New York Post

IT’S NOT DELIVERY!

- — Lauren Steussy

Replicatin­g restaurant pizza at home is pretty much impossible, but with a little know-how, you can make pies that are almost as good as your favorites. Here, some tips from the pros.

Go for the dough 1

“Go to your favorite pizza place and see if they’ll sell you a raw dough for $3 or $4,” says Anthony Falco, formerly the pizza czar at Roberta’s in Bushwick, and now an internatio­nal pizza consultant. If you’re making your own dough, let it rise slowly in the fridge overnight, instead of quickly in a warmer area. “You’re going to get much better depth of flavor,” Falco says.

Can it 2

Most times of the year, canned tomatoes are the way to go. Falco recommends buying a 28-ounce can of Jersey Fresh crushed tomatoes, and blending them in an immersion blender with 1 to 2 teaspoons of salt and 2½ teaspons of olive oil. No need to cook it. You can add garlic or herbs if you want, but just know that’s not what the pros do: “A chain restaurant will dump a bunch of herbs in your sauce to cover up the taste of the tomatoes, but I like to have my tomato speak for itself,” Falco says. You can always use garlic and fresh herbs as toppings.

Don’t get shredded 3

Use fresh mozzarella, not the pre-shredded packaged stuff. “It has a lower melting point than the commercial­ly made kind, and also has low moisture, which means it will melt quicker and more evenly,” says Al Di Meglio (right) of Barano in Williamsbu­rg, who adds that there’s no need to shred it, just cube it with a knife. And don’t overdo it. “You want to see the sauce between the cheese, so it has some room to melt,” Falco says.

Keep it simple 4

The biggest mistake most beginner pizza chefs make is overloadin­g on the toppings. “Until you’re really a pizza master, keep it under five toppings,” Falco says. This will taste better and prevent the pie from getting soggy and collapsing at dinnertime. Place the least amount of ingredient­s in the center of the pie. “Gravity will pull all the toppings toward the middle,” Di Meglio says.

Turn up the heat 5

Baking the pizza in the hottest possible oven is the only way to get close to the crispy, chewy crust you’ve had at restaurant­s, says Christian Petroni, chef at Fortina, which has locations in Brooklyn and Yonkers. Aside from turning the oven to its highest temperatur­e setting, you can put the pizza on the oven’s top rack, set the temperatur­e to broiler mode, cook it for five minutes so the top gets blistered, then transfer it to a skillet on the stovetop to finish cooking the bottom, Falco says.

Or, use a barbecue. Brush a grill with olive oil, get it nice and hot and lay the stretched-out dough, sans toppings, directly on the grill. “After like a minute and a half, give it a shimmy so that it releases from the grill and has a nice dark brown char on the bottom.” Flip it, he says, then add the sauce, cheese and toppings until the cheese melts.

And get even hotter 6

Try using a cast-iron pan to create an especially hot surface for cooking. “Brush the pan with olive oil, stick your dough in there, put your toppings on, crank up your oven as high it will go, leave it in for 15 to 20 minutes, [and you] have a pan-style pizza,” Falco says. If you’re ready to up your pizza game, consider investing in a thick pizza stone, or “the Cadillac of pizzamakin­g,” a pizza steel, which gets even hotter, Falco says. For the DIY crowd, head to Home Depot and buy some quarry flooring tiles, which can tolerate high heat and not crack. “The thicker, the better — an inch is ideal,” Petroni says.

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