![]() |
Old Place, New – carb-loaded! – Soul Food |
Guys, let's return to my heroine of many of my shorts / novel series Laura Zimmermann, or better, her Turkish bestie, Hatice Güngörmüs, short, Hattie, or even shorter, Hats, because she has a penchant for hats. ![]() She already contributed – "5. Döner Kebab" ![]() – "12. Köfte Burger" ![]() to my international cookery. ![]() The Döner, by the way, is even one of Germans' fave "junk" food (that word doesn't do it justice, though ![]() ![]() ![]() Anyway, another Turkish staple we Germans loooove ![]() ![]() So it comes that it's very popular among Laura and her international friends (many of them part of the crew at the restaurant where she works, the Meat Me), too. ![]() To those trying to amp their carbs, like me... it's not Hi-carbed, but decently-carbed, nevertheless. Plus fiber because of the selected veg. Interested? Nice! But... I have to admit something ![]() The recipe is originally for 20(!) mini-pizzas. ![]() ![]() Since I'm alone, I can't – and don't want – to eat that much. And I suspect, it's a bloody Sauerei to prep and freeze 'em, too. ![]() So I halved the recipe, but wrote the original quantities in parenthesis behind the "adjusted" ones. I also adjusted the size – the halved recipe makes for four large pizzas, 12-14 in.. ![]() I had the butcher halve the fresh beef, and made the four pizzas in two days, with another course between them: two pizzas => another round of "13. Nonno Aurelio's Ricotta-Cinnamon Mac (Yup, Hi-Carb)" ![]() That was due to the freshness of the beef ![]() ![]() ![]() So I made two pizzas, ate one, and put the other into the fridge – on its baking tray – after it completely cooled off. The next day I just shoved the baking tray into the oven and warmed it up at 100-120°C / 210-250°F. Yep, you guessed it: even if pre-baked, the pizza doesn't get better in the fridge, and that because there are NO preservatives in it ![]() Still interested? Yeah? Then quickly off to the kitchen ![]() ![]() Serves: 4 12-14 in. pizzas Or, as mentioned, 20 mini pizzas. Then you divide the dough into 20 mini balls, roll them out thinly, spread evenly with 2 tbsp topping and bake them for 10-15 minutes OR until the dough's golden brown and the topping done but not burned. Keep an eye on 'em! Burning happens quickly ![]() Prep Time: about 2, 2.5 hrs including resting of dough, prepping topping and "downshifting" the recipe into German sizes ![]() Degree of Difficulty: Intermediate Actually Easy, but some steps are a bit tedious ![]() WE NEED Dough – 100 (200) ml / 3.4 (6.75) US fl.oz. milk full-fat – 30 (60) ml / 1 (2) US fl.oz. sunflower oil was out, so I took Canola oil – 10.5 (21) gr / 0,4 (0.75) oz. fresh yeast In Germany, it's sold in 42 gr / 1.5 oz. cubes ![]() – 1/2 (1) tsp sugar – 1 (2) tsp salt – 300-350 (600-700) gr / 10.6-12.3 oz. (1.3-1.5 lb.) flour Actually refined wheat but I used Spelt because it's a bit healthier Topping – 1 (2) onions Of course red, as they're the highest carbed – they are sweet for a reason! ![]() – 2 (4) garlic cloves – 2 (4) middle-sized tomatoes When you can't throw in a window with 'em, they're that size. ![]() – 2 (4) red pointed peppers Also taste very sweet... ![]() – 1.5 (3) green peppers – 1/4 (1/2) bunch fresh parsley For frozen I can only guess – it's on the pizza last, after baking, so it up to you – 1 (2) tbsp tomato puree – 1/2 (1) tbsp paprika puree Didn't get it, so I used a heaped tbsp tomato puree and poured some smoked paprika powder on top. – 1/2 (1) tsp chili flakes – 0.75 (1.5) tsp salt – 1/4 (1/2) tsp ground pepper – 60 (120) ml / 2 (4) US fl.oz. sunflower or canola oil – 2x 180 (700) gr / 12.4 oz. (1.6 lb.) minced beef WE DO Dough: 1. Gently heat 100ml / 3.4 US fl.oz. milk with 150 ml / 5 US fl.oz water until the mix is lukewarm. Crumble 10.5 gr / 0,4 oz. fresh yeast into a little bowl and pour the lukewarm liquid onto it. The milk-water-mix shall really only be lukewarm, otherwise the yeast won't "work". 2. Mix sugar, oil + salt in a large bowl and mix in the milk-water-yeast-mix. It's perfect when the yeast foams a bit. 3. Bit by bit, add + whisk in the flour. Knead until you have a smooth + sticky dough. That bugger's really sticky, so I used an egg whisk at the beginning and a large wooden spoon toward the end. 4. Cover the bowl with cling film and let the dough rise for 1 hr. Topping 1. Peel the onion + garlic. I freed the onion from the yellowish stem that makes you cry, too, and chopped them roughly. Wash, de-core + de-stem the peppers + tomato(es). I chopped 'em roughly, too, so my little moulinette didn't have to work so hard. ![]() 2. As hinted at above, blitz everything in a blender / food processor. 3. At last, wash, shake dry + finely chop the parsley. 4. Line 1 (2) baking sheets with baking paper and preheat the oven to 210°C / 410°F. Actually, it's 250°C / 480°F, but baking paper burns at maximum 220°C / 430°F... and you don't want it burned into your food ![]() 5. Mix veg mass and parsley in a large bowl and add tomato- / paprika puree, spices + oil and mix well with your hands – or a spoon. At last, add + mix in the minced beef and 63 (125) ml / 2,1 (4.3) US fl.oz. water. Make 6. Flour a work surface. Thoroughly flour the dough, too – remember it's a sticky bugger! ![]() 7. Roll out the dough thinly with a rolling pin. Or, like me, very gently, spread it out using your heel of the hand + fingertips, a bit like Italian pizzaiolo. Be SLOW – you don't want holes in the dough ![]() ![]() ![]() 8. Spread half of the mince-veg-mass on the dough base using a tablespoon, and do so evenly. ![]() ![]() 9. Bake the Lahmaçun on the middle rack of the oven for around 15-20 minutes – keep an eye on it in the last minutes – the pizza rind shall be golden brown. Guten Hunger & Afiyet olsun! ![]() ![]() ![]() |