I had not used my KettlePizza adaptor for quite some time. This long weekend seemed like the perfect occasion.
Had no pizza sauce on hand, so I decided to make some.
I think next time I will not drain the liquid from the tomato can.
And, hopefully remember to add some more fresh seasoning and such.
Everything went into the blender, and voila, pizza sauce was created.
Got all of the toppings ready …. Next time, more cheese.
Here is my kettle pizza set-up. I personally think that having extra kettles on hand for this is essential.
The KP kettle in the foreground,
followed by the kettle that is used to hold the KP adaptor while the lit charcoal is being dumped into the aforementioned kettle,
and then the kettle to hold all of the lids.
I decided to light a full chimney of Maple Leaf briquets. Usually I go with lump, but these briqs are excellent. Sugar maple wood for extra heat.
On the top part, I went with a thin piece of aluminum plus some fire brick.
The bowl turns a very, very dark red …
I let Mother Nature pre-heat the pizza stone (kiln shelf) …. Not sure if this does much.
I do not like to put the pizza in when it is doing this … I let it die down some ….
That's better …
I used Bobby Flay's pizza dough (PD) recipe. Very easy to follow and do. I will be using this PD recipe again.
http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/bobby-flay/pizza-dough-recipe.htmlI gotta say … I suck at building pizza. Way too much sauce on this one. My wife made the second one, and it was much better.
Once the stone is heated up nice, I think the KP unit cooks the best at around 550-600° …. That's been my experience.
I remembered how much fun it is to create your own pizza and cook them outside on a Weber kettle.
Thanks for looking.