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I love pizza and needed to figure out how to make it gluten-free. However, I’m a BIG ol’ fan of crispy thin crust pizza. But I love this pillowy one all the same.
Sift together the dry ingredients in a mixing bowl.
Combine the milk (heated for around 50 seconds in my microwave, but your mileage may vary), yeast and sugar and let proof for about 5 minutes until foamy.*
Combine the olive oil and egg whites, add the oil/eggs and the yeast/milk to the dry ingredients. Mix on medium speed for around 5 minutes.
Prepare your pan by putting out some parchment paper on it, and sprinkling it with cornmeal. If you don’t have parchment, you can oil the pan, but in my experience, it sticks a bit. So I use parchment. And for the love of all that is good in the world, please don’t put a gluten free pizza crust directly on a pizza stone – spread the dough on parchment and slide the parchment onto the hot stone. Because you won’t get it back if the dough sits on the stone. Your crust or the stone.
Gluten-free dough is way more like batter and doesn’t hold up well in its pre-cooked state to manipulation. If you add more xanthan gum, it will behave like CRAZY STICKY dough, but will be tougher when you eat it.
I’ve found that spooning it out on parchment paper, then filling in the spaces between the dollops of batter, THEN spreading it around works WAY better than putting the whole kit and caboodle (wait, what?) of batter in the middle of the pan and spreading it out from there.
If it’s sticking to the damn spatula, try cleaning the spatula, putting some oil on it and use short deliberate strokes instead of long languorous strokes to spread the dough.
Put it in a warm place (I turn my oven on to 120 degrees), and let rise for 20 minutes.
Preheat the oven to 400, and put the risen dough in for 10 minutes to cook.
Take it out of the oven, top it with pizza sauce, a thin thin layer of mozzarella, sprinkle some Italian seasonings if you like, toppings, and then MOAR CHEESE.
I use mushrooms, red onions, turkey pepperoni (Hormel regular and turkey pepperoni are gluten-free) and crushed red peppers as my go-to toppings.
If I’m feeling extra-motivated, I’ll saute some Italian turkey sausage (I use Shadybrook farms, hot Italian turkey sausage – it’s gluten-free) in place of the pepperoni.
Stick it back in the oven for 16 minutes or so, until the cheese is golden bubbly, remove, slice and serve. Pizza…mmm…
*I recently read somewhere that you can reduce the yeast in most recipes by 40-50%, and I’ve done this here with no adverse affects – the sponge proofs, (prooves?) the dough rises)
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castal on 7.31.2009
If you are having trouble getting the dough to spread, use a sheet of plastic wrap on top to smoosh the dough where you want it to go. Just make sure that you either use parchment paper or use lots of cornmeal/other gf flours to keep it from sticking. I like using cornmeal on the bottom more for texture than anything else, but it works great at making the crust crispy and …well… not gf tasting.
Three cheers for not paying an arm and a leg (and$10) for a cardboard pizza crust!
anomiso on 7.24.2009
if you reduce the amount of yeast you have to allow more “raising” time.
I will give it a try …but , if I might make a suggestion…start the topping with the mozzarella as the base…add all the other ingredient and add to tomatoes On Top and finish with a sprinkling of oregano…that is what give the pizza its distinctive aroma!
That way the topping will stay nice an moist .
Cheers