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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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The "Pizza with everything" thread ("RFC: Every topic a rathole!")
got me thinking about crusts. I've decided the pizza I like best[1] has a blistered crust, i.e. crisp on the bottom, chewy above that, but with large(ish) air pockets. The Goog is full of "guidance" on how to get that at home. What's *your* advice? -- Silvar Beitel [1] Leaving Chicago deep dish, which I love, out of the discussion. |
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On Wed, 24 Oct 2018 15:03:10 -0700 (PDT), Silvar Beitel
> wrote: >The "Pizza with everything" thread ("RFC: Every topic a rathole!") >got me thinking about crusts. I've decided the pizza I like best[1] >has a blistered crust, i.e. crisp on the bottom, chewy above that, >but with large(ish) air pockets. The Goog is full of "guidance" on >how to get that at home. What's *your* advice? overnight the dough in the fridge will get you blistery crust |
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On Wednesday, October 24, 2018 at 12:03:14 PM UTC-10, Silvar Beitel wrote:
> The "Pizza with everything" thread ("RFC: Every topic a rathole!") > got me thinking about crusts. I've decided the pizza I like best[1] > has a blistered crust, i.e. crisp on the bottom, chewy above that, > but with large(ish) air pockets. The Goog is full of "guidance" on > how to get that at home. What's *your* advice? > > -- > Silvar Beitel > > [1] Leaving Chicago deep dish, which I love, out of the discussion. I like to lay the pizza on a metal sheet on the floor of a hot oven then finish it under the broiler. |
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On Thursday, October 25, 2018 at 4:52:18 PM UTC-5, dsi1 wrote:
> On Wednesday, October 24, 2018 at 12:03:14 PM UTC-10, Silvar Beitel wrote: > > The "Pizza with everything" thread ("RFC: Every topic a rathole!") > > got me thinking about crusts. I've decided the pizza I like best[1] > > has a blistered crust, i.e. crisp on the bottom, chewy above that, > > but with large(ish) air pockets. The Goog is full of "guidance" on > > how to get that at home. What's *your* advice? > > > > -- > > Silvar Beitel > > > > [1] Leaving Chicago deep dish, which I love, out of the discussion. > > I like to lay the pizza on a metal sheet on the floor of a hot oven then finish it under the broiler. Sounds HOT! And that's GOOD! Just don't put any sugars in the pizza dough! And for as crispier crust bake directly on a wire grid! Midoven to 2/3 of the way up! John Kuthe... |
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On Wed, 24 Oct 2018 15:03:10 -0700 (PDT), Silvar Beitel wrote:
> The "Pizza with everything" thread ("RFC: Every topic a rathole!") A lot of people will go way out their way to invent something to criticize. I seem to generate the most. And I'm one of the top relevant on-topic starters here. Hardly anybody will confront me when I'm being an asshole in some off-topic thread, but start a non-controversial on-topic thread and here they come. > got me thinking about crusts. I've decided the pizza I like best[1] > has a blistered crust, i.e. crisp on the bottom, chewy above that, > but with large(ish) air pockets. The Goog is full of "guidance" on > how to get that at home. What's *your* advice? The [mis]information about pizza doughs and the different flours is all whacked out. Especially when it comes to pizza flours and gluten content. The best place for pizza questions is the reddit pizza group. Lots of professional pizza makers hang out there (NOT Pizza Hut Managers), but there's also a lot of pictures to weed through. A very hot oven (hotter than your typical home oven by 200-500F). Minimal toppings, at least where you want it to blister. Never roll the dough, but rather spread-stretch the dough (to create uneven spots) A very hydrated high gluten dough (at least 65% and using a 00 flour) to generate steam. I get crispy on the bottom, chewy the rest of way by using a perforated aluminum pan, but you need high peripheral heat source for the blistery edges, and a hot stone for blisters anywhere else. I should also note that I actually cook my pizza and pan for about 90 seconds rotating it on the big gas 24K BTU stovetop burner before putting it into the oven. That way the aluminum and the dough get a jump start. Helps crisping but still not hot enough for blisters. -sw |
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On Thu, 25 Oct 2018 18:52:59 -0500, Sqwertz >
wrote: >On Wed, 24 Oct 2018 15:03:10 -0700 (PDT), Silvar Beitel wrote: > >> The "Pizza with everything" thread ("RFC: Every topic a rathole!") > >A lot of people will go way out their way to invent something to >criticize. I seem to generate the most. And I'm one of the top >relevant on-topic starters here. Hardly anybody will confront me >when I'm being an asshole in some off-topic thread, but start a >non-controversial on-topic thread and here they come. Nobody looks up when you're being an asshole, as that's your default behaviour. We just have a bit of fun when you post a Kitchen Sink Pizza. |
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