Today’s recipe is a personal pizza! This is basically a pizza shrunk down to a size that’s comfortable to eat without leftovers. My family’s had an old tradition of making these every Friday/Saturday to celebrate the weekend, usually with a movie. Now, I use it as a weekly splurge.
Whenever I talk to my internet friends about this, the most common answer I’ve gotten is “that sounds like a ton of work!” Well, I’ll be the bearer of good news and tell you pizza is one of the easiest, most rewarding recipes I know. It’s basically mixing and waiting, so all you need is patience!
1/4 cup warm water (10 seconds in the microwave)
You should be able to hold you finger in it indefinitely
1 tsp yeast [$5.22 / 4 oz : $0.13]
1 tsp honey or sugar [$2 / 8 oz : $0.06]
1/8 tsp salt [$0.54 / 26 oz : $0]
1 1/2 tsp oil (olive oil is best) [$6.68 / 24.5 oz : $0.07]
3/4 cup flour [$1.72 / 5 lbs : $0.08]
Italian seasonings (thyme, oregano, basil, etc) [$1 for a blend]
Preheat the oven to 450° F (I do this around step 4)
Mix the water, yeast, and honey/sugar and let rest no more than 10 minutes. At the end, there should be a bit of sludge on the top and mixing it should make a slight fizzing sound. This is called “proofing”, and it lets the yeast “wake up”.
Add the rest of the ingredients and mix them together. Consider adding garlic powder and Italian seasonings to improve the dough’s taste. When it gets mostly mixed, use your hands to finish the job.
If the dough sticks to your hands and stays there, add flour to the dough a pinch at a time.
If the dough looks kind of clumped and doesn’t feel sticky to the touch, wet the tips of your fingers and work that moisture into the dough.
Mold the dough into a ball, cover it, and let it rest in a warm place until it’s roughly doubled in size (about an hour)
On a surface covered in flour, pat the dough flat and roughly circular, flipping occasionally. The dough should resist being stretched, just keep at it.
To minimize cleanup, try dampening your hand, wiping it on the counter, and putting cling wrap on top.
On some baking sheet or pizza pan, sprinkle course cornmeal/breadcrumbs or drizzle oil and put your pizza dough on it.
Decorate your pizza - you know what you want! Just about anything can be used as a pizza topping, so be creative.
Spaghetti sauce can be a really good pizza sauce substitute. If you’re up for a little more work, try heating your sauce on low with some garlic powder and oregano, stirring occasionally, while you make the pizza dough. This gives it a heavier/more savory taste than the brighter/citrusy spaghetti sauce.
Cook for 6-8 minutes, possibly longer. You want the cheese totally melted and ideally a touch of browning.
Let it rest for 3-5 minutes before cutting.
Total cost: $0.34 + cost of sauce, cheese, and toppings
Recipe adapted from blendtec