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Flour or Cornmeal

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  • Unofornaio
    replied
    Re: Flour or Cornmeal

    Excellent poll---

    I voted corn meal. It works perfect and it is the cheapest solution. For breads I was using a mixture of cornmeal and AP flour with consistent results. Hearth temp for bread is quite a bit lower and will tolerate the little bit of flour mixed in.

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  • james
    replied
    Re: Flour or Cornmeal

    Isn't an aluminum pizza peel just a cookie sheet with a long handle?

    JW, how did the class go?

    James

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  • jwnorris
    replied
    Re: Flour or Cornmeal

    Originally posted by Archena View Post
    He probably means a baking sheet (also called a cookie sheet) with only one (or three) crimped edges. At least one edge is left flat so that you can just slide whatever you're baking right off. They're great for sliding off cookies and I'd imagine would work well for what Bacterium is describing.
    At the wood fired cooking class this past weekend at Ramekin's in Sanoma they used a regular sheet pan however, it was turned upside down. This way there are no edges and everything slides off without issue - as long as the pan is well floured.

    J W

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  • Bacterium
    replied
    Re: Imma and Mario's Mercato

    Originally posted by Hendo View Post
    Damon,

    It is great, isn't it? Last Saturday I found some Italian Buffalo Mozzarella for Insalata Caprese (Italian dinner with friends that night) - delightful, and not nearly as strong or gamey as Shaw River's from Victoria. I think it's a new line, and it would also be great for pizza toppings!

    Cheers, Paul.
    ahhh yes...such a great shop to wander about and consider recipe ideas. If any of you other Adelaide guys go Cambelltown/Newton way its worth a visit.

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  • Archena
    replied
    Re: Flour or Cornmeal

    Ah, okay. It just sounded so much like a sheet...

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  • Hendo
    replied
    Re: Imma and Mario's Mercato

    Originally posted by Bacterium View Post
    I got mine from the local Italian Shop - Mercato - Home - which BTW is a great spot.
    Damon,

    It is great, isn't it? Last Saturday I found some Italian Buffalo Mozzarella for Insalata Caprese (Italian dinner with friends that night) - delightful, and not nearly as strong or gamey as Shaw River's from Victoria. I think it's a new line, and it would also be great for pizza toppings!

    Cheers, Paul.

    Leave a comment:


  • Bacterium
    replied
    Re: Flour or Cornmeal

    ok they are aluminium trays.

    I got mine from the local Italian Shop - Mercato - Home - which BTW is a great spot. I can't get an online picture there so have a look here(this company supply equipment to the local pizza shops):
    Metal Spinners - Products: Pizza Cookware

    Go down the page to "Trays" and they are the aluminium ones.
    I'm guessing mild steel or stainless steel would be no good as the dough would stick too much.

    Sorry I haven't pics of my own but I am working on that

    Archena I have seen something like a cookie sheet but not tried it...mmmm
    Last edited by Bacterium; 06-04-2007, 04:18 PM. Reason: spelling

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  • Archena
    replied
    Re: Flour or Cornmeal

    He probably means a baking sheet (also called a cookie sheet) with only one (or three) crimped edges. At least one edge is left flat so that you can just slide whatever you're baking right off. They're great for sliding off cookies and I'd imagine would work well for what Bacterium is describing.


    Click image for larger version

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    Source

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  • Richard
    replied
    Re: Flour or Cornmeal

    What type of tray are you using? do you have pictures? size, source

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  • Bacterium
    replied
    Re: Flour or Cornmeal

    my current option = pizza trays

    Ahhh hey I'm a noobie at this, so this ones more for the beginners. I use locally sourced pizza trays (they are almost flat, slight lip, the shops use them). I tried the flour method but lost the toppings a few times when flicking the peel - so rather than embarrasing myself this works for now.

    Basically I assemble pizza on tray (no flour underneath, just a dry - clean tray), then slide tray onto oven floor to cook. Around 30seconds the dough releases itself from the tray enough for me to grab pizza tray (with tongs) and the pizza slides nicely onto the dome floor to keep cooking. Once cooked I then extract the pizza with my peel.

    The positives
    -I can make a few pizzas up ahead of time
    -No more toppings shooting off if base sticks
    -Plus you can use the edges to pinch the dough to...if needed


    And to "cheat" further (if the top does cook to quickly)....I hold the peel over the top (to act as a shield) to let the underside finish off cooking.......as I said "noobie"

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  • Johnny L
    replied
    Re: Flour or Cornmeal

    When I started making pizza I (admit that I) used too much cornmeal a few times. My fire alarm in the house would sound off. Then after backing down it got better. I seem to get a certain smokey smell though when I used cornmeal in a 550+ degree oven. Maybe a reminder of the early days?

    The Semolina four seems to give me the same "ball bearing action" as the cornmeal, without the smokey smell. I'll dust with Caputo flour and Semolina, but put the Semolina on my wooden peel. It works for me.
    This is only from my own experience, and I wanted to share it with you.
    The bottom line is that if it works for you and your oven then it's good.
    John

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  • RTflorida
    replied
    Re: Flour or Cornmeal

    I agree, cornmeal does seem to work better. I just don't like the grittyness on my pizza, so I usually use flour. As for taste, no preference.

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  • Dutchoven
    replied
    Re: Flour or Cornmeal

    I voted cornmeal, I like the little ball bearing action it gives. I also don't notice a taste difference really. I might try ap flour and will definitely try semolina.
    Dutch

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  • Johnny L
    replied
    Re: Flour or Cornmeal

    Jim,
    Thanks for your input. Since this particular subject is new ground for me I'm going to soak it up for a while. Then I'll compare notes with Peter Reinhart's notes in the Bread Baker's Apprentice.
    In the past couple of months I have run across many of your posts and was able to pick up a lot of information from your valuable input.
    I appreciate it Jim.

    Leave a comment:


  • CanuckJim
    replied
    Re: Flour or Cornmeal

    John,

    Did a quick check in Jeffrey Hamelman's Bread on durham flour. According to him, most of the hard flour we get in North America is made from hard red winter or spring wheat. Durham wheat, by contrast is grown in North Dakota and (though he doesn't say this) mainly in Saskatchewan. It's primary use is for pasta. It has a higher percentage of protein than either winter or spring wheat but not all of it usable in gluten matrix formation. He says that bread doughs made with a high proportion of it to tend break down during mixing, so care must be taken with mechanical mixers. Instead, he recommends shorter mixing times, longer bulk fermentation and folding. Durham flour is soft and golden, while semolina made from the same wheat has a gritty coarseness.

    This tendency to break down might have something to do with the fact that many North American recipes that use durham flour call for a 50/50 mix with hard bread flour.

    As a side note, he suggests that although hard red winter wheat bread flours have somewhat lower protein than spring wheat flours, there is evidence that the protein in winter wheats is superior in making natural yeast hearth breads that have long fermentation times.

    Found this definition of durham wheat fairly quickly:

    durum

    Scientific classification
    Kingdom: Plantae

    Division: Magnoliophyta

    Class: Liliopsida

    Order: Poales

    Family: Poaceae

    Subfamily: Pooideae

    Tribe: Triticeae

    Genus: Triticum

    Species: T. durum


    Binomial name
    Triticum durum
    Desf.
    Durum wheat or Macaroni wheat (Triticum durum) is the only tetraploid species of wheat widely cultivated today. Durum is the hardest of all wheats. Its high protein content and gluten strength make durum good for pasta and bread. It is not, however, good for cakes, which should be made from soft wheat or they will be tough, because of the high gluten content of durum.

    Most of the durum grown today is amber durum, the grains of which are amber-colored and larger than those of other types of wheat. Durum has a yellow endosperm, which gives pasta its color. When durum is milled, the endosperm is ground into a granular product called semolina. Semolina made from durum is used for premium pastas and breads.

    There is also a red durum, used mostly for livestock feed.

    Durum wheat sells at a premium to other varieties and accounts for roughly 5% of global wheat production, or about 30 million tons in 2004. Most durum wheat is grown in Mediterranean countries, the former Soviet Union, North America, and Argentina. U.S. durum production is primarily in North Dakota, which produced 59% of the US crop in 2004. However the largest producer of durum is Canada where it is the third most prominent crop behind red spring wheat and canola, the primary region for durum is in the southern quarter of Saskatchewan.


    Maybe others can find more or different.

    Jim
    Last edited by CanuckJim; 03-27-2007, 11:09 AM. Reason: More info

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