Hello,
Looking for some help on getting a crispier crust. I've gotten feedback saying my pizza is really good, but its very soft, any way to make a crispier crust?
I use Caputo 00 pizza flour, following the Flour, Water, Salt, Yeast recipe for dough with overnight Poolish (although I add an overnight in the refrigerator to the end). So, the timeline is:
Friday evening: mix poolish (500g flour, 500g water, pinch yeast)
Saturday morning: mix dough (another 500g flour, salt, 250g water, poolish, so 75% hydration)
Let rise for 4-6 hours, shape dough, into the refrigerator for overnight.
Sunday, pizza bake.
I'm rolling out cold dough (helps with the high hydration), get the oven fired to 1000 degrees on the floor, but then I let it cool down to about 750 and do my bake.
Pizza comes out great, but very soft. I've searched some on this forum, found a few references, but not sure how to have a high hydration along with crispy bottom. I saw some reference to adding semolina (7%) to the dough? Would this make a difference? Anything else I can do to crisp this up? Thank you,
Tim
Raleigh, NC
Looking for some help on getting a crispier crust. I've gotten feedback saying my pizza is really good, but its very soft, any way to make a crispier crust?
I use Caputo 00 pizza flour, following the Flour, Water, Salt, Yeast recipe for dough with overnight Poolish (although I add an overnight in the refrigerator to the end). So, the timeline is:
Friday evening: mix poolish (500g flour, 500g water, pinch yeast)
Saturday morning: mix dough (another 500g flour, salt, 250g water, poolish, so 75% hydration)
Let rise for 4-6 hours, shape dough, into the refrigerator for overnight.
Sunday, pizza bake.
I'm rolling out cold dough (helps with the high hydration), get the oven fired to 1000 degrees on the floor, but then I let it cool down to about 750 and do my bake.
Pizza comes out great, but very soft. I've searched some on this forum, found a few references, but not sure how to have a high hydration along with crispy bottom. I saw some reference to adding semolina (7%) to the dough? Would this make a difference? Anything else I can do to crisp this up? Thank you,
Tim
Raleigh, NC
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