Partially inspired by this thread, me and miss dined on pizza this evening. It turned out okay - I'd give it 65% on the pizzometer:
I have a fundamentally weird relationship with pizza, after dropping out of uni first time around and restarting my course I had to pay my tuition fees and rent and work thirty plus hours a week of sub-minimum wage toil to scrape by in a high street pizza kitchen - no big deal of course and hardly Dickensian misery, for the most part there was a lions-led-by-donkeys sense of camaraderie and ten years on I'm still close friends with people I worked alongside.
In all the shifts there I learned nothing about how to make good pizza and even avoided it for a couple of years afterwards but as clichéd as it might sound, I’ve come to regard pizza as one of those simple and righteous forms of endeavour, like writing a pop song using three chords.
It’s nothing like you might encounter in Naples but the two main factors that have improved my home baked efforts are:
i) use Italian double zero flour
ii) a really fucking hot oven
I’d never thought of zom’s suggestion about using a coal-fired grill before but I can see how that might work, the dough should be cooked very quickly, it should char slightly and make a crust, trapping the bubbles within.
The sauce is less important but if you have access to a good, hot oven I think raw cherry tomatoes work well, it’s a pain but if you can dip them in boiling water and peel then first then it's good to denude them of their tastless skins. Tonight I tried a bit of garlic and thyme along with them and just a touch of sugar and white wine vinegar.
Just a short walk away away from where I stayed on holiday a few weeks ago was a van that cooked pizzas to order - you'd drop by after lazing on the beach as they were making the dough in the late afternoon and pick it up a couple of hours later, each one took less than five minutes to cook and was as near to perfection as you could hope for.