Make Us Your Home Page
Make Us Your Home Page
Bookmark Allrecipes.com
Bookmark This Page
New Users!
Create your FREE Allrecipes.com recipe box
.
Recipes
|
Ingredients
|
Articles
|
More »
Advanced Search
Glossary Search
Collection Search
User Name
Password
Remember me?
Forgot password?
My Profile
My Stuff
Recipes
Budget Cooking
Recipe Exchange
Holidays
Summer Grilling
Labor Day
More Recipes Like This
Chicago Style Stuffed Pizza
New York Style Pizza
Buffalo Style Chicken Pizza
Garlic Lover's Pizza Crust for the Bread Machine
Pepperoni Pizza Bread
MORE
Top Related Articles
Topping and Baking Pizza
Making Pizza
Put Your Pizza on a Diet
Italian Wine Country: Abruzzi to Sicily
Lunch Box: Pizza
Forming Pizza Crust
Gifts for Every Cook: Pizza Lovers
Kick Off a Winning Super Bowl(R) Party
Grilling Pizza
Sunday Dinner: Coq au Vin, Italian Style
Related Collections
Aglianico Wine Pairing
Barbera Wine Pairing
Football Party Pizza
Low-Fat Vegetarian Main Dishes
March Madness Pizza
Free Membership
Join the Allrecipes Community!
Contests and Sweepstakes
Create a Recipe Box
Sign Up For Newsletters
Manage Emails
Favorite Products
Comparison Shop
TasteBook
Create-A-Cookbook
Cookbooks
Magazines
Cooking In Style Club
Shop
Culinary Schools
Print This Recipe
Full Page
3x5 Card
4x6 Card
Email This Recipe
Brick-Oven Pizza (Brooklyn Style)
SUBMITTED BY:
CDM68
PHOTO BY:
CDM68
"This is a simple recipe for authentic brick-oven pizza made famous by several, well-known Brooklyn pizzerias. Best accompanied by ice-cold pilsner-style lager beer."
RECIPE RATING:
Read Reviews
(35)
Review/Rate This Recipe
PREP TIME
25 Min
COOK TIME
6 Min
READY IN
16 Hrs 31 Min
Original recipe yield 2 pizzas
SERVINGS
(
Help
)
Servings
US
METRIC
INGREDIENTS (
Nutrition
)
1 teaspoon active dry yeast
1/4 cup warm water
1 cup cold water
1 teaspoon salt
3 cups bread flour
6 ounces low moisture mozzarella cheese, thinly sliced
1/2 cup no salt added canned crushed tomatoes
1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
1/2 teaspoon dried oregano
3 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
6 leaves fresh basil, torn
Add to Recipe Box
My folders:
Add to Shopping List
Add a Personal Note
DIRECTIONS
Sprinkle yeast over warm water in a large bowl. Let stand for 5 minutes to proof. Stir in salt and cold water, then stir in the flour about 1 cup at a time. When the dough is together enough to remove from the bowl, knead on a floured surface until smooth, about 10 minutes. Divide into two pieces, and form each one into a tight ball. Coat the dough balls with olive oil, and refrigerate in a sealed container for at least 16 hours. Be sure to use a big enough container to allow the dough to rise. Remove the dough from the refrigerator one hour prior to using.
Preheat the oven, with a pizza stone on the lowest rack, to 550 degrees F. Lightly dust a pizza peel with flour.
Using one ball of dough at a time, lightly dust the dough with flour, and stretch gradually until it is about 14 inches in diameter, or about as big around as the pizza stone. Place on the floured peel. Place thin slices of mozzarella over the crust, then grind a liberal amount of black pepper over it. Sprinkle with dried oregano. Randomly arrange crushed tomatoes, leaving some empty areas. Drizzle olive oil over the top.
With a quick back and forth jerk, make sure the dough will release from the peel easily. Place the tip of the peel at the back of the preheated pizza stone, and remove peel so that the pizza is left on the stone.
Bake for 4 to 6 minutes in the preheated oven, or until the crust begins to brown. Remove from the oven by sliding the peel beneath the pizza. Sprinkle a few basil leaves randomly over the pizza. Cut into wedges and serve.
FOOTNOTES
Wine Tip
Try with an
Italian red
like Aglianico, Barbera or Chianti Classico.
ADVERTISE WITH US
ADVERTISEMENT
REVIEWS
Reviewed on Feb. 15, 2007 by
wisweetp
X
Full Review
wisweetp
Feb. 15, 2007
Great pizza--my family loved it. The dough was a little hard to work with--will let it completely come to room temp next time I make the recipe. I added garlic and italian seasoning rather than oregano and used regular crushed tomatoes rather than salt-free. I also sprinkled the pizza with blend of parmesan, asiago, and provolone cheeses and baked it for an extra 5 minutes for a nice golden color. UPDATE: Made the recipe again and used 1 cup all-purpose flour as a substitute for 1 cup of the bread flour. The dough much easier to work with and had a wonderful texture--we liked it better this way. It's become our favorite pizza! This dough also freezes beautifully. We make this at least once a week now, so I triple the batch and freeze the balls of dough. Thaw them in the fridge and take out to let come to room temp. The crust actually tastes better that way!
Was this review helpful?
[
YES
]
13 users found this review helpful
Great pizza--my family loved it. The dough was a little hard to work with--will let it...
MORE
MORE
Reviewed on Nov. 22, 2004 by
EAMILNE
X
Full Review
EAMILNE
Nov. 22, 2004
Had a pizza stone for so long, and didn't realize pizza can taste so good. Just like or better than my local pizza place that makes brick oven pizza. Bakes quick too!
Was this review helpful?
[
YES
]
12 users found this review helpful
Had a pizza stone for so long, and didn't realize pizza can taste so good. Just like or better...
MORE
MORE
Reviewed on Apr. 4, 2008 by
CathyEm
X
Full Review
CathyEm
Apr. 4, 2008
This recipe works GREAT!! And, actually, there IS a reason for the long, 16 hour chilled rise... it allows the dough to "ferment" which REALLY adds to the flavor. DON'T wimp out and use the dough the same day... it will taste MUCH more authentic if you follow the directions as given... it can even go a little longer than 16 hours without a problem. Be sure to preheat your stone and oven for at least an hour... and to make the "brick oven" experience even better, I have a second stone on the rack above so that heat is generated from the top, too. Thanks for this great recipe!
Was this review helpful?
[
YES
]
9 users found this review helpful
This recipe works GREAT!! And, actually, there IS a reason for the long, 16 hour chilled...
MORE
MORE
Reviewed on May 21, 2007 by Alexandra T
X
Full Review
Alexandra T
May 21, 2007
I love how simple this recipe is!! I used 1 cup all-purpose flour and 2 cups whole wheat flour. My boyfriend has always said he likes whole wheat, but whole wheat pizza is awful. He LOVED this and said I could make it anytime! I image it's even tastier with just white flour. It's great to know all the ingredients going into your food and make something like this from scratch. I do not have a Pizza Peel and had some trouble getting the pizza from my cutting board to the hot stone. On my second one, I ended up putting the dough on my stone after I stretched it out and assembling the pizza on the hot stone. I'm not necessarily recommending this, but it was a lot easier than when I tried to place the completed pizza on the stone. Also, I cooked mine at 400 for a longer time because I wasn’t sure my stone could handle 550.
Was this review helpful?
[
YES
]
8 users found this review helpful
I love how simple this recipe is!! I used 1 cup all-purpose flour and 2 cups whole wheat...
MORE
MORE
Reviewed on Mar. 12, 2006 by
Laura Bossart
X
Full Review
Laura Bossart
Mar. 12, 2006
This was a nice crust the whole family loved! I liked how simple it was to make, and it stored in the fridge in a plastic container for 3 days before baking,just fine. The first one I baked, I didn't have a pizza stone, so it took longer to cook. The second one I made on a newly purchased stone, and it was awesome!
Was this review helpful?
[
YES
]
5 users found this review helpful
This was a nice crust the whole family loved! I liked how simple it was to make, and it...
MORE
MORE
Reviewed on Feb. 15, 2008 by
Deniece
X
Full Review
Deniece
Feb. 15, 2008
GREAT!!! This is by far the best pizza dough recipe I have tried and, I have tried several.My search is over I started not to try this recipe because,the picture on the recipe page does not do the recipe any justice at all.I baked it on my stone and the crust was so crispy and very tasty.My family LOVED it,Thank You!
Was this review helpful?
[
YES
]
3 users found this review helpful
GREAT!!! This is by far the best pizza dough recipe I have tried and, I have tried several.My...
MORE
MORE
Reviewed on Feb. 2, 2008 by AMCDONAL86
X
Full Review
AMCDONAL86
Feb. 2, 2008
Excellent. I have tried many pizza dough recipes, but for NY-style pizza, this one is the best! Also, there is NO reason to put the dough in the fridge and let it rise for 16 hours. 1 to 1.5 hours in a warm place is plenty of time for it to rise. I was very skeptical at first, since this is the FIRST pizza dough recipe I've encountered that didn't have sugar or oil in it. But it really tastes different! It's chewy, and the crust is delicious!
Was this review helpful?
[
YES
]
3 users found this review helpful
Excellent. I have tried many pizza dough recipes, but for NY-style pizza, this one is the...
MORE
MORE
Reviewed on Jul. 24, 2007 by
vanessah
X
Full Review
vanessah
Jul. 24, 2007
Awesome recipe. We brushed a little bit of olive oil around the edges to give it a bit of color. We do not order from our local pizza place anymore! Thank you for this great recipe!
Was this review helpful?
[
YES
]
3 users found this review helpful
Awesome recipe. We brushed a little bit of olive oil around the edges to give it a bit of...
MORE
MORE
Reviewed on Aug. 27, 2006 by
JSWAVOLA
X
Full Review
JSWAVOLA
Aug. 27, 2006
Used only the pizza crust recipe and it was excellent. My husband said it was the best. The crust had a perfect texture. It was better than the pizza from the local pizzeria. We both said we may never buy pizza out again.
Was this review helpful?
[
YES
]