Getting the fillings and toppings ready: Ricotta and spinach with some parmesan cheese, salt, pepper.
Eggplant drizzled with garlic infused olive oil, salt pepper and oregano, then oven roasted.
Onion and mushrooms oven roasted with olive oil.
I divided the dough into four pieces:
I flatten them out on the counter top with enough flour to keep them from sticking. I don't twirl. (Well, maybe some years ago, at the disco.)
Two of the pizzas got stuffed with the ricotta mixture and some fresh mozzarella.
The folded pizza or calzone was sealed using the Florentine Tapestry method (I made that up). See the sealed edge of my calzone.
See the edge on the Florentine Tapestry
Put steam holes on top, then bake in a preheated HOT oven - 450 to 500 degrees
This pizza has eggplant and drizzled with more olive oil.
I recently acquired some nice asiago cheese, so grated some and put it on top.
The other pizza has the roasted onion and mushroom mixture and the asiago too. I really shouldn't bake all of these at once, because my little 11 year old, $245 "Sears dent-and-scratch oven"* is not meant for such tasks, but I am not known for my patience. So in they went. If I could crank the oven to more than 500 degrees, I would have.
Here they are, waiting for everyone to dig in. The calzone oozed out some of the filling.
Taste test: Everyone thought they were tasty. The onion and mushroom was a good combo. I thought the eggplant needed something - a little more salt maybe; I had a piece with some of the ricotta filling that had oozed out of the calzone and that was exactly what it needed: eggplant and ricotta pizza, yum.
*bring out the red robe, the crown and the bouquet of roses now
3 comments:
Eggplant is good any way you fix it. Pizzas look so tasty, think I can smell them all the way down here.
My mouth is watering!
I love eggplant pizza - looks fabulous (oops I meant great)...
ps your Florentine edge is called a "gadroon".
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