A few hints make cooking with Wisconsin cheese an easy and tasty success: Use low heat, just enough to melt the cheese and blend it with other ingredients. High heat makes natural cheese tough and stringy. Avoid long cooking, which also makes cheese tough and stringy; cook just enough to melt. To promote even melting, slice, shred, grate, cube or dice cheese before adding as an ingredient.
WISCONSIN CHEESE PIZZA
Dough: 1 1/3 cups water 1 package or 2 1/4 teaspoons active dry yeast 1 tablespoon sugar 1 tablespoon sugar 2 tablespoons olive oil 3 1/2 to 3 3/4 cups all-purpose flour 1 tablespoon kosher salt
Pizza Sauce: 1/3 cup extra virgin olive oil 1 pound Roma tomatoes 1 garlic clove, crushed 6 large fresh basil leaves, whole 6 sprigs fresh parsley,whole kosher salt to taste fresh ground pepper to taste
Dough: Combine water, yeast, sugar and olive oil in a large mixing bowl. Let mixture stand until it foams on top. Combine flour and salt. Stir dry ingredients into the liquid ingredients and knead dough together until dough forms a smooth ball and is elastic. Shape dough into 2 balls and place in two bowls covered with damp towel or plastic wrap. Allow dough to proof at 70 degrees until double in size. Punch down dough and shape into 2 12-inch circles. Sauce: Place olive oil and tomatoes in large pot (not aluminum). Sauté tomatoes in oil until tomatoes soften. Add remaining ingredients, except the cheeses, and simmer together until thickened. Puree mixture in food processor and strain through fine sieve. Cheese Topping: Spread sauce on pizza dough according to the amount of sauce you prefer. Sprinkle Wisconsin Parmesan and Wisconsin Mozzarella cheeses on pizzas. Bake at 450 degrees until lightly golden brown, about 15-20 minutes.
Makes two 12-inch pizzas.
Note: Top pizzas with favorite toppings, if desired. Note: Can substitute purchased pizza shells.
Cheese is a nutritious milk product that has been one of man's most important foods for thousands of years. The United States and France rank as the leading cheese-producing countries. Wisconsin is the leading cheese making state. Wisconsin Cheese comes in about 350 varieties and in many different sizes and shapes. There are literally several thousands of varieties world wide.
History of Cheese Making
Widmer's Wisconsin Cheese Legacy...
In Wisconsin, the cheese making
legacy runs deep and examples of
third-and fourth generation
Wisconsin cheese makers carrying
on the family tradition are common.
Joe Widmer, is one such third-generation example. Widmer's Cheese Legacy
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