Pizza with Dry-Farmed Tomatoes

This recipe uses weight measurements common in Italy and can be replicated easily with a simple kitchen scale. Estimates for volume conversions are in parenthesis but are rough and can vary depending on the freshness of your ingredients.

By / Photography By | December 11, 2022

Ingredients

SERVINGS: makes 4 (12 inch) pizzas
For the Dough
  • 600 grams bread flour (about 4⅔ cups)
  • 360 grams water (about 1½ cups), at room temperature
  • 10 grams olive oil (1½ tablespoons)
  • 10 grams salt (2–3 teaspoons)
  • Either ¼ teaspoon active dry yeast or 30 grams sourdough starter (about 2 tablespoons)
For the Topping
  • 2 cups puréed whole, organic, peeled tomatoes, dry-farmed if possible (seeds optional)
  • 10–12 ounces whole-milk mozzarella cheese, diced into small chunks
  • 1 cup grated Parmesan or pecorino Romano
  • 1 bunch basil, torn or sliced just before applying to pizzas
  • Several sprigs oregano

Instructions

Add all ingredients to a bowl. Mix together by hand or with a mixer until a dough is formed and all ingredients are incorporated with no flour left sticking to the sides of the bowl. Dough will be slightly stiff and won’t quite stick to your hands. Cover bowl with a towel. Let rest for 30 minutes.

On a lightly floured surface, knead dough 5–6 times, return to bowl, cover, then let dough rise in a warm location for 4 hours. The dough will look slightly larger but not doubled in size.

Shape the dough into 4 dough balls, about 250 grams each. Place in a covered dough tray or sheet pan covered with a towel and refrigerate 24 hours. 

Take dough out of refrigerator 2 hours before you plan to make the pizzas, to bring to room temperature. Leave covered until ready to shape.

With your hands or a rolling pin on lightly floured surface, shape dough into 12-inch round pizza pies. For thinner pie, stretch to 14 inches; for thicker pie, 10 inches.

When placing ingredients on shaped pies, leave dough on floured cutting board for easy transfer to pizza stone. If you have a pizza paddle, all the better!

Making The Pizza:

Set the oven to the hottest possible temperature, 525–550°F; if your oven doesn’t go that high, use high broil. Put baking stone in oven to preheat for 30 minutes to an hour.

Layer ingredients as desired onto the pizza dough (see Chef’s Note for basil). Carefully transfer loaded pies to baking stone or alternative heating surface.

Bake each pizza on baking stone for 5–7 minutes, or until cheese is melted and crust is golden.

Chef’s Notes:

1. If you don’t have a pizza stone, an inverted baking sheet or a large cast-iron pan can be used instead.

2. To prevent the basil from burning, either add it before adding the cheese or after the pizza is baked.                                                 

3. Feel free to add additional fresh seasonal ingredients after cooking, as desired: arugula, fresh sliced tomatoes, red onions, etc.

Ingredients

SERVINGS: makes 4 (12 inch) pizzas
For the Dough
  • 600 grams bread flour (about 4⅔ cups)
  • 360 grams water (about 1½ cups), at room temperature
  • 10 grams olive oil (1½ tablespoons)
  • 10 grams salt (2–3 teaspoons)
  • Either ¼ teaspoon active dry yeast or 30 grams sourdough starter (about 2 tablespoons)
For the Topping
  • 2 cups puréed whole, organic, peeled tomatoes, dry-farmed if possible (seeds optional)
  • 10–12 ounces whole-milk mozzarella cheese, diced into small chunks
  • 1 cup grated Parmesan or pecorino Romano
  • 1 bunch basil, torn or sliced just before applying to pizzas
  • Several sprigs oregano