i"m have trouble getting the bottom crust of my pizza cooked even though the dough is rolled thin and the oven is up to temp....any advice???
X
-
Re: pizza crust
Hello Strafford,
A couple questions, what temp is up to temp, and are you using Italian flour or American?
If you are using Italian it takes a whole lot of hot to "color" the crust, and even then it is somewhat pale but you can aquire the "leopard" char spots.
JG
-
Re: pizza crust
Strafford,
Is your floor temp 750 or the oven in general? That would be one of the things to look at. There is probably a long list of other variables to consider and I will throw out a few off the top of my head, so, if others would like to weigh in..........
So, one is floor temp. Is oven floor directly on concrete or do you have insulation directly under your baking floor.
location of pizza during bake, typically my top gets done rather quickly so I need to position my pizzas a good distance from the fire to get an even bake and be crisp all over at the same time.
Another consideration might even be your dough recipe.
JG
Comment
-
Re: pizza crust
Gudday
A new oven often has a bit of residual water in the hearth insulation so I think it will come better with a few more firings
Regards DaveMeasure twice
Cut once
Fit in position with largest hammer
My Build
http://www.fornobravo.com/forum/f51/...ild-14444.html
My Door
http://www.fornobravo.com/forum/f28/...ock-17190.html
Comment
-
Re: pizza crust
Troubleshooting pizza baking begins with one simple mantra... "The heat from the hearth and the dome need to be balanced." If the bottom is browned and the toppings are not then your dome is too cold or you need more flames to increase the heat from the top. (There is the possibility that your hearth is TOO hot but...that should not be a troublesome issue if you simply check your hearth temp.) The converse is that if the top is cooked, dough browned, etc. and the bottom is not as cooked/dark as you want then your hearth is not hot enough and you need to increase the temperature of the hearth - i.e. rake coals out onto the hearth for X minutes where X depends on how cold it is, Then push the coals back into place, give the hearth a minute or two to equalize, check the temp of the hearth, and (assuming right) bake.
Your fundamental problem is your hearth is too cool. The simplest test is to throw semolina (or flour if you don't have semolina) on the hearth and count one thousand one, one thousand two, one thousand three until the flour suddenly turns black. That should take about three seconds. If it turns black on two it is too hot and you should hold off cooking until it cools down some. In your case you would probably get to five or more before the flour burns. That is way cold.
Next question is why is your hearth cold. There are three primary options. First, and most likely based on history, your hearth is wet and you need to dry out your oven with a series of fires. Another possibility is that you didn't fire the oven long enough to heat load the hearth and a related possibility is that you let ash insulate the hearth and prevent heat loading the hearth.
With experience you can recognize a wet oven because the hearth will not hold heat and will cool off too fast relative to the past. It is important to NOT have a bed of ash in the oven that insulates the hearth. Ash is a superb insulator and really hinders getting the hearth properly loaded.
My guess is wet hearth. But only you know how you build and manage the fire.
Good luck!
Jay
Comment
-
Re: pizza crust
thanks jay...i'll take all of your points into consideration .....maybe move the fire to the opposite side of the oven and try and bake on that part.... i appreciate the advice and will give it a go....you're right though...that part of the hearth is not up to temp....thx again....
Comment
-
Re: pizza crust
I personally feel just the opposite, I think your hearth is too hot for a crisp crust. Although 750 is low if Neapolitan style pizza was the goal, it is still going to produce a relatively fast bake. Fast bakes and crisp crusts don't go together. To get a crisper product you need to drop the temperature and extend the bake time. I'd personally shoot for a 600-650 degree hearth and a 5-6 minute bake if crisp is what you are after, even a New York style pizza in the 4 minute range is not going to be crisp.
Comment
-
Re: pizza crust
Try firing your oven longer before you cook- sounds like the top is cooking faster than the bottom, so you need to get the whole thing really hot (clear dome, no black) and then let it cool down a bit. Just keep a few flames going, no bonfires. My oven takes four hours in the winter before it's ready for pizza. Pretty cold here lately!
Comment
Comment