Good for you. It won't work for me because your cup of flour is not my cup of flour. Pretty universally understood for the same reasons you use the digital scale for brewing.
Most of the baking recipes I have say to measure by weight, since flour especially, but also other fine-grained powders can pack down and vary wildly in weight. My pizza dough recipe I've been going by weight and it was never as consistent as it's been since I started that. (my recipe is from The Baking Steel site|)A cup measured by you is not a cup measured by another person. So as I said if it works for you, fine It just might not work for other people which is why bakers and pizza makers use weights and percentages. It's the same reasons we use weights in beer recipes. It's well known fact, but you are entitled to do your own thing but people might want to think twice about using your recipe.
00 flour is great if you are cooking in a pizza oven that can hit 8-900 F. In a home oven at 5-550F, it is difficult to get the crust to brown. Even if you are successful getting browning in a home oven with 00 flour, there will be a world of difference in the texture of the crust from that cooked a proper pizza oven because it will take longer to cook.
Producing a good pizza dough is not unlike brewing a good beer. Process - including fermentation - play as large role in the end product as does the ingredients.
Add to that, Candy is another science!! And if anybody thinks weights do not matter, try a recipe that calls for 3 teaspoons of kosher salt and instead use 3 teaspoons of table salt!Most of the baking recipes I have say to measure by weight, since flour especially, but also other fine-grained powders can pack down and vary wildly in weight. My pizza dough recipe I've been going by weight and it was never as consistent as it's been since I started that. (my recipe is from The Baking Steel site|)
As a friend of mine put it, (she's a trained chef, Johnson & Wales grad) cooking is an art, baking is a science. Regular cooking you can get by with a little of this and a little of that, skip this and add that, but baking relies on the proportions being right.
That pepperoni doneness is SPOT on. Would be thrilled to see that in any restaurant I walked into.regular cheese, pepperoni,
Cheese with no sauce (for the toddler)
With enough practice, that's a fine method. But it takes a lot of screwups (perhaps minor ones) to get there. A lot of grandmas make biscuits the same way. Have you tried that?An Italian pizza maker for a restaurant I worked for eye-balled the flour for the daily dough--scoop after scoop until it was enough. The temp of the water was determined, literally, by hand but was measured in a very large, metal pitcher.
No, not with biscuits. I don't have a good recipe for those.Have you tried that?
That pepperoni doneness is SPOT on. Would be thrilled to see that in any restaurant I walked into.
Of course it's the one already cut into. Gotta feed them NOW!
I'm always working on that particular quality. A problem is that I don't spend enough effort testing out different brands--always using the Boar's Head from the fruit market. Crisp like that photo and a little pool of grease within is the goal.my best pepperoni yet
I'm always working on that particular quality. A problem is that I don't spend enough effort testing out different brands--always using the Boar's Head from the fruit market. Crisp like that photo and a little pool of grease within is the goal.
I'm going to try it. Thanks.Hormel Cup and Crisp
We have a Jet's pizza near us, really unique and tasty, love the crunchy corners. Got us wanting to try making it ourselves, wonder if they would sell us some dough to give it a shot?View attachment 763512
My wife brought this home. It's a Jett's pizza. The thing is, Jett's workers had to make around 30 pizzas for a lunch to serve another bunch of workers doing an event. Skimping is expected and so is lower quality.
I poshed it up with cheese and sauce and it came out far better than I thought it would.
So, I get a 1/4 credit for the photo.
Done.
I cant say what's the best today but when I was a pizza cook years ago we used well seasoned steal, it browns better than mostWhich pan for authentic Detroit-style pizza? I see aluminum, steel, and cast iron options out there, but which is the real deal? I read somewhere that it originated with somebody baking pies in surplus stainless steel parts trays from auto plants, is that a myth? Is it still an option?
According to legend, they were steel parts pans. I am planning on buying a set of these some day.Which pan for authentic Detroit-style pizza? I see aluminum, steel, and cast iron options out there, but which is the real deal? I read somewhere that it originated with somebody baking pies in surplus stainless steel parts trays from auto plants, is that a myth? Is it still an option?