Easy Pizza Rustica (traditional Italian Easter Pie Or Pizzagaina) Recipe

Easy Pizza Rustica (traditional Italian Easter Pie Or Pizzagaina) Recipe

Make Easy Pizza Rustica (traditional Italian Easter Pie Or Pizzagaina) Recipe for a hearty, shareable Italian pie with rich meats and melting cheeses.

Prep Time90 minutes
Cook Time50 minutes
Total Time140 minutes
Yield8

Ingredients

Instructions

Step 1: Bloom the yeast and sugar

Warm the half cup of water until just comfortably warm to the touch, stir in the teaspoon of sugar and the active dry yeast, and let it sit in a small clear glass until it becomes visibly frothy and fragrant — about five to ten minutes. This simple bloom signals the start of life in the dough and smells faintly yeasty and sweet.

Step 2: Combine the dry base

In a large matte ceramic bowl, whisk together the four cups of all-purpose flour and the teaspoon of salt so the seasonings are evenly distributed. This dry homogenous mix creates the structural backbone for the pastry and should feel light and powdery to the fingertips.

Step 3: Add the wet ingredients and bring the dough together

Pour the frothy yeast, the half cup of whole milk, and the quarter cup of olive oil into the flour, folding with a wooden spoon until the shaggy dough forms. The mixture will look rough and slightly sticky — that’s the correct stage before kneading.

Step 4: Knead until smooth and elastic

Turn the dough onto a lightly floured surface and knead for about ten minutes until it becomes smooth, slightly tacky but elastic, with visible stretch. The texture should transform from ragged to cohesive and springy when pressed.

Step 5: First rise in a greased bowl

Place the dough ball into a lightly oiled greased bowl, cover it loosely, and let it rise undisturbed for about an hour or until doubled in size; it should feel airy and billowy when poked gently.

Step 6: Preheat the oven (mental note)

Set the oven intention to 350°F (175°C) so it will be ready once the pie is assembled — though for our visual flow everything remains on the surface, the oven is only implied, not shown.

Step 7: Prepare the hearty filling

In the same matte ceramic bowl used earlier, combine the cooked crumbled Italian sausage, diced prosciutto, diced salami, creamy ricotta, shredded mozzarella, grated Parmesan, four large eggs, and the quarter cup of chopped fresh parsley; season with salt and freshly ground pepper. The mixture will be dense and custardy, flecked with red meat morsels, white cheese curds, and green parsley, and it should bind into a cohesive, scoopable filling.

Step 8: Divide the risen dough

Gently deflate and divide the doubled dough into two portions, one slightly larger for the bottom crust. Each portion should feel soft and elastic; rest them briefly so the gluten relaxes and rolling becomes easy.

Step 9: Roll the bottom crust

Roll out the larger portion on a floured board to a round that will line your pie pan’s bottom and sides, the dough sheet smooth with faint stretch marks and a slightly floured matte exterior.

Step 10: Line the pan and add the filling

Carefully ease the rolled dough into a round pie pan so it hugs the sides, then spoon and spread the rich meat-and-cheese filling evenly into the pastry-lined shell; the filling should sit slightly domed and compact, with visible pockets of cheese and diced meats.


Step 11: Roll and place the top crust

Roll out the second dough portion to a matching round and drape it over the filled shell, the raw pastry edges soft and pliable, ready to be sealed.

Step 12: Seal and vent the pie

Crimp and seal the edges neatly, pressing with fingers or a fork to make a tidy join, then cut several slits on top to allow steam to escape; the top should look taut and slightly floured.

Step 13: Bake to golden perfection (visual cooling step)

Bake until the pastry turns a deep golden-brown and the filling feels set when lightly jostled — roughly forty-five to fifty minutes. Once out of the oven, the crust will glisten subtly and the interior will be custard-set with visible pockets of melted cheese.

Step 14: Rest, slice, and serve

Let the pie cool until it can be sliced cleanly, then cut a generous wedge and serve on a pristine plate; the cross-section should reveal a tapestry of diced meats, creamy pockets of ricotta and melted mozzarella, flecks of parsley, and a custard-like egg matrix.


Notes