- Jun 3, 2011
- 14,337
- 2,805
- 126
for @Kaido and everyone else who isn't a barbarian.
Pizza is life: discuss.
My first input is that the pizzamaking forum is pretty much the definitive resource online for everything pizza. It may look a bit daunting at first because it has everything, from home cooks in electric ovens, to restaurants with $30k ovens, they deal with yeasts, flours, breads, wholegrain, and you can feel like the "just give me a .exe" rant guy, that you "just want a pizza".
In brief, making a pizza that doesnt taste like it's come out of the freezer is not terribly hard, but it does require some things that if you don't have them, you're gonna have a really hard time getting it right.
Pizza - by which i mean GOOD PIZZA - cooks from the bottom up. If the bottom of your pizza has leopard spots, you made good pizza.
Pizza is bread. It is made better by the ingredients, but it's not a breadbowl to hold your slop of melted cheese.
To cook the bread which needs to be fluffy, crunchy, and tasty, the cooking process raises the dough and evaporates the water. Too much water will ruin the pizza.
You should be able to hold the pizza slice. Slop is not pizza.
Because of this you need tools that will make these things happen. You can maybe do without one, or the other, but when you start not having a whole bunch of them, your pizza fails.
For example: the planetary mixer. This allows you to get a smoother dough while using less water. Sure you can do it by hand, but most home cooks don't have the patience to work the dough for half an hour - five minutes and it's done. This means when your dough hits the stone, the stone has more work to do evaporating all that water.
And maybe you are using unsqueezed fresh mozarella. And maybe you are not charring your vegetables. And maybe you put a touch too much tomato sauce. Now your pizza is shit, and you wonder why.
The same way, you can maybe do with a lower temp than a pizza oven.
pizza is normally made between 400-450 C. If your oven can do 550F, it's not great, but it can still work. But if your pizza is full of water AND your oven is underpowered, you now have shit pizza.
And so on. Proofing the balls correctly, not too long, not too short. Adding the right type, and right amount of yeast. Having a flour that is suitable for pizza. The damn temperature of the country you live in, the air humidity.
Bread baking can be sooo frustrating. This brand of yeast doesnt do well with that brand of flour. Your country is too cold. Your oven isn't hot enough. Your water has too much calcium. Jesus christ!
but a well made home pizza can change your life.
Pizza is life: discuss.
My first input is that the pizzamaking forum is pretty much the definitive resource online for everything pizza. It may look a bit daunting at first because it has everything, from home cooks in electric ovens, to restaurants with $30k ovens, they deal with yeasts, flours, breads, wholegrain, and you can feel like the "just give me a .exe" rant guy, that you "just want a pizza".
In brief, making a pizza that doesnt taste like it's come out of the freezer is not terribly hard, but it does require some things that if you don't have them, you're gonna have a really hard time getting it right.
Pizza - by which i mean GOOD PIZZA - cooks from the bottom up. If the bottom of your pizza has leopard spots, you made good pizza.
Pizza is bread. It is made better by the ingredients, but it's not a breadbowl to hold your slop of melted cheese.
To cook the bread which needs to be fluffy, crunchy, and tasty, the cooking process raises the dough and evaporates the water. Too much water will ruin the pizza.
You should be able to hold the pizza slice. Slop is not pizza.
Because of this you need tools that will make these things happen. You can maybe do without one, or the other, but when you start not having a whole bunch of them, your pizza fails.
For example: the planetary mixer. This allows you to get a smoother dough while using less water. Sure you can do it by hand, but most home cooks don't have the patience to work the dough for half an hour - five minutes and it's done. This means when your dough hits the stone, the stone has more work to do evaporating all that water.
And maybe you are using unsqueezed fresh mozarella. And maybe you are not charring your vegetables. And maybe you put a touch too much tomato sauce. Now your pizza is shit, and you wonder why.
The same way, you can maybe do with a lower temp than a pizza oven.
pizza is normally made between 400-450 C. If your oven can do 550F, it's not great, but it can still work. But if your pizza is full of water AND your oven is underpowered, you now have shit pizza.
And so on. Proofing the balls correctly, not too long, not too short. Adding the right type, and right amount of yeast. Having a flour that is suitable for pizza. The damn temperature of the country you live in, the air humidity.
Bread baking can be sooo frustrating. This brand of yeast doesnt do well with that brand of flour. Your country is too cold. Your oven isn't hot enough. Your water has too much calcium. Jesus christ!
but a well made home pizza can change your life.
Last edited: