A few from yesterday
Trust a good one had been had team.
Pitch
type russian letters
Looks like Branson Pickle to me.
Mr C-B really……. Remove yourself from this thread….
It’s fig and balsamic sweet chutney Raffe. With the picante Gorgonzola and prosciutto it works and is amazing.
Ta
Pitch
Slightly overdone maybe but the dough worked out much better with this 18 hour prove. The thing I still can’t quite get right is while the crust has crunch it’s still quite doughy like a bread. Any ideas?
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I use Bake With Jack’s method Raffe as my base and it works every time now, great loafs. I just pick the starter up to 120g and watch down to 280g. The air in the dough as final folds are completed is just crazy.
https://www.bakewithjack.co.uk/blog-...-for-beginners
Pitch
We are without pizza oven and I still read this thread with envy !
Going to put together a dough this afternoon for pizza tomorrow and going to give it a go in the home oven.
I know ! Wrong thread for this, but I feel left out - sorry chaps !
Any tips for home oven cooking? I had planned to do exactly what I normally do in terms of dough, sauce, etc. but just that it won't be ready in 90 seconds...so sad !
I had planned to put them on a pre-heated baking tray...thoughts?
(I am also using pasta flour as don't have any caputo...this could go horribly wrong :) )
I have no experience, but have seen some guys doing very nice pizzas at home.
Crack it up to max temp (using infrared and everything you have) for at least 45 mins. Key is to launch the pizza(s) without all the heat escaping, suppose that is the biggest challenge?
If you don't have a stone, it will be even more difficult I would expect.
Someone who lies about the little things will lie about the big things too.
I use a pizza setting on our Neff and a stone and it has worked pretty well in the past. Fortunately I now have an oven that lives in the kitchen in the garage which I also bring indoors occasionally. I feel real bad now………..
Hugs.
Pitch
We need a PitchNRaffe roadshow where you fellas tour the lands showing us the ropes :-)
I’m thinking something between the Hairy Bikers and Two Fat Ladies :-)
LOLZ.
Someone who lies about the little things will lie about the big things too.
The pizza bible book recommends using diastatic malt powder if you’re cooking in the oven. Never tried it myself but might be worth a go https://www.winemag.com/recipe/tony-...za-napoletana/
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We went ahead with indoor ovens yesterday.
Took about ten mins to cook each pizza and although the theatre of outdoor cooking was not there and the dough doesn’t develop and crust doesn’t rise like it would have in a proper pizza oven, it was actually fine and the family all enjoyed which is the main thing!
Definitely worth a go on a stone if you don’t have an F1 for indoors in the winter!
Having said all that. See the pic and you may disagree and just buy the F1. Which is still where we will probably end up!!!
Move your baking rack with the stone higher, as close as possible to the upper heat source (10cm space will suffice). The stone will store the heat for it to bake from below, but you need plenty of heat from above and if you have such a large distance to the heating element you are missing out.
As a side effect, the stone will be much hotter when you launch the pizza (just give it everything your oven can give, no danger of the stone breaking).
Someone who lies about the little things will lie about the big things too.
Thanks Raffe. Will give that a go next time.
The Neff was on ‘Pizza Mode’ which I think meant it was heating from the bottom.
The Other oven was on intensive heating mode which apparently is the correct one for Pizza and they recommended the bottom or middle shelf in the manual. But still learning / experimenting at the moment so will try what you said for next time which makes logical sense!
Hi
Wondering if anyone has tried and had any success with a gluten free pizza base recipe?
Thanks
Nigel
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What's the best 'easy' pizza dough recipe?
I tried searching, but there's too many hits.
I tend to use PizzApp which is an iOS app where you can specify number of dough balls and it gives you grams of ingredients, 62% hydration is a reasonable balance IMO.
In my opinion (I’m far from the expert here), the easiest approach is to use some instant dry yeast (Caputo for example), Caputo flour is a reasonable start too (I use the purple 00 type), make the dough as follows:
Add all the water, dissolve in all the salt, mix in 3rd of the flour, mix in all the yeast (3rd flour first so the salt doesn’t kill the yeast) then gradually add all the remaining flour. Knead the dough or mix in stand mixer with dough hook, I use a thermometer to tell when I’ve done enough kneading (when it reads 25-28C).
Leave covered in damp tea towel for an hour, after that split up into dough balls of 225-250grams (YouTube for technique). Leave for another hour in airtight container.
That’s what I’ve found easiest for a reasonable output with limited turnaround time. There’s many ways you can improve on the above if you want to make things more complicated.
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I make "beginner dough" that's easy to handle. There are dozens of ways to do it, but this is super reliable. This is 60% hydration, but you can simply add more water as you get more confident.
This makes 4 balls each weighing ~280g.
Caputo Blue - 700g
Water - 420g
Salt - 8g
half tsp sugar (helps colour if not made in proper pizza oven)
1/3 tsp dry yeast - (I use caputo)
Stick it all in a mixer for a couple of minutes until it binds
Rest for 5.
Mix for 5.
Rest and mix again if you want.
Remove and add to a lightly olive oiled bowl and cover with film or damp towel for an hour.
Ball up and add to a lightly oiled baking tray.
Paint a little oil on each ball and cover with film.
Stick it in the fridge overnight or for a few days.
Take out an hour of so before you cook. They must warm up to room temperature or stretching will rip them.
Saturday pizza, which was a leftover dough ball from Thursday's pizza evening (no photos, had the house full of kids and we had a fantastic evening making pizza with the kids).
I re-balled the dough and stuck it into the fridge until today.
Someone who lies about the little things will lie about the big things too.
We do pretty much the same pizza each week (boring I know) but they taste so good..
Pepperoni
Salami Milano
Candied jalapeños
Piquante peppers
N’duja
That pizza board is ace
Americans call them Granny Pizzas if you make a tray bake style. I do them fairly often and the family all love them. I've posted these in this thread before anyway but..
I use the basic recipe from this video
which links out to the recipe here https://www.thecookingguy.com/cookbo...rq=sheet%20pan with the dough being here http://www.thecookingguy.com/stcg-on...=pizza%20dough Though he has changed the dough recipe as the original had some garlic powder in which we still add. Then put on whatever topping you want.
I now tend to make the sauce for it using the recipe for the Chicago Deep Pan as it spreads better
Just note his ratios are for two deep pan so adjust accordingly. These make a really good Chicago btw
As a bonus here is a Detroit style which again can be done in a normal oven
Note:- I find the Americans add too much salt and sugar so I would suggest toning down the quantities to suit your tastes.
Last edited by reecie; 7th February 2022 at 10:49.
I have never made Chicago or Detroit pizzas before, but sometimes, when I see pictures of them, I contemplate if I should.
Someone who lies about the little things will lie about the big things too.
Definitely you should. It tastes really great - I think someone in this thread tried that recipe and said it tasted just like ones he had had in Chicago. Weirdly the Chicago is really filling even just having a quarter of that type of size. Yet I can eat loads of a Dominos one :-)
That chicago dish definitely looks worth a try, on the list !
Just watched the Chicago video. That's going to be difficult, he puts sugar into dough, tomato sauce and sausage (calling spiced minced meat a sausage is another question I have). The dough contains butter (!!!), 9gram of yeast (!!!) and gets zero kneading.
Well, this goes against anything I know and like about pizza. Will need to check some other authentic recipes before I go for any of this.
Someone who lies about the little things will lie about the big things too.
Like I said above I cut the sugar and salt right down. For a start these make two of those pizzas so half everything for one. I now probably put 1/2 tsp max sugar in the sauce and a pinch of salt and a small bit of butter to fry the onions in. You are in effect making shortcrust pastry not pizza dough see https://www.bbc.co.uk/food/recipes/s...ustpastry_1278 so again I am using minimum sugar and salt in it. The first time I knocked the measures down and it was still too much so I reduced them down again to more our liking. It does show how much sugar and salt Americans must use though!
She can’t remember but is a lot more health conscious with cooking than myself so maybe cut down a bit. I do remember it was lovely and worth trying.
I do the Italian sausage on a lot of the pizzas I do in the effeuno and everyone loves it. I cook it in a frying pan first and cool it. Also freeze it and use it in pasta dishes.
It looks like the ratio of 'bread' to filling is all wrong. Is this what is actually meant when people refer to pizza pies, as it certainly looks more like a pie than a pizza.
Last edited by hogthrob; 7th February 2022 at 18:01.