Pizza in Teglia — Prosciutto e Funghi
- Servings
- 4
- Prep time
- 30 min (+ 24h ferment or 8h same-day)
- Cook time
- 18–22 min
Ingredients
Dough
- 400 g bread flour (RED BELL, ~13.5% protein)
- 320 g water (80% hydration), at room temperature
- 10 g fine salt (2.5%)
- 2 g instant dry yeast (0.5%) — see timing note below
- 20 g extra virgin olive oil (5%)
Toppings
- 250 g crushed tomatoes or passata
- 200 g low-moisture mozzarella (or fresh mozzarella, drained and torn)
- 150 g mushrooms (button or brown), thinly sliced
- 80 g prosciutto crudo
- 1 clove garlic, minced
- 1 tbsp extra virgin olive oil (for the sauce)
- Salt and pepper to taste
- Fresh basil leaves (after bake)
- Drizzle of olive oil (after bake)
Instructions
1. Make the dough
24-hour cold ferment (recommended)
- In a large bowl, whisk the flour and yeast.
- Add the water and mix until no dry flour remains — it will be shaggy and sticky. Rest 20 minutes (autolyse).
- Add the salt and olive oil. Mix and fold until incorporated — use wet hands or a dough scraper, it’s too sticky for dry hands.
- Perform 4 sets of stretch and folds, 15 minutes apart. The dough will transform from a sloppy mess to a smooth, extensible slab.
- Cover the bowl tightly and refrigerate for 18–24 hours.
Same-day (8 hours)
- Same as above but use 4 g yeast instead of 2 g.
- After the stretch and folds, let it bulk ferment at room temperature for 6–8 hours until it has roughly doubled and looks bubbly.
2. Prepare the sauce
- Combine the crushed tomatoes, minced garlic, 1 tbsp olive oil, a pinch of salt, and pepper.
- Do not cook the sauce — it goes on raw and bakes in the oven.
3. Prepare the mushrooms
- Heat a dry pan over high heat.
- Sauté the sliced mushrooms for 3–4 minutes until they release their moisture and start to brown.
- Season lightly with salt. Set aside to cool.
- This step is critical — raw mushrooms on pizza will make it soggy, especially at these hydrations.
4. Pan the dough
- Pour 2–3 tbsp olive oil into your sheet pan (~35×25 cm) and spread it around the bottom and sides. Be generous — this creates the fried, crispy bottom.
- Gently transfer the dough to the pan. Don’t punch it down.
- Using oiled fingertips, press the dough outward from the center toward the edges. Work slowly — if it resists, wait 10 minutes and try again.
- Stretch it to fill the pan, getting it into the corners. It should be about 1–1.5 cm thick.
- Cover with a damp towel or oiled plastic wrap and rest 2 hours at room temperature. It should puff up noticeably.
5. Top and bake
- Preheat the mini-oven to 230°C (450°F), or as hot as it goes. If it has a convection setting, use it.
- Spread the raw sauce evenly over the dough, leaving a small border.
- Scatter the mozzarella.
- Distribute the sautéed mushrooms evenly.
- Drizzle a little olive oil over the top.
- Bake for 18–22 minutes — the crust should be golden on top and bottom, the cheese bubbling and lightly spotted with color.
- Check the bottom by lifting a corner with a spatula — it should be golden and crisp.
6. Finish and serve
- Remove from the oven.
- Drape the prosciutto crudo over the hot pizza — don’t cook it, it will wilt and become tough. The residual heat is enough.
- Top with torn fresh basil leaves and a drizzle of good olive oil.
- Let it rest 5 minutes before cutting.
- Cut into rectangles and serve.
Tips
- The oil in the pan is not optional. This is what gives teglia its signature fried bottom crust. Don’t skimp.
- High hydration is the point. The dough will feel unmanageable at first. Trust the process — the stretch and folds build structure. By the end it will be smooth and cohesive.
- Don’t punch down the dough. When transferring to the pan, handle it gently to preserve the gas.
- Mini-oven tips: Use the convection setting if available for more even browning. Place the pan in the lower-middle position for good bottom heat. If the top colors too fast, tent with foil.
- Prosciutto goes on AFTER baking. Always. Cooked prosciutto is a crime.
Result
A thick but impossibly airy square of pizza with a shatteringly crisp, olive-oil-fried bottom. The crumb is open and custardy inside, topped with tangy tomato, melted mozzarella, savory mushrooms, and the delicate salt-sweetness of prosciutto that melts softly from the residual heat. This is home pizza at its best — no fancy oven required.