Teaching Kids How to Make Pizza

Originally published on September 17, 2015

So here’s the thing. As a parent, I have visions of me and my grown girls in the kitchen, preparing a big family feast together and chop-chop-chopping while we giggle away. And I’d like to think that one day, they’ll bring me breakfast in bed on Mother’s Day. But before any of that can happen, I have to teach them. I have to show them how to cook. And truthfully, I just don’t want to. Or at least, I didn’t think I did.

See, the kitchen was my place. It was where I could go and know that, for at least half an hour, time was mine. I could forget about all the other stuff that had to be done, and get lost in risotto or put all my focus into making that perfect pasta dough. How exactly was I supposed to do that when I was explaining every move, or waiting for tiny little hands to level out a cup of flour? It couldn’t be done. And if I allowed it to happen, the kitchen would turn into just another place where chores were done.

But the time had come. My girls are getting older and, it was probably time to start teaching them at least a few kitchen basics. I mean, I’ve cooked for a good portion of my life. If they can’t at least make themselves a proper meal when it comes time for them to leave home, I’ve basically failed as a mother, right? So, I bought The Usborne First Cookbook while on our family trip to the annual town fair. We put a plan in place that every Thursday, we’d get into the kitchen and they’d cook while I instructed. They were excited. I could see the beginning of the end.

That Thursday will turn into many more Thursdays – I can’t remember the last time I had so much fun making dinner. So maybe pizza isn’t the most sophisticated dish to make. And yes, maybe I did have my doubts about the simply-too-simple sauce in the book. But I can’t tell you how much fun it was to watch their noses scrunch up when they smelled the yeast as it started to bloom. And watching their eyes widen in amazement after the dough rose was a feeling that I had almost forgotten existed. See, when you get kids in the kitchen, you not only get to teach them a life skill everyone should have, you get to relive the joy of cooking that brought you to the kitchen in the first place. And you get to take the time to once again discover that sometimes simple is best – that sauce was gorgeous.

And as it turns out, 7 and 9 year-olds can giggle just as well as their future 20-something selves.

1/2 cup water  
1 teaspoon sugar  
1 teaspoon quick-rise yeast
1 3/4 cups white bread flour
1/2 teaspoon salt  
1 16-ounce can diced tomatoes
1 tablespoon tomato paste
1 1/4 cups grated mozzarella cheese  
1 teaspoon dried oregano  
Additional toppings such as pepperoni, bacon, green peppers, mushrooms, etc. (optional)  

Directions:

1.) Following the directions on the package of yeast, add the water, yeast, and sugar to a container.

2.) Sift the flour and salt into a bowl, then mix in the yeast. Mix in just enough water to make a soft bowl of dough that leaves the bowl clean.

3.) Dust flour over a clean work surface. Put the dough onto the floured surface and knead it for about 5 minutes. When the dough is smooth and stretchy, put it into a greased bowl.

4.) Cover the bowl with plastic wrap. Put it in a warm place for about an hour to rise.

5.) When the dough has doubled in size, take it out of the bowl and knead it for five more minutes.

6.) Preheat the oven to 400 degrees Fahrenheit and grease two pizza trays.

7.) Break the dough into two balls and put one into each pan. Press them with your fingers until they fill the pan, then pinch the edge to make crusts.

8.) Place a sieve over a large bowl and drain the tomatoes. Push the tomatoes through the sieve with a wooden spoon. Stir in the tomato paste and a pinch of salt and pepper.

9.) Spread the tomato sauce over the pizzas, but don’t spread it on the crusts. Sprinkle the cheese and seasoning over the sauce.

10.) Bake the pizzas on the middle shelf of the oven for 20 minutes, until the crusts are crisp and brown.

11.) Carefully lift out the pizza. Cut them into wedges or slices.