The Fresh Loaf

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Calzone "Wood Fired" of course! Mmmm...

Lisakemr's picture
Lisakemr

Calzone "Wood Fired" of course! Mmmm...

  Calzone "Wood Fired" of course! Mmmm...

Finally some summer weather! Friday night and a new wood fired recipe book from K.C. for my birthday last month will make a great night along with the weather. The book is by Andrea Mugnaini and is called The Art Of Wood Fired Cooking. Tonight we are using her dough recipe and a recipe for sausage vegetable calzone. The book gives some good tips on how to manage your fire when making different foods. There are different methods for grilling, baking bread or baking pizza. For the calzone we placed the fire to one side and put the calzone opposite to the fire and towards the front of the oven. We kept the temperature high at around 700*F. As the floor gets hotter the flames get larger. The dome should be void of any black spots and the flame should be rolling to mid point of the dome. This is explained in more detail in the book and you are given details for cooking all the recipes in the book. This worked very well for us and the calzone was done in about five minutes! Cooking with wood is so fast!
The dough recipe was a little different from doughs I have made. It uses active dry yeast you mixed with warm water (110* to 115*F) for 5 minutes to activate. I usually use instant or bread machine yeast. The recipe can be altered to make in 3 hours,24hours or 48 hours. I used 24 hour dough as I like the flavor of cold fermentation dough. It was more bread like then the thin crust we are used to and had a great flavor. I wish I could find a store that sells 00 flour as the recipe calls for it has a 10.5 percent protein and is ground very fine. I used bread flour and it was good.
The sausage and vegetable calzone was easier then making pizza and I liked that everything was prepared on Thursday to bake on Friday night after work!
I will share the vegetable sausage calzone recipe with you and you can try it with your own dough.

Sausage and Vegetable Calzone from The Art Of Wood Fired Cooking

1/4 c chopped roasted sweet red bell pepper
1/4 c sauteed spinach, drained well
1/4 pound spicy Italian sausage sauteed and cooled to room temperature
1/3 c fresh ricotta
1/2 c diced fresh mozzarella
1/4 c shredded fontina
1 T grated pecorino
1 teas fresh oregano leaves
1 8 to 10 oz. pizza dough

Combine all ingredients except dough in a bowl and mix well. Mound mixture onto one half of stretched dough. Fold other half over and pinch to seal. Place in oven towards the front and bake about 5 min until puffed and stiffened. Pull forward and pierce with a sharp knife to release steam and brush with olive oil. Return to oven and bake 2 to 3 minutes more. Enjoy!


There are so many tips in this book. I learned why it is best to hand press the dough and not use a rolling pin. The rolling pin presses out the air and makes the crust dense. Hand rolled dough is light and tender and also cooks faster. The recipes are for everything from seafood to peach crisp. I can't wait to make a Thanksgiving turkey and I am going to follow the suggestion to try it out this summer before the holiday! Karl liked the chapter on making the right fire for the food you are making. I will share more as I make the recipes.
If you have a Round Boy Oven I suggest you try this book and learn more delicious ways to enjoy cooking with fire!

Posted by kemr at 3:39 PM 0 comments

 

Comments

BellesAZ's picture
BellesAZ

Don't be so stingey... I want more pictures!  LOL  Those look beautiful!  How do you like your oven?  What kind do you have??  BTW, I've managed to replicate (sort of) 00 flour by using 1 part pastry flour to 3 parts AP unbleached flour.  You can also order it through Giusto's.

BellesAZ's picture
BellesAZ

Is that your blog on the RoundBoy Oven?  I think your oven images are wonderful.  Have you decided to manufacture and sell them?  You'd have a great market for them.  We are debating whether or not to build one ourselves or buy one.. but the ones we're looking at are horribly expensive.  A potential customer here.. would love to hear more.

Lisakemr's picture
Lisakemr

Yes that is my blog! My husband designed and built our oven last summer from field stone and brick! We love it! I have made everything from steak to pizza and bread! We have had so much interest in the oven that he designed a precast oven that we sell for $1000.00. Most ovens are very costly, starting around $6000.00 He designed the oven to cost about the same as a gas grill! He will also buid and design a oven on sight. I don't think I can get him to come to Arizona! I am thinking the precast could be shipped!

 

BellesAZ's picture
BellesAZ

What would you do to the precast.. finish it off the way you'd want it?  Do you have a site that shows the precast ovens and what comes with them?  Thanks!

Lisakemr's picture
Lisakemr

The oven itself is precast refractory.  The outer shell is stamped precast concerete with a slate finish. You can put it on base you create or buy a steel stand from us. We are just starting out selling the ovens and have been staying local with our sales. We don't have a website yet. Here is a picture of the oven on a custom base.

turosdolci's picture
turosdolci

I agree, I'd like to see a larger picture. Looks good and like the info on the wood fire.

Lisakemr's picture
Lisakemr

Thank you for your interest! I have a Blog on blogspot http://www.roundboyovencompany.com/ also a facebook page for Roundboy ovens. Both have some nice pictures of our ovens! Do you bake with a wood fired oven? We are really having fun with ours. I just found this forum and am looking forward to trying out the bread recipes.

SylviaH's picture
SylviaH

Great looking wfo calzone!

Sylvia

Lisakemr's picture
Lisakemr

Thanks it was a great recipe!