The Pizza Bible: The World’s Favorite Pizza Styles, from Neapolitan, Deep-Dish, Wood-Fired, Sicilian, Calzones and Focaccia to New York, New Haven, Detroit, and More

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Description

A comprehensive guide to making pizza, covering nine different regional styles–including Neapolitan, Roman, Chicago, and Californian–from 12-time world Pizza Champion Tony Gemignani. Everyone loves pizza! From fluffy Sicilian pan pizza to classic Neapolitan margherita with authentic charred edges, and from Chicago deep-dish to cracker-thin, the pizza spectrum is wide and wonderful, with something to suit every mood and occasion. And with so many fabulous types of pie, why commit to just one style? The Pizza Bible is a complete master class in making delicious, perfect, pizzeria-style pizza at home, with more than seventy-five recipes covering every style you know and love, as well as those you’ve yet to fall in love with. Pizzaiolo and twelve-time world pizza champion Tony Gemignani shares all his insider secrets for making amazing pizza in home kitchens. With The Pizza Bible, you’ll learn the ins and outs of starters, making dough, assembly, toppings, and baking, how to rig your home oven to make pizza like the pros, and all the tips and tricks that elevate home pizza-making into a craft.

Additional information

Weight 1.42 kg
Dimensions 2.8 × 21.98 × 26.93 cm
PubliCanadanadation City/Country

USA

by

Format

Hardback

Language

Pages

320

Publisher

Year Published

2014-10-28

Imprint

ISBN 10

1607746050

About The Author

TONY GEMIGNANI is the chef and owner of seven restaurants: Tony's Pizza Napoletana, Capo's, and Tony's Coal-Fired Pizza in San Francisco, Pizza Rock in Sacramento and Las Vegas, Tony's of North Beach and Slice House by Tony Gemignani in Rohnert Park. He's also the co-owner of the International School of Pizza in San Francisco. Gemignani has been making pizza for over 20 years and holds an impressive set of awards.

“The Best Pizzeria in America: Tony’s Pizza Napoletana” —Larry Olmstead, Forbes Magazine   “[Tony Gemingnani] approaches the craft of making pizza dough with the same intelligence and expertise as that of a pro brew master concocting an artisanal ale.” —Publishers Weekly   “A cookbook we’re looking forward to this fall.” —Tasting Table   “One of the most anticipated cookbooks of ll 2014” —Eater National   “Tony Gemignani has one jealousy-inducing resume. It's full of phrases like ‘World Champion’ and ‘Best in America.’ And get this: it all relates to pizza.” —Food Republic“You’ll never look at a pizza the same way again.” —Santa Rosa Press Democrat“One-stop shopping for your deepest pizza desires.” —Mike DeSimone and Jeff Jenssen, Huffington Post

Table Of Content

Respect the Craft     The Master Class    Gearing Up   Master Class Shopping List   Part One: Theory   Ingredients   Part Two: Practice   Day One   Day Two  Day Three   Regional American    Master Dough with Starter  Tiga and Poolish Starters   Master Dough Without Starter  New Yorker   New York–New Jersey Tomato Sauce Sweet Fennel Sausage     Calabrese Honey Sausage   Casing Sausage  New Haven with Clams   New Jersey Tomato Pie  Detroit Red Top   St. Louis   Chicago   Chicago Deep-Dish Dough  Chicago Stuffed Dough   Deep-Dish Tomato Sauce   Chicago Deep-Dish with Calabrese and Fennel Sausages   Chicago Deep Dish with Spinach and Ricotta   Fully Stuffed   Cast-Iron Skillet    Cracker-Thin Dough   Cracker-Thin with Fennel Sausage   Cracker-Thin Tomato Sauce   Frank Nitti   Italian Stallion Italian Beef   Italian Beef Sandwich   Chicago-Inspired Cocktails   Sicilian    Sicilian Dough with Starter Sicilian Dough Without Starter   Parbaking Sicilian Dough  The Brooklyn   Sicilian Tomato Sauce   Pepperoni and Sausage   Burratina di Margherita     Purple Potato and Pancetta   La Regina   Grandma Early Girl Tomato Sauce   Quattro Forni  California Style    Cal-Italia   Multigrain Dough   Honey Pie  Eddie Muenster Guanciale and Quail Egg   Campari Organic Three Cheese   Eggplant and Olive   Fig, Almond, and Monterey Jack  Organic Dough     Khorasan Dough   Einkorn Dough   Sprouted Wheat Dough   Napoletana    Napoletana Dough   Napoletana Tomato Sauce   Handmade Mozzarella   Wood-Fired Pizza Basics   Wood-Fired Oven Baking    Home-Oven Broiler Method   Margherita   Margherita Extra   Marinara   Mastunicola   Regional Italian  Lucca    Rimini   Calabrese “Diavola”   Quattro Anchovy   Sardinia   Pizza Romana   Romana Dough  Global    Barcelona  München   Dubliner     Parisian   Greco   Grilled    Dough for Grilling  Grilled Pizza Master Recipe   Steak Lover’s   Insalata   St-Germain BBQ Chicken   Wrapped and Rolled    Calzone with Meatballs or Spinach   Mortadella and Cheese Calzonewich   The Bow Tie   Pepperoli Sausage Rol   Two Cool Things to Do with Leftover Dough   Meatballs   Focaccia and Bread    Focaccia   Focaccina   Ciabatta   After-School Ciabatta Pizza   Baker’s Percentages Chart   Measurement Conversion Charts   Sources   Acknowledgments   Index

Excerpt From Book

RESPECT THE CRAFTPizza is simple. It’s dough, tomato, cheese, and toppings. But as someone who has devoted more than half of my life to it, I can tell you that, like all really great, really simple things, pizza is infinite. I’m still learning, still refining, still trying to make it even better every single day. And what I can tell you for sure is that pizza doesn’t come down to just recipes or formulas. It’s a craft.  That one word—that’s why I wanted to write this book. There are hundreds of pizza books, blogs, and websites filled with thousands of recipes out there. Do we really need another one? I thought about this a lot, and here’s where I ended up: when I teach home cooks and certify chefs and pizzaiolos, it’s less about recipes and more about inspiring people to master the craft of pizza—the techniques, the reasons to choose one ingredient over another, the art of “reading” the dough as you mix, shape, top, and bake it.  Anyone can hand you a pizza recipe, and if that recipe is halfway decent, chances are you can make yourself a perfectly good pizza for dinner tonight in your own kitchen with no special equipment and not much preparation. But that’s not where I want to take you. I want to get you all the way to five-star, killer-pizzeria-quality pizza. I want you to master any style you love—whether it’s Chicago deep-dish or cracker-thin, a big, fluffy Sicilian pan pizza or a classic Neapolitan margherita with that authentic char blistering the edges—right in your own kitchen with whatever oven you’ve got.  Is that really possible? Can you actually do all that without a real pizza oven? That’s the question I get asked most often. Believe it or not, you can. It’s not your oven. It’s the ingredients and the techniques you use, and I’m going to give you every piece of ingredient and technique advice you’ll need to succeed.  But if you truly want to get all the way to rocking restaurant-style pizza at home, there’s one thing I’m going to ask you to commit to. It’s the motto that runs across the front of my menu, and the three words etched on the door of my restaurants. Hey, I even had it tattooed right onto my hands. Respect the craft. Craft is the difference between good and great. It takes a few extra steps, the right equipment, a little more time, and a fair amount of practice. But if you’re up for it, the payoff is golden.  So I’m going to start by asking you to try something a little unusual for a cookbook. I want you to read all the way through page 19 before you try a single recipe. And then I’m inviting you to take a Master Class where we make your first pizza together—and maybe even take that class a few more times before you graduate to trying all the great stuff in the rest of the book and eventually coming up with your own variations and improvisations.  That’s what I mean by respecting the craft and getting a handle on the whys and hows behind it. It might sound a little back-to-schooly. But trust me, it’ll be fun. And you get to eat the final exam. Want more information and inspiration? Check out my blog at ThePizzaBible.com.

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