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B1 Intermediate English 9:43 1,842 words Cooking

Roman-Style Pizza | Food Wishes

National Geographic · 154,287 views · Added 2 months ago

AI Summary

This video shows how to make Roman-style pizza, a thick-crusted variety that differs from traditional thin-crust versions. Learners will develop vocabulary around bread-making and pizza preparation, including terms like dough, yeast, hydration, rise, and stretching, as well as descriptive adjectives for texture like airy, crispy, and chewy. The video offers excellent practice in following extended procedural English while learning about international food culture.

Learning Stats

B1

CEFR Level

1,842

Total Words

512

Unique Words

5/10

Difficulty

Vocabulary Diversity 28%

Subtitles (107 segments)

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00:00

hello this is chef john from foodwishes.com with roman style pizza that's right i'm going to show you how to make my favorite non-thin crust pizza which i can

00:12

confirm is absolutely amazing although i can't confirm it's absolutely authentic but i'm pretty sure it's close and

00:19

i'm very sure you're gonna love it and

00:21

to get started we'll begin our pizza dough like we do almost all of them by combining flour yeast and

00:27

water which we will then stir together with a wooden spoon oh and

00:31

because we're going to do such a long slow ferment this time we don't need to start the east in the water first okay we can just mix everything together at once and

00:40

what we'll do is stir that until almost all the flour is incorporated and

00:44

we form sort of a shaggy dough at which point we'll stop and

00:47

add the last two ingredients which is some salt as well as a generous splash of olive oil and

00:52

then we'll continue stirring for at least two or three more minutes or until we've formed a very smooth extremely soft and wet and

01:00

sticky dough okay one of the secrets to roman style pizza is a high hydration dough which simply means we're using a lot of water as in like 80 percent

01:09

compared to the weight of the flour and

01:11

that's it once we feel like we've stirred that long enough we will clean off our spoon with a spatula and

01:16

scrape down the sides of the bowl and then what we'll do is cover this and Set our timer for 15 minutes, at which point we'll perform the first of three foldings, which, yes,

01:26

is going to be very similar to the technique we use for sourdough. And of course we're

01:31

to want to wet our fingers first to prevent the dough from sticking too much.

01:35

And what we'll do is grab the dough at the edge of the bowl and sort of pull it and

01:40

stretch it over the top, and then we will rotate the bowl a few inches and do the exact same thing,

01:45

and we'll repeat that about 10 or 12 times. And

01:48

if possible, after the last fold, if we can sort of gather that dough together and fold it over and end up with some sort of smooth skin over the top,

01:56

that's considered an advantage. But

01:58

don't stress if you can't do that, especially on this first fold, since it does take a little bit of time for that elastic texture to develop.

Full subtitles available in the video player

Key Vocabulary (9)

you A1 pronoun

Used to refer to the person or people that the speaker is addressing. It is the second-person pronoun used for both singular and plural subjects and objects.

little A1 adjective

small

transfer C1 noun

The act of moving someone or something from one place, position, or situation to another. In academic contexts, it specifically refers to the application of skills or knowledge learned in one situation to a new and different problem or environment.

Grammar in This Video

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