Thursday, March 28, 2013

Making Homemade Italian Pizza

Last week, our new friend taught us how to make homemade, authentic, and delicious Italian pizza. He made it look very easy, but yesterday was the first day we tried to make it ourselves. In fact, it's not hard to make your own pizza and it's really fun! I think the hardest part is making the dough (pasta as they call it here) from scratch. Here's a little step-by-step in case you want to try making Italian pizza at home.

1. Pour a packet of yeast into a cup and add lukewarm water to it. Also add a bit of sugar to it, since sugar is a "friend" or "amico" of yeast. Stir thoroughly and wait for the yeast to rise.



Yeast for the Pasta (dough)




2. While waiting for the yeast to rise, pour about 500 grams of flour (type 0) into a bowl. Add around 4 teaspoons of salt to the flour and stir in. Salt is an amico of flour, but a "nemico" or "enemy" of yeast. This awesome terminology is all from our Italian amico, by the way.

Flour or "Farina"

3. After your yeast has risen a bit, stir it into the flour. Knead the dough with your hands and add water as needed (but try not to add too much water). Place the dough on a firm surface and knead it and slap it into the table for about 10 minutes (or until the dough starts cleaning the table and no longer leaves bits of residue behind).

Knead the dough

As seen in the picture above, just act like a hand model and place your hand gently on the dough....just kidding! You have to slap that dough around.

4. Place the dough into a pot or plastic bin and cover it with a damp and warm towel. Leave the dough in a warm place to rise for about 3-4 hours. You can let the pasta rise for longer (about a day) but then you'll just use less yeast for the recipe.

Dough covered with warm towel


5. After the dough has risen sufficiently, remove the towel and separate the dough (cut it in half if you want to make 2 pizzas, for example). Start rolling the dough into the shapes that you want with either your hands or a rolling pin. You can put some flour on your hands so that they don't stick to the dough. Before you place the dough into pans, lightly oil the pans with some olive oil.

The dough rolled out into pans

6. Sauce the pizzas. We used store-bought tomato sauce for ours.

Saucy!

7. Here's the fun part! Add whatever toppings you want. For our first pizza, we added pepperoni (salame piccante) and mozzarella cheese. For the second pizza, we added fresh basil and buffalo mozzarella. We may have added too much cheese (is that even a thing?) because it spilled over onto the crust a bit. Pro tip: Drizzle a bit of good quality olive oil over the pizzas before cooking.

Assembled Pizzas with Toppings


8. Hopefully your oven is preheated by now, at about the hottest setting, short of broiling. Place pizzas in and take them out when the cheese is golden and bubbly (for us that was around 16 minutes).

Pepperoni Pizza

Buffalo Mozzarella Pizza
9. Enjoy that delicious pizza that you made all by yourself!

And now you know how to make your very own authentic Italian pizza. I imagine I'll be making this many more times in the future, and hopefully I'll continue to improve my pizza-making skills.

Italian phrase for the day: Che pizza che sei! This literally means "What a pizza you are!"  Now, this sounds like a cute term of endearment, but it actually means "You're a pain in the ***."  So there you have it.

Ciao a tutti,
Susie

Monday, March 18, 2013

Bolzano, Bressanone, and Maranza


Hello fellows and ladies,

Sorry I haven't updated my blog in a while! I'll have to remedy that now. In the last few weeks, we've gone on a few trips--to Bolzano and to the mountains (Maranza & Bressanone). Our trip to the mountains was even accompanied by real Italians! Here we go...

Bolzano:
Bolzano is the capital of South Tyrol here in Northern Italy. The city itself is a unique mixture of Italian and Austrian culture (quite a bit like Trento). In Bolzano, they speak Italian, German, and Ladin.

In the city center, you'll find Walther Square, which has a statue of a German minstrel named Walther von der Vogelweide.

Walther Square in Bolzano       


Statue of Walther von der Vogelweide  





Walther Square also has a lovely gothic church--the Assumption of Our Lady Cathedral. We went inside to check it out, but ended up leaving because there was a wedding going on.

Assumption of Our Lady Cathedral


While we were in the city, we ate lunch at a cafe in the square called Walthers'. I'd say the food was fairly average, but the dessert was buonissimo! It was an espresso mousse that was very creamy and flavorful.

Espresso Mousse from Walthers'
Now, one of the reasons we took a day trip to Bolzano was that we wanted to get Tyson's dad a Harley-Davidson shirt (mission accomplished), but even more importantly we wanted to see Ötzi the Iceman! While in Trento, we met some archaeologists who recommended that we go to the South Tyrol Museum of Archaeology to see him and they were right. The iceman is a must-see while you're in Bolzano.

So where's the picture of Ötzi? Well, unfortunately pictures of the iceman are not allowed, but I did look up this picture on the internet for you.

Ötzi the Iceman

 Who is Ötzi? He's a man who lived around 3,300 BCE and he is Europe's oldest mummy (through natural means). There is still some speculation as to his cause of death, but it may have been from an arrowhead wound in his shoulder or a blow to the head. It's speculated that his arm is in such a strange position because he was trying to stem the flow of blood from the wound.

Ötzi, as he may have looked in life

 We also checked out the rest of the museum, which included such delights as a replica of a Roman road and exhibits on the Rhaetians (an Alpine tribe).


Tyson's masterpiece (but it's not in Rhaetian?)

We played a Roman game of Delta




 Overall, I quite enjoyed Bolzano and I would like to go there again when the weather warms up.

Maranza & Bressanone: 
We were invited by our new, wonderful Italian friends to visit the mountains with them. The scenery was breathtaking and the weather was surprisingly warm/sunny. We walked around and enjoyed the view--

Maranza in March

Maranza
 We stopped for some German food and beer--
German Restaurant in Maranza
When we were walking around we came upon a farm that had a bunch of baby animals like these capretti (baby goats)--

Capretti

After Maranza, we went and checked out Bressanone.

Duomo di Bressanone
We went inside the Duomo di Bressanone and it was beautiful:

Inside the Duomo

Bello

We enjoyed walking down by this river towards the end of our trip:



Well, that's all for now...

A presto,
Susie