Archive for the ‘Local Ingredients’ Category

Chaos Theory

The moment I wandered onto Chris Chmiels’ hilly Integration Acres, I found myself surrounded by goats of all ages, shapes and colors. It’s milking time and they gather at the gate of the milking pen like people waiting for a new computer software game at a big box store. They know there is some bodacious feed just feet away and I’m blocking their access. They bite and butt their heads into me, bleating a frenzied salutation: “Hello human, are you edible?”

dsc04063 hilton-head-and-farmers-market-2261 hilton-head-and-farmers-market-275

Goats sizing up the interloper, Chris making feta, Pizza al Taglio with goat feta.

Chris Chmiel has invited me here to make goat feta. I’m taking in the whole nine yards, from the milking process to the final aging process. I need some fresh chevre to compliment juicy Amish strawberries, fresh rhubarb and basil for an early summer pizza.

hilton-head-and-farmers-market-233 hilton-head-and-farmers-market-268

Integration Acres fresh chevre and smoked chevre, chevre and Strawberry Schiacciata.

I use an amazing amount of cheese in my day-to-day operations but none compares to the farmstead chevre and goat feta products in taste, freshness, meltability and topping flexibility. From Turkish pides (Pi-DAYs) to the long Pizza al Taglio (Italian for “peak of the cut”), goat cheese is a must-have ingredient for my pizza repertoire. Both the chevre and goat cheeses are a great foil for sweet fruits and vegetables, offering a creamy-sour bridge from fresh, crunchy vegetables such as broccoli and onion, to salty olives and crunchy crust.

chicago-2008-bread-207

Pizza al Taglio with chevre, apples, fresh spinach, paw paw jam and balsamic vinegar.

Chris Chmiel is one of the few small farmstead producers to make and sell goat cheese in Ohio. Since 1996, he has operated Integration Acres, and his commitment to sustainable agriculture is awe-inspiring. For most guys in the pizza business, as well as most chefs, the closest you get to your cheeses is checking the expiration date on the tub or box. Now I am experiencing and using what is rare: a locally-made cheese from a true food artisan, from udder to table (or in my case, box).

His drive is reflected in his tireless effort to bring the paw-paw back from obscurity. It’s a native Ohio fruit that tastes like banana custard with mango and papaya undertones. I’ve known Chris for the last couple of years, and besides being a die-hard Cubs fan, he is one cool dude. I never knew until now that you have to be mellow to raise goats.

dsc040971

Got Goat? Full udders drained of goat milk destined for goat feta.

“The best way to describe a goat is ‘chaos,’” Chris says, while trying to grab an uncooperative goat’s kicking legs. The goat breaks free and kicks Chris’s arm. “That’s why they’ve got no one to blame but themselves for the bad rap and association with the devil throughout the ages,” he says. It kicks him again, and Chris gives up. The goat runs away.


hilton-head-and-farmers-market-241 hilton-head-and-farmers-market-259 dsc04062

A youngster gets stuck in the fence, Chris milking, another goat wants to get stuck in the fence


Chris starts the milking process by letting the goats into the barn six at a time. The goats run down a chute and scramble for position in the granola trough. The feed reminds me of the muesli I once served to Swiss tourists in my younger waiter days. The goats are trapped by an ingenious head panel that keeps each goat in place while Chris turns on the milker that sucks the milk out of each teat. While a few goats kick and haw, most seem content as the milk gets sucked into large containers in a cooler.

The next batch of goats adheres to a more “Satanic” procedure. An extra goat gets into the pen (my fault) and creates havoc among the chosen six. The kicking and bleating become unbearable as suction cups pop off and Chris scrambles to contain the chaos. It reminds me of what a passenger plane must seem like after landing in a river. In seconds, Chris placates the chosen ones, ejects the interloper, and all is back to normal, meaning only mildly chaotic. The juice of life begins flowing again and I’m fired on the spot.

hilton-head-and-farmers-market-2561

I wonder if Beelzebub was this cute when he was young?

The Chevre

The Integration Acres Chevre has a unique and luxurious creamy tartness with a nutty back-palette taste that only pasture-fed goats can achieve. After years of pizza topping experience with chevre, I’ve learned that there is no way to put it on without using my fingers. I have to flick the sticky curds onto the pizza, and they make silky white islands of lemony-tart flavor. Ironically, just like goats, they present themselves in a random and chaotic pattern.

dsc04317

Chevre, ricotta and roasted garlic stuffed fougasse (left). Pizza al taglio with chevre, mozzarella and summer vegetables (center and right).

The Goat Feta

The Integration Acres raw milk feta is aged in a 10 to 20 percent brine solution in a room with a constant temperature between 45 to 50 degrees. It has a texture similar to sheep feta, but with less graininess. It melts better on pizza than sheep feta or the commercial cow’s milk feta, which tends to burn.

hilton-head-and-farmers-market-2421 hilton-head-and-farmers-market-2353 hilton-head-and-farmers-market-230

Chris with fresh milk, A goat that had to appear in Star Wars, Straining goat feta.

hilton-head-and-farmers-market-012 hilton-head-and-farmers-market-026 hilton-head-and-farmers-market-228 turkish-pide

Goat feta draining mold, Filling the molds, My Turkish Pide (Pee-DAY) with goat feta.

When we’re done, Chris offers me a small dice-sized chunk of feta. It explodes in a salty-lemony tang on my tongue. He then transforms the raw goat’s milk by adding a culture to it, waiting an hour then adding diluted rennet and waiting another hour. He cuts the curd and stirs for 20 more minutes, then puts it in a mold to be brined for at least 24 hours.

pizzas-and-breads-farmers-market-035

The result: Goat feta with Morrocan oil-cured olives, Sicilian green olives,carmelized red onion, paw paw jam and spring broccoli.

At Avalanche Pizza, I love using goat feta in different combinations including roasted red peppers, apricots, kholrabi, Kalamatas or Morroccan oil-cured olives, black sesame seeds, oven-dried tomato, eggplant and even tahini, grapes, watermelon, and sage. Don’t get me started on broccoli, fennel and even kimchi. Yes, I would recommend the kitchen sink, but porcelain’s flavor profile is more geared toward Gorgonzola.

After my tour at Integration Acres, I can truly appreciate the craftmanship that small cheese producers like Chris Chmiel go through to bring their products to the market. Before I leave, we toast the goats, the milk they bestow upon us, and the ensueing chaos that constantly reminds us we are truly alive.

dsc04102

An udderly fabulous time was had by all, meaning me (left) and Chris.

Strawberry and Chevre Schiaciatta

Americans tend to compartmentalize when it comes to pizza. “Well, is this a dessert pizza or an appetizer?” I get this all the time. Really, pizza can be anything you want it to be. For this pizza, I’ve made a compote of fresh Amish strawberries, Granny Smith apples and rhubarb, then added fresh chevre, almonds, macerated strawberries and basil. It’s agra dolce (sweet and sour) to the max. This pizza would be great in lieu of a cheese course because the tart, sour, creamy, sweet aspect helps you forget all the troubles of the day (or the preceeding dinner.) The crunch of the almonds and the sharp basil zing at the end makes a wonderful compliment to the sweet strawberries.

“Schiacciatta” means “flattened” in Italian. It is flatbread usually found in the Tuscany region, but I’ve enjoyed it in Venice also. Usually the Italians use Tipo 00 flour, a finer milled, higher protein flour than the all purpose flour we use here in the US. Every year at the World Pizza Champioships in Italy I see numerous interpretations of Schiaciatta, some thicker and longer than others. I make them all different ways also. Viva la Difference!

Serves 3 to 8

Easy Dough Recipe

This part is the same as my classic pizza dough recipe. When you strip down all the finesse and personality from a pizza dough recipe, you end up with flour, yeast, salt, and water. I add extra virgin olive oil too because I love the flavor it imparts.

Unbleached flour is best for flavor and vitamins

Just your normal small packets of dry yeast work best. Instant is not as good for longer fermented recipes like this one.

Nothing compliments bread and crust like salt. All-purpose flour requires help with the elasticity of the dough that retains the gasses that form the cells (bubbles for rise) called the “gluten net.” Salt strengthens the process.

Olive oil adds a floral flavor to the dough and helps with manageability and emulsification during mixing. It eases the breakdown of the starches and strengthens the gluten net.

1 1/2 cups unbleached flour and more for kneading

3/4 cup warm/tepid water

1/2 teaspoon crushed sea salt

1/2 teaspoon active dry yeast

1 teaspoon extra virgin olive oil

making-dough june-2009-078

1. This is a 5 hour rise 2. Dough ready for balling

 

Mix the flour, salt, and yeast together with dry fingers in a large bowl. Add the water and oil and combine until blended. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap set in a 70-80 degree environment for 4-12 hours. This is the primary mixing of the dough. Note: You can let it sit for only 3 hours, but the dough will need a longer secondary proofing for at least 45 to 60 minutes in a 70 to 80 degree environment.

Balling the dough and secondary proofing

june-2009-080 june-2009-081 june-2009-082 june-2009-083

1. The dough 2. Folding the gluten. 3. Making the dough ball. 4. Secondary proof

Sprinkle 1 tablespoon of flour on countertop, then remove the dough from the bowl with a scraper or spatula and place on countertop. Sprinkle flour overthe dough to help with the stickiness.

Take all the dough in both hands and gently knead the outer edges into the bottom to form a ball. Use your fingers to push dough up and into the center of the ball. You are folding the gluten strands into a cohesive round that will make it easier to form a pizza. As you gently push more dough underneath, the top will get firmer. This is a good time to stop. If the ball gets too sticky, roll the ball in flour. Do not over knead.

You should have one 14 ounce dough ball. Place it on an oiled tray and cover with a generous sprinkling of flour and a clean cotton towel, for 15 to 45 minutes.

 

Forming the Schiacciata

june-2009-084 hilton-head-and-farmers-market-265 june-2009-085 june-2009-086

1. Pushing into oval 2. Gravity stretch. 3. Two handed stretch. 4. Rest on countertop.

Take the dough ball in both hands and stretch it into a football shape. Set on a lightly floured countertop and push with fingertips sideways to push gluten strands into shape. Go all the way to the edge with fingertips.

Hold the dough over the countertop. Using the back of your hand, let gravity pull the dough into an elongated form. Make sure the thinner parts don’t rip. Set it down on the countertop and manipulate the dough to even out the thick and thin areas.

With the back of both hands, place with fingers together in the center of the dough. Slowly pull them apart while opening your fingers. This will gently massage and stretch the dough in an elongated form.

Leave the dough on the countertop to rest for 3 to 5 minutes, do not let it sit for longer as it will begin to stick to anything. With this all-purpose flour recipe, there shouldn’t be much “bounceback” (when the round or oval pizza dough contracts back) but there may be some.

Pizza Topping

7 to 9 strawberries

4 tablespoons sugar, divided
1 tablespoon butter
1 cup fresh rhubarb stalks, cut in 1/2- inch pieces

4 Tablespoons apple juice
2 tablespoons honey
Granny Smith apple, peeled and cut in 1/2-inch cubes

1/4 cup slivered almonds, preferably raw so they don’t burn in the oven

3 to 5 ounces fresh chevre

4 to 6 large leaves of fresh basil

Preheat the oven and pizza stone or tray to 425 degrees. You may need to use an upturned cookie sheet if your pizza stone is too small for the sciacciata.

Cut the tops off of the strawberries, turn cut side down and slice through, creating thin slices that will still hold up to a toss in sugar. Put them in a bowl with 2 tablespoons of sugar and toss with a spoon. Return to the strawberries while cooking and continue to toss to make the sweet juices leach from the flesh.

To make compote, heat butter in large saute pan over medium heat. When melted, add rhubarb, apple juice, honey and sugar. Lower heat to simmer, cover, and cook for 6 to 10 minutes, stirring occasionally. Add apple cubes and stir in with the now wilted rhubarb. Simmer 5 to 10 more minutes. Let cool. Taste for sweetness. (Rhubarb can exhibit variations both in tartness and in cooking times. The tender stems in the springtime cook faster and are not as tart as summer rhubarb. Add extra honey or sugar if you like, but remember, there will be juicy, sweet strawberries on the pizza also.)

Put the stretched dough onto a floured pizza peel or parchment that you can slide onto your pizza stone or upturned pan that has been pre-heating in the oven.

hilton-head-and-farmers-market-346

Using a spoon, distribute the cooled compote onto the stretched dough.

hilton-head-and-farmers-market-348

Place chevre on top of the compote.

hilton-head-and-farmers-market-350

Add the slivered almonds. Now you are ready for the oven.

hilton-head-and-farmers-market-357

Cook the pizza for 12 to 15 minutes, depending upon the doneness of the dough, the heat radiating from the stone or tray and your individual oven. Look for a golden brown crust and light to medium brown on the bottom of the crust. You may also have to turn the schiacciata to accommodate your oven’s cooking characterstics.

hilton-head-and-farmers-market-366

Roll the fresh basil leaves up into a tight ball and slice finely into little strips. Cut crossways against this slice for smaller pieces. Serve immediately.

Super Sam’s Springtime Pizza with Morels

Nothing says springtime pizza more profoundly than a morel mushroom. Its hollow body and musty cap with oblong, welcoming cells add a pungent and rich umami flavor to many dishes. Along with fiddlehead ferns, ramps and asparagus, morels are the awakening soul of the forest.

A rainy spring and hope in the future initiated the buzz about morels here in Southeast Ohio. When I visited the farmer’s market I heard farmers speculate, “This is gonna be a massive year for morels. I’ll be out there, when it warms up.”

mushroom-blog

It had been a wet year so far. January and February were wrist-cutting months. The depressing bone-chill and bleak-brown hills created a foggy, far-away look in people’s eyes. Just when it seemed that we couldn”t take any more fog, cold and winter, the weather warmed up. Then it was off to find the morels.

I had found the perfect muddy spot near a state park,  with a few fallen and rotting elm trees around it. My two sons, after numerous hopeful trips to this spot, were getting attuned to the mud. After every hunt they looked more like French infantryman at the battle of the Somme than kids looking for mushrooms.

This year I was determined to not suffer the dreaded “morel envy.” That’s when I break out in a cold sweat when  a neighbor or friend waves a 6-inch morel in my face, gloating. “Hey John, check this baby out,” they say, and I think, “Damn, he got one before me.”

But this day in the woods it turned warm, and it was the perfect month, the perfect day and the perfect temperature for finding morels. Suddenly my son Sam said, “Hey dad, I see one,” like he’s declared a thousand times already, announcing frogs, flowers and rocks.

“Now Sam, remember the boy who cried wolf?” I began. “That’s just a… morel. A morel! Oh…there’s others!”

mush-blog

We all scrambled and scanned the muddy floor. Jake tripped on a stump and fell face first in the leaves.

“Mommy,” he cried as I spotted more morels blanketing the forest floor. They were huge and blonde. I couldn’t let a 2 year-old ruin the hunt. I had no choice but to psyche Jacob out.

“No Jake, it’s not mommy, its morel,” I said as I wiped off his face. “We have to find more of these. For mommy.”

I waved a morel in front of him like a prison guard letting a blood hound sniff an escapee’s clothes and set Jake down. He scampered like a magnet to Sam, who was busy grabbing the morels and shaking the spores off, the way I taught him. We felt like pirates who’ve just found their treasure after years of looking.

morels1

That day, we ended up with about 15 giant morels. I made a  morel pizza with Fontina di Aosta, Parmagiano Reggiano, fresh asparagus, roasted garlic oil, Prosciutto di Parma, arugula and the first grape tomatoes of the year. I called it “Super Sam’s Springtime Pizza” in honor of the warmer weather and my son’s great find.

Super Sam’s Springtime Pizza

blog-pic

Serves 2 to 3

Easy Dough Recipe

When you strip down all the finesse and personality from a pizza dough recipe, you end up with flour, yeast, salt, and water. I add extra virgin olive oil too because I love the flavor it imparts.

Unbleached flour is best for flavor and vitamins

Just your normal small packets of dry yeast work best. Instant is not as good for longer fermented recipes like this one.

Nothing compliments bread and crust like salt. All-purpose flour requires help with the elasticity of the dough that retains the gasses that form the cells (bubbles for rise) called the “gluten net.” Salt strengthens the process.

Olive oil adds a floral flavor to the dough and helps with manageability and emulsification during mixing. It eases the breakdown of the starches and strengthens the gluten net.

1  1/2 cups unbleached flour and more for kneading

3/4 cup warm/tepid water

1/2 teaspoon crushed sea salt

1/2 teaspoon active dry yeast

1 teaspoon extra virgin olive oil

making-dough june-2009-078

Mix the  flour, salt, and yeast together with dry fingers in a large bowl. Add the water and oil and combine until blended. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap set in a 70-80 degree environment for 4-12 hours. This is the primary mixing of the dough.  (Note) The less you let this sit, the more proofing (letting the dough sit and rise in a secondary fermentation) you will need in the next step. For example if you let this mix go for 4 hours, when you cut and make dough balls out of this, you should let them sit for at least 30 to 45 minutes in a 70 to 80 degree environment.

june-2009-080 june-2009-037 blog-dough blog-dough-iii

Sprinkle 1 tablespoon of flour on counter top. then remove the dough from the bowl with a scraper or spatula and on counter top, sprinkle flour over the dough. This will help with the stickiness. Divide into 2 parts. Cut the dough in two.

Take one piece of dough in both hands and gently knead the outer edges into the bottom to form a ball. Use your fingers to push dough up and into the center of the ball. You are folding the gluten strands into a cohesive round that will make it easier to form a round pizza. As you gently push more dough under, you will notice the top get firmer, this is a good time to stop. If the ball gets to sticky, roll the ball in flour. Do not over knead.

june-2009-038 june-2009-039

You should have two 7-ounce dough balls. Place them on an oiled tray and cover with a generous sprinkling of flour and a clean cotton towel for 15 to 45 minutes.

Pizza Topping

4 medium asparagus spears

¼ cup butter

4 ounces morels (or any wild mushrooms)

Cornmeal for sprinkling on pan

2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil 

4 ounces of Fontina di Aosta

3 slices of Prosciutto di Parma

Handful of fresh arugula

6 sliced grape tomatoes, cut in half

Shavings of Parmesano Reggiano

Coarse sea salt

Preheat oven to 450 degrees. You will need either a pizza stone or the bottom side of a heavy duty cooking pan. Whichever you choose, place it in the oven when you preheat.

Bring 1 quart salted water to boil, add asparagus and cook for 1.5 minutes. Remove and plunge the spears into a bowl filled with ice and water. This method retains the color and stops the cooking. Slice the asparagus vertically, down the center.

Place a saute pan on medium heat and add the butter.  Once it melts, add the morels. Saute for 2-3 minutes, turning until they are just cooked and wilted. Remove from heat and transfer the morels onto a plate.

Sprinkle the counter with flour to prevent the dough from sticking.

pizza-disc-forming pizza-dough-forming pizza-dough-formingii

(1)Use your fingertips to push down in the center of the dough ball, making sure not to go near the outer edge, as this will be your crust. Turn the dough over and do the same on the  other side. These actions will make the dough flatten while leaving some air (or cells) to expand while cooking.

dough-9

(2) Use your hand to form 1/4 to a 1/2-inch crust while pulling away with the other hand.

doug dougi pizza-dough-forming-iiii

(3) Pick up the dough and place it vertically in one closed  hand (some dough may overhang) and slap it into the other hand. This is easier than it sounds. It helps to stretch the gluten strands and helps to flatten some of the larger cells for a uniform crust. This slap forms the round naturally. Do this 3 to 5 times, rotating for roundness.

dougii pizza-dough-forming-iiiii

(4) Using the back of both hands formed in loose fists, stretch the dough slowly. Feel the dough stretching, turn and continue 3 to 8 times, being careful to not be aggressive. Look at it in the light to see areas that are too thick or thin.

pizza-dough-forming6 pizza-dough-forming-7 pizza-dough-forming8

(5) Brush all flour away from your work area and lay the dough on the table to see your work. The dough will have some “bounceback.” These are the gluten strands contracting from the stretch. Let it rest a few minutes and continue with (6) again until you get a 7 to 9-inch round. Do not worry if the dough is not round (if you make a hole, as we all do, pinch it shut).

6. Brush (or use paper towel to spread) a thin coating of extra virgin olive oil on the dough. Add the Fontina cheese. Place morels around the pizza and slide the pizza onto the preheated pizza stone or just place the pan in the oven. Bake until the crust is golden brown on the edges and the bottom is a little more medium-light brown.

hilton-head-and-farmers-market-223

 

 

 

6. Place the asparagus spears on the pizza, cut side up. Rip each slice of prosciutto  into two to three slices and place on the asparagus. Scatter the arugula, tomatoes and shaved Parmesan on top. Sprinkle with sea salt. Serve immediately.