
There are as many scientific theories about bread dough as there are recipes to make it. Experience is the best teacher. I use cold dough, I like my dough to have a chance to rise twice, once outside the fridge at room temp and the second in the fridge. I roll my dough into balls (about the size of a grapefruit) while they are cold and spray a 9 x 13 pan with cooking spray (Pam) I have a shallow bowl with olive oil in it that I roll each dough ball in before I set it on the cookie sheet, this way the balls can touch each other and I can get 12-16 on each pan. I have lids for this pans that I purchased at the restaurant supply and I snap them on. When I am having a big party I leave one slot in the pan empty and I fill a plastic bag with ice cubes and set it in there with the dough balls to cool down the atmosphere in the pan and keep the sequential pans of dough from rising as fast. The pans stack, so I keep those under the pan I use first and they stay cooler.
The oil keeps them from forming a skin and the lid keeps out flying pests. I can easily grab the balls as I need them because they don't stick together. At the end of the night if I have dough balls left I simply reform them into balls and slide them into the freezer. As soon as they are frozen I snap them apart and put them in a Ziplock. After a while I have built up a full batch and I simply thaw them out and make pizza with them. I haven't noticed any difference in using the frozen dough versus the unfrozen. Punching down dough is perfectly acceptable, the yeast simply works harder each time. You can run the risk of depleting the sugars in the dough (which feed the yeast) if you repeatedly punch dough down, but that is rather unlikely.
Dough does need to rest at least 20 minutes before it can stretch. The first few pizzas typically require more effort. I pull a couple at a time as large as I can get them and let them rest before I finish getting them to size. After the first 2-3, at least 20 minutes as passed since I first formed them so they just get easier from there. I like to use cold dough for this reason, so that I have a little more time to form all the dough balls and get out to the oven and start making pizza, I feel less rushed this way.





Makes a lot more sense now. Been using the pin.
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