Using well - floured hands and a rolling pin, as necessary, pat and roll out
the first piece of dough on a lightly floured surface into a 12 - inch round, rotating the dough and flouring it frequently, to prevent sticking, as shown in the gluten free pizza shaping video.
After 30 minutes, pull out
the first piece of dough.
On a 14 inch square piece of parchment paper, flour the top of
the first piece of dough and, using a rolling pin, roll into a 12 inch round, rolling it thinner toward the center and thicker along the edge to create a crust.
Not exact matches
Take the
first piece and flatten the
dough into a 6 - inch round so that you can place 1/4
of the raspberries on top.
notes: 1) after
first rise you can punch down and then braid, and then let rise again for at least 1 hr) 2) the word challah actually doesn't mean the BREAD — it's a
piece you take out
of the
dough, burn and then bless — in honor
of people who can't afford to get a meal... at least that is what I learned growing up!
Take the
first ball
of pizza
dough, and roll between two
pieces of parchment paper into an approximately 6 to 8 inch round, about ⅛ inch thick (thickness
of a nickel).
Now, to make the balls —
first, take a 17 - gram (0.6 oz)
piece of dough and then stick one side
of it into cocoa nibs.
Take one
piece of dough and
first form a ball and then a thick flat circle (see video) by patting and shaping at the same time.
In between 2
pieces of parchment, roll the
first dough to 1 / 8 - inch thickness.
For the
first loaf, take 1
piece of dough and divide it into 4 equal
pieces.
Now, to make the balls —
first, take a 17 - gram (0.6 oz)
piece of dough and then stick one side
of it into cocoa nibs.
The pack includes: · Two long colourful display banners
of «Pirates» and «Treasure Island» each decorated with pirate themed pictures · A colourful display border to print out as many times as you need for use on a display board
of any size · An A4 word card - great to use when writing · Topic words - great to add to display or use in the writing area · Word and picture flashcards · Pirate posters - pictures
of different pirates · Colouring pictures - a collection
of pirate themed sheets for children to colour · Phoneme coins - all
of the phonemes from the Letters and Sounds scheme on gold coins - great for display or to hide in the sand tray for the children to find the «treasure» · Alphabet coins - lower and upper case letters · Bingo - a pirate themed colourful bingo game to make and play · Skull and cross-bone bunting · Pirate phrases on posters · A pirate profile worksheet - draw your pirate and then decide what characteristics your pirate will have - three different versions
of this for differentiation · Songs and rhymes about pirates · Play
dough mats - can you make 3 more
pieces of treasure, can you give the pirates new hats etc · Colourful treasure to cut out and use on displays, in the sand tray etc · Board game - move around the treasure island answering questions along the way to try and reach the treasure
first - two levels
of maths questions are provided as well as blank question cards · Two pirate themed wordsearches · «My pirate adventure» worksheet · Wanted posters for the children to fill in · Writing pages - Four A4 pages with pirate borders for the children to use when writing · Design a pirate flag worksheet · Search for the treasure game - collect coins along the way to fill your treasure chest · Cut and stick treasure map · Pirate acrostic poem · Speech bubble worksheets - write what you think the different pirates are saying · Counting cards up to 10 - count the number
of pirate ships, telescopes etc · Design a pirate ship worksheet · Describe the treasure worksheet · A worksheet for the children to draw and write what they have spotted through the telescope