we used the caputo flour this weekend in our pizza construction efforts and i'm happy to report an excellent result. if you want a thin cracker like crust then the caputo is the only way to go. we've never before been able to get such a thin yet crispy crust with any other flour. a couple of notes:
1. the receipe posted (in pdf format) here at forno calls for 1 and 3/4 cups of water to 4 cups of flour. this makes a loose and sticky dough. forget about tossing it. i suppose its theoretically possible to toss it but then again its also theoretically possible to shape a pizza into a facimile of the mona lisa.
heres a shot of the (puddles of) dough. pretty wet, huh?

2. flour your hands (and the peel) well when working with the dough. what's great about the dough is that is can easily be hand stretched to a very thin thickness without tearing and without springing back. even though its thin, it bakes to impressive structural strength. i took the picture below to illustrate the thinness and strength but unfortunately he camera decided to focus on the background. this slice of pizza was loaded with onions, bacon and blue cheese and was held up, without flopping, by a thickness of crust equal to about 10 sheets of paper.

here's another picture indicating the holding power of the crust.

all in all, great stuff and as far as i know impossible to dupicate its characteristics. we've made a lot of pizza with a lot of different flours and nothing has handled or baked like the caputo.
1. the receipe posted (in pdf format) here at forno calls for 1 and 3/4 cups of water to 4 cups of flour. this makes a loose and sticky dough. forget about tossing it. i suppose its theoretically possible to toss it but then again its also theoretically possible to shape a pizza into a facimile of the mona lisa.
heres a shot of the (puddles of) dough. pretty wet, huh?

2. flour your hands (and the peel) well when working with the dough. what's great about the dough is that is can easily be hand stretched to a very thin thickness without tearing and without springing back. even though its thin, it bakes to impressive structural strength. i took the picture below to illustrate the thinness and strength but unfortunately he camera decided to focus on the background. this slice of pizza was loaded with onions, bacon and blue cheese and was held up, without flopping, by a thickness of crust equal to about 10 sheets of paper.

here's another picture indicating the holding power of the crust.

all in all, great stuff and as far as i know impossible to dupicate its characteristics. we've made a lot of pizza with a lot of different flours and nothing has handled or baked like the caputo.





I posted the results of my 'cake flour experiment' in the Pizza forum - 75 % bread flour (King Arthur), 25% cake flour. This dough hand-stretched very thin and uniform, and I was quite happy with it. The cake flour (Pilsbury Softasilk) was about $2 for a 2 lb. box. Have you tried anything like this?
You can try letting the dough sit for 5-10 minutes after everything is mixed, before you start kneading. It let's the dough hydrate.
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