Ingredients:
2 cups brown rice flour (white actually works even better, but is less healthy)
1 generous cup tapioca flour
1/2 cup corn starch
2 Tbsp sugar
1 1/2 tsp salt
1 Tbsp xanthan gum
1 envelope unflavored gelatin
sprinkle of your favorite garlic & herb, and/or Italian seasoning
2 Tbsp yeast
Mix these dry ingredients together before adding wet ingredients:
2 eggs
1 cup milk (may use alternatives)
1 1/2 cup warm water
1 tsp apple cider vinegar
Mix in and then beat (I use a stand mixer) on high speed while you prepare your pans. Yes, that's two full sized (16 inch, I think) pizza pans. You may use nonstick spray or butter to prep your pans, but get them greased in some way. By now your dough/batter should be smooth. Simply divide it between your two pizza pans, and use a rubber scraper to begin spreading it out over the surface. At this point I make the biggest divergence between other recipes that I've seen. I've seen famous chefs on TV spray plastic wrap, cover their dough, roll it out, remove the plastic wrap, and then brush olive oil on the dough. When I saw this I laughed aloud... Hold your hand over the partially spread dough, pour yourself a handful of olive oil, rub your palms together and gently slap out your dough. That's it, no plastic wrap, no rolling pins and no awkwardly brushing oil on a dough that wants to stick to your brush. At this point I place both pans into a barely warmed oven (turned off), and let it rise.
Let this rise for about 10 minutes or so and then remove them in order to preheat your oven to 425 degrees.
While you're topping your first pizza, you can bake the second crust. The timing works out just about perfectly at my house. When the second crust comes out, it's time to slide your topped pizza directly onto the rack. If you have discovered that your crust has stuck at all, just use a spatula to loosen it, and then gently support the pizza with your spatula as you tilt your pan over your pulled out oven rack and pull the pan away. (This took me a little while to get really good at this, but if many of you complain about trouble with this step, I'll have to make a video or something. Really I think you'll get it.) Bake until your toppings are to your liking, and you're done... Well, bake your second pizza too, of course. I cut my pizzas right away, and place the slices on a wire rack so that they don't sweat (This keeps the crust crisp instead of soggy). My family would rather eat this than have purchased pizza any day.
(Zion)-Mmmmm... I want the picture of this pizza to jump out so that I can eat it...
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