We teach making stuffed, AKA double crust, pizzas at our annual October pizza seminar. Begin with any dough formula, sheet it out as thin as you want, I normally go for about 1/8-inch thick, then fit it into a 2-inch deep pan that has been greased with Crisco or margarine. Leave the excess dough draped over the top edge of the pan. Using your fingers, fit the dough into the pan, then allpy some ricotta cheese and (my favorite) a few chopped fresh basil leaves. Sheet another dough piece as thin as you can, then hand stretch it a little more (you want it very thin), fit this dough piece over the filling in the pan so it completely covers the filling and drapes up over the top rim of the pan. With your thumbs on the outside of the pan, and your other fingers inside the pan pinch/crimp the two pieces of dough on the side of the pan together. Now, using your fingers, push and lightly crimp the top dough layer into the bottom of the pan around the circumference of the pan. Tear a hole in the cwenter of the top dough sheet, and using a rolling pin, crimp-cut the scrap dough from the top edge of the pan. Put in the oven to parbake just until the crust begins to turn brown, about 5 minutes. Remove from oven and sauce, cheese and desired toppings. Place back into the oven to finish baking (about 5 to 7 minutes more). Allow to set a couple minutes before cutting with a rocker knife and serving. You can turn this into a Chicago style stuffed pizza by putting the toppings in the bottom with the ricotta cheese and then after par-baking, putting on a layer of sliced mozzarella, followed by the sauce, and then baking it. You can experiment with this to make it unique to your store. Try using a blend of three or four different cheeses in the bottom rather than just the ricotta.
Tom Lehmann/The Dough Doctor