Morning,
Thought I'd share a humility check experience i had SUnday. I have been baking pizzas in my self-built pompeii (forno plan on Scott base) since MAy-- thought i really had it down, having nearly 400 pizzas and stromboli's to great reviews.
I have always kept my banked fire on the side of the oven after firing up, but for having read some fire management suggestions recently I decided that since I was doing a batch of premade pizzas quickly (23 people) I'd try the fire in the back.
It was pretty cold out-- about 28 F, and oven about 750 dome, 675 floor when i started. What a disaster!.. The cold seemed to draw the water to the surface of the dough (i use a pretty wet dough) and in retrospect i think the cold air flow on the deck cooled it quickly-- result, first 3 pizzas i put in stuck to the brick. what a mess! In all i lost 5 of 20.
What saved me was parchment paper-- I had made up the pizzas in the house on parchment, but didn;t expect to actually put it in the oven.
giving the pizzas a couple minute start on the parchment to firm up, then sliding off to crisp, saved the day.
Also with the fire in the back, and cold air entering front, the front portion of the oven was definitely too cool for satisfactory results.
So-- my next cold weather bake-- fire on the side as usual, a little hotter to start than my typical, and keep them on the parchment if they are sitting a little while before baking.
Any one else with cold weather tips?
Thought I'd share a humility check experience i had SUnday. I have been baking pizzas in my self-built pompeii (forno plan on Scott base) since MAy-- thought i really had it down, having nearly 400 pizzas and stromboli's to great reviews.
I have always kept my banked fire on the side of the oven after firing up, but for having read some fire management suggestions recently I decided that since I was doing a batch of premade pizzas quickly (23 people) I'd try the fire in the back.
It was pretty cold out-- about 28 F, and oven about 750 dome, 675 floor when i started. What a disaster!.. The cold seemed to draw the water to the surface of the dough (i use a pretty wet dough) and in retrospect i think the cold air flow on the deck cooled it quickly-- result, first 3 pizzas i put in stuck to the brick. what a mess! In all i lost 5 of 20.
What saved me was parchment paper-- I had made up the pizzas in the house on parchment, but didn;t expect to actually put it in the oven.
giving the pizzas a couple minute start on the parchment to firm up, then sliding off to crisp, saved the day.
Also with the fire in the back, and cold air entering front, the front portion of the oven was definitely too cool for satisfactory results.
So-- my next cold weather bake-- fire on the side as usual, a little hotter to start than my typical, and keep them on the parchment if they are sitting a little while before baking.
Any one else with cold weather tips?
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