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How to throw a portable pizza party in your backyard

A table with a pizza oven, pizza plates and a metal turner. There's a beer on the table, too.
The Ooni Fyra 12, waiting to be put into action. It weighs about 20 pounds and is fired using wood pellets, so is easy to transport and set up anywhere. (Jess Fleming / Pioneer Press)
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Who doesn’t love pizza?

A table with a pizza oven, pizza plates and a metal turner. There's a beer on the table, too.
The Ooni Fyra 12, waiting to be put into action. (Jess Fleming / Pioneer Press)

Crust, sauce, cheese, toppings: It’s the perfect recipe for a dinner everyone will love.

My husband and I recently bought a portable outdoor pizza oven (ours is an Ooni), and we have been churning out pizzas for friends and family with abandon.

It took a few tries for us to get the dough right, and I’m still experimenting there — sourdough and fermented dough are next on my agenda — but what we’ve accomplished so far is so fun and easy that I wanted to share.

There are lots of options for portable pizza ovens, but we wanted an oven that was small enough to transport to the cabin or friends’ houses, and we were also hoping for some wood-fired flavor. We landed on the Ooni Fyra 12, which is fired solely through wood pellets — the same kind we use in our Traeger smoker/grill. It weighs about 20 pounds and has a carrying case (purchased separately) so is easy to transport, too.

We have the operation down pat now, after figuring out that you must add a small scoop of pellets after every pizza to keep the fire hot. We also purchased a metal peel and a metal turner, the former of which makes launching pizzas into the oven a breeze, and the latter of which ensures an evenly cooked crust, since you can do quarter or eighth turns every 15 seconds.

It’s a very active process — no sitting and waiting for your pizza to cook — but also extremely fast. A 12-inch Neapolitan pizza cooks in less than two minutes. My husband and I usually tag-team: He mans the oven while I stretch the dough and top the pizzas.

A table covered with toppings in individual containers -- cheese, sauce, arugula, pesto, peppers, pineapple and more are included
A toppings bar for a pizza party. We let guests choose their own adventure, but also create a few specialty pies. (Jess Fleming / Pioneer Press)

It’s fun to have a toppings bar so everyone can make their favorites or whip up a fun new creation. I prep the toppings and sauce beforehand — usually the day before so that I’m not exhausted by the end of pizza day — and make the dough for the crust the day of the party. Thanks to my trusty stand mixer, the dough comes together in a matter of minutes.

One batch of crust makes six 12-inch pizzas. I figure on about a pizza and a half per person, especially since we always have salads or other side dishes. Leftovers are great reheated or eaten cold from the refrigerator the next day.

A pizza in an oven
A pizza topped with garlic/black pepper oil, mozzarella and prosciutto cooks in the Ooni pizza oven. (Jess Fleming / Pioneer Press)

I’m including the crust and red sauce recipes I use, along with a fun list of topping ideas and some combinations to try. A big bonus of making pizzas: Leftovers from other meals can be toppings! Scraps of chicken from rotisserie or beer can chicken, bits of ham, that half-carton of mushrooms languishing in your refrigerator drawer — all make great toppings.

You can make these in your home oven or grill with a pizza stone, too. I’ve seen recipes that use a broiler to mimic the intense heat of a wood-fired oven, but many gas grills also reach high enough temperatures to cook a Neapolitan.

Tips and tricks

A pizza topped with bright green arugula
A prosciutto and arugula pizza, cooked in the Ooni pizza oven. (Jess Fleming / Pioneer Press)

Use 00: It’s more expensive, but if you want perfectly pliable dough, seek out 00 flour, which is finer than all-purpose. I have found it at Hy-Vee but usually order it from Amazon for a better price.

Invest in a scale: If you don’t already have one, you’ll need a cooking scale to weigh out the flour, water, salt and yeast for the crust if you want it to be perfect every time.

Less is more: Scant sauce and limited toppings will ensure that your crust is crisp and not soggy. I use less than a quarter cup of sauce on each pizza and leave the middle of the pie nearly sauce-less.

Grate your own: Pre-grated, bagged cheese does not melt as well. My food processor’s grater attachment can take down two pounds of mozzarella in just a few minutes, and it’s well worth the cleanup. You can also tear fresh mozzarella into small pieces and use that, but beware that there’s lots of moisture in fresh cheese, which can affect how well your crust cooks. Use it sparingly. If you can find whole milk mozzarella, absolutely use that, but the part-skim stuff in most grocery stores works fine, too.

Tears are your enemy: If you get a hole in your crust, sauce and cheese will stick to the pizza peel and make your pie impossible to launch. You can try re-rolling and shaping the dough, but don’t try and top it and cook it with a hole. I speak from experience.

More flour is better: Before you add toppings to your crust, make sure you generously flour the peel you’ll use to launch it. Shake the peel to make sure the crust moves freely, then add the toppings. If it doesn’t move, lift the crust and add more flour before you top it.

Work swiftly: The longer your crust is on the peel, the more likely it will stick.

Topping ideas

A pizza topped with sausage and green peppers
An Ooni pizza topped with Italian sausage and green peppers. You must sautee the sausage first. (Jess Fleming / Pioneer Press)

I always have the basics — pepperoni, sausage, mozzarella, parmesan, green peppers, green olives, onions and mushrooms. Sausage and mushrooms should be sauteed first.

In place of red sauce: Tapenade or olive paste, pesto or plain or flavored olive oil

Vegetable toppings: Artichoke hearts (diced small for quick cooking), pineapple, fresh or pickled jalapenos, thinly sliced zucchini, halved cherry tomatoes, broccolini (blanch it first)

Other meats: Rendered bacon, pre-cooked shrimp, pulled pork, cooked chicken, prosciutto

After-oven additions: Fresh basil; arugula tossed in lemon juice, salt and pepper; olive oil; hot honey

Pizza Sauce

A pizza topped with green olives and mushroom confit
A mushroom and green olive pizza made in the Ooni Fyra 12. (Jess Fleming / Pioneer Press)

Makes enough for about a dozen pizzas

Adapted from “The Outdoor Cook” from America’s Test Kitchen

INGREDIENTS

  • 1 (28-ounce) can high-quality whole peeled tomatoes (preferably San Marzano), drained
  • 1 tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil
  • 1 teaspoon red wine vinegar
  • 2 small garlic cloves (or 1 large), minced
  • 1 teaspoon kosher salt
  • 1 teaspoon dried oregano
  • ½ teaspoon freshly ground black pepper

DIRECTIONS

Process all ingredients in a food processor until smooth, about 30 seconds. Transfer to a bowl and refrigerate until ready to use.

Classic Pizza Dough

A pepperoni pizza
A simple pepperoni pizza made in the Ooni pizza oven. (Jess Fleming / Pioneer Press)

Makes enough for six 12-inch pizzas

Adapted from Ooni

INGREDIENTS

  • 607 grams or 21.4 ounces 00 type flour
  • 364 grams or 12.8 ounces water
  • 18 grams or 4 teaspoons salt
  • 9.2 grams or .3 ounces active dried yeast (or 7 grams or .24 ounces of instant dried yeast)

DIRECTIONS

  1. Place two-thirds of the water in a large bowl. In a saucepan or microwave, bring the other third of the water to a boil, then add it to the cold water in the bowl. This creates the correct temperature for activating the yeast. Whisk the salt and yeast into the warm water.
  2. Fit a stand mixer with a dough hook and place the flour in the mixer bowl. Turn the machine on at a low speed and gradually add the yeast mixture to the flour. Once combined, leave the dough to keep mixing at the same speed for 5-10 minutes, or until the dough is firm and stretchy. Cover the dough with plastic wrap and leave to rise in a warm place for 1-2 hours.
  3. When the dough has roughly doubled in size, weigh out 160 gram (5.6 ounce) balls. Space out balls on a sheet pan that’s been lightly coated with olive oil — I can usually fit about 9 dough balls per sheet. Cover in plastic wrap and leave to rise for at least 20 more minutes, but I often leave them for an hour or so as I’m prepping our workspace.
  4. When ready to cook the pizzas, stretch or roll the dough into 12-inch rounds, place on floured peel, top and launch into the oven.

Tip: You can freeze leftover dough. Wrap individual balls tightly in plastic wrap. Thaw and allow to rise for 30 minutes before using.