I had never made a cast iron skillet pizza before and wanted to use my new stand mixer. I was incredibly surprised how good this came out. I’ll probably never order pizza again and it only costs $3.47 per pizza! The crust is like the pan pizzas from the Pizza Hut of the '90s, my favorite!

I baked the pizza in my 11" skillet at 450F for around 20 min. After checking the bottom crust I cooked 5 more minutes on the stove, medium heat.

I used this recipe for the dough.

Dough (makes two balls)

  • 4.25 cups Bread Flour = $0.93
  • 2.25 tsp Rapid-rise Yeast = $1.00
  • 1.5 tsp Salt = $0.02
  • 2 tbsp Extra Virgin Olive Oil = $0.36
  • 1.75 cup Warm Water = Free

Total = $1.16 ($2.31 for two dough balls)

Toppings

  • 3 tbsp Pizza Sauce = $0.27
  • 1.5 cup Mozzarella Cheese = $1.42
  • 1 oz Pepperoni = $0.47
  • 1 Jalapeno Pepper = $0.15

Total = $2.31

Total for everything = $3.47 per pizza.

  • Tempus Fugit@midwest.socialOP
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    4 months ago

    Oh for sure I could get the price down further, but I did a quick lookup of all the ingredients in quantities I normally buy and from local stores.

    I always thought you’re supposed to use low moisture mozzarella for pizza, no?

    • FauxPseudo @lemmy.worldM
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      4 months ago

      In my experience it doesn’t brown right. It just melts. No cispy golden anything. And it doesn’t pull. It’s slides.

      • tychosmoose@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        If it’s pre-shredded, the anti-caking additive may be the problem. It’s typically coated in moisture absorbing cellulose. When it melts that causes the problem you describe. Using higher moisture can overcome that somewhat, but shredding your own will come out better and it only takes a couple of minutes.

        In my area low moisture chunk mozz is as cheap or cheaper than pre-shreds (~$3.75 per lb) and it won’t do this.

        Galbani “Italian style” whole milk “classic melt & stretch” is my favorite for pizza. Nicer flavor and texture than the cheaper options. It’s $5 per lb but regularly goes on sale for less.

          • tychosmoose@lemmy.world
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            4 months ago

            Interesting. I read a paper one time on the salting step, stretching/pulling the curd, and the proportions of skim milk content (in part skim cheese), as well as handling after production having some impacts on this. It’s why I hunt out my one favorite cheese that always behaves like I expect.

            • FauxPseudo @lemmy.worldM
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              4 months ago

              On the left of skim milk low moisture. Edges are burnt but center has no browning. On the right is higher moisture. Even browning with no burnt edges.

              And by high moisture I mean in comparison to the cheddar like block of low moisture. Not the stuff swimming on juice.