Search results for: “pizza dough”

  • Simple Pizza Dough Recipe : GF Video

    Simple Pizza Dough Recipe : GF Video

    We’ve been making a bunch of pizza oven videos and how to make pizza videos, so I thought we should show how to make easy pizza dough using your food processor.

    You can make this pizza dough recipe and put it the fridge for two hours, but its much better if you mix it up the night before and refrigerate the pizza dough overnight. I had some extra pizza dough after making a bunch for the video and put it in the dutch oven as a round loaf and it baked up great.

    3 cups Bread or All Purpose Flour

    1 tsp  active yeast  about 1/2 packet of yeast

    1 tbsp sugar

    1 tsp coarse salt

    1/3 cup olive oil

    1 cup warm water

    Put all the dry ingredients in your food processor and turn on the food processor for a few seconds to swirl the ingredients together.
    Turn on the food processor to high and pour in the olive oil
    Start to slowly trickle into the food processor the water. The goal is to get the dough wet, but not real wet
    Once the dough forms into a rough ball, turn off the processor, gather up the dough, and put it on a large piece of plastic food wrap.
    Wrap the dough with the plastic wrap and put in the fridge for at least 2 hours, overnight is better.
    When rolling the dough out, if it shrinks back, allow it to rest a few minutes and then roll it again.

  • How to make pizza dough and bake pizza

    How to make pizza dough and bake pizza

    Wondering how to make pizza at home, or need a good pizza dough recipe? Here we go. Using the Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a Day dough as a base, we create some super great and fun pizzas here. You’re best off with a bread – pizza stone to make these.

    Watch the How To Make Pizza episode and share with us your pizza recipes.

    Check out another Gardenfork episode we did making bread based on the Artisan Bread book here.

    This pizza dough recipe is adapted from Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a Day, see their site for info on buying their great books.

    This works best with a clear 6 quart plastic container with a lid that can be slightly ajar, not super tight on the top of the container.

    Take 3 cups of warm water, add to it 2 packets of active yeast, 2 tablespoons of salt and 2 or 3 glugs of Olive Oil.

    Add 6 cups of all purpose flour to this and allow to rise for a few hours.

    When the dough has about doubled, put it in the fridge.

    You can use the dough right away, but its best to leave it overnight in the fridge.

    cut off a a hunk about 4″ in diameter, and roll it into a ball, turning the outside into the inside as shown in the video.

    lay out on a floured board and roll out to desired diameter.

    bake on a preheated baking stone in a 500F oven until bubbly and crisp.

  • Katherine’s Favorite Propane Pizza Oven – GF Radio

    Katherine’s Favorite Propane Pizza Oven – GF Radio

    Thinking about buying a propane pizza oven? GardenFork pizza expert Katherine is on the podcast to tell us her pizza making journey, and which oven she uses now.

    A few key things from the podcast.

    • Follow Katherine on Instagram @kcrosbie .
    • We have both used Blurb to print photobooks with good success.
    • AND Katherine is a GardenFork Patron. Want to get the behind the scenes photos and The After Show? Learn how here.
    • The best propane pizza oven? Katherine uses the PizzaQue by PizzaCraft.

    pizza oven

    Eric: Hey everyone. Thanks for downloading the show. This is garden fork radio. This is your host, Eric. I am your host. Is that what I say? Anyway? Today we were going to talk about making photo books and making pizza with my friend, Katherine, who I have known virtually. Is that the right word for a really long time? Hey Catherine. Hey there. So a little backstory between me and Catherine. you were one of the first people that started watching garden fork, and then you started emailing me. and then we became a virtual friends and I think that’s a great thing.

    Katherine: Yeah, it’s kind of neat. it’s a little different probably from my perspective, because you are like the star and I’m just one of the many fans. but, it is kinda neat to be able to connect with people and, you know, you can check out my Instagram and learn a little bit more about me. I actually know way more about you just because of all the videos and podcasts, but it’s an interesting way to get to know someone.

    Eric: You can all follow Stu in a bag. She has a terrier that travels with her and I kind of envy it because the Labradors, you just can’t put in a travel bag.

    Katherine: No, it’s very challenging and he, I’m getting worried. Now he’s putting on a little bit of weight and he’s reaching his, he’s consumed to weight, reach his weight limit. So he’s going to have to go on a diet before the fall and we get to go traveling again.

    Eric: So today we were going to talk about, making pizza in indoor and outdoor ovens and then also making photo books. And we have a huge list that Katherine sent me, which will probably fill up like three shows. And I’m, I’m all for that. But, I just made this a pizza oven out of a barrel and it got, I think people really liked it. I really liked making it, but you actually have, a properly made outdoor pizza oven.

    Katherine: Yeah. We have a, it’s called a pizza queue. and it’s something that, you know, a friend actually gave to us as a Christmas gift, a surprise Christmas gift, which involved me taking a rather large box that I didn’t know what was inside it to Mexico on a plane Canada, which my son was horrified. when he learned on the way to the airport that this large box that I planned to take with us, I didn’t know what was in it, which of course isn’t like a TSA thing is always like, always know what you’re taking. so yeah, it was, I’ll tell the story briefly, but, so my friend had been down our place in Mexico and they decided that they knew what we needed and they thought it was a pizza oven. For some reason, I thought that they wanted us to have an espresso maker, like a coffee maker because they were totally into coffee.

    Katherine: So I figure out that this box in my mind, which they don’t want to tell me what it is, which they’ve wrapped in Christmas wrap is like a large espresso maker. So we get to the airport and, of course we get diverted to the large parcel area to run this parcel through the X Ray machine. And as they’re putting it on the box, I’m with my daughter at this stage because my son has totally abandoned me and said, I’m not having anything to do with you and got on the plane with his girlfriend. So my sister, so my daughter and I are sitting there and the he’s, the guy says that the X Ray machine, what, you know, what’s in the box. I said, well, I think it’s a coffee maker anyway. So it goes to the box through the screening machine and he says, that’s like, no coffee maker I’ve ever seen.

    Katherine: So anyways, so I said, well, you know, I don’t, I actually had to confess, I don’t really know what’s in it, but I thought it was a coffee maker. So anyway, they open it up in a way it goes and out comes this gigantic propane pizza oven. So it was a nice surprise. But unfortunately when we get to Mexico, of course, I don’t have a pizza peel. I don’t have, you know, anything for like a roll, roller for dough and all that sort of stuff. So we, we, improvised it first and used cardboard as the pizza peel to get the pizza into the oven and eventually bought ourselves a proper pizza peel and brought it down. But yeah, it’s a neat, it’s a propane fired, pizza oven. So it heats up really quickly and it has, it utilizes, you know, a stone like a pizza stone that you would use in an oven. It uses two of those. And with this gigantic pizza burner up underneath and fires right up and gets up to like 900 degrees Fahrenheit.

    Eric: Wow. So once you turn it, turn on the flame, do you have to wait 10 minutes or is it just ready to get going or,

    Katherine: Yeah, it takes about seven or eight or, you know, minutes or so. And usually the first pizza is not the best one. So I probably should always, I mean, patient didn’t want to get one in the oven and out as quickly as possible, but usually the second or subsequent pizzas work the best, because, it’s, you know, properly heated up and they get nice and bubbly on the top and those little leopard spots on the bottom that you’re supposed to have in the crust.

    Eric: Yeah. I, my issue with the barrel oven was the fire was a little too womp and hot. So the side of the pizza that was near the fire was burning crispy, and I have to spin it. Do you, in the pizza oven, do you have to spin it or is it the, the, the heat is kind of all round?

    Katherine: Yeah. The heat is all around because there’s an opening at the front and no opening at the back and there’s no actual cover for the front opening. I I’ve thought of, I should have some sort of little thing I could hang on that would, you know, keep the heat in. So because of that, it is a bit hotter at the back. And I usually spin it halfway through halfway through the cooking. but I found a great, what I do is prepare the pizza on a sheet of parchment paper. And then I just put the parchment paper in the oven with the pizza and leave it with that. So that makes it really easy. First of all, to get off the peel, and makes it easier to spin around. And usually the pizza, the pizza just comes off the parchment paper and then those, you know, some of the parts of paper might burn on the edges. I usually trim it. So it’s not too big. It doesn’t start a big fire in the oven, but using the parchment paper is, is makes it super easy, especially to make a lot of pizzas. Like if you have friends around and everybody’s going to make a pizza, they can all make their pizza on a piece of parchment paper, and then you can go around and pick them up and throw them in and you don’t have to wait, you know, to kind of bake it on the peel or whatever.

    Eric: I never thought of that.

    Katherine: Yeah. It’s an, it’s an amazing pack. It just makes it that much easier. You can, and you can have more pizza, doughs rolled out ready to go. but yeah, mostly I use that when I have, I started doing it when I had friends over for a pizza party and you know, you, everybody kind of grazes on pizza as it comes, but you want them to kind of go in and out a little bit quicker and have people engaged. So while one person’s cooking, another person could be making their pizza. That one comes out, you know, you can whip the other one in.

    Eric: So with the parching paper that the bottom of the crust still crisps up there. Okay.

    Katherine: Absolutely. There’s like no difference whatsoever. Wow. Yeah.

    Eric: So many people in the YouTube videos are like, for some reason, they don’t like the idea of the dough being right on the clay brick. Cause it’s used used clay brick, which I’m fine with. and they’re like, can I put in my pizza stone? I’m like, yeah, but you’d have to have the charcoal, the coals on the pizza stone to heat it up anyway. But the idea that of the parchment would be brilliant because that way people would feel okay about it. And yet they’d get the good crust.

    Katherine: Yeah, no, it works out really well. And then you end up with this, it’s funny when the paper comes out, because usually the, sometimes the paper comes out before the pizza’s done, you know? Cause when I go to turn the pizza, the paper is just isn’t attached to the dough anymore and it just comes out. It’s almost, it looks like, like old Papyrus kind of, you know, tea, stained paper. It looks like some piece of art when you take it out. It’s kind of interesting, but no, I mean it, and it also cuts down on the amount, cause I used to use like a corn meal or semolina on the peel. so that the dough wouldn’t stick. Right. So that you could kind of shove it in really quickly and it would, it would just separate from the, from the pizza peel, but then you get a lot of that.

    Katherine: I found that in burning up in the oven and make, it would just make a huge mess. So, this way I don’t have to use the, the corn meal or the semolina. And although you could, if you like that texture right on your crest. Yeah. And I use the, New York times pizza dough recipe, make it usually the night before one of their recipes makes, for, you know, balls of pizza dough and you let it basically, you let it slow rise in that plastic bag in the refrigerator and take it out. Basically I take it out and put it on, you know, like a cookie sheet and leave it in the oven with the light on, if it’s cool in Mexico, it’s not so much of an issue, but if it’s cool, you know, it just take, take the dose out of the fridge, put them on that. like on a, either on a piece of parchment or a sill Pat and throw them in the oven with the light on and they just have their second rise there.

    So were you making pizzas before the pizza oven gift? The mystery gift came?

    Katherine: Yes, I was. I started, I’ve made pizzas a couple of different ways over the years of the first things I did actually was make it on the barbecue using flour tortillas. And I can’t remember even where I heard about that, but it’s a super easy, quick, and pretty tasty way to get like an extremely thin crust pizza, but you just do it right on the barbecue and you can’t put too many toppings on it. Cause of course the tortilla is very thin, but it makes a lovely, a lovely pizza, really easy, really quick. And so that was probably the first thing that I used. And then I, I had one of the ceramic pizza stones for a while and would use that in the oven, but I wasn’t all that happy with the results, with that. So I ended up purchasing and I think, I think you were the inspiration for getting the modern steel, pizza steel, huge rectangular, extremely heavy. I’m not sure. Do you know when it’s made, it’s made of steel obviously. and put that in my oven and made pizzas on that and had a lot more success. Cause it just holds that much more heat than the pizza stone

    Eric: And it doesn’t crack. It’s not fragile, you know, I have one and, it was just kind of, I was just making a pizza video about what’s better than pizza steal or the pizza stone. Cause I was never a fan of the pizza stone. I, the two I have are both cracked. I still use them cause I just shoved the pieces back together, you know?

    Katherine: Right. I remember from your videos in the, in your country place with you kind of just joining the fractured stone,

    Eric: You know, me too well. Oh and yeah, so that, that’s my go to now the New York times pizza dough recipe, there’s one that they have where they made a video about it. And it was just kind of a light bulb for me. I think the key thing with pizza dough is it just needs an overnight rise and in a refrigerator

    Katherine: I think. So that helps develop the, the, the flavor. And I guess the gluten, I mean, I definitely don’t know anything about the science of it, but the slow rise, like the no knead bread. I mean, I think just that slow rise just gives you a much better result in terms of the texture and the flavor at the end of the day.

    Eric: Yeah. Cause the New York pizza places, I’m an, I, you can see them, you know, they shaped their pizza doughs right at their, at the counter, you know, and they have below this marble counter is a frigerator basically what those big stainless steel doors and individual pieces of dough are in these round, but just like stackable round bowls. And I got to talking to the one guy at Romano pizza near me and he’s like, yeah, we make the pizza day before. And we, and we do a cold rise and it was just like, Oh, just like just like bread, you know? So it was kind of a light bulb moment for something really simple.

    Katherine: Yeah. And it, and the other thing is, is I often will freeze the extra balls and then you have them, you know, before you do any rise, basically just as soon as I make them put them in the plastic bags and just throw them in the freezer and then you’ve always got pizza dough ready for people come out, you can basically take it out, let it, let it defrost on the counter. And it doesn’t really take that long. And you’ve got, you know, homemade pizza dough ready to go.

    Eric: I love that. I love that kind of thing. So yeah,

    Katherine: What I would love to have is one of those, Breville pizza ovens that they use on, on Bon Appetit. Have you seen those? No, it’s an electric countertop pizza oven that heats up to like a thousand degrees in five minutes.

    Eric: What’s, what’s the name of it they’re made by Breville.

    Katherine: I L L E but they’re like a thousand dollars, which just seems insane.

    Eric: Yes, they are a thousand dollars.

    Katherine: So one thing, so I’m waiting for those to go down in price, because it’s, you know, it’s an extremely extravagant thing. I mean, I could see spending, I don’t know, I don’t need, it’s be hard to justify spending more than $200 on a pizza oven, which I think is what the outdoor ones cost. the one that, I have my friends bought at Canadian tire, which you guys don’t have in the United States, but they go, they have, they have what they call fantasy pricing. So they’re, most of their large items are priced at about twice of what, you know, anybody really wants to pay for them. And they go on flyer specials, you know, two or three times a year. And that’s when everybody buys that particular item. So anyway, these, these things, you know, the outdoor pizza Q is probably only about $200 Canadian when it’s on sale.

    Eric: All right. I like that. Cause I’m on YouTube. Kenji Lopez all has been making these videos where he literally slaps a GoPro on his forehead and just cooks. And he’s been, he did a review of the two different pizza ovens he has and one’s called an uni. And I can’t remember the other one, the Oni is about $330 online here. And he has quite good results with those two ovens. But man, the thousand dollar one looks very interesting.

    Katherine: It’s you have to watch one of the Bon Appetit pizza videos that use it. And it’s, you know, they’ve done deep dives into pizza and, you know, episodes about the sauce and episodes about the dough and episodes about the toppings and all that sort of stuff that they, this is what they use because it makes a pizza and, you know, in three or four minutes and they get really good results from it. But I’ve seen that Oonie one, that’s an interesting pizza oven. the other, the other great way to make pizza and you’ve done this, I think is cast iron pan right on your stove. And I think, the Kenzie, what’s his name? Jay Kenji Kanzi Lopez. He has done the same thing. I’ve watched some of those videos when he has the YouTube, when he has the, the GoPro on his head. And, I really enjoyed those.

    Eric: He’s a good guy is a good energy and he is wicked smart.

    Katherine: Is he located in New York as well or Houston, San Francisco?

    Eric: Most recently he was at, America’s test kitchen. And then he moved to, a website whose name I’m blanking on. And then he wrote several amazing cookbooks. And now he’s, he has a restaurant called versed, versed hall, like sausage hall basically. And then the Corona thing hit. And so he went back to making YouTube videos. He already had some YouTube videos up and he just, I mean, I don’t know him personally, but I think he was like, well, I needed to do something. And he just slapped the GoPro on his head and it’s wildly successful and a complete lack of production value, which I love.

    Katherine: Yeah. Well, isn’t it great. And you can just, you just do it, you just film it right through. It’s done in a short period of time. You get to see in real time how long it takes them to do things. And every now and then he does like a, fast forwarded thing where he started does, you know, you’re, this is where I I’ll get to the next stage. Cause this is the boring five minutes where I’m stirring this particular thing. But yeah, no, I’ve, I’ve really enjoyed his, his videos very accessible. He makes things very accessible

    Eric: And he’s, he always feeds his dog at the end.

    Katherine: [inaudible]

    Eric: Does Stu get fed at the end of the meal or is he a as the

    Katherine: Yes, yes. He’s, he’s an extremely food oriented dog. So he, he gets fed through the meal at the end of the meal and and he eats almost anything. So he’s kind of like your Labradors

    Eric: Yeah. With our new lab, we’re trying to figure out, she gets really, really excited. She’s one of those dogs that does the circle spins when it’s time to eat her food. And it just must be built in somehow. Cause I just, like, I was like, I didn’t train her to do this. It’s just that my other labs would never do this, but she just does these spins and I’m like, okay, sit down so I can give you your food, you know?

    Katherine: And I see she likes tomatoes.

    Eric: Yeah. She’s a character. It’s she’ll she is, she’s a good fit for the family. She’s a good fit. So yeah, it’s always amazes

    Katherine: Me when dogs, we used to have, a vegetable garden and the, our black lab would like the carrots love the carrots out of there. And she also was able to pick blackberries off the bushes with her. Like she could just put her head in a Blackberry Bush with all the thorns and everything and pick off blackberries and eat them. It was amazing.

    Eric: Yeah. It, it, mine, we’ll take the sugar snap peas off the vine. So I just planted a seed for my second crop of sugar snap peas. That’ll hopefully, bear fruit, bear sugar snap peas before it gets too cold up there. So

    Katherine: Yeah. So how long, when, when do you get your first frost?

    Eric: Well, with the climate change thing, it’s, it keeps changing up. There comes later in, late in the year, but the F the first frost is usually in November. but we’ll see. So like last year, it barely, it barely snowed, you know?

    Katherine: Yeah. Yeah. Well, we get a PR we have pretty mild climate here in Vancouver, so it’s, you know, we off, we have had years where we don’t get any snow at all and somewhere we just get a dusting and then we have years where we just get walloped, but

    So amongst our huge list that we put together here, something that intrigued me is that you make photo books.

    Katherine: Yes. Well, I, photography has been probably one of my longest and most consistent hobbies. although I took a fairly long break, I guess, from any sort of serious photography when my kids were growing up, I started out, you know, with a Canon [inaudible]. Yeah. That’s, I think that’s so many people’s first serious cameras. And I started that out with that. I think when I was 16 or something, I thought a and eight, you want, I still have it. And, got back into it, photography, more serious obviously to, you know, family photos and that sort of thing when the kids were young. but back into it a little more seriously when they were back at school full time, and I had a little bit more time to devote and camera’s changed dramatically, you know, ditch, I got back in just before digital.

    Katherine: and so, but quickly made, I got back in because of autofocus. Cause that was the old cameras that we had were not autofocus we, you know, manual focus, manual everything. And, you know, so the next camera I had after the one was one of the Nikons, a Nikon SLR with autofocus, which I thought was like revolutionary, but then within, within a year or two, you know that with the digital revolution. And, so I got got right into the digital thing. And, but the big thing with digital is that you don’t print your photos. And I missed that tangible thing to show people, digital photo frames, you know, they never, they never really took off people have screensavers on their, their TV’s. And I do that with, through flicker. I have, you know, like a screensaver on my television, but nothing beats, you know, something that people can pick up and hold in their hands and look at, also because not just for other people, but for your, for yourself as well, because you don’t sit back and say, you might, you know, you sit down and you’re having a coffee, you might scroll through one of your photo books.

    Katherine: It’s sitting out on your coffee table. You don’t sort of scroll through all your photos on your computer, partly because you have so many of them and you just don’t have them curated in a way that makes them accessible. So the photo book was something that I got started on. I don’t know when my first photo book was, but I’ve been making them for at least 10 years. I would say

    Eric: My thing with that is just trying to edit through everything.

    Katherine: Yeah. And that’s where, and that’s a discipline thing. So if I, if I’ve taken a bunch of photographs or I’ve been somewhere, or I, I know I’m doing something that I’m going to want to, make into a book, so it might be a family vacation, it might be some sort of an adventure. then I will, when I, when I upload those photos to my computer, I will take the time. And I use Lightroom for my, both my editing and my storage or organization of photos. So I’ve never been good at, you know, tagging things. I mean, that was, you know, supposed to be the way to do things. But what I do is I basically create a collection in a Lightroom and I will go through basically, well, you know, right after I’ve uploaded my photos and I will do, I will create a collection of kind of the best photos and save that as a, basically like, Oh, you can do the same thing just with your computer by saving photos into a folder or creating an alb I guess, is the way that you would do it probably on your back in the photos app or something.

    Katherine: So I try to right away, create some sort of an album or collection that has a subset of the photos, the ones that I like and kind of cuts out some of the duplication so that I that’s usually what I start with when I do a book. And I usually don’t, you know, go back to the, the bigger collection, unless I think, you know, as I’m going through things, I’ve missed something that I want to tell the story.

    Eric: So what are you, how are you creating the book? is it an online company or,

    Katherine: Yeah, it’s a company called blurp. and they, they have a Canadian and a U S website. I like the fact that they have a Canadian website because I can order and have a book and not have to pay, you know, shipping and duty or extra shipping costs or duty, an import duty costs on it when it gets here. and they also, one of the big reasons I use them is that they have a link through Lightroom. So there’s actually a book module in Lightroom. Oh, wow. That is linked to blurb. and the nice thing about that is that when you, so you create your collection, your, you know, you do your layout and basically decide which photos are gonna go, where in your book. And then, then you can only, you can decide to only edit the photos that are going into your book. and I don’t necessarily do a lot of editing, but I will, you know, go in and correct the exposure or the white balance if that’s screwed up. and the nice thing about the blurb thing is even after their photo book, the photos are in your layout. When they’re in light room, you can go back and edit them and it will automatically update so that when you upload your book, it gets uploaded with the most recent version of all the photos that you have.

    Eric: Oh, that’s brilliant. So it’s like auto updating and it’s one less thing you have to do.

    Katherine: Yeah. So, because I mean, one of the other things is you have to kind of pick all your photos, edit them, all, save them. You know, if, if you, you know, if you upload your photos in raw, then you have to edit them, save them as JPEGs in a folder. And then if you go in and you’re, you know, you’re creating your book and you say, Oh, well, I don’t really like that photo. I need to edit it or do something different with it. Then you might need to go back to the original image, change it, you know, and then save it again as a JPEG and then upload it again to whatever site you’re using. So this way you kind of do it all, and then you just click the upload button in light room and it uploads it to the blurb website. And you can order your book from there.

    Eric: Sweet. I know since you said blurb, I’ve actually, haven’t used it in awhile, but I used blurb to create a couple of books about the dogs, and then we’ve also used it for our family. And, they’re not paying us to feature them, but it’s a really straightforward process. And I like that they have templates for photo books and you could just pick one and it’s different layouts. And some of the pictures overlap sometimes it’s three across, but man, is it easy and fun?

    Katherine: Yeah. And they, they offer, so there are a few different ways. So the way I use it is through the Lightroom logical, but they have an online product. And then they also have, I think it’s called book-smart or something, which is some sort of their own software, which you can download for free and use on your computer. And then basically do it the same way I do it in the sense with Lightroom. so it doesn’t have to be done online, but I’ve used, I’ve also used a company called I don’t even know how you pronounce it, but Xenos Zed, or do you pronounce it C, Z or Zed and Oh, and they, they do really nice books as well. really nice quality. And they do like a little, I think they’re more professional, maybe more of a professional site, but they do these lay flat books, which are more like a cardboard kind of paper, you know, and that the quality of those is really good. I, I made, I only made one through there just kind of on spec of a bunch of, photos from our boating. We have a boat. So we do a lot of boating up here in the Pacific Northwest. And, so I did a, they had like a free book promo or something. It was like, all you had to pay was the shipping. So I ordered one of their books and the quality was very, very nice as well.

    Eric: Now I want to go make photo books. So yeah.

    Katherine: Well, it’s, it’s great. So I, I also follow, a couple young couple from Newfoundland. they go by the name, I think their YouTube channel is Becky and Chris. Oh, I love them. Do you love them? Yeah. Yeah. Let’s, it’s funny. Actually, Becky lived just down the street from where, cause I’m from, I’m not from Newfoundland. My husband’s from new Finland and my kids were born in Newfoundland, excuse me. So we, we lived in basically in the same neighborhood in st John’s and I think my kids, you know, played with her sister or something, but so we have that, a bit of that, that Newfoundland connection, which is what got me started on their site. But she posted a video recently on making photo books and she’s much more organized than I am, but one of the ideas that she had was like me, she takes photos with her camera, but also takes photos with her phone.

    Katherine: And the challenge for me has always kind of been integrating those, right. Cause the, you know, you have your kind of more photography that you do with your camera, but then the iPhone photos are, are so good now. And you take a lot of the more photos of those, where with your iPhone, how do you integrate those into the photo books? So her idea, which is what I’m going to use when I do my next book is that she basically creates grids at the back of her photo books with all the iPhone photos from that trip. And so, you know, and those are more of the, like what you would think of as a snapshot, right? So all the, not the serious landscape photos are the most beautiful photos, but they tell a story. And so she has like a grid maybe with like, I don’t know, 16 or 20 photos on a page. And that then she throws all the iPhone photos in at the back and it looks really cool. And it’s a great way to kind of not leave out those things without bulking up your photo book too much.

    Eric: I love that. My challenge with photos is the color balancing. And, I just start to get overwhelmed in my edit software. I use Adobe premiere, like I’ll shoot some of the video with my main Canon. It’s a camcorder actually. And then I have my GoPro and the GoPro has a kind of a preset it’s called a lot, color lookup table. It applies, but for it basically kind of enhances for, for your average person, the GoPro enhances the video to make it kind of look, saturated in contrast. But to match that back to the other camera’s video, there’s literally a button you press that says match the colors.

    Katherine: Wow. Yeah. That, that, that whole thing, you know, editing video, I’ve done a little bit of video and tried to edit. I can’t even just, I mean, it’s challenged for me just to, you know, splice things together. I still think of splicing. Cause I think back in the days and we shoot, you know, you actually cut the film and joined it together, but this whole, yeah, the latter, less people call them that whole thing. Like you shoot your video in an, in a neutral format or something and it has no color. And then you apply the color to it afterwards. It’s flat. Yeah. Yeah. It’s very, sounds very complicated.

    Eric: It’s, it’s really easy. I, my cam Carter shoots flat and then I lay on a, a preset that is in Adobe premier. It’s called golden tobacco, I think. And it just warms it up a little bit almost. And I set it to, there’s a scale from zero to, I set it about 40 and then I just crunched the blacks a little bit. I darkened the blacks and the shadows a little and add a little saturation and I’ve done sometimes don’t even color. Correct.

    Katherine: And can you create a preset your own preset for that sort of thing or?

    Eric: Yes. And why? I’ve never done that before? I don’t know. Yeah.

    Katherine: Well we’re creatures of habit, right? We do things the same way, whether it’s the best way or not. Yeah.

    Eric: So we’re almost at the end of the show, but I’m going to throw this out, Katherine, and you tell me whether you want to do it or not. is, is to ask Eric, anything

    Katherine: I can ask Eric anything. Oh, Eric, anything

    Eric: We could skip this part if you want.

    Katherine: who would you most like to interview on this podcast that you haven’t interviewed so far? that would be like a stretch maybe.

    Eric: Oh, who’s the guy Nelson Mandela.

    Katherine: Okay. How about if we pick someone who’s alive? Oh,

    Eric: I’d like to, I would like to have Gary Vaynerchuk back on the show.

    Katherine: Oh, so you you’ve interviewed him.

    Eric: We did a video together. It’s still on, it’s still on the channel. It’s still on the YouTube channel. And I met him when he was scaling up his father’s liquor store into a big wine business and he wanted to go, he wanted to use YouTube. He wanted to use web video to drive business to his store. And then from that became Gary, the personality, Gary who would describe wines is tasting like a mix of Kool-Aid and RO you know, raid Roach spray. And he was advertising in the newspaper of all things about his video show. And so I just emailed him and I said, can I, can I bring my camera? You want to be in my garden fork show? And he said, sure. And we talked about wine and you know, I look, I wasn’t balding or anything, and he’s got the near jets bucket there. And, but, and then we,

    Katherine: I’m going to have to, I’m going to have to look that one up,

    Eric: We would meet at different, you know, web web 2.0 events, and then he just blew up. But I love what he’s doing now. He’s basically telling people stop worrying and just start. And don’t worry about what people are gonna think, you know, lead with your heart and, and, don’t be mean don’t be a jerk. Basically. He uses more colorful language. Like there’s one video of him addressing like a sixth grade class. And he was just like, he was telling them and really blunt terms, don’t be a jerk to the other in your class because one day you’re going to get to be adults. And, and that nerdy guy over there is going to be running the tech company that you want a job at, you know?

    Katherine: Yeah. Don’t, don’t burn. Bridges is what we used to always say. Right.

    Eric: I just believe that karma is boomerang, but that would be, that’d be a fun one,

    Katherine: But he would be up, you know, I thought I learned about him through my son because my son watches a lot of his videos. And, I think during the whole COVID thing he’s been doing, like just like iPhone chats with people maybe, and yeah. And posting those. And, yeah, my son has sent me a number of those and we’ve watched some of them together and yeah, I think he’s been, you know, helped a lot of people through, you know, rough times.

    Eric: And I love that. He’s, he’s, self-made, he’s, you know, he’s got money in the bank he’s okay. And he doesn’t have to do this, you know, he can live, he could live off his profits for the rest of his life, but he’s out there spreading a message of good and he keeps it a political, which I think is really important even, you know, I mean, I occasionally make a comment about the national politics, but, he’s just positive, positive, and I love that. So, yeah. That’s great. Well, Catherine, would you come back on the show? Cause we have a bunch of other stuff to still talk about.

    Katherine: Sure. I’d love to, well, I’ll have to listen to the episode first and see how I sound.

    Eric: It sounds like a Skype call and that it is what it is.

    Katherine: It’s fun. It’s been fun chatting with you. So yeah, no, I’d like to do it again.

    Eric: We’re going to chat more cause we’re going to do the Patrion, after show, but, this was a lot of fun. You guys should check out the Becky and Chris YouTube channel. Cause it’s, it’s very inspiring what they do, especially Becky and Chris is a doctor, so he’s never there half the time, but I’ve learned a lot from him. She’s she’s a neat person.

    Katherine: Yeah. They’re, they’re an interesting, they’re an interesting couple. They have a lot of fun and they don’t take each other too. They don’t take themselves too seriously, which is nice.

  • Pizza Oven Brick, How To Store It

    Pizza Oven Brick, How To Store It

    I just pulled a bunch of pizza oven brick out of a dumpster in Brooklyn. The contractors were taking down the parapet wall of a crumbling building near my house. I walked down with my hand truck. The crew were happy to help me sort out a ton of excellent brick.

    When I say pizza oven brick, I mean old school clay brick. We talk about this a bit in our pizza oven videos, but we can expand here. We don’t use fire brick in our home made pizza oven, we use used clay bricks. These old kind that we salvage from construction sites or we find online. I wrote about how to find used brick here.

    People have asked about the potential for bad things being in the brick that one doesn’t want touching their pizza dough. From what I understand, that potential is low to non-existent, because the pizza dough is only on the brick for a very short time. Not long enough to absorb anything, in my opinion, as long as the brick is clean.

    How To Store Pizza Oven Brick

    The beauty of our home made pizza oven is you can break it down. But, you have to store the brick somewhere. I learned the hard way that just leaving them out in the yard is bad. Over the winter, the bricks got wet, consequently, they froze and cracked over the winter. Bad Bricks!

    Pizza Oven Brick
    Snow and Rain will damage your bricks, don’t do this.

    Pizza Oven Brick

    So here is how I now store pizza oven brick.

    Grab two pallets, probably an easy thing if you are a GardenFork sort of person. Plan where you are going to store your brick. Ideally, this is not under the overhang of a shed, because we don’t want more water than necessary near the brick. Learn from me…

    Pizza Oven Brick
    Plenty of space between the bricks

    Put one pallet down on the ground, and stack the bricks on the pallet with air space between them. Because if the bricks do get wet, they can dry out. If they are stack tight together, they wont dry out as well.

    Pizza Oven Brick

    Place another pallet of the same size on top of the loosely stacked bricks. Finally, cover the whole stack with a waterproof tarp.

    Pizza Oven Brick

    What I have found is the tarp can pool water, so I make sure the side of the pallet with more cross pieces is facing up. Unlike the photo above… It wouldn’t hurt to slide a piece of scrap plywood over the top pallet, then the tarp.

    Homemade Brick Pizza Oven Video

  • How To Find Used Brick For A Pizza Oven

    How To Find Used Brick For A Pizza Oven

    People have been asking me how to find used brick for building our DIY pizza oven plan, so as I just found some more brick today, I can share with you how to do this.

    The best way is to look around for construction demolition projects going on in your area. Ask you friends if they know of any work being done. I was lucky today to walk down the block to find a crew taking down a brick wall of a building. They were happy to get rid of some brick.

    find-used-brick-2

    Used Brick sits well in those plastic organizer crates, but make sure they aren’t the cheap flimsy kind.

    Perfect reason to ride your bike around, so go look into construction dumpsters and find used brick.

    watch-pizza-oven-video
    If there aren’t brick buildings near you, check out Craigslist. You’d be surprised how had a pile of brick that they want to get rid of.

    find-used-brick

    You will probably pay more for clean brick, so keep in mind when you want to clean brick and when you to just pay for brick that has already been cleaned.

    The issue of using used clay brick has been debated quite a bit. I have used it for several pizza ovens and I am fine with it. You can make your own choice. For pizza, we are not heating up the brick for hour after hour to build heat, we are creating a space to hold fire for a short period to cook some dough and cheese.

    How do you find used brick? Let me know below.

  • More Brick Pizza Oven Plans & Photos

    More Brick Pizza Oven Plans & Photos

    Here are additional photos of our DIY brick pizza plans. Easy to make and break down, you can build a pizza oven in a few hours and be making pizza in the oven tonight. Note the sturdy table the brick oven is on, this thing is heavy!

    brick pizza oven plans

    I used two pieces of tile backer board on top of a 1″ plywood base for the pizza oven. Use the cleanest bricks you have for the floor of the oven.

    brick pizza oven plans

    Recycled bed frames are become the angle iron to hold up the roof of the oven. The paint on the metal angle iron will burn off quickly.

    brick pizza oven plans

    Detail of how the angle iron sits on top of the side walls.

    brick pizza oven plans

    The back of the oven can be confusing, I used some extra brick to provide extra support.

    brick pizza oven plans

    I made a DIY pizza peel for our DIY pizza oven! Watch the Pizza Peel video here.

    brick pizza oven plans

    Use hardwood to fire the oven, charcoal will not work. Leave some logs burning as you cook the pizzas, you need the constant heat from the wood fire to cook the pizzas.

    pizza oven plansSee More Pizza Oven Assembly Photos Here

    diy-pizza-oven

    Watch all of our pizza oven and pizza dough recipes here

    Our backyard pizza oven is based on one in the book Bread , Earth, & Fire by Stuart Silverstein. Stuart’s book has a bunch of plans and info on building backyard ovens, go buy it here. it is available as an ebook or paperback. Read Stuart’s blog here.
     

  • Rooftop Pizza Oven in Cambodia

    Rooftop Pizza Oven in Cambodia

    Tony wanted to make a brick pizza oven, and he found our pizza oven videos, and then made his own version. On a rooftop in Cambodia, of all places. How cool is that?

    Pizza Oven 2.0 from ConceptuallySpeaking.
    Tony writes:

    “I’ve been meaning to re-visit your site since it provided the perfect solution I was looking for in 2013 when I wanted to build a pizza oven on my roof here in Cambodia.

    I stacked and built mine on a custom made angle iron table with the angle iron bars ($40). Then I found these perfect 2 inch think angled cement pieces to put under the oven ($10). Once I found the place to buy the old bricks from the French Colonial buildings being dismantled at a price of $1 for 4, things got a lot easier – but finding the bricks was not an easy task given the language barrier and neither did the fact that it’s a 5 story building with no elevator. Although I did get a great workout bring it up and continue to do so with each or cord of wood. One original modification on made on your design was not to stack the bricks vertically but instead all of them flat.

    I have now re-built the oven three times, replacing cracked bricks and modifying the design slightly. I originally had a chimney in the back but found it was really non-essential. One nice feature I added was an elevated level in the front for cooking the pizza on. I also built it up two brick levels higher over all as the brick price is pretty inconsequential here. I use terra cotta tiles to cook on in the oven and on top of the oven to keep the pizzas warm, help the dough rise and get the crust a bit crispier.

    Thanks for the inspiring solution. If you are ever in Phnom Penh, Cambodia come over for a pizza with one of the best views in town.”

    Not only are they good for making pizza, but our DIY Pizza Oven Plans make for a good workout when you are hauling brick up four flights of stairs!

    Interesting that T0ny also found that one does not need a chimney for this pizza oven. I have had many people ask about that.

    DIY pizza oven video

    Watch all our DIY pizza oven plans videos here.

     

  • Best Stove Top Pizza Recipe – GardenFork Video

    Most fry pan pizza ain’t great, but this stove top pizza recipe is truly the best. Why? Its a thin crust pizza with a nice snap, and it can be made in about 5 minutes, and you don’t have to make pizza dough the day before.

    The key ingredient to this pizza is tortillas. Who knew? I’ve seen many recipes that say to use a pita bread as the pizza crust, and its real underwhelming. The torilla is already thin, and it crisps up nicely in some oil in a cast iron pan. You can also use a Calphalon style pan, but it has to be oven proof.


    But where to get tortillas? In your grocery store. From what I can tell, they are now sold all over the country. Yes you can use those tortillas that you have to cook first, just cook the top side bit first, then flip it and add your sauce and toppings.

    The pan does not need a lot of oil, as the excess oil can smoke when you put this in the broiler. Learn from my experience. The ideal tortilla is one that covers the bottom of the fry pan, mine did not, but it wasn’t a big deal, it still tasted great.

    best-stove-top-pizza-recipe

    My tomato sauce is super simple. Quality pureed canned tomatoes are already cooked and only need some salt and I add a few tablespoons of italian seasoning mix. Done.

    For cheese, I used chopped up fresh mozzarella, and quality Pecorino Romano. Do not fill the whole crust with cheese, it will spread out nicely.

    For toppings, its really use what you got. I always keep a can of sundried tomatoes in the fridge, and I had some nice dry sausage that I chopped up.

    Best Stove Top Pizza Recipe

    1 can quality pureed tomatoes

    2 tablespoons italian seasoning mix

    1 bag tortillas that fit your fry pan

    1 chunk of pecorino romano

    1 ball of fresh mozzarella

    Few slices of quality dried sausage

    1 cup sun dried tomatoes

    Preheat the broiler

    Heat the cast iron fry pan on the stove top, add enough vegetable oil to coat the bottom of the pan. When it shimmers, drop on the tortilla.

    Spread the tomato sauce mixture lightly on the tortilla, and drop on chunks of mozzarella.

    Add dried tomatoes and sausage.

    Sprinkle romano cheese.

    By now the fry pan will be hot, so be careful. Take this pan and put it in the broiler, the closer the better to the broil element.

    Keep an eye on it, but in about 2-3 minutes, the top of the pizza will be melted and toasted.

    Pull out, let cool a bit, and cut into slices.

  • Pizza Oven Plans & Make Pizza Videos

    Pizza Oven Plans & Make Pizza Videos

    A compilation of our videos on simple pizza oven plans and how to make pizzas. Its easy. I can do it, so you can do it.

    We have several videos, photos, and GF Radio shows devoted to all things pizza, and I thought I’d put all our videos in one place here, plus links to the Gardenfork Radio show about making pizza ovens, pizza oven build photos, and pizza oven photos from GF fans.

    Our portable DIY brick pizza oven starts things out here, then a follow up video with additional tips on building and using the simple pizza oven. After that is our first how to make pizza video, and a few more fun things. Let us know your thoughts and ideas below.

    simple pizza oven plans
    Here are some photos of assembling the portable brick pizza oven.

    below is the first pizza video we made, based on the Artisan Bread in 5 Minutes a Day book.

    Below is a video on how to make a pizza peel with wood you probably already have.

    I love making food in the fireplace, below we make pizza:

    Pizza dough is simple, it just takes some planning and time, watch how we make it below, Click here for our easy pizza dough recipe that uses a food processor. Here is our version of the Artisan Bread pizza dough recipe.


    This is a brilliant stove top pizza recipe:

     Talking Pizza Oven Plans on GardenFork Radio:

    microphone-b-w we talk about making pizzas and how to use the pizza oven plans with Stuart Silverstein, whose plan our pizza oven is based, on GardenFork Radio here

     

    pizza oven plans Some DIY Brick Oven photos from a GF fan are here.

    pizza oven plans John Made this Pizza Oven, photos here.

    pizza oven plans Steven modified the pizza oven plans here.

    More DIY pizza oven plans are in the pipeline, Subscribe To Our Newsletter to find out when we post them. I have ideas for at least one using a gas grill, plus more pizza recipes.

    I think one of the key things for a good crust is making the dough the day before, and letting it rest in the fridge. The dough stretches that much better. Does your dough spring back when you are trying to shape it? Probably need to let it rest in the fridge longer, I think.

    Don’t pile on too many ingredients, I am a big fan of minimalist pizzas, letting those few ingredients be themselves rather than getting lost in the mix. Use sauce sparingly, OK?

    Let me know your thoughts in the comments below:

  • DIY Pizza Oven Tips and Tricks – GF Video

    DIY Pizza Oven Tips and Tricks – GF Video

    Using our easy brick pizza oven plan, learn these tips for building your wood fired pizza oven and how to cook pizza in it. After using our DIY pizza oven several times, I wanted to share with you all some things I have learned about firing the brick oven and cooking pizza in it. If you haven’t watched our how to build a portable brick pizza oven, check it out here.

    Planning helps a lot to have a successful brick oven pizza night. I suggest you start assembling the oven 4 hours ahead of time, and starting the fire 3 hours ahead.

    Build the pizza oven on a strong base. Don’t use flimsy sawhorses, they will break! Again, learn from my mistakes here…

    Start your pizza dough at least 24 hours ahead of time, if possible. You can check out our pizza dough recipe videos here. If this is a spontaneous pizza night, go ahead and use the Artisan Bread in 5 Minutes a Day dough recipe. It all tastes good!

    diy-pizza-oven-tips-and-tricks

    Don’t burn green wood. Learn from my mistakes! I grabbed a bunch of kindling that I did not realize was green, and had to rebuild the fire after it didn’t start well. Oak works best, I think.

    Rake most of the coals to the back of the oven, and then throw another large log onto the coals, you need to keep the fire going for multiple pizzas.

    Our homemade pizza peel works great with the brick pizza oven, watch the pizza peel video here. Use cornmeal on the pizza peel, it helps the pizza slide off the peel onto the oven floor.

    Rotate the pizza halfway through the baking process, it helps to even out the cooking.

    Don’t pile on the ingredients, less is better in this case. Vegetables should be sliced thin. Vegetables such as broccoli are best blanched first, so they cook along with the pizza. You can also add things after the pizza comes out of the oven.

    Here is the how to build the brick pizza oven video:

    Click here to see some of the pizza ovens people have built after watching our how-to vids, have you built one? Please send us pictures:  [email protected]

     

  • Cooking Pizza In A Fireplace – GF Video

    Cooking Pizza In A Fireplace – GF Video

    Cooking pizza in a fireplace is not rocket science! No need to build a pizza ove, let me show you how to cook pizza in the fireplace. This is totally a “Use What You Got” GardenFork moment. I wanted to make pizza in our portable backyard pizza oven, but it was freezing outside, and staring at the fireplace, the light bulb went off in my head. I already had a built-in pizza oven in our living room.

    Cooking Pizza In A Fireplace, How To Start

    For this pizza oven method, you’ll need a cast iron dutch oven combo cooker, You can buy a combo cooker dutch oven here
    And a cooking or camping grate. you can buy the camping grate here

    We make our pizza dough – watch our pizza dough recipe video here – the day before and let it do a slow rise in the fridge overnight.

    Be very careful when working with the fire! Fire burns – don’t wear loose clothing, wear gloves and use fireplace tongs or other metal tools.

    After the fire in the fireplace pizza oven dies down bit, put the camping grate over the fire and preheat both parts of the dutch oven. You may need to adjust the height of the camping grate over the fire, I used bricks under the legs of the camping grate. Have all your ingredients prepared ahead of time, as well as the dough rolled out.

    Hardwoods make the best firewood, my wood shed is primarily stacked with oak and maple. The maple takes longer to catch, so I use a mix of what I have.

    Have you used your fireplace as a pizza oven? Let us know in the comments section below.

    Here are the links again to the combo cooker dutch oven and the camping grate:

  • Homemade Brick Pizza Oven Video

    Homemade Brick Pizza Oven Video

    Build this homemade brick pizza oven in your backyard with recycled used clay bricks and a recycled metal mattress frame. And the pizza oven is portable! You can assemble this in 20 minutes, make homemade pizzas, then take it apart and store it. Most backyard pizza ovens are big and permanent, this homemade brick oven is great because its easy to break down again until your next pizza baking party.Here are the pizza oven plans shown in photos, our oven uses used clay brick and 24″ angle iron we cut from a old bed frame. You have to heat up the oven for an hour to get it up to temperature. The brick pizza oven has to be on sturdy sawhorses or cement blocks. We used cement tile board to insulate the plywood table from the heat of the brick oven. Stuart, author of the Bread Oven book, emailed us, cautioning that he felt the 2 layers of cement tile board was not enough insulation to keep the plywood from scorching, he suggests a base of cement, as shown on his blog here.

    Clean the bricks that will be used for the floor of the oven, that’s where your pizza dough will be sitting. We didn’t have a thermometer, but I’m told the floor of the brick oven can reach 700F. We also found its good to keep some of the coals in the front part of the oven, so the heat is more even. We had to turn the pizza once during baking to have it cook evenly.

    I have a few ideas for more modifications, which we will post later on. Keep children and animals away from this and all fires, this is for adults.

    base of pizza oven
    building walls of pizza oven
    pizza oven roof using angle iron
    Backyard Brick Pizza Oven

    brick pizza oven videoMore Pizza Oven Plan Photos Here

    diy-pizza-ovenWatch all of our  pizza oven and pizza dough recipes here

    Our backyard pizza oven is based on one in the book Bread , Earth, & Fire by Stuart Silverstein. Stuart’s book has a bunch of plans and info on building backyard ovens, go buy it here. it is available as an ebook or paperback. Read Stuart’s blog here.

  • Homemade Pizza Recipe : Christmas Eve

    Homemade Pizza Recipe : Christmas Eve

    Its a tradition in our family that on Christmas Eve, we make pizzas. I’ve been trying to get a thinner crust on my home pizzas, but haven’t gotten there yet. Cook’s Illustrated just did an article in their magazine on homemade thin pizza crust recipe, and concluded that a long refrigerator rise helped greatly. So we’ll work on that.

    You can watch the GardenFork How to make pizza video here. And if you’d like to make a pizza peel, we have a GardenFork video on how to make your own pizza peel here.

    My current recipe for pizza is a simple dough, 4 cups of bread or all purpose flour, with 1 teaspoon of yeast, 1/2 tsp of salt, 2 tablespoons olive oil and about 2 cups of warm water.

    Mix the dry ingredients, then add 1 cup of the flour and the oil, mix and then slowly add enough water that you can work the dough, but its not a sticky mess.

    Knead for a minute, then shape into a ball and put in a bowl covered for a few hours. After it has doubled in size, or when you’re ready to make pizza, roll out your dough into 4 small pies.

    Let these pies rest a bit, and you can stretch them out more if you like.

    Add what sauce and toppings you like, bake in a preheated oven with tiles or a pizza stone at 500F for about 7 minutes.

    Here are some photos from the Christmas Eve pizza baking.

    I wanted to try mozzerella slices vs. grated, so here we go
    The sliced cheese burned and wasn't great to eat
    Grated cheese with mushrooms
    grated cheese worked well for us
    Our crust was pretty good, but the edges were pretty thick
  • How to make a bread peel or pizza peel : Gardenfork.tv

    How to make a bread peel or pizza peel : Gardenfork.tv

    I needed a pizza and bread peel for our video shows on How to make pizza dough and bake a pizza, and our show on the Artisan Bread in 5 minutes a day method. Instead of buying a pizza peel, I decided to make my own. I went into my basement shop, look around for some scrap plywood, and make a pretty good pizza – bread peel.

    You can make this peel from a piece of 2’x2′ 1/4″ plywood from a home improvement store, and a 1″x2″ stick. You’ll need two 3/4″ wood screws, some 60 grit sandpaper, and white or wood glue.

    What do you think? Watch the show and let me know, have any suggestions? write them below. thx, eric.

  • Recipe Failures! – GF Radio 312

    Recipe failures, and whether chefs skew their recipes on purpose when sharing them with the public, or is this a case of just poor recipe editing starts GF Radio. Eric  had two recipe failures this weekend, one with pizza dough and one with sous vide slow cooker short ribs. Eric will try again for the pizza dough  using a recipe from the Jan – Feb 2011 issue of Cook’s Illustrated. We talk about gluten development, over-working pizza dough, and overnight refrigerator rise. We’ve found that the overnight rise is key for pizza dough, it allows long gluten strands to develop with less carbon dioxide growth, so you don’t get big bubbles in your pizza.

    Rick's Water Feature with Bluebirds
    Rick’s Water Feature with Bluebirds

    recipe-failureEric shows you a pizza dough recipe video here, and here is the Portable Brick Pizza Oven video.

    The slow cooker sous vide controller Eric uses is from DorkFood, and it works well. Look for us to use the DorkFood sous vide controller to appear in future GardenFork videos. We have tried to hack a slow cooker sous vide controller, but realized this slow cooker sous vide rig is worth the price. Go buy it here

    Are the temperatures that Modernist Cuisine states for sous vide cooking safe? Eric had the same question and found this great post by Douglas Baldwin, Sous Vide Safety, linked to by Reddit.

    Douglas is the author of Sous Video For The Home Cook, which is on our wish list now. Lets see if we can get a review copy to share with you all.

    We then move on to making hard cider, which will be a new GardenFork video soon!

    Rick and Eric talk about photography, in a geek way, on the challenge of keeping your photo files backed up while traveling. Rick likes to shoot in RAW format for the ease of editing the photos and doing color correction, while Eric usually shoots in JPEG format, which is a compressed file format.

    Eric Jaffe wrote about Tom Vanderbilt’s Why Traffic Happens talk at the Boing Boing Ingenuity Conference .

    Eric and Rick talk about their great world view on traffic and driving, starting from this article. We learned of this article via Dave Pell’s great email, NextDraft, which you should all sign up for.

  • Backyard Brick Oven Discussion! GF Radio

    Backyard Brick Oven Discussion! GF Radio

    We talk about the Simple Backyard Brick Oven Plans and Video. The pizza oven construction is discussed, and how to source angle iron using freecycle techniques. Placement of the wood fire within the Brick Oven and the difference between our simple brick oven and those pizza ovens in a restaurant fill out the conversation. Its the perfect brick oven for a pizza party. Mike talks about the ritual of building the oven is akin to BBQ, the ritual of doing it. Having your friends help build the pizza oven when they come over to eat would be fun. How to cut Durock, a cement backer board used in the Brick Pizza Oven is best scored with a utility knife.

    What kind of dough recipe to use in the pizza oven comes up. Eric used this pizza dough recipe and found it to be good.

    Mike asks if people remember a mimeograph machine, and dates himself immediately, and talks about fishing in winter.

    Monica joins us to talk about what Eric should make with what he has in his fridge, the consensus seems to be Mexican Casserole. We also talk about Monica’s trip to Los Angeles.

    The 7 bone roast mystifies Eric, and Monica suggests visiting your local butcher who knows about meat. Stew meat, what kind to use, and how Monica and Mike make it is discussed, use what you got seems to be the theme here. Mike has a great suggestion to save food from catering platters, put them in the freezer and use them to make stews.

    GardenFork Radio is now available on Stitcher Radio

  • New No Knead Bread – Artisan Bread Recipe – GF Video

    New No Knead Bread – Artisan Bread Recipe – GF Video

    I’ve been making the No Knead Bread recipe, by Jim Lahey, made famous by The New York Times and Mark Bittman for a while now. I have also been making the Artisan Bread in 5 Minutes a Day recipe, watch our original artisan bread recipe video here. In this video I show you an improved way to make the No Knead Bread and the Artisan Bread Recipes. Flipping the dough has always been a problem for me, and now I’m using parchment paper. You can watch our original video ‘How to bake bread with the No Knead Bread Recipe” here. Watch the video and let me know your suggestions and thoughts below, thanks!

    Learn how to make pizza dough using the artisan method by watching our video here. Pizza dough is not hard, and this method is an easy pizza dough recipe.

    Our orginal Artisan Bread in 5 Minutes A Day video:

    new-no-knead-bread-artisan-bread-recipe

  • Eric Bakes Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a Day

    Eric Bakes Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a Day


    click here to watch our second video on the Artisan Bread Method and click here to watch our pizza dough recipe video using the artisan method.

    Today we learn how to bake bread the Artisan Bread way. I picked up Zoe Francois and Jeff Hertzberg’s great book, Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a Day, after reading about it in Alexandra Stafford’s food blog Alexandra Cooks. So we fired up the Gardenfork kitchen to see what would happen. Baking bread is not hard, even I can do it. Watch here and see how we make bread based on Zoe and Jeff’s concept, which is a bit like Jim Leahy’s No Knead Bread, but different. I like what they are doing to spread the word about making your own food.

    Plus, you save money when you bake your own bread. Read what Alexandra says, here’s an excerpt from her blog:

    So, what does one of these loaves cost to prepare? Using the price of flour given by the American Farm Bureau — a 5-lb. bag of flour costs on average $2.39 — and prices for yeast and salt listed at Henry’s Market — a 3-lb. pound box of kosher salt costs $3.49 and a three-pack of yeast costs $2.39 — a one-pound loaf of homemade artisan bread costs about 60 cents to prepare from scratch. (Flour costs about 3 cents per ounce; yeast, 35 cents per teaspoon; and salt, 1 cent per teaspoon.) Using Henry’s Market prices, too, this estimate of 60 cents is likely on the high side.

    The average price of a loaf of La Brea bread is almost nine times more expensive. Even the cheapest loaf of bakery-style bread, priced at $1.29 a pound, costs over twice as much as a loaf of homemade bread. Upon closer analysis it seems the man who called into the radio program actually might be on to something.

    Even if saving money is not your goal, however, give this recipe a stab purely to experience how truly simple bread making at home can be. I’m dying to try other recipes in this book such as roasted red pepper fougasse, Italian semolina, and sun-dried tomato parmesan but for now, I’m extremely happy with the results of this master boule: It’s perfectly salty, moist and airy and delectable all around.

    What do you think? Can you bake your own bread in this modern crazy world? Watch us try. Below is the 2nd video we did on Artisan Bread, and the basic recipe.

    eric-bakes-artisan-bread-in-five-minutes-a-day

    Here is the basic recipe as adapted by me, the Artisan Bread book has a ton more stuff in it, you should go buy it.

    3 cups warm water

    1 1/2 tablespoons yeast

    1 1/2 tablespoons coarse salt

    6 1/2 cups all purpose unbleached flour

    In a large plastic food container with a lid, add together the water, yeast and salt

    mix this up, then add in the flour, mix together.

    all the flour needs to be wet, but no over-mixed

    place this container in a warm area and let it rise for 2 hours,

    then you can use some of the dough,

    or better yet,

    put the container in the refrigerator overnight, the dough will have a better flavor.

    pull off a hunk of the dough, shape it into a ball, let it rise on parchment paper in a bowl for 40 minutes,

    preheat the oven with the dutch oven and lid in the oven at 450F

    when you are ready to put the dough in the dutch oven, use a razor blade to slice a few lines through the top of the ball of dough

    take out the dutch oven, place the parchement paper with the dough in the dutch oven.

    put in oven for 30 minutes,

    then remove lid of dutch oven, and bake for about 20 minutes more.

    bread should have a hollow sound when thumped when it is done.