This pizza uses my aromatic nettle sourdough pizza dough and is best cooked in a Gozney Dome. There are few things as delicious as a woodfired pizza. This recipe was born in the dusty Valencian hills, I was walking with my wife, Sophie and our best friends when we came across a beautiful little village and sat down to eat at a weather beaten family restaurant. As the evening sun nestled in the surrounding trees we ate the most delicious honey, figs and goats cheese – accented with a mouth watering hit of chilli. Whenever I make this pizza I’m fixated by the bubbling brown butter and vibrant colours. Every bite takes me back to that little Spanish paradise.
It’s best to start the dough the day before for the best flavour but you can make it early in the morning if you run out of time. You will need a ripe sourdough starter but you could swap out with 3g of dried yeast if needed.
You will need your Gozney oven clean, enough fuel to keep her hot and the appropriate pizza peels – one for loading and one for turning. If you need some instruction on the basics then Gozney has a great YouTube channel that will help you.
Here is how to make the pizza…
- The day before, mix your dough. Mix the water, starter and oil by hand in a large bowl until combined. Add in the flour and mix again, leave covered for 15 minutes to fully hydrate then add in the salt and knead by hand for about 10 minutes until the dough becomes smooth. Add in the sieved nettles and knead until combined. Place into an oiled bowl, cover with a cloth and leave on the worktop. After 20 mins fold the dough and leave again for another 20 mins, repeat this two more times. Shape into four balls by dividing the dough and folding each piece in on itself. Place into an oiled tray, cover with cling film and place in the fridge overnight. Make sure the fridge is running at about 5C.
- Now for your spicy pizza party day! Heat up your Gozney dome with a small wood fire, move the fire to the right hand side, loosely wrap the garlic bulb in foil and roast off until soft and smokey, this should take about 20 minutes on the far left hand side of the oven. Remove and once cool, squeeze out the pulp and mix into the soft butter with a teaspoon of the Maldon Chilli Sea Salt. Taste and set aside at room temperature.
- Get the topping ready and laid out and run up your pizza oven to over 450C, making sure the base is at least 350C (I use an infrared thermometer to check). Remove the dough balls from the fridge for an hour, still covered.
- Clean off a smooth work surface and dust with the semolina flour. Dust the pizza balls with a little semolina, pick up a dough ball and place on the worktop with a good dusting of semolina. Gently and evenly push the dough out to a circle. Using both hands, stretch the dough out to a dinner plate size. Add two spoons of the chilli butter and evenly spread around the pizza. Top with the goats cheese, figs, Iberico ham and drizzle over with honey. Slide a pizza peel underneath the pizza and confidently slide into the oven, making sure there is a rolling flame from the wood fire. After about 30 seconds turn the pizza to give it an evenly cooked crust. Remove the pizza and place onto a cooling rack to harden up. Sprinkle over a little more Maldon Chilli Sea Salt and cut into 6 wedges.
- Best eaten with an ice cold glass of spanish beer in the Valencian hills, but then again – what isn’t?