NetWareHead
THAT guy
- Aug 10, 2002
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I can't imagine that it really saves much work at all. It doesn't take that much effort to make great pizza dough. And, it's easier to fine tune the dough without the breadmaker. One of the keys to good pizza dough is higher gluten flour. Simplest recipe: flour, lard or shortening, salt, yeast, water. NO sugar. Let it rise once until it's about doubled in size, cut into separate doughs, then let rise again before tossing.
Earlier today, ordered a 50 pound bag of flour for pizza in February. (One batch of dough.)
Yep, you need to use good flour and have a good dough recipe. Most grocery store pizza doughs are not up to par. There are a few frozen doughs that I like from the store, but they are from local pizzerias that market their dough in the store. So I would imagine they know what they are doing when making the dough.
It sounds like your oven was too cold. I bake my pizzas at 400-450. You need to preheat the stone for *at least* half hour. I don't like those metal pizza sheets, Ive seen stone replacement that were made of steel and those burn. I suppose a new recipe and baking instructions would have to be calculated for use of a steel pizza "stone" but I haven't bothered to do that because I'm happy with my stone.
Also, if making your own dough, oil/lard/fat is necessary. Don't oil the stone though.
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