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Universal Veggie

The Best Summertime Pizza
I cannot believe how much pizza I ate when I was young.
I was going to school at the University of Alaska in Fairbanks and working too. Still, my roommates and I made regular treks the two blocks to the local pizza joint, the King's Kup. The pizza was good and the pretty blonde waitresses didn't hurt. When it was cold outside, as cold as fifty below, we stayed forever—and consumed mountains of pizza.
Now most commercial pizzas seem heavy and rich to us. We much prefer lighter pizzas, especially in the summertime. A summertime pizza is a lighter pizza made with fresh vegetables, fewer toppings, and a crispy crust. In this article, we'll tell you how to do it.
It's amazing what you can put on a pizza. You can serve many of your favorite garden vegetables on a pizza, everything from tomatoes to potatoes and broccoli to beans. Some may seem a little strange but if you like the veggies, chances are—you'll like them on a pizza.
Your veggies are usually placed on a base, often a marinara sauce. It doesn't have to be a red sauce. White pizzas are made with either a white sauce like alfredo or simply a nice coating of olive oil. You need enough that your pizza is not dry but no more, especially if you want a crispy crust.
Except for tomatoes, cook your veggies first. It just doesn't work to load up a thin light crust, one that was intended to be crispy, and then bake the pizza until the vegetables are cooked. Stir fry the vegetables until they are almost tender, load them on a prebaked crust, and cook them for five more minutes. Top your veggies with just enough cheese to balance the veggies and hold things together. Of course, you can add meat but we're trying to make summertime pizzas here. Cook the pizza just until the cheese melts, about five minutes.
And the crust . . .
You can't make a thin crust with bread flour. It's too stiff and springs back too much. You need a soft, pliable dough with not too much gluten. You can do it with all-purpose flour. Better yet, add a little rye flour. Rye flour does not contain the proteins that make gluten and effectively dilutes the gluten in the wheat flour. You can use our pizza mixes and make soft, pliable dough.
About the Author
Dennis Weaver is president of The Prepared Pantry. The Prepared Pantry sells ingredients, kitchen tools, gourmet food, and baking mixes—including pizza dough mixes. One of The Prepared Pantry's tools is the Excelle Elite Pizza Crisper Pan. It's great for making crispy, delicious pie crust.
What economic theory is this? is it a form of communist economics?
if u had like a universal coin u can buy a house wit one or a veggie burger. basically if everything cost the same not jus in stores but ppl themselves having to comply by law i dont care this about being unrealistic i jus wanna kno wut this is called
There's no name for that, because it doesn't make any sense. You could call it an "undifferentiated-value monetary system."
It doesn't seem particularly communist--products under communism are valued largely by the amount of labor involved in their production. A veggie burger would require vastly less labor than a house, so pricing them the same would be senseless.
Vegetarian Recipe #10 - Bread Rolls - Healthy Cooking - Indian Food - Brahma Kumaris


