White Pizza Topping

Yo!  Tony, gimme a slice o’ dat pie.

In truth, I did hear these kinds of exchanges between fellas in Brooklyn.  When in Carroll Gardens. . . .  In an attempt to illustrate the point, when  Smith W 9th Streets in Carroll Gardens, BrooklynBobby DeNiro’s character in “Goodfellas” is waving the Renne Russo character down the block to pick up some dresses and the camera pulls back to reveal the street signs of Smith and W 9th, well, that’s the other side of the block where I lived.  Carroll Gardens, capisci?

At the minimum white pizza ought to start, or at least include, ricotta cheese.  I’ve seen it be at its worst a poorly made cream sauce with parmesan cheese (not Italian) and too much garlic.  Ooof!

I really do love a great white pizza.  I have discovered more and more, outside of NYC, if I want that, I have to make it.  So, I did.

It’s all about the basics

This is the basic recipe I use.  It has the fabulous ability to adapt to whatever I add or subtract from it as long as ricotta is the base.  Do your best or worst, whichever is the one you like.  Post some pictures.

You can find my pizza dough recipe here.

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White Pizza

Not a tomato in sight (unless you want one) white pizza captures a different aspect of what pizza can be.  It can handle a few toppings but the jewel is the cheese mix.  That's the secret to make this pizza sing.

Course Main Course
Cuisine Italian
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 30 minutes
Cooling down 4 minutes
Total Time 40 minutes
Servings 6
Author Dann Reid

Ingredients

White Pizza Cheese mix

  • 8 oz Whole milk ricotta
  • 4 oz Shredded mozzarella
  • 2 oz Grated Pecorino Romano
  • 2 oz Grated Parmigiano Reggiano Sub Provolone is you wish
  • 2 oz Extra virgin olive oil
  • 1 T Fresh chopped oregano or marjoram Or both!
  • 4 oz Heavy cream
  • q.b.* Salt and pepper

Instructions

Mix the topping

  1. Mix all ingredients together with a wooden spoon or in a mixer on speed 1. Check the seasoning. Cheeses tend toward salty so you might not need salt.

  2. Using an offset spatula, carefully spread the cheese mixture on the rolled dough. The dough will be a bit soft and non-compliant. No worries. Spread the cheese by placing large mounds of the cheese at the center and the even numbers of a clock face. Push the cheese toward the other mounds. If there are a few spots where the cheese 

  3. Place your toppings on top. Bake on a stone and reduce the temperature to 375 degrees. Bake until the crust is done and the cheese turns golden brown and delicious.

Recipe Notes

*q.b. means quanto basta, or as needed.  The cheeses may tend toward salty, so taste the mix before adding additional salt.  Pepper you will almost certainly want. 

These weights are a guide. That means I don’t measure the cheeses for this all that well. I am a stickler for measuring when measuring matters. In the case of this topping, it just does not matter. If you prefer more or less of this or that, make the topping as you wish. You are eating it, not me.

I find it of importance to make sure that some ingredients do not go on pizza raw. Raw peppers or mushrooms contain a lot of moisture and will ruin a pizza by all that water running out onto your pie. Cook them first. Then place the cooked peppers, mushroom, bacon or sausage on the pie. Onions are fine cut thin. I like broccoli on pizza, but I cut mine small so they get well caramelized. Cauliflower too. I avoid sliced tomatoes but do use halved grape tomatoes. Both have an incredible amount of water, but the grape tomatoes, place cut side up, allow the skin to retain the majority of that extra water and it doesn’t ruin the pizza.

A moment of cooking philosophy: Details matter when they are important. Recipes matter for the details. But, sometimes, when they don’t matter and you can make a dinner better as you see it by making it to your tastes, then that is absolutely what you should do. If you prefer pesto and not oregano, use it. If you hate provolone but love gruyere, use it.

white pizza with Zucchini
Pizza can be many shapes and topped with many things. The only real rule is it must taste good.

 

 

 

 

 

 

What is the best corn bread and why is it Charlie Bread?

How to make amazing Charlie Bread

When my wife wanted me to make Charlie bread for the first time, I was pretty sure I knew what I was making: cornbread.

Yes.  But, no. Not really.

Charlie bread is cornbread baked in a cast iron pan and is made rich with creamed corn and sour cream.

 

 

Ingredients

Self-rising corn meal mix

Baking powder

Baking soda

Corn oil

Eggs

Creamed corn

Sour cream

Salt

Pepper

Tools

Whisk

Mixing bowls

Scale or measuring cups and spoons

9″ or 10″ cast iron pan

Substitutions

Bacon fat, as mentioned in the recipe, is a good choice for the pan. You can also use bacon fat, or melted lard, in place of the peanut oil.

Regular canned corn will not perform as well as creamed corn. The starch and liquid are necessary for the right balance.

Fine grain corn meal will work, but the texture will be different.

Storage

Charlie bread freezes very nicely for up to a month as slices. We put them into snap top containers and freeze one piece per container.  That’s perfect for work lunches.

People, time, and memory are fickle actors.  Add food to that and getting it right is a tough task.

I was competing with a beloved grandma and years of fond memories of Charlie bread.  How was I supposed to even twin grandma’s?

13 or so year on I am reminded, on occasion, that it is pretty good but not quite as good as Grandam Doris’.  Fair enough.

Make and bake the Charlie Bread

Heat your oven to 450° F and place the cast iron pan inside to get hot.

Mix your Charlie bread like a muffin, all the liquids together and the dry folded into that.

Remove the cast iron pan from the oven and add a generous portion, 1 tablespoon or so, of fat to the pan.  Lift and tilt the pan to coat the bottom and corner edges of the pan.

Pour the mixed batter into the prepared hot pan and return to the oven until it is done

Remove the pan. Give the pan a jiggle to see if there is a spot where the bread stuck. Use an offset spatula to press the edge of the bread toward the center and do that all the way around the pan. Turn the bread out and cut and eat. It doesn’t get better as it cools which really means it is just fine, but still piping hot is, OH! That’s good.

Charlie bread sliced and already on the table.We find this particularly well suited as the side for chili.

 

 

Charlie Bread

A staple in my wife's family for years and years.  Excellent alone with butter on top or with chili.  Or, pretty much anytime.

Course Bread
Cuisine American
Keyword Best side for chili, Corn bread, Family traditions, Grandma's cooking, Not corn bread
Prep Time 5 minutes
Cook Time 40 minutes
Resting time 5 minutes
Total Time 45 minutes
Servings 8 portions
Author Dann Reid

Ingredients

Make the batter

  • 185 g Corn meal mix-self rising
  • 8 g Baking powder
  • 4 g Baking soda
  • 90 g Corn oil
  • 2 each Eggs
  • 1 each 8 oz can creamed corn
  • 240 g Sour cream
  • Salt and pepper

Instructions

Procedure

  1. Place your 10" cast iron pan in an oven heated to 425°F.

  2. Mix this the muffin method: Corn meal and baking powder in one bowl. Mix the creamed corn, oil, sour cream, and eggs together, pour the wet onto the dry and fold together.

  3. Pour a small amount of corn oil (I use bacon grease) in the pan. Tilt the pan to and fro to cover the bottom of the pan with the oil, pour the Charlie Bread mix into the pan. Bake for 45 minutes or until the top is nicely golden brown.

  4. Remove the pan. Give the pan a jiggle to see if there is a spot where the bread stuck. Use whatever kitchen tool you have to press the edge of the bread toward the center and do that all the way around the pan. Turn the bread out and cut and eat. It doesn’t get better as it cools which really means it is just fine, but still piping hot is, OH! That’s good.

Recipe Notes

I've always felt a few scallions cut very thin would be a great addition to this. But, some things aren't to be fussed with. In my house, this is one of those things.

If you prefer a taller bread, increase the recipe by 50%. It comes out nice and tall.