Making Vito Lacopelli Pizza Dough

After watching his video, twice, I decided it was time to make Vito Lacopelli pizza dough. If you want an authentic pizza dough recipe, you have to follow his to the letter! In order to do this, you need a food scale and measuring cups.

For the perfect pizza dough recipe, you will need to make the poolish. Poolish is made my mixing water, yeast and flour. This will essentially be your yeast that you use a day later with the rest of the ingredients. For the poolish you will need:

  • 300 ml of water
  • 300 gr of flour
  • 5 grams of dry yeast
  • 5 grams of honey

After mixing all the ingredients you place the mixture in an airtight container and leave it in the fridge 16-24 hours. I may have left it in there a little longer because my brain forgets easily.

The next day, I did the remaining steps of Vito Lacopelli pizza dough. For the next part you will need:

  • 700 ml of water (3 cups of water)
  • 1250 gr flour
  • 40 gr salt

The first part is to mix 700 ml of water with the poolish. After incorporating this into a smooth consistency, you add half of the flour and mix some more. Once that is incorporated you add the salt and mix thoroughly. I did not do this step correctly. I mixed it enough but I should have probably done at least a minute or two not 15 seconds or so. Next, you add the remaining flour and create a loose dough ball.

Since I didn’t add enough water, my dough was a little harder. Vito’s dough was stickier so he covered it for 15 minutes and voila! It was perfect. I covered my dough for 20 minutes. The next step was to coat your hands with olive oil (I ran out and used canola) and loosely shape the dough into a round ball. Once you have your dough shape, coat your container or bowl with oil and place the dough inside. Let the dough rise for another 30 minutes then you can cut it into strips and smaller dough balls.

Perfect Pizza Dough Balls

This is where your scale will come in handy. You can make sure that every ball is equal or as close to equal in weight as possible. We aimed for 180 grams for every pizza dough ball. After letting the dough balls rise for two hours, they are ready to be used for pizza. We left out two dough balls and placed the remaining doughs in the freezer. You can freeze the dough overnight and then place them in individual freezer bags.

From Vito’s recipe we got 13 180g pizza doughs. If I added just a tad more water, perhaps I would have gotten more. We will have to try the recipe again and maybe use the mixer. Vito Lacopelli pizza dough came out great! So far, we’ve used it to make “mini burger buns,” bagels, and pizzas. This is the perfect pizza dough recipe for Neapolitan style pizza. Give it a try! You won’t hate it! And you won’t need to buy Walmart pizza dough for a few days at least.

Pizza Fan Club House Build

We recently purchased the Expert Grill Charcoal Pizza Oven from Walmart. My goal is to see if I can build a club house to fit in my new pizza oven on the deck. There is no plans for this build, I’m doing it as I go and changing my mind a thousand times =)

The framing is almost complete. At this point I had to go back to Home Depot for more supplies and to see what options I have for the tiling I want to use inside.

After wasting hours driving from Home Depot to Lowes because only Lowes had the .59cent tiles. I didn’t want to spend a lot of money on this and it was my first time doing tiling.

Now we are up to the the tiling part of this DIY Pizza fan club build. It got really messy for our first time tiling but it wasn’t as bad as I thought it would be =). The next goal is to find something cheap to use on the sides of the house that is waterproof. This has slowed down the build because I can’t decide on what I want to use lol

Can Deer Eat Pizza?

Now that we know that raccoons love pizza, can deer eat pizza too? The short answer is YES! Every animal that has a taste of pizza will love it and want more. This goes for deer as well. One day, after finishing a hike, we went to grab a pizza pie. As we were driving back home and eating our pizza, a few deers passed the road. We stopped for them, rolled down the window and started taking photos. One brave deer turned around and came straight to the car!

What do you do when a deer pulls by your car window? You feed it a piece of your pizza! Not all deer are this friendly, but this lady was probably being fed by someone on a regular basis. She had no issues coming up to me and slobbering her saliva all over my hand and car window. So yes, deer can eat pizza and they love it! I felt bad that we didn’t have more slices to share. As to which restaurant the pie came from, I have no idea. Since the hike was in Rock Hill, I’m assuming it was a pie from Pizza the Rock.

While deer can eat pizza it doesn’t mean you should buy a pie and go looking for one. Deer, and other wildlife, should eat things that they can easily digest and won’t upset their stomachs. Avoid feeding your deer items they are not used to, especially in the winter. This can shock their digestive system and can cause diarrhea and dehydration. We want our deer to live and thrive, not have the runs.

Pizza Oven Steak and Potatoes

Do you have a good pizza oven steak and potatoes recipe? We could just keep making pizzas in our Expert Grill charcoal pizza oven, but what fun would that be? Plenty, actually, but sometimes you need a little variety in your life. And, a chef should always experiment and try new things. No harm in trying, right? Before making our steak, we first made salmon and potatoes in the pizza oven. This was a process, but in the end it was delicious.

Today, we decided to make pizza oven steak and potatoes. Who doesn’t love steak and potatoes? Don’t answer that! It’s not every day that we indulge in this meet, but when we do it’s usually a filet. This time we got two rib-eye steaks. The price was better and the steaks were bigger. More meat, more protein, am I right?

Steak and Potatoes in Pizza Oven

For the steak and potatoes recipe I wanted to use the cast iron skillet but did not want the potatoes to get stuck or burn. So, I decided it was a safer bet to cook them separately in a different pan. After the potatoes were cooked almost all the way, I took them out and put the cast iron in the pizza oven. Once the pan was heated up, I placed the seasoned steaks in. The sizzle was perfect and just what I wanted! After two minutes I flipped the steak and waited another two minutes. Then I placed the potatoes back in with the steak and let them heat up in the skillet. Let’s just say this was the most delicious steak and it was hard to share. We have two cats that love steak and they got a tiny piece as well.

You can cook your steak in a pizza oven, straight on the pizza stone. I don’t like to think about the cleanup afterwords and it won’t give me those grill marks that I like. So, I’ll stick to cooking pizza oven steak and potatoes in the cast iron skillet. Next time, I’ll cook the potatoes in the same pan, for added flavor and to speed up the process.

Can Raccoons Eat Pizza?

I have wondered a few times, can raccoons eat pizza? The answer is, of course, yes! Raccoons love pizza as much as the next New Yorker. Italians visiting us must be horrified when they see a giant pie with so much cheese and sauce. On the other hand, we love it and can’t get enough. Our raccoon city and country dwellers love pizza as well. If you’ve been to the city and didn’t see a raccoon looking for pizza, you’re not looking hard enough.

Our late neighbor found a raccoon kit by the street a few years ago and took it home. He raised her and even let her chew on his toothbrush. Then, when she was old enough, he let her out into the wild. Every year since, Rascal, or her family generation, comes to us when it’s time to have her kits. Once the kits are old enough, they emerge from under our deck and start causing havoc. This year they came out at the right time. We just got our charcoal pizza oven, and they enjoy the leftovers. You can say they are also our taste testers.

When we don’t have any leftover pizza slices to give them, they flip and turn everything on the deck until they find a crumb. Okay, that might exaggerate a bit, but they are little rascals. My tomato plant was overturned and is dead now. The pizza oven and our sliding doors have small raccoon hand prints all over them. Shoes for outside have been chewed on and carried across the deck. Yes, there is nothing cuter than watching raccoons eat pizza! Sure, your baby is adorable but watching a bunch of raccoons fight over pizza and munch on them is priceless.

Is Pizza Greek?

When researching pizza, I started asking myself, is pizza Greek? How do you ask? Well, for one, Naples, Italy, was a Greek settlement. That means Naples wouldn’t have been what it is today without the Greeks. Or it might have taken a little longer to get to where they are today. 

My second observation is that Greeks were creating flatbread dishes called plakous. This flatbread would come with herbs, cheese, and garlic. It was cheap and fast to make, making it popular amongst the settlers and the city’s poor. 

Since Naples is a city by the water, the men were fishermen. According to my research, the wives would prepare a deep bread dish filled with tomato sauce. This sounds like a classing marinara pizza. 

By 1700, the city was bustling with Italians, but were there still Greeks there? In 1738 Lucianos started selling their pizza on the streets. By 1830, the family had their first pizza restaurant. Since the family was Italian, does that make the pizza Italian? 

In the states, an Italian immigrant changed the way we eat. In 1905, Gennaro Lombardi opened the first pizzeria in Little Italy. The love of the flatbread filled with tomato sauce and cheese soon spread over the states, and our passion for pizza expanded.

Is Pizza Greek or Italian or…?

The pizza we consume today in the USA is shaped to what Americans love. Classic Neapolitan pie includes sourdough pizza, cheese, tomato sauce, garlic, and oil. The pies are cooked in a wood-burning stove built from local volcanic rock. The cheese used on classic pies is usually buffalo cheese. This was changed to cow’s mozzarella cheese instead. Woodburning stoves were turned to coal-fired stoves because it was cheaper but produced the same heat and flavor. Today, you might see electric or gas pizza stove ovens in your local pizza stores. 

What do you think? Do you think pizza is Greek or Italian? Or maybe it’s neither. Perhaps the Persians and their flatbreads with dates were making the first dessert pizza.

History of Pizza

Who amongst us knows the history of pizza? I’m not sure anyone knows who started it, but we’re all glad someone thought of it. Today, we eat enough pizza to cover a lot of acres of land. Let’s not get into the logistics. Just believe me because it’s a lot. In New York alone, we have over five thousand pizzerias. With so many choices, how do we go about tasting all of them? Like all things in life, make a checklist and get on it!

All over Europe, different cultures were creating flatbreads with toppings. Everyone from Egypt to Greece and Rome had their version of a savory flatbread dish we now call pizza. Greeks in particular, had a flatbread called plakous. This flatbread would include herbs, cheese, and garlic. I guess we can say they made the first white pie? But did they make the first pizza?

Naples, Italy, was founded in 600 B.C. as a Greek settlement. By 1700s, Naples became a thriving city with plenty of water views and a growing poor population. To feed themselves and others on the street, they sold cheap and versatile flatbread with toppings. These included tomatoes, cheese, oil, anchovies, and garlic. 

In 1738, the Lucianos family created a street-food stand called the Antica Pizzeria Port’Alba. The pizzas were cooked in ovens lined with local volcanic rocks. In 1830, the family moved from the streets and opened their restaurant. This was the first pizza restaurant in the world, as far as we know.

In 1889, King Umberto I and Queen Margherita visited Naples. Legend has it that the pair had a variety of pies at Pizzeria Brandi. It is said that the Queen’s favorite was a pie called pizza mozzarella. This pie included soft white cheese, tomatoes, and basil. If the legend is correct, this pie was renamed, Margherita after the Queen.

History of Pizza in USA 

In the states, a Naples immigrant, Gennaro Lombardi, opened a small grocery store. One of his employees, Antonio Totonno Pero, created pizzas for the store. Were they his recipes or Lombardi’s? Does anyone know? Anyway, these pies were selling like hot cakes, which helped Lambardi open the first pizzeria in NYC called Lambardi’s in 1905. To accommodate his pizza lovers, Lombardi changed his wood-burning stove to charcoal burning, and his buffalo cheese to cow cheese. By 1924, Pero quit and opened his own pizza shop in Coney Island.

While the popularity of pizza might have been widespread in New York, it wasn’t until WWII that it became a popular dish everywhere else. Why, you ask? Soldiers got a taste of Italian pizza and wanted it back home. All over the world, pizza shops would open up in Italian-populated neighborhoods with modernized twists. Domino’s has dominated in the pizza franchise now, with over 17,000 stores in 90 countries.

Today, we have insane pies like pineapples and ham, dessert pizza such as Nutella and strawberry pizza, pasta pies, deep dish, and more! If you can think of it as pizza toppings, someone already tried it. You also have moms making pies with peas. Let’s avoid doing that and stick to normal toppings such as cheese, basil, and garlic. History of pizza is an extensive one but we’re glad that someone thought of it and made it one of our favorite go to meals.

Catskill Pizza Shop: Brio’s Pizzeria

If you’re looking for an excellent Catskill pizza shop, Brio’s Pizzeria is the spot! This restaurant has been feeding its neighborhood since 1973. As you walk in, you see the wood-burning stove in action. Pizza after pizza, dish after dish, cooks for guests in this open brick pizza oven. As for us, we just came for the pizza.

The last time we went hiking in the Catskills, we stopped by Brio’s to grab a pie for the ride home. The pie we chose was covered in sliced tomatoes, basil, cheese, garlic, and oil. Could pizza get any better or be more straightforward? I don’t think so. This is one of their signature pies at Brio’s. It’s simple but so darn delicious!

Three Pies at Brio’s Pizzeria

The second time going to Brio’s Pizzeria, we ordered three pies. This time we got a large fresh tomato, basil, and garlic pie, a personal goal cheese pie, and a mushroom pie. The mushroom pie was loaded with mushrooms on the entire pie and drizzled in truffle oil. This was not my pie but I tried a slice and didn’t care much for it.

The goat cheese personal pie from Brio’s Pizzeria is incredible! I ordered this pie because I love all the veggies they put on it – mushrooms, roasted peppers, and sun-dried tomatoes. This pizza was full of flavors and textures and seasoned just right. Maybe the goat cheese made it salty, but it’s perfect and needs nothing else.

While Brio’s Pizzeria has excellent pizza, they also have other incredible food options on the menu. The choices are endless, from salads, burgers, and wraps to Tex-Mex, fajitas, and burritos! You can dine in or eat outside and enjoy the Catskill views and fresh air. We took our pies to go and ate as we drove back home. Some might say that good pizza is hard to find in upstate NY but Brio’s pizza will prove them wrong! Just make sure you’re there at noon, when they start making pizza!

Brio’s Pizzeria & Restaurant
68 Main St
Phoenicia, NY 12464

HOURS

Open Breakfast,  Lunch and Dinner
Monday-Thursday  9am-10pm

Friday 9am-10:30pm

Saturday 8am-10:30pm

Sunday 8am-10pm

Healthy Pizza Dough Options

Some might say pizza’s healthy and has all the essentials we need. Others will argue that pizza has too many carbs and that carbs are bad that turn into sugar. Carbs can spike our blood pressure and diabetes and cause other health concerns. Some might say that cheese is terrible and makes you fat, but it’s proven that it doesn’t. The issue is with carbs and how to reduce them in your pizza.

Healthy Pizza

Whether you want to cut down on your carbs intake or want to lose weight, there are other healthy pizza dough alternatives that you’ll love. These include using:

  • Cauliflower pizza dough
  • Zucchini crust
  • Broccoli pizza crust
  • Protein crust
  • Pumpkin zucchini crust

These are just a few of the different keto-friendly, low-carb cust options. If you want to eat pizza but not feel guilty about it, choose one of the above products. They can help you enjoy pizza in a new way and can help you make other health-conscience decisions.

You can also make healthy pizza by adding fresh tomatoes instead of canned pizza sauce. Another option is to add more vegetables to your toppings. Peppers, mushrooms, broccoli, and zucchini are some of the low-carb veggie pizza toppings. You can also use healthier pizza sauce options, such as white keto sauce.

Whatever you do, there is no need to give up eating pizza! Instead, get your pizza oven and start experimenting. Make healthy pizza dough options your mission in life at least once a month.

Do You Like Dessert Pizza?

Are you a lover of all things pizza, including dessert pizza? The first time we made a sweet pizza, it was coated in Nutella and sprinkled with berries. This is still one of my favorite dessert pizzas that we make. Over the years, we have made numerous sweet pies, but there are so many more that we should all try! Since we got the Expert Grill Charcoal Pizza Oven, we’ve been experimenting more and having a lot more pizzas. Our new dessert pizza includes pies with strawberry jam, berries, Nutella, and cookie dough with fresh blackberries and frozen fruit.

Some people do not consider dessert pizza an authentic pizza and might even think that it’s a disgrace. Well, if it’s round, there is a dough base, a sweet center, and toppings. I’ll call it pizza all day. When it comes to sweet pizza, you can use raw dough for your crust or ready-made crusts like flatbread. I prefer fresh dough, but I’ve used flatbread and pita bread as alternatives.

If you want to get your juices floating and start making sweet pies, the below list might help to inspire you. Some new dessert pies you should try include:

  • Sweet cream cheese and berries pie
  • Nutella pie with different toppings (ex: fruit, nuts, candy, sprinkles, mini marshmallows)
  • Whipped cream and fruit, nuts, or drizzled chocolate
  • S’mores pie
  • Cherry pie pizza
  • Cinnamon pizza
  • Brownie pie with whipped cream and fruit
  • Banana, brown sugar, and white chocolate pizza pie

These are just a few different sweet pizza options you should try. I think my next pie will include apples, cinnamon, and brown sugar.

Dessert Pizza Crust Options

While I love using pizza dough for the crust part, there are other options you can choose. Some different crusts can be:

  • Cookie dough cooked in a round pan
  • Brownie mixture used as the crust
  • Floured tortilla
  • Flatbread
  • Pita bread
  • Sugar cookie crust

What are some of your favorite dessert pizzas to make? Do you use fresh dough or flatbread for dessert pizza?