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1. Preheat oven to 425 degrees 2. Slice eggplant into thick layers and place on a baking sheet. Coat and drizzle in olive oil 3. Roast eggplant (flip until both sides have a brown, crust-like ...
9. Grab the extra dough from the left-hand side and begin to fold and roll overtop of the ingredients until it goes overtop. Begin to fold over the right-hand side of the dough, crimping and tucking as you go (especially toward the ends of the stromboli). The final creation should look much like a large stuffed burrito. 10.
Press out the dough into a larger rectangular shape. Layer the eggplant in a domino-like effect along the left-hand side of the dough, leaving about two inches of space on the side. Coat eggplant ...
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The dough used is either Italian bread dough or pizza dough. Stromboli was invented by Italian Americans in the United States, in the Philadelphia area. [1] The name of the dish is taken from a volcanic island off the coast of Sicily. A stromboli is similar to a calzone or scaccia, and the dishes are sometimes confused.
In 1987, a bakery shipped pepperoni rolls from West Virginia to Maryland. [9] While the pepperoni had been inspected as an ingredient before it was baked into the rolls, the Food Inspection and Safety Service decided that the final product needed to be inspected as well because it was sold outside the bakery, similar to how a bakery making pepperoni pizzas would require inspection of the final ...
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A stromboli is a flat dough, covered with toppings and then rolled like a swiss roll and carved or punched so the cheese can 'ouze out'. Yeah, like a vulcano. I agree with "I am an Italian" The Stromboli is not an Italian dish albeit made with stuff traditionally used in Italian cuisine.