(A
G3 Ferrari pizza oven of course, what else did you expect?)
This oven had been reviewed by a Dutch food journalist often praising
foody goodies, sometimes wrongly so but in many occasions he spots a
true gem. I had modest expectations for this oven, but still I could not
resist when it
showed up in this web shop for € 109,-.
The completely incomprehensible DHL status page seems to suggest this
machine has arrived from Germany, but still it got in here in just a few
days. One hour after delivery the only "status changed" e-mail fell
into my Inbox; 'Delivered'. Thanks a lot, DHL.
Friday evening we unpacked the machine, read the dough recipe and got to
work. The recipe works fine, and the machine is both simple and quick.
There is a somewhat Chinese lack of attention to detail in the machine
(the air holes are punched in at an angle that probably wasn't in the
"Italian Design"). I removed some Chinese pizza stone dust with a wet
cloth and heated up the machine.
It supposedly only consumes a modest 1200W and heats up in about 12-15
minutes. Making sure the heating elements were back on by turning it
higher to max, I let the pizza slide from the brilliant double pizza
'paddles' onto the hot stone. In 5-7 minutes all pizza's turned cooked
on top and crisped on the bottom. Not quite a real wood-oven finish, but
much closer then I ever got with my normal oven. The burned residue
that you get on the stone after a while actually adds to the flavor.
Some tips for great pizza's;
- Make the crust as thin as you can
- Do not overfill. One or two ladles-full of tomato sauce suffice,
thinly spread out on the dough, leaving a centimeter of crust. Then your
toppings, but once again, not to much.
- Do not put too much salt into the dough or the sauce - especially
when using capers, bacon, (blue) cheese, anchovies and olives there's
plenty of saltiness going on.
- Make some chili oil by infusing dried chili peppers or flakes, oregano, thyme and pepper corns in olive oil for a few weeks (do not add garlic, as this may cause botulism).
- Make a simple pizza sauce by blitzing a can of tomatoes with a little salt, crushed garlic and oregano
The dough recipe in the Ferrari instruction guide was excellent. Here's our adaptation:
- Combine 300 grams of pizza flour ("tipo 00") with 2 grams of salt
- Combine 10 grams of dried yeast with a teaspoon of sugar and 200ml of lukewarm water
- Wait for a couple of minutes for the yeast to start, then mix everything together. Add some water or flour if needed.
- Knead the dough for a good 15 minutes until you have a clean surface, clean hands and a nice elastic dough.
- Transfer the dough into a bowl and cover with clingfilm.
- Preheat your regular oven to 35 degrees Celcius, place the dough
inside and put a mug of boiling water in the oven. Close the door and
wait until the dough has doubled in size.
- No oven? Then cover with a wet cloth and put in as warm a place as
you have. You may have to wait a little longer (2 hours instead of 1)
- Knead the dough for a few minutes and cut into 4. Shape each piece
into a ball, place on an oven tray, cover with clingfilm an put it back
in the oven. Once again, allow it to rise until doubled in size. This
only takes a minute or 10.
- Put a liberal amount of flour on your worktop. Take out a dough ball
and form it into a 25-28cm pizza by gently pulling and kneading it into
shape (or do the Italian baker helicopter moves at your own risk).
Watch out for holes in the middle of the dough, as you do not want
stuffing or sauce to leak onto the pizza stone.
- Transfer the dough onto a well-floured pizza board and add your sauce and toppings (remember- not too much!)
- Slide the pizza onto the oven and wait for it to finish.
Here's some of results:
 |
Close the lid and wait for 5-7 minutes... |
 |
Alsatian "Flaemmekuche"ready for the oven |
 |
Flaemmekuche - Parma ham & roquette base
Anchovies & Pesto - Blue cheese & Mushrooms |
|
|
|
 |
Tomato & onion cooked, Parma ham & roquette added after |
 |
Flämmeküche: sour creme, Emmenthaler cheese, bacon & onion |
 |
Tomato, onion, blue cheese & mushrooms |
 |
Tomato, cheese, anchovies, capers (roquette added later)
|
This articale orginally appeared in Dutch on
Mout&Peper
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