Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Crust issues

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • #16
    Re: Crust issues

    One more issue:

    I find that the crust bottom has a lot of uncooked flour on it- obviously a by product of rolling the dough on a floured surface. Tried to brush it all off, but I guess I'm unable to get it all. Also, sliding the dough onto a floured peel seems to add flour.

    Am I being fussy or am I missing a step here?

    Thanks in advance for all your help.

    Comment


    • #17
      Re: Crust issues

      I second Brian! The NeoNeoplolitan is easier to handle and well behaved which can be helpful to newbies. Biggest caveat is to ball it early. The bread flour needs to relax before you form pies. Longer the better.

      550 is great. But give it an hour to get the stone to temp. You will have to experiement with convection on/off to see which works better for the pies. Convection will heat the stone faster but for pies it may or may not balance well between the rate the top and bottom cooks.

      Good Luck!
      Jay

      Comment


      • #18
        Re: Crust issues

        Nice looking Pie, Bob. My mouth started watering!

        Aside from using the absolute minimum amount of flour on the board, and "lubricating" the paddle with corn meal or semolina or rice flour (everyone seems to have their favorite)... the approach I often take is the use of a screen. I throw the dough and land it on an appropriately sized screen befroe suacing, topping ad baking. After a couple of minutes the skin has set enough to slide a peel between the screen and pie. The screen comes out and the pie goes directly on the stone. This is one way to minimize the amount of flour, etc on the bottom of the pizza.

        Comment


        • #19
          Re: Crust issues

          Originally posted by BrianShaw View Post
          Nice looking Pie, Bob. My mouth started watering!

          Aside from using the absolute minimum amount of flour on the board, and "lubricating" the paddle with corn meal or semolina or rice flour (everyone seems to have their favorite)... the approach I often take is the use of a screen. I throw the dough and land it on an appropriately sized screen befroe suacing, topping ad baking. After a couple of minutes the skin has set enough to slide a peel between the screen and pie. The screen comes out and the pie goes directly on the stone. This is one way to minimize the amount of flour, etc on the bottom of the pizza.
          Brian,

          I am interested in this "screen" approach. Can you describe the screen in more detail? Pictures?

          Thanks a bunch.

          Comment


          • #20
            Re: Crust issues

            Hey Bob, your pizza's look quite nice. Aren't you glad you moved over to this thread and got much better advice than mine on the original? You've got people all over the country ready to re-calibrate your Wolf oven for you .

            MY favorite release is rice flour shaken out of a large salt shaker with a handle. Rice is so hard and repels water (wheat cooks in seconds, rice cooks in 45 minutes) that a little works terrific to slide the pie off the paddle.

            Seriously, nice looking pies. I love that Reinhart 'America Pie' book. BrianShaws got good advice. Can't wait to get more details on his 'screen'.

            Cheers, Dino
            "Life is a banquet and most poor sons-of-bitches are starving to death." -Auntie Mame

            View My Picasa Web Album UPDATED oct
            http://picasaweb.google.com/Dino747?feat=directlink


            My Oven Costs Spreadsheet
            http://spreadsheets.google.com/ccc?k...BF19875Rnp84Uw


            My Oven Thread
            http://www.fornobravo.com/forum/f8/d...arts-5883.html

            Comment


            • #21
              Re: Crust issues

              So Dino, what do you use on your counter to prevent the dough from sticking while you work it into shape? I assumed I needed flour to keep it from sticking to the granite...but maybe not?

              Where does one find rice flour? Can you use rice flour to roll out the dough?

              Comment


              • #22
                Re: Crust issues

                Originally posted by texassourdough View Post
                Biggest caveat is to ball it early. The bread flour needs to relax before you form pies. Longer the better.
                Jay, I appreciate the advice, but I don't understand this part of what you offered. Can you explain this please?

                Thanks so much.

                Bob

                Comment


                • #23
                  Re: Crust issues

                  Pizza screen images
                  My geodesic oven project: part 1, part 2

                  Comment


                  • #24
                    Re: Crust issues

                    Bob,
                    I don't use a rolling pin. Actually, very few on this forum use a pin. I use either caputo or bread-flour on the back of my hands and knuckles and gently turn it over back and forth while I gently stretch it round. I use a plastic tray or large round metal pizza tray to flop it on (well floured) and usually add a little hand pulling and tugging on the flat tray. I use a tray or pizza pan so not to get flour all over the counter-floor-roof rafters...it ain't pretty.

                    Jay will have to explain it to you (he's much better at this) because I think "balling" early and "relaxing" all have to do with the suppleness of the dough and then how easy it becomes to hand stretch (not compressed with a rolling pin).

                    I get the rice flour at any ethnic store (Persian, middle eastern, asian and larger markets always carry it and it's cheap). And no, the rice flour is only shaken onto the 'placing peel', you hand-stretch (or roll-if you insist) with flour.

                    OK, maybe now you're not so happy with all this advice.

                    Actually, thank you, I'm getting lots of good info too -Dino
                    "Life is a banquet and most poor sons-of-bitches are starving to death." -Auntie Mame

                    View My Picasa Web Album UPDATED oct
                    http://picasaweb.google.com/Dino747?feat=directlink


                    My Oven Costs Spreadsheet
                    http://spreadsheets.google.com/ccc?k...BF19875Rnp84Uw


                    My Oven Thread
                    http://www.fornobravo.com/forum/f8/d...arts-5883.html

                    Comment


                    • #25
                      Re: Crust issues

                      Yeah, I figured out that a rolling pin would tend to inhibit the development of bubbles in the crust (Right?). So my last pie was done purely by hand. Now, my technique really blows...but I am trying to be patient and still properly aggressive in stretching the dough out to the thickness and diameter that suits me. Needs work here!!!

                      I suspect that getting the dough to just the right consistency/degree of wetness has something to do with how "workable" the dough is. Yes? Again, needs work here.

                      Would I be accomplishing the same thing as you do by using the stone counter tops instead of a metal or plastic tray?

                      Actually, my ego is very much in check and I am drinking in all the advice I can. At some point I will think I've become an expert and will not listen to anything...but thats a ways off.

                      Comment


                      • #26
                        Re: Crust issues

                        I can throw a dough, but as a rule, I just push it out leaving 1/4" of the edge strictly alone. It helps to leave the center a little thicker, but I end up pounding the crust pretty good by the end. My pies are not big or many, 14" max, usually 12", but if I was doing more or bigger pies, I would throw them.

                        Comment


                        • #27
                          Re: Crust issues

                          Originally posted by bobframe View Post
                          Brian,

                          I am interested in this "screen" approach. Can you describe the screen in more detail? Pictures?

                          Thanks a bunch.
                          Pizza Screen, Pizza Screens screen

                          This is one of the few times when I'll actually say, "I really recommend using this source; They have served me well over and over and over again!" You might be able to find them in a local restaurant supply store and save the hassle of shipping.

                          p.s. for Dino: Star Restaurant Supply on Sepulveda... walk to the back, past the counter into the baking supplies. On the rack to your left. I also like having a supply of those aluminum pizza trays.
                          Last edited by BrianShaw; 09-30-2010, 08:38 PM.

                          Comment


                          • #28
                            Re: Crust issues

                            Hi bob(frame)!

                            I need to jump back a ways. Your "complaint" of too much uncooked flour on the bottom of the pie is troublesome. Something is wrong - you shouldn't need to have a lot of flour on the dough. The excess SHOULD come off. So...I will carry you through a LONG description covering both the mixing/balling and the forming...

                            For a start, I think you are either using dough too wet or dough that you are "afraid" of (and thereby getting in trouble). As I recall your first dough was Neopolitan which is usually pretty soft and fragile and at hydration above 60% begins to pose handling problems for newbies. (And if you are in the 65% range it can seem impossible though there are a number of us on here who in person would simply smile at your frustration and make it happen). It has a lot to do with experience and it is hard to shortcut the process.

                            Neopolitan dough is in Reinhart's book balled after the bulk ferment. It will be very relaxed after the retard in the fridge. The low protein of AP allows it to relax pretty quickly so the balls will relax during the 2 hour warm up and expansion and be ready for forming pies at that time.

                            The reason I and others say to go NeoNeopolitan is that the NeoNeo dough uses bread flour which has more protein and can remain "manageable" at higher hydrations. (for the same hydration it gives a stiffer (seemingly dryer and less sticky dough). This makes it easier for newbies to deal with. (And, I prefer it for lots of pizzas - there are some I prefer Neopolitan for and others NeoNeo (in particular wetter pizzas - the increased protein gives the crust better ability to maintain "bite" and structure).

                            In either case, if you make a batch of dough and you can't handle it gracefully, reduce the water for the next batch. It seems like 60% hydration AP/Neopolitan dough is reasonably handleable by most people and say 64-65 % bread/NeoNeo dough.

                            Now...bread flour has more protein. It gets tougher and has longer memory. It doesn't relax quickly. As a result Reinhart has you ball the NeoNeo dough about 20 minutes after you finish mixing. (Note: timing at this point is not critical, fifteen minutes or 30 minutes no big deal. If you let it sit out an hour it will tend to be overpoofed later. Still no big deal. But form the balls before you put it in the fridge for the retard. (Reinhart says to put them in baggies. I put mine in dough pans (big plastic lidded rectangular boxes), others use round food storage containers. Of these choices the baggies seem to need the most oil and I don't want a lot of excess oil because it encourages excess flour at forming)).

                            If you wait until after the retard to divide and ball the NeoNeo it will get firm and tough and it will not be fully relaxed in two hours so it will fight you when you try to form the pies. And it will give a tougher pie. The relaxed, pre-balled dough is much more similar to the straight Neo - still more bite and mouthfeel but not nearly so tough.

                            NOTE: A number of us feel that Caputo 00 is similar to bread in that IMO it does not like to be worked late. It isn't as troublesome to me as bread flour but I definitely prefer to ball it before the retard.

                            And finally... to pie formation. Once the dough is warm and relaxed and soft it is ready to form the pie! There are a zillion ways to do this and you will eventually come up with your own variation but this works well and will allow you to make relatively round pies out of doughs you probably can't handle on a counter or just with your hands.

                            Take a sheet pan or jelly roll pan and put a cup or so of flour in the pan and spread it around. Put the dough ball on the loose flour and flatten it to about half its height. Flip it over to flour the other side and gently press it down to about half that height. It will probably be five or six inches in diameter and about an inch tall.

                            Beginning near the center begin using your finger tips to press the dough down and spread the dough. Use both hands. There are pretty decent videos of this part. As soon as the center is down to say half an inch start working farther out and get the outer portion and cornicione to the thickness you want. Then go back to the middle and thin down the center and work your way out to the edge again. Note: It can be done quickly faster than I can write it... The key is don't thin the center first or you will get a pie that is unevenly thin. By forming a "flattened" spaceship form with a low dome in the center and then finishing the pie you can get airy, thin, more uniform pies.

                            At that point put semolina (I am NOT a rice flour fan! YUCK! GRITTY!) on the peel. I then put the pie on one hand and spin/slap it from one hand to the other and back to knock off the excess flour (and there should be very little left) and immediately put the pie on the peel. (I find wood is preferable over aluminum for putting pies in the oven - less sticking problems (but that is also that developed better technique after I quit using aluminum!)

                            Dress the pie. Pop in the oven and....

                            One last comment.... Your picture of your pie raises a couple of questions. The top definitely looks more done than the bottom but you say you heated for 75 minute so the pie should have been more uniform. Two possibilities that I can see. First is the flour on the bottom is misleading me OR you kept the oven on convection and the top was too hot relative to the stone. The second issue is that the pie (top) is IMO still undercooked. You could have gone at least another 30 seconds and probably a minute or more longer. And that would have helped the bottom too.

                            Good Luck!
                            Jay

                            Comment


                            • #29
                              Re: Crust issues

                              Gulp...that's a lot to process. Let me pick a couple of things that I think I can process.

                              Starting at the end- I did use convection all the way through, which may have sped up the top cooking at the expense of the crust's browning. Makes sense to me. Solution: Stop using convection? BTW, I was using Convection Bake mode. I think this means that only the bottom burner is active (plus the fans). Wouldn't Roast mode be a better choice as (I think) that employs the bottom and top (broiler) elements?

                              I wonder if using too much oil on the dough is encouraging flour to stick and that is at the root of my flour problem? Before I try to form my next crusts I will attempt to wipe all of the oil off the dough. In hindsight, I really did over oil the dough. Oh well.

                              It is hard for me to accept that my dough is too wet. I think it is just the opposite. Now, am I "afraid" of it? Could easily be the case...I am worried about overstretching and ripping the dough as I form the crust.

                              Comment


                              • #30
                                Re: Crust issues

                                If you can handle it and make it into a pie like that, it's not too wet. The flouring bit will come with practice, but an oily dough ball is no good. I use cooking spray and just a little bit at that. By the time my dough blobs are ready to be shaped and I dump them out onto the flour, you can't tell the containers were ever even sprayed and the dough is definitely not oily on the surface.
                                Parchment paper is a great thing for the indoor oven if you are getting hung up on the transferring bit. I won't discourage you from honing your skills with flouring JUST enough to shape and then be able to transfer a pie, but for experimentation purposes, there is no shame in shaping on lightly floured parchment and then putting the whole thing onto the stone on the paper. You can either leave it or pull it after a couple of minutes.
                                A properly developed dough will stretch to absolute tissue paper thinness without tearing. Assuming you've got good gluten development, you just need more practice.

                                Comment

                                Working...
                                X