Make Food Network star Giada De Laurentiis‘ flavorful and easy Antipasto Calzone recipe the star of your next meal. Oozing with cheese and bursting with your favorite antipasto ingredients, this is a ...
Jason Goldstein shared a version for LA and Cincinnati fans. Whether you want to see the Bengals or the Rams with more end zone celebrations on Sunday, these recipes will have food fans hyped over ...
These calzones are easy to make and taste fantastic! The ingredients are simple, frozen bread dough (you can make your own ...
A calzone is essentially an Italian handheld meal made with chewy-crisp pizza dough stuffed with classic pizza toppings. The process for making a calzone is simple: sauce and fillings are placed on a ...
To make the most of rotisserie chicken, Food & Wine’s Justin Chapple tosses it with a buttery Buffalo sauce, then bakes it into a calzone with Monterey Jack cheese. To stay in keeping with traditional ...
Cookbook author Sara Mouton experiments with fruit inside these dessert calzones. (Photo from 'Sara Moulton's Home Cooking 101: How to Make Everything Taste Better,' (Oxmoor House, 2016). "Calzones ...
Food Network host Giada De Laurentiis shows home cooks how to turn pizza dough into a sweet-tooth-satisfying dessert with her recipe for chocolate-hazelnut calzones. Reviewers praised the dessert’s ...
Mmm… the calzone. Folded-up pizza filled with gooey cheese. Yes, please. I love pizzas with all my favorite ingredients showing on top and hot, melted mozzarella ...
The city of Naples, Italy, is recognized as having the world's first pizzeria. According to Holly Hughes' book 'Frommer's 500 Places for Food and Wine Lovers', Antica Pizzeria Port'Alba opened in 1830 ...
“Valerie uses leftover Thanksgiving turkey, creamy ricotta, melty mozzarella and flavorful pesto to create calzones you’ll be craving year-round!” Food Network wrote in a caption for the video posted ...
Pizza is described in one dictionary as a “baked, open-faced pie consisting of a thin layer of dough topped with tomato sauce and cheese.” In which century was that written? Somebody has to tell them ...