I started with pizza crust. I made my own, but you could use whatever your preference is. After stretching out the dough to fit a 16" pizza pan, I drizzle it with olive oil, poked it with a fork, and popped it in the oven to pre-bake. While that was going, I beat two egg yolks and then added ricotta cheese, parmesan cheese, black pepper, and 2 cloves of grated garlic. The recipe called for one clove, but Judy recommended two, and two was perfect. I also took a half pound of bacon, diced it, and fried it up. The recipe calls for pancetta, but seeing as how I'm a girl on a budget, I used our favorite hickory smoked bacon instead.
Next, I pulled the pizza crust out of the oven and brushed it with some of the bacon grease- hey I'm not one to argue with the tiny addition of pork fat. Then the ricotta mixture was spread evenly over the crust- the aroma right there was excruciating. Hot crust + bacon grease+ garlic=Mmmmm. Anyway, after the ricotta mixture, I sprinkled a mozarella/provolone cheese blend over the top and then topped that with the crumbled bacon. The whole thing went into the oven to bake for about 12 minutes- or until golden brown and bubbly. I left off the parsley since I didn't have any, but we hardly missed it. This pizza was pure heaven. It was incredibly good and gives me a ton of ideas for variations. It was wonderful as is, but I can't help but wonder how some additions would taste- like grilled portobella slices, roasted red pepper strips, or some caramelized leeks or onions.

4 comments:
I'm glad your family liked the pizza! For what it's worth, I learned leftovers are excellent for breakfast.
--Judy
I am drooling just reading tha! Thanks for posting. I've never made pizza before -- wondering if I need to get a pizza stone. Your pizza looks great -- what do you use. I don't know if those pizza pans with holes are good.
Thanks again.
Judy, my hubby enjoyed it thoroughly for brunch. :-)
anonymous, really, all you need for pizza is a good sturdy baking sheet. This particular pizza I used one of those pizza pans with holes, but I have to cover with foil to use it for homemade pizza- otherwise the dough sinks into the holes and is a nightmare to get off the pan. I also have a stone, and use it on occassion, but honestly...there really isn't that much of a difference. If you have a sturdy baking sheet- round or rectangular, that will work just fine. Click on my link for this pizza dough if you want homemade- this one is really easy, and you could knead the dough in a KA mixer or a bread machine if you wanted. Good luck! And if you need any homemade pizza tips, just holler. We make pizza a lot here.
Thanks Erika -- I think I am going to make this pizza this weekend. I am going to start by picking up the dough at my local pizza place... I want to ease into this pizza thing. I am going to pick up a heavy non-stick cookie sheet (I am thinking nonstick is better since, pizza usually cooks in a real hot oven). I can always use another sheet. Just don't have room for pizza stone. Can't wait to try it -- love pizza. Thanks for the info.
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