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  1. Cast Iron Skillet Pan Pizza Recipe - Yahoo Recipe Search

    Hot Sausage Cast-Iron Skillet Pan Pizza
    Food Network
    Make your favorite pizza at home in your cast-iron skillet. Spicy sausage, chili flakes and honey give sausage pizza a whole new look. While the pizza is in the oven, throw together a salad -- simple mixed greens with balsamic or an acidic, bright fennel salad with olive and arugula.
    Iron Skillet Pizza
    Food52
    My best version of a deep-dish pizza, made in an 11-inch cast-iron skillet. This takes some advance planning, if you make it as I prefer to; I like to make the dough a day in advance and let it mature in the fridge overnight as it slowly rises. I find the crust develops more flavor with this method. I love the butter in this crust; it makes the final crust flaky and light, which is important in a deep-dish pizza. The sauce in this recipe makes more than you'll need for a single pie. This pizza is versatile; it adapts well to vegetarian preparations, for example. We love a spinach and mushroom pizza, using this crust, sauce, and cheese. Obviously, you wouldn't be browning pork sausage for a vegetarian pie, but you might still be sauteeing mushrooms; if so, saute them in the iron skillet and retain any remaining olive oil in the pan. If you're not sauteeing anything in the skillet, be sure to coat the bottom with 2 Tbsp. olive oil. I've been trying to perfect a deep-dish pizza for years; this is my best version to date. - adashofbitters
    Simple Pizza Dough
    Yummly
    This is a straightforward pizza dough recipe for stress-free homemade pizza. This recipe works especially well in a pre-heated cast iron skillet or in a pan for Detroit-style pizza. To make your own pizza sauce, try our Classic Tomato Sauce recipe!
    Skillet Galette With Creamed Greens and Parmesan
    Food52
    Savory galettes are a perfect way to bake a pie-like main course, in less overall steps. They’re ideal for a cozy brunch or lunch, or a comforting, simple dinner. This twist on a classic galette is baked in a skillet, which gives it the appearance of a single crust pie without all the fussiness of crimping the edges of the pastry, or more time-consuming techniques like par-baking. Like a classic galette, the edges of the crust (I use this recipe for my homemade crust) are folded over simply to gently encase the filling. But instead of being baked as a free-form pie on a baking sheet, it’s baked in a cast-iron skillet. The cast iron of a vessel like Le Creuset’s Signature Enameled Cast-Iron Skillet assists in browning the crust evenly while it bakes, eliminating the need for a baking steel or pizza stone to ensure a crisp, sog-free bottom. In short, a cast-iron skillet is an amazing alternative to a pie pan for anyone who struggles with soggy or blonde bottomed pies. Plus, a 10.25-inch skillet is the perfect size to feed 4 to 6 people. This galette is a rich and hearty combination of sweet leeks and lots of greens (any kind you have on hand will work). The mixture is cooked down slightly in a creamy sauce—think of it like a toasty gratin, wrapped in pastry. If you can’t find leeks, you can substitute an equal weight of just about any onion, just remember that larger onions will take longer to cook down to the same wilted, softened texture you’re looking for (more like 15 minutes). While this galette is best served fresh and warm from the oven, room temperature leftovers are also delightful (if there are any, that is). You can also wrap leftover slices in plastic wrap, then a layer of foil, and freeze for up to 1 month. When you’re ready to eat, thaw the leftovers overnight, unwrap them, and refresh the galette by toasting both sides in a hot skillet for 2 to 4 minutes each. I like to serve this skillet galette alongside a big green salad, something bright and tart, or with just about any soup. Check out the full Skillet Galette episode of Bake it Up a Notch for more ideas.
    Savory Apple Tarte Flambée
    Food52
    This savory pizza combines the elements of a classic Alsatian tarte flambée—crème fraîche, bacon, and raw onion—with sugared apple slices, a touch inspired by a Dorie Greenspan recipe in Baking Chez Moi . Use any pizza dough you like. My preference is the Lahey no-knead dough. I have the best results with pizza at home when I use my baking steel, but I have made this on both a sheet pan and in a 9-inch cast-iron skillet. A cast-iron skillet is preferable to the sheet pan—I had trouble getting this pizza crisp on a sheet pan. The photos above show two methods: sheet pan and cast-iron skillet. Recipe can be scaled up as needed.
    Bar Pizza-It's What You Crave
    Food52
    There has never been a more one-of-a-kind pizza like the bar pizza. For the most part they are never good, many times they are awful, but that has never stopped anybody from ordering one. Patrons order them because they are drinking. Combine it with hunger and it makes these pizzas far better then they would ever be if a shot of better judgement was in hand. Without exception a bar pizza reigns over the pink pickled eggs languishing in the murky liquid of the large glass jar back by the whisky. Bar pizzas are also infinitely better then the microwavable cups of Spaghetti-Os or the burritos ensconced in a cardboard tortilla. Even so, that doesn't make them good. Here is the catch, in Indiana this food exists and maintains a life all its own because in Indiana if a bar sells liquor by the drink it has to be able to serve food to a minimum of 25 people at all times. On top of that many bars(mostly working class bars) don't have room for a kitchen much less the money for one. To get around this law most bar fly type establishments bring in a microwave, a toaster oven labeled as a pizza oven, or a snack rack where pork rinds rule. Sporks and disposable tableware abide, as do paper towels used as napkins. It is less then the bare minimum and ordering anything while the bartender is busy is likely to make him/her hate you. In the moment though, when hunger and alcohol meet, a bar pizza is the best pizza ever. It doesn't happen often but it does happen enough that people continue to order them. If all things aline, it hits the sweet spot—that meaty place on the bat that makes hitting a home run feel effortless. In food speak it is the moment when something is at its best, it is perfectly ripe for eating, and waiting longer is to watch perfection in its decline. Here is the problem, why would I want to make one of these awful pizzas at home? If I do make them at home it doesn't mean I am drinking at home, well not often anyway. It means I have kids, kids that want pizza—all the time. I make a great pizza dough. I make great pizza but then there are those nights where I don't want too. It is readily apparent to me why I need to perfect this pizza. Make it a dinner everyone requests on any given night. The point is, this is a great pizza to have in your back pocket and I never would have thought much about it until I read an article at Serious Eats. At that moment I knew I was going to start making bar pizzas, I was diving in deep and going for it, and I did. Like lots of recipes though, and maybe even more so, this one takes practice. Myself, I always make a recipe three times before I give up on it and in this case it took all three times. It's okay, there is nothing wrong with eating your mistakes when it comes to food. Besides it is not a lot of work and here is why. My kids love spaghetti and there is rarely a day I don't have a homemade tomato sauce of some kind in the fridge. Bacon, ham, salami, or even pepperoni are always in the deli drawer. I almost always have some sort of mozzarella too, either fresh or grated. I have taken too keeping tortillas in the freezer for quesadillas, so adding tortillas as pizza crusts to the list of uses is a plus. . Even so, if you had none of these specific ingredients you have something, say eggs, ham, and gruyere. If not you won't make this pizza anyway. But as I said, I am looking for the sweet spot, with practice I found it, and ever since making bar pizzas is like effortlessly hitting one out of the park. 1. When it is time to sauce the tortilla put a dollop of sauce in the middle of the tortilla and using the back of the spoon spiral your way to the outer edge. If this were a regular pizza I would tell you to stop short of the edge by about 1/2-inch but with this kind of pizza take the ingredients to the edge. It keeps the tortilla from being charred beyond recognition. 2. I have used all kinds of pans to make this pizza, stainless steel, enamel, cast iron and a comal (pictured). I like the camol best but I also know not everyone has a comal. I made these in a 12-inch cast iron skillet for a long time before I started using the comal. I use a comal simply for ease of access to the tortilla. I makes the pizza easier to assemble. 3. Turn on the broiler before taking anything out of the fridge or putting a pan on the stove. It needs time to get hot. 4. Keep all the ingredients at pans edge. These go fast and you have to be ready with the ingredients. 5. It is important to brown the the tortilla deeply before turning it. If it isn’t brown enough the pizza will lack the crunch that makes it so good. 6. Place the top oven rack 7 to 8 inches from the broiler. This prevents the pizza from cooking to fast and keeps the edges from burning.