Crust looks great, you take a crumb shot?notjakefromstatefarm said:
Anybody in this thread have a roccbox? Makes an amazing pie. If your serious about it's a great investment at $500.
Crust looks great, you take a crumb shot?notjakefromstatefarm said:
Anybody in this thread have a roccbox? Makes an amazing pie. If your serious about it's a great investment at $500.
notjakefromstatefarm said:
Anybody in this thread have a roccbox? Makes an amazing pie. If your serious about it's a great investment at $500.
I enjoyed the book but didn't like the recipes as much, go figure. As someone else put it, he constantly repeats "pizza is not bread" in the book, quoting one of the pizzaiolos, and then completely forgets that when formulating his recipes.schmendeler said:
I've have good success with pizza dough and bread dough from "the elements of pizza" and "flour water salt yeast" respectively.
King Arthur is employee-owned, and as such has an incredible customer support line where they will answer any question you may have. I don't particularly care for their product (prefer Gold Medal myself), but I love the way they run their company and their help line.OaklandAg06 said:
I stumbled onto Vito Iacopelli's YouTube channel last year- his recipes are spot on, and he does a great job showing technique in his videos. Granted you may need to scale down some of the recipes he shows (unless you are looking to make 8 pizzas at a time) but it is pretty easy to do since everything is in grams.
I took his poolish technique and applied it to a scaled up King Arthur Flour 72 hour pan pizza recipe for my Sicilian style pizza for the recipe I posted above as I didn't want to make dough that far in advance.
King Arthur Flour has a bunch of good recipes as well for both pizza and bread.
Dear God, no!!!Quote:
I took the 3rd fermenting container of dough and transferred to a large ziplock. It had pushed the top off the plastic container. I remove the air and froze. I assume that to cook I can let though overnight in the fridge then microwave, microwave a cup of water, then let it rest in a bowl in the microwave w/the steaming water to reactive a bit?
thawed dough?Garrelli 5000 said:
Not microwaving the dough, microwaving water then letting the thoughed dough sit in the the microwave w/the still steaming water. It is what I did with a Jimmy's Italian Foods dough that was bought frozen (per their instructions).
If it doesn't need to rise more than I assume I can just let it thaw in the fridge then cook as normal?
Why? I don't know of a pizzeria that uses this approach.Quote:
I'm freezing to test making dough in big batches to thaw/cook later.
Assuming lunch is at noon, have you tried making dough with 6 hour fermentation time at room temperature (traditional in Italy) so it is ready for a 6 pm dinner?Quote:
If it tastes like crap then I know to find a faster dough recipe for when I want to make pizza on the fly.
I'm far from a baker. Making pizza dough isn't rocket science, and it can be incredibly forgiving for newbies.Garrelli 5000 said:
No but thanks for the advice! I'm brand new to this and these are my first two attempts. 12 or 13 years ago we made a few using a "mario batali" cast iron pizza pan, using his dough recipe, that turned out ok. Never did it enough to gain any type of proficiency nor did we expirement w/different doughs.
Neither my wife nor I are bakers so anything requiring making our own dough is essentially uncharted territory.