t sure.). Turns out, as per my cookware manufacturer’s site, it is totally safe (though irreversible).

Closing Thoughts

One more look at the goodness.

A few closing thoughts. First, the biggest problem for me was the lack of topping cohesion. I wanted those toppings to be at the very edge of the crust all over the pizza, and I had thought when I put them on that they would melt and spread out to cover more area than they actually did. This is a small critique but I think it would have improved the pizza. I also think some more mozzarella cheese and a little more sauce would have improved the taste.

Second, this was a big confidence booster for me. As someone who never grew up with thorough cooking instruction, this was a relatively big step for me. I am very proud of myself that I was able to successfully follow a recipe yet modify it for my tastes without disaster.

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