
Pinsa in can ‘easy’
This Pinsablend has been specially designed by the chefs of Dalla Giovanna for making Pinsa Romana.Pinsa is a cross between pizza and focaccia. With this mix from the Italian house Molino Dallagiovanna, making a Roman-style pinsa is fairly simple. The pinsa has a distinctive and unique flavor, with notes of traditional taste thanks to the presence of soy and rice flour. The addition of tritordeum gives this pinsa a special flavor. Tritordeum is a grain with a thousand properties, a cross between durum wheat and wild barley.
Ingredients
1000gPinsa flour
800mlWater at approx. 4°C
1gDried yeast
20gSalt
20gOlive oil
Cornmeal
Preparation
- Put the pinsa flour in the dough machine and add the dry yeast to the flour, let it run on a low setting for about 1 minute.
- Slowly add cold water (about 95%) of the total amount.
- Mix for about 7-10 minutes until the water is well absorbed and add the last 5% of water.
- Add the salt.
- Switch the speed to setting 2 (a bit faster) and mix for another 6-8 minutes. Aim for a final dough temperature of about 23°C.
- Add the olive oil and mix until max 24°C.
- Let the dough rest for about 15 minutes.
- Portion to the desired weight and store the dough in the refrigerator for about 24 to 72 hours.
- Always keep the dough around 4°C in a dough box or a sealed container.
- Take the dough out of the refrigerator well before preparation (about 6 hours).
- Sprinkle cornmeal on the work surface and turn the dough out of the container upside down.
- Press it in with your fingertips and dust off the flour. Grease a baking tray and bake in it or bake directly on a stone.
- Bake at 250°C for about 11 minutes.
Serving suggestion: Serve with whipped mascarpone, fresh lemon zest, buffalo mozzarella, and anchovies




