Author Topic: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza  (Read 12988 times)

fitfrugalfab

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Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« on: August 03, 2015, 06:48:40 AM »
My husband and I are serious pizza addicts. We live in the city and there are 5 pizza joints within a quarter mile from our apartment. Not to mention with all of these new ordering apps it's very tempting to constantly order pizza from our favorite restaurants. We eat pizza about 3 times a week and it's not a good thing for our wallets or our waistlines.

For the past 6 months I've started to make my own pizza at home and have noticed some serious savings and surprisingly enough, weight loss. Considering how much pizza my husband and I eat, we calculated that we are saving about $1000 a year, just by me making pizza for us at home. I've gone in more detail on my blog and have even included a no fail recipe for those who are interested. 


http://fitfrugalnfabulous.blogspot.com/2015/08/15-who-doesnt-love-pizza.html

kvaruni

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #1 on: August 03, 2015, 07:15:59 AM »
Making pizza is indeed a real moneysaver, and pizza can make for a very cheap meal. We often use pizza when we want to loose some weight, so I'm not surprised by your comment on that! The dough is pretty much the same for everyone, but there are plenty of variations in the pizza sauces. If you want to have a sauce that you can quickly put together and forget, try this one:
1 small tin (5oz) of double condensed tomato puree
5oz of water (just rinse the tomato puree tin)
1 tsp sugar
1/2 tsp salt
1 1/2 tsp of pizza spices (a equal mix of oregano, basil, garlic, pepper flakes)
1 tsp smoked paprika
1/2 tomato
3 tsp port (not essential, so can be omitted)

Dice the tomato. Toss everything together. Let sit for half a day and done!
No cooking needed. If you are in a hurry, just toss together and let it simmer for 15 min or so.
« Last Edit: August 03, 2015, 07:17:45 AM by kvaruni »

fitfrugalfab

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #2 on: August 03, 2015, 07:46:27 AM »
Great Recipe! My is kind of similar, just no water or port.

1 ¼ cup of Tomato Sauce (I always use San Marzano or Pomi)
2 garlic cloves, minced
1/4 white onion, diced
Salt and Pepper to taste
1 tsp Sugar
Dried Oregano, to taste
 Dried Basil, to taste

Simmer on Medium for 30 minutes then voila!

CommonCents

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #3 on: August 03, 2015, 08:04:57 AM »
Just had homemade grilled pizza last night.  It's pretty hot here right now, so it avoided us heating up the house, and it used up some bacon I was worried about going bad.  Can't say I feel like it helps us to lose weight though.

We stole the toppings idea from a local place we liked: bacon, red onion, and apple (and mozzarella).  White pizza - no sauce
Dough recipe (off the top of my head so subject to error....)
1/2 c water
1 T vegetable oil
1.5 c flour
1/2 t salt
1/4 t sugar
1/4 t seasoning (they called for "Italian seasoning" - I alternate with a "pizza seasoning" I have) - optional
1.25 t yeast

The savings aren't so much if you are accustomed to buying your dough (rather than eating out).  I only starting making the dough because we moved and Trader Joe's with its 99 cent dough (making two pizzas) was no longer a block away. 
« Last Edit: August 03, 2015, 08:07:08 AM by CommonCents »

2ndTimer

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #4 on: August 03, 2015, 10:43:23 AM »
Totally agree.  I make stacks of pizza crusts by rolling my regular white bread recipe into 1/4 inch thick rounds and cooking for a couple of minutes on a side in a dry frying pan on medium high.  Then I freeze about half a dozen in a reclosable five gallon freezer bag.  Take out two when we need them, no need to defrost, apply commercial sauce which I buy by the gallon and freeze in smaller containers.  Add toppings and grated cheese.  Bake at 350 until cheese is melted. 

Frankies Girl

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #5 on: August 03, 2015, 11:22:25 AM »
I tried around 6 or so crust recipes before I hit on the one we liked at my house. Simple, but takes about 1.5 hours total time due to the rise. I usually make the dough in the afternoon and try to double it so I can freeze the other crust for later. I add spices (garlic/basil/oregano) and aged Asiago or parm cheese shreds to the crust and bake it about 10 minutes, then add sauce and toppings, and then bake an additional 10 minutes for a crust that is fancy restaurant quality (and still costs me under $5 total).

I caramelize onions and roast red peppers whenever I get them on sale and then freeze them (they freeze VERY well), and we tend to do that plus cheese and black olives (with some fresh sweet basil from my herbs on the back porch).

We haven't ordered a chain/restaurant pizza in over a year.

Workingmomsaves

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #6 on: August 03, 2015, 01:10:17 PM »
We love pizza in our house.  We use flour tortillas as a simple crust if i am in a hurry.  Works great if you like thin crust.

codemonkey

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #7 on: August 03, 2015, 02:24:57 PM »
We love pizza in our house.  We use flour tortillas as a simple crust if i am in a hurry.  Works great if you like thin crust.

We used to do that, but found we prefer Pita bread or even naan when we are in a hurry.  It's worth a shot, although probably a bit more expensive than flour tortillas.

Workingmomsaves

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #8 on: August 03, 2015, 02:39:28 PM »
We love pizza in our house.  We use flour tortillas as a simple crust if i am in a hurry.  Works great if you like thin crust.

We used to do that, but found we prefer Pita bread or even naan when we are in a hurry.  It's worth a shot, although probably a bit more expensive than flour tortillas.

We have done pita bread as well.  It was yummy!  Also held up on the grill for more of a "wood grilled" flavor.

Helvegen

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #9 on: August 05, 2015, 09:24:07 AM »
I haven't bought a chain pizza in years. In a moment of weakness a few months ago, I priced a pizza at Dominoes for delivery. The price was outrageous, so I sucked it up and just made pizza at home as planned.

The best thing I have ever done with pizza is make it on the grill. It is beyond amazing. The grill is able to achieve the high temps for good baking that the oven can't. I generally have to pop the pizzas under the broiler for a minute to get the toppings the way I want them, but it isn't necessary. You can also bake stromboli or calzones on the grill. Our current favorite stromboli is pulled pork, bell pepper, onion, and cheddar cheese. Favorite calzone is spinach, roma tomato, and feta. But I also make one that is mozzarella, salami, roma tomato, fresh basil, mushroom, bell pepper, and onion that is pretty darn tasty. 

I make my own sauce and the night before pizza night, I'll make a batch of dough and let it rise in the fridge until I need it the next evening.

I use this recipe, but I just use all all-purpose flour instead of the blend they suggest. I also add fresh pressed garlic because garlic.

http://www.kingarthurflour.com/recipes/now-or-later-pizza-recipe
« Last Edit: August 05, 2015, 12:00:39 PM by Helvegen »

DecD

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #10 on: August 05, 2015, 10:49:56 AM »
So about a year ago, I discovered Mint.  My spouse had all our accounts in Mint since 2012, but I'd never paid attention.  I started browsing around--

And saw how much money we'd spent on pizza over the previous 12 months.  It was appalling.  We love pizza, but I had no idea how it added up.

Starting that day, we stopped ordering pizza.  We've ordered out once since then, when we were hosting my parents and aunt and they wanted to treat the family.  Now we make it homemade or cook up a frozen pizza.  We have saved probably $600. 

Plus, if I do say so myself, my homemade pizza is lightyears more delicious than the ordered-out stuff!

GerryS

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #11 on: August 05, 2015, 11:19:31 AM »
Homemade Pizza is awesome. +1 to that!

Quote
If you want to have a sauce that you can quickly put together and forget, try this one:
1 small tin (5oz) of double condensed tomato puree
5oz of water (just rinse the tomato puree tin)
1 tsp sugar
1/2 tsp salt
1 1/2 tsp of pizza spices (a equal mix of oregano, basil, garlic, pepper flakes)
1 tsp smoked paprika
1/2 tomato

I saw you are in the UK. I assume double condensed tomato puree is what we in the US call tomato paste? Can anyone confirm? I want to try making sauce. I buy the prepared stuff at Trader Joe's but alas it's got sugar in it.

Quote
The best thing I have ever done with pizza is make it on the grill. It is beyond amazing.

If you haven't tried it do it! It's super easy with a gas grill. I imagine it's just as easy with charcoal and probably even better tasting it you use real hardwood coals!

nonsequitur

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #12 on: August 06, 2015, 05:16:10 AM »
We've been progressively in-sourcing our weeklyish pizza night over the past year, and have just started making our own base (no knead style).   It makes for awesome pizza, and the cost each week has gone from $40+ to less than $10.  Total win. 

Our sauce is just tomato paste with some minced anchovies. 

Patrick A

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #13 on: August 06, 2015, 08:56:18 AM »
I'm also a bit of a pizza making fanatic. 

For a long time I made simple yeast dough (water, flour, honey/sugar/maple syrup, salt, yeast, oil) but I have since stepped up my pizza and bread making game and now make pretty much everything from a sourdough starter. 

I worked in a fancy bakery for a while many years back so I had some skills, but the main catalyst for improving my bread making and my understanding of the process was this book:

http://www.amazon.com/Flour-Water-Salt-Yeast-Fundamentals/dp/160774273X

He's got a few good pizza dough recipes in there, and once you have it down you can modify ingredients and schedule to fit your life.  Time is an ingredient and it gives amazing taste . . . just have to know you want pizza more than 3 hours before you make it. 

trailrated

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #14 on: August 06, 2015, 11:58:32 AM »
This Thai Chicken Pizza from budgetbytes is sooooooo good :)

http://www.budgetbytes.com/2012/01/thai-chicken-pizza/

Hamster

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #15 on: August 07, 2015, 12:43:51 AM »
My wife and I have been doing this a while and have experimented a lot. Our favorite crust by far is Peter Reinhart's neo-Neapolitan dough. To get the best results you want to refrigerate the dough 2 to 3 days before you cook it, and ideally have a nice thick stone in your oven and at least 500 degrees. It cooks in 5 minutes or less and is sooooo good. It is still very good with lower temps on a pan, but it is amazing with the high heat and a stone.

Our favorite is our homage to Frank Pepé's New Haven white clam pie, voted number one pizza in America on many occasions, and probably the best pizza I have ever eaten.

We often just buy canned chopped clams, since fresh chopped clams are much harder to find in the PNW than in the northeast. It may sound gross, but everyone I have fed this pizza falls in love with it. Aside from the crust, and heat, we find the most important thing is fresh whole milk mozzarella. We are happy with the kind costco sells. The sauce is just olive oil and crushed fresh garlic. You can add fresh oregano (or dried, too).

We also like fresh basil and fresh sliced tomato with fresh mozzarella, also white, but red is ok too.

My girls like red sauce and aren't picky, so we just mix canned tomato sauce and a bit of dried Italian herb mix. It feels blasphemous, but they like it.
« Last Edit: August 07, 2015, 12:48:49 AM by Hamster »

MMMaybe

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #16 on: August 07, 2015, 03:24:48 AM »
We have gotten to the point where we don't like other people's pizza :)

I have a very easy dough recipe that I throw in the bread machine to knead.

Sometimes I chop up smoked salmon or cooked bacon and keep it in the freezer to use on pizza. We keep jars of artichokes, olives, capers and sun dried tomatoes in the fridge. I also have grated mozarella in there. So its pretty easy to throw together a pizza in a hurry.

Rural

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #17 on: August 07, 2015, 07:05:51 AM »
I'm a pizza dough heretic in that I use a baking powder biscuit recipe for the crust.


We like the high rise and the texture, and it means I can go from pantry ingredients to pizza in the oven and kitchen cleaned in five minutes if I'm not making the sauce (tomato paste works well) or ten if I am. This week's pizza was a ten-minute job starting in the atrium, cutting basil for the pesto base.

jacksonvasey

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #18 on: August 07, 2015, 12:36:40 PM »
My wife and I have been doing this a while and have experimented a lot. Our favorite crust by far is Peter Reinhart's neo-Neapolitan dough. To get the best results you want to refrigerate the dough 2 to 3 days before you cook it, and ideally have a nice thick stone in your oven and at least 500 degrees. It cooks in 5 minutes or less and is sooooo good. It is still very good with lower temps on a pan, but it is amazing with the high heat and a stone.

Our favorite is our homage to Frank Pepé's New Haven white clam pie, voted number one pizza in America on many occasions, and probably the best pizza I have ever eaten.

We often just buy canned chopped clams, since fresh chopped clams are much harder to find in the PNW than in the northeast. It may sound gross, but everyone I have fed this pizza falls in love with it. Aside from the crust, and heat, we find the most important thing is fresh whole milk mozzarella. We are happy with the kind costco sells. The sauce is just olive oil and crushed fresh garlic. You can add fresh oregano (or dried, too).

We also like fresh basil and fresh sliced tomato with fresh mozzarella, also white, but red is ok too.

My girls like red sauce and aren't picky, so we just mix canned tomato sauce and a bit of dried Italian herb mix. It feels blasphemous, but they like it.

I just had Pepe's classic tomato pie a couple days ago, first time in years.  I remembered why I stay away from Pepe's; because once I start eating it I don't stop until it's gone.

For a while, home-making pizza didn't save a lot of money, because I liked buying different kit for making the stuff (stones, steels, peels, etc...).  But nowadays I use the baking steel in the oven in the winter, and just cook it on the grill in the summer.

I just open a big can of diced tomatoes into the slow cooker with some butter, salt, olive oil, and italian seasoning, then blend it up a bit after ~12 hours.

I have gotten into making my own mozzarella cheese, but mainly for making no-salt-added pizzas for my grandfather that has heart failure.  But making your own mozzarella is surprisingly easy, though you might have to mess around until you find milk that works.  I haven't weighed the resulting cheese, so I don't know the yield vs buying a block of cheese vs pre-shredded, but I expect it's a good deal, given that you can use all the whey that's left over.  One hint, you can use it in place of water in your pizza dough.

Also my guilty pleasure is, once a year, the Friday after Thanksgiving, I take some cream sauce from the leftover creamed onions, and use that as a base sauce, then top that with a bit of mozzarella, and then whatever other Thanksgiving leftovers there are (turkey, mashed potatoes, yams, dressing, etc...).  It probably sounds gross, but man do I like it.

Potterquilter

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #19 on: August 07, 2015, 01:04:38 PM »
You guys are killing me. Now I am going to make pizza tonight.

I made my favorite pizza last week for company. I had about a quarter pound of bacon that I chopped and fried. I scooped the solids out of the pan, and put in some chopped peppers onions and mushrooms. Made two big rounds, put sauce, the sautéed veggies and bacon and mozzarella on top. The little bit if bacon grease and bacon makes this so yummy. I have found if I prebake the crust for ten minutes or so it is not soggy.

Another huge savings?  Tortillas and breads of all kinds. We just have to watch it or we consume hundreds of extra calories. But we do have a smile on our face.

Mrs.LC

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #20 on: August 08, 2015, 07:41:17 AM »
We have gotten to the point where we don't like other people's pizza :)

I have a very easy dough recipe that I throw in the bread machine to knead.

Sometimes I chop up smoked salmon or cooked bacon and keep it in the freezer to use on pizza. We keep jars of artichokes, olives, capers and sun dried tomatoes in the fridge. I also have grated mozarella in there. So its pretty easy to throw together a pizza in a hurry.
Thought we were the only pizza snobs! We love our homemade pizza. Make a large pizza that is good for two meals. We heat up the leftovers in the toaster oven so it is just as crispy as when it first came out of the oven. Yum!

We are amazed at how frequent pizza delivery vehicles go by our house. We lived in the country for many years so we never saw the cars. Now living in the 'burbs we see them a couple times a night.

LadyMustache

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #21 on: August 09, 2015, 07:04:43 PM »
Another homemade pizza lover here. I make a bit extra and then DH takes it in cold for lunch the next day. Friday night is pizza night in our house. I let the kids decorate their own pizza, so they get in on the act too.

And yes, tomato paste is the same as tomato puree. I'm a Brit living in the US. Can't believe how expensive takeout pizza is here! $20+ for a large pizza, which isn't quite enough for all four of us, or $2 for homemade pizza :) I make double batches of dough in the bread machine and freeze for emergencies!

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #22 on: August 09, 2015, 10:02:30 PM »

MgoSam

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #23 on: August 09, 2015, 10:20:56 PM »
Any tips on grilling or baking pizza? I haven't done it before on my own, but love pizza and willing to try.

I live close to a TJ and might buy their dough for the first attemp, do I just spread it out into a pizza shape, put it in a preheated oven for a few minutes and then pull it up and add pizza sauce, cheese, and toppings and then bake for about 8-11 minutes?

Any additional tips?

happy

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #24 on: August 10, 2015, 05:00:17 AM »
MOO pizza is a winner in our house.

GerryS

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #25 on: August 11, 2015, 11:38:12 AM »
Any tips on grilling or baking pizza? I haven't done it before on my own, but love pizza and willing to try.

I live close to a TJ and might buy their dough for the first attemp, do I just spread it out into a pizza shape, put it in a preheated oven for a few minutes and then pull it up and add pizza sauce, cheese, and toppings and then bake for about 8-11 minutes?

Any additional tips?

Here's my method for Grilled Pizza...Like a stir fry, prep work is the key...Oh and I'm using Trader Joe's ingredients

1) Get out dough and let sit at room temp for 30min on a floured surface per the package directions
2) Go turn on your grill (i use gas) and get it screaming hot
3) Cut/prep your toppings up and put them in little glass bowls
4) Adjust grill heat so that you achieve a temp of 450-500F
5) Stretch out your dough, make sure to flour the dough ball, your hands and your work surface. I use a large wooden cutting board
6) Take your dough and your toppings out to grill. Make sure you bring a spoon/ladle for your sauce if using
7) Throw dough onto grill and start saucing and topping your pie
8) should be ready in 8-12 minutes.
9) just watch the dough to prevent burning. charring is good, burning is bad. I'll use a large spatula or my fingers to rotate the pizza around

Good luck!!

jacksonvasey

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #26 on: August 11, 2015, 11:43:59 AM »
I like to hit the grocery store salad bar to get just enough of different toppings, rather than have to buy a whole container of mushrooms, or a whole pepper, or pack of pepperoni, etc...even though the salad bar unit price is fairly high, I end up with a lot less waste, so I come out ahead.

crazy jane

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #27 on: August 11, 2015, 11:53:00 AM »
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Workingmomsaves

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #28 on: August 11, 2015, 01:07:49 PM »
I like to hit the grocery store salad bar to get just enough of different toppings, rather than have to buy a whole container of mushrooms, or a whole pepper, or pack of pepperoni, etc...even though the salad bar unit price is fairly high, I end up with a lot less waste, so I come out ahead.

This is what i do too.  Last time it cost me around $0.50 for pepperoni rather than 3 bucks for a bag.

patrat

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #29 on: August 11, 2015, 01:38:04 PM »
Been doing this for a while, gives you full control of the ingredients! It was hard enough to find (let alone afford) natural/organic pizza in the Front Range, and now we live in rural New Jersey...

I also make convenience pizzas, usually just a basic pepporoni with parbaked crust that I stock the freezer with. Just as fast as going out for fast food, and fairly cheap. Good homemade pizza will also make you a popular entertainer for house guests, because everyone likes pizza yet few make it - meanwhile you can afford to feed your guests.

One of my house favorites is a German inspired pizza made with cabbage, mustard, and sage. Sounds weird but it works, search "patrat german pizza" on all recipes.

Patrick A

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #30 on: August 11, 2015, 03:57:28 PM »
Any tips on grilling or baking pizza? I haven't done it before on my own, but love pizza and willing to try.

I live close to a TJ and might buy their dough for the first attemp, do I just spread it out into a pizza shape, put it in a preheated oven for a few minutes and then pull it up and add pizza sauce, cheese, and toppings and then bake for about 8-11 minutes?

Any additional tips?

Here's my method for Grilled Pizza...Like a stir fry, prep work is the key...Oh and I'm using Trader Joe's ingredients

1) Get out dough and let sit at room temp for 30min on a floured surface per the package directions
2) Go turn on your grill (i use gas) and get it screaming hot
3) Cut/prep your toppings up and put them in little glass bowls
4) Adjust grill heat so that you achieve a temp of 450-500F
5) Stretch out your dough, make sure to flour the dough ball, your hands and your work surface. I use a large wooden cutting board
6) Take your dough and your toppings out to grill. Make sure you bring a spoon/ladle for your sauce if using
7) Throw dough onto grill and start saucing and topping your pie
8) should be ready in 8-12 minutes.
9) just watch the dough to prevent burning. charring is good, burning is bad. I'll use a large spatula or my fingers to rotate the pizza around

Good luck!!


Grilled pizza is great, adds some good flavor and cooks the crust in a new way.  The way I do it varies slightly though.  I like to form my pizza from the dough ball, lightly olive oil one side, and then I put that side directly on to the already heated grill (open it up, flip the dough down from your peel).  Keep it open on almost high heat and watch the dough bubble up and cook -- and then flip it after the bottom is grilled but not burnt.  As soon as you flip it, add all your ingredients and shut the grill to allow them to melt.  Sometimes if I end up throwing the pizza under the broiler to get the ingredients a bit more cooked, but generally this method yields delicious results and can be fun to watch too.

N

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #31 on: August 13, 2015, 08:58:51 PM »
yeah, I make a lot of pizza.

aside from pita, we also use levash bread which is like a larger, thinner pita or a thicker breadier tortilla :) I can get a package of 6 for 1$ so its inexpensive and then quick to bake them with cheese and sauce and whatever toppings or spices.

I also tried using some italian 00 flour, which yielded some extremely tasty crusts. that was fun.

dantownehall

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #32 on: August 14, 2015, 08:15:25 AM »
I like to hit the grocery store salad bar to get just enough of different toppings, rather than have to buy a whole container of mushrooms, or a whole pepper, or pack of pepperoni, etc...even though the salad bar unit price is fairly high, I end up with a lot less waste, so I come out ahead.

This is what i do too.  Last time it cost me around $0.50 for pepperoni rather than 3 bucks for a bag.

I love this idea!  Will definitely save me some money.

happy

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #33 on: August 17, 2015, 09:39:14 PM »
Since pizza is a regular event in our house,  I buy bacon by the budget kg  ($5.99 - great price for Australia), pepperoni by the stick, then slice up the pepperoni, and freeze it and  the bacon in portions for 1 night of pizza.  I buy made up pizza sauce but freeze the leftover in its plastic container for the next time.

cerebus

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #34 on: August 17, 2015, 10:36:14 PM »
We make pizza once in a while - when I can remember. It takes some effort to source the ingredients and we normally cook what we have so mozzarella always means a trip to the shop.

My tomato sauce recipe I got from a friend is quite delicious:
Sweat onion and garlic in butter
Add a tin of tomatoes and a cup of chicken stock. Simmer for 10 minutes.
Add a tsp sugar, Worcestershire sauce, a small amount of fish sauce, parsley, seasoning.
Puree with a hand blender.

I like to do a pesto and tomato topping with fresh basil from the garden. Also caramelized onion (with balsamic vinegar) and feta cheese is lovely.


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Hamster

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #35 on: August 18, 2015, 01:43:29 AM »
Our most recent creation. Got a big charred bubble of deliciousness.
olive oil, garlic, basil, tomato, and fresh mozz.

Drakmon

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #36 on: August 18, 2015, 12:41:56 PM »
My wife and I took a pizza-making class from Pizza A Casa (http://pizzaschool.com/) about four years ago, and we've been making pizza at home ever since! In fact, we're making some tonight with fig, gruyere, caramelized onions, and other goodies.

Here's the foolproof crust recipe we use, courtesy of http://www.howsweeteats.com/:

1 1/8 cups warm water
3 teaspoons active dry yeast
1 tablespoon honey
1 tablespoon olive oil
3 cups all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon salt

Let it rise in the bowl, on the warm oven, for 1-1.5 hours (put a towel over the bowl). Toss it on the baking round (or sheet) and form it with your hands. Bake with toppings at 425F for 20-25 minutes. Perfection!

Our favorite summer pizza recipe? Also from the same food blog! Sweet Corn, Zucchini and Mozzarella: http://www.howsweeteats.com/2014/07/sweet-corn-zucchini-and-fresh-mozzarella-pizza/
« Last Edit: August 18, 2015, 12:43:58 PM by Drakmon »

eostache

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #37 on: August 18, 2015, 02:56:04 PM »
I made my own pizza yesterday.

I didn't have yeast on hand so I looked online for a yeast-free crust recipe. I found a recipe that uses baking powder. I added dried basil and oregano flakes to the crust dough. I don't have a pizza pan so I used a couple of my cast iron fry pans and made the pizzas up in them. Sauce from a jar of store brand spaghetti sauce. Topped with onions, bell peppers and mushrooms, mozzarella cheese. They were great!

Hamster

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #38 on: August 18, 2015, 04:53:32 PM »
One other tip on yeast. If you are using active dry, think about instant yeast instead - like SAF instant yeast.

You don't have to hydrate it first (just add it directly to the dry flour), so it makes things much simpler, and you can use 25% less than you would with active dry yeast, or a fraction of what you would use with fresh yeast.

For rustic breads, you arguably get less interfering flavor from the yeast, and more flavor from the bread since you can use a bit less yeast.

We buy one pound packages of it for a few dollars at our local Cash and Carry - which supplies restaurants.

Whatever you do, don't pay the ridiculous unmustachian prices for the tiny foil packages of yeast at the grocery stores. It is a huge ripoff when you consider you can get a whole pound of instant dry yeast for $5 or less. It lasts us a year in a tupperware container in the fridge.

cerebus

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #39 on: August 19, 2015, 01:09:04 AM »
I made my own pizza yesterday.

I didn't have yeast on hand so I looked online for a yeast-free crust recipe. I found a recipe that uses baking powder. I added dried basil and oregano flakes to the crust dough. I don't have a pizza pan so I used a couple of my cast iron fry pans and made the pizzas up in them. Sauce from a jar of store brand spaghetti sauce. Topped with onions, bell peppers and mushrooms, mozzarella cheese. They were great!

There's also a great recipe for dough that uses just plain yogurt and flour:
http://www.theslowroasteditalian.com/2014/02/2-ingredient-pizza-dough-recipe.html

Made it recently and was impressed with the results.

fitfrugalfab

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #40 on: August 19, 2015, 09:35:37 AM »
One other tip on yeast. If you are using active dry, think about instant yeast instead - like SAF instant yeast.

You don't have to hydrate it first (just add it directly to the dry flour), so it makes things much simpler, and you can use 25% less than you would with active dry yeast, or a fraction of what you would use with fresh yeast.

For rustic breads, you arguably get less interfering flavor from the yeast, and more flavor from the bread since you can use a bit less yeast.

We buy one pound packages of it for a few dollars at our local Cash and Carry - which supplies restaurants.

Whatever you do, don't pay the ridiculous unmustachian prices for the tiny foil packages of yeast at the grocery stores. It is a huge ripoff when you consider you can get a whole pound of instant dry yeast for $5 or less. It lasts us a year in a tupperware container in the fridge.

Thanks for this tip. Definitely going to keep my eye out for this. I can order it on Amazon for $13.85 16 oz. with free shipping. How does that compare to the cost when you get it at your Cash and Carry?

Hamster

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #41 on: August 19, 2015, 11:52:28 AM »
One other tip on yeast. If you are using active dry, think about instant yeast instead - like SAF instant yeast.

You don't have to hydrate it first (just add it directly to the dry flour), so it makes things much simpler, and you can use 25% less than you would with active dry yeast, or a fraction of what you would use with fresh yeast.

For rustic breads, you arguably get less interfering flavor from the yeast, and more flavor from the bread since you can use a bit less yeast.

We buy one pound packages of it for a few dollars at our local Cash and Carry - which supplies restaurants.

Whatever you do, don't pay the ridiculous unmustachian prices for the tiny foil packages of yeast at the grocery stores. It is a huge ripoff when you consider you can get a whole pound of instant dry yeast for $5 or less. It lasts us a year in a tupperware container in the fridge.

Thanks for this tip. Definitely going to keep my eye out for this. I can order it on Amazon for $13.85 16 oz. with free shipping. How does that compare to the cost when you get it at your Cash and Carry?
My wife bought our last batch. She said it was $5 or less for 16oz. The link in the post you quoted has 16 oz for $5.95 plus shipping.

fitfrugalfab

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Re: Saving Some Serious Cash by Making Your Own Pizza
« Reply #42 on: August 20, 2015, 07:05:02 AM »
One other tip on yeast. If you are using active dry, think about instant yeast instead - like SAF instant yeast.

You don't have to hydrate it first (just add it directly to the dry flour), so it makes things much simpler, and you can use 25% less than you would with active dry yeast, or a fraction of what you would use with fresh yeast.

For rustic breads, you arguably get less interfering flavor from the yeast, and more flavor from the bread since you can use a bit less yeast.

We buy one pound packages of it for a few dollars at our local Cash and Carry - which supplies restaurants.

Whatever you do, don't pay the ridiculous unmustachian prices for the tiny foil packages of yeast at the grocery stores. It is a huge ripoff when you consider you can get a whole pound of instant dry yeast for $5 or less. It lasts us a year in a tupperware container in the fridge.

Thanks for this tip. Definitely going to keep my eye out for this. I can order it on Amazon for $13.85 16 oz. with free shipping. How does that compare to the cost when you get it at your Cash and Carry?
Glad it is helpful. I learned about it from a friend who used to work in a bakery. He does fundraisers for his church where he will make several hundred pizzas at a time, so he has the bread thing down.

My wife bought our last batch. She said it was $5 or less for 16oz. The link in the post you quoted has 16 oz for $5.95 plus shipping.

I saw that and shipping came out to $6. I always try to avoid shipping costs so I'll keep my eye out in stores now for sure.

 

Wow, a phone plan for fifteen bucks!