Homemade calzones are filled with 3 cheeses and sausage.
Originally published on January 4, 2008 – Since it’s Father’s Day, I thought I’d bring back one of my husband’s favorite recipes. He loves calzones, and fell back in love with this recipe when I recently remade them. They take a little time since you are making the dough from scratch, but they are totally worth it!!
My mom called me this morning, and during our conversation, she asked me if my husband and I ever go out to eat. I told her that we don’t go to restaurants very often, and when we do, I am usually disappointed because I can usually make the same thing better at home. Not to make it sound like I am a better cook than most restaurants out here, but it just seems like the quality has been lacking the last times that we have been out. There is a restaurant in Park City called the Main Street Pizza and Noodle that we really enjoy whenever we are up in Park City. And they make a delicious calzone. But seeing that it is tourist season in Park City, and especially since it’s almost time for the Sundance Film Festival, we will be steering clear of Park City for the next few months. (Neither of us are fans of the crowds, or the fact that the prices go up during the tourist/ski season!) So what do we do instead? Make our own calzones!!
I’m not a stranger to calzones. I have a recipe that I have made multiple times, and it’s pretty rare for me to make the same recipe multiple times. So what persuaded me to try this recipe? Because it’s America’s Test Kitchen!!
I had an easy time choosing the first recipe from this month’s Cookbook of the Month – The New Best Recipe. I was going through the book after I received it, and once I saw that there was a chapter on pizza, calzones, and focaccia, I immediately went to that chapter.
In the heading for calzones, it says that what they were looking for when creating the perfect calzone was “a crisp crust that had plenty of chew, with a healthy proportion of rich, creamy, flavorful filling.” I love it when someone else does the research and testing for me, because these calzones came out perfectly the first time!! I would say that they are better than my tried and true recipe, and my husband claimed that this was the best calzone dough that he had ever had.
I chose to make the Ricotta Calzones with the addition of sausage. In the book, there is an option for Ricotta Calzones with Sausage and Broccoli Rabe, but I didn’t have any of the broccoli, so I left that out. I do wish that I would have replaced it with another vegetable, though. My husband and I thought that mushrooms would have been a perfect addition to these.
One thing I especially loved about this recipe is that it is easily halved. The original recipe makes 6 calzones, but it was easy to cut down to make only 3. One suggestion I have if you are a recipe-half-er like me is to buy your yeast in the small jars instead of the packages. It’s a lot easier to measure the yeast out of the jar instead of opening a package, having to measure it, and then store the rest of the little package. The recipe listed below is the full recipe – not the halved recipe.
This recipe is quite long, but in reality, it is quite easy to put together, so don’t let the length deter you.
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Ricotta Calzones with Sausage
Ingredients
Dough
- 4 cups 22 ounces bread flour
- 2 1/4 teaspoons instant yeast
- 1 1/2 teaspoons table salt
- 2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
- 1 1/2 cups plus 1 tablespoon warm water
Filling
- 1 15- ounce container whole-milk ricotta cheese
- 8 ounces mozzarella cheese shredded
- 1 1/2 ounces freshly grated Parmesan cheese
- 1 large egg yolk
- 1 tablespoon chopped fresh oregano leaves
- 1/4 teaspoon table salt
- 1/2 teaspoon ground black pepper
- 8 ounces hot or sweet sausage
- 1 tablespoon minced garlic
- 1/4 teaspoon red pepper flakes
- Extra-virgin olive oil for brushing on tops
- Kosher salt or coarse sea salt for sprinkling on tops
Instructions
Make the dough:
- In the bowl of a mixer, combine the flour, yeast and salt. Using the dough hook with the mixer on medium-low speed, add the olive oil. Gradually add the water. Continue to mix until it comes together into a soft, elastic dough. This will take about 10 minutes.
- Spray a large bowl with cooking spray. Remove the dough from the mixer bowl and add the dough to the bowl. Cover with a towel or plastic wrap. Let the dough rise in a warm spot until doubles, 1 1/2 to 2 hours.
Make the filling:
- In a medium bowl, combine the ricotta, mozzarella, Parmesan, egg yolk, oregano, salt and pepper. Cover and refrigerate until needed.
- Remove the casings from the sausage. Cook the sausage in a skillet, breaking it up as it cooks until it is cooked through. Stir in the garlic and the red pepper flakes until fragrant, about 10 seconds and then remove from heat. Set aside to cool, then stir into the cheese mixture.
To assemble:
- Place an oven rack at the lowest position in the oven and set a pizza stone on the rack. Heat the oven to 500F and heat for at least 30 minutes.
- Divide the dough in half. Divide each half into thirds so that you have 6 pieces of dough. Shape each piece of dough into a ball and set on a piece of parchment paper that has been sprayed with nonstick cooking spray. Cover them with plastic wrap and let them rest for 15 to 30 minutes.
- Cut 6 9-inch squares of parchment paper. Roll each piece of dough into a 9-inch circle and set on a piece of parchment.
- Form the calzones by dividing the filling between each of the 6 rounds of dough. Fold the top half of the dough over, leaving a 1/2-inch border uncovered. Lightly press the dough to seal it. Starting at one end, place your index finger diagonally across the edge and pull the bottom layer of the dough over the tip of your finger. Repeat until the filling is sealed inside the calzone.
- With a sharp paring knife or a razor blade, cut 5 slits, about 1 1/2 inches long each, diagonally across the top of each calzone. Do not cut through the calzone, just the top layer.
- Brush the top of each calzone with olive oil, then sprinkle with coarse salt. Trim the excess parchment from around the calzone and slide the calzone onto a pizza peel. Slide them into the oven on the pizza stone. Bake until they are golden brown, about 11 minutes.
- Remove to a wire rack to cool for 5 minutes before serving.
Emiline says
Wow! Those look fantastic! The dough looks perfect. I like anything Italian. Sausage, mushroom, and ricotta sounds good to me. I’ve never had broccoli rabe…I wish I could try it. I bet you wish you had some, too.
Cynthia says
Deborah, look at that pic with the filling oozing out, slurp!
Jenny says
Yumm! I’ve been wanting to make some good calzones lately. Yours look beautiful!
Gwen says
Ah, I got that cookbook for Christmas. So far I’ve made the spaghetti and meatballs. (I thought it was yummy but my husband thinks meatballs are just a nuisance to eat because he prefers his meat distributed in the sauce so he cuts them up and stirs them in…sigh…) Looks like I need to check out the chapter that has the calzones next 😀
Tracy says
Beautiful calzone photo! I make that same recipe and I really like it … although they don’t look nearly as nice as yours.
Gigi says
I love calzones! The perfect “sandwich”!
Shandy says
I am so making this for football tomorrow! My husband actually has football today too, but he will just have to wait for this one. Your pictures are so beautiful! and the Calzone has to be one of my favorite foods. What I need to see is what the difference is between Stromboli and Calzone? When I was growing up, I used to be so hooked on Stromboli at a local Italian Deli. Calzones and Stromboli seem to have a lot in common. =)
Shandy @Pastry Heaven
Ann says
I love calzones and yours look fabulous. Haven’t made them in ages, but this post gets bookmarked and calzones get added to the (already) insanely long list of things to make this year.
chiff0nade says
Of course, everybody in the blogging world knows that I am Italian, born and raised in Brooklyn. My mother was a seamstress in a factory and my father (before he ran off with a floozie) was a milkman. Being good Italians, my mom and I used to make calzones all the time.
Then, after I became a PROFESSIONAL CHEF (graduated with honors from Peter Kump’s school, you understand) I devoted my talents to much more sophisticated cuisine.
But now I live in Florida (a man I met on the internet and married took me to Florida and then dumped me – what is it about men?)
Anyway, I now have a new boyfriend, “THE MANAGER” (he manages some lady ‘singers’ I think) so I am going to renew my talent at making calzones using your recipe.
Thanks for a great post (on, and my website has good recipes to – its on MySpace)
Peabody says
My husband will be running over to your house if I show him this. Calzones are his favorite. These look really good.
Beth G. says
WOW! My husband would LOVE these, I’ll have to give them a try- they look delicious!
Kevin says
I like calazones and it is past time that I tried making my own! Yours look really good! I like the sound of the ricotta and sausage filling. I also think that the addition of mushrooms would be nice.
Anj says
I think I just need to link to recipes in your blog on mine and say ‘yeah, what she did’….:o) Everything you make is just great.
Sylvia says
It happens to me when I order pizza,I always disappointed, And now I made my own pizza. Calzone is so good too, I like a lot your filled it sounds delicious, I must be try soon.
Susan from Food Blogga says
Calzones are one of my all-time favorite foods. I just made a spinach one the other night when we were watching football. It’s one of favorite football foods too. Your crust looks perfect in that top photo!
glamah16 says
Seems we are both into our Italian Ricoota thing this week.:-)I agree about dining out. And Chicago has some fabolous restaurants! But for average dining we can do it better at home with better service and prices.
Tab Eli says
I don’t eat red sauce in any restaurant as they do not know hiow to make it the way I was taught to make it. It is lqays to acidic to eat. My Siciliangrandmother made it with a pinch of baking soda and sugar to taste to cut the aciidty way down and make it sweet. If I have to eat Italian out, I will only wat buttered noodles or aldredo. They can’t mess that up. And Antipasto I know is mostly trsy of meats, cheese, olives and peppers. Not a salad with a vinegar/oil dressing. So name it anstipaso salad or antipasto tray.