Cook's Illustrated

Ricotta Calzones with Sausage and Broccoli Rabe

Published September 1, 2003. 

Why this recipe works:

We discovered a few tricks when crafting our ricotta calzone recipe that gave us an exemplary ricotta calzone with a crisp crust and a rich, creamy, flavorful filling. We chose bread flour to give the crust chew and olive oil to add flavor and make the dough easy to handle; we then mixed the dough for 10 minutes to fully develop the gluten. A combination of ricotta, mozzarella, and Parmesan in just the right proportions, blended with a single egg yolk, gave us the best filling for our ricotta calzone recipe.

Makes six 9 by 4-Inch Calzones

To make this recipe, you will need a standing mixer or food processor, parchment paper, and a pizza stone. The stone must heat for an additional 30 minutes once the oven has come up to temperature; if your oven heats slowly, begin heating it about an hour into the dough’s first rise. Leftover calzones must be refrigerated; to reheat, heat the oven with the pizza stone just as you did when making the recipe, then set the calzones on the hot pizza stone for about 10 minutes. A simple tomato sauce is a nice accompaniment to the calzones.


Ingredients

Try CooksIllustrated.com Free for 14 days.
Start your 14-day Free Trial Online Membership
  • 20 Years of Cook’s Recipes
  • Web-Exclusive Videos
  • Updated Product Ratings
  • Menus and Shopping Lists
How we use your email address
Christopher Kimball

Dear Friend,

These days, it’s pretty easy to get free recipes on the Internet. I’m sure a search for “roast chicken recipe” will turn up thousands and thousands. But, as with so much on the web, you should tread lightly if you don’t know the source.

In America’s Test Kitchen, our motto is, “Recipes that Work,” and our mission is to be your trusted source for recipes that work every time you use them. Our test cooks spend their days obsessively testing recipes until they offer consistently great results. As we like to say here, “We make the mistakes so you don’t have to.”

CooksIllustrated.com is the only place you can find not only 20 years' worth of our foolproof recipes, but also objective ratings of cookware, and blind taste tests for hundreds of everyday supermarket ingredients (hey, without the proper ingredients and equipment you can still run into problems — no matter how good the recipe).

Let me make a simple, no-nonsense offer. Try out our website FREE for a 14-Day, No-Hassle Trial Offer. I’m pretty confident that CooksIllustrated.com will quickly become an invaluable resource for everything from quick, weeknight suppers to huge, holiday feasts for family and friends.

Thanks for your consideration,

Signature

Christopher Kimball
Founder and Publisher

 
America's Test Kitchen