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Crusty Nutsack posted:I prefer an uncooked sauce. But using crushed tomatoes as opposed to whole, and then cooking on top of it, would seem to create the opposite of a chunky sauce? Why not use whole and hand crush for a better texture, especially if you're going to be cooking it which breaks the tomatoes down even more? I phrased myself poorly. I meant that I like it chunkier than a blended sauce, but more of a suace than simply hand crushed tomatoes offer, hence cooking down the extra liquid. So I guess a "sauce" with medium-small chunks of tomato. Perhaps I'm picky...
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# ? Jan 19, 2012 23:16 |
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# ? Jun 8, 2024 09:20 |
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So I've never made my own dough (pizza or otherwise) before and I was wondering: If I want to make a dough that rose overnight, like the one in the OP, but don't plan to use it first thing in the morning... should I just start it tomorrow and let it rise for the same amount of time? I'd rather start it tonight - If I just leave it in the fridge longer (say, ten hours longer), how much will that affect the dough?
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# ? Jan 20, 2012 00:01 |
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Cpt. Spring Types posted:God that looks amazing. The only thing I miss about living in SC is the tons of basil I could grow and make pesto with
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# ? Jan 20, 2012 00:20 |
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I only know how to make dough by the 50 pound bag, but we usually leave it at room temperature for about 6 hours, then fridge it. It can be used after about 4 hours at room temp, but has to be docked (poked full of holes to prevent bubbles) a lot more. It's easier to work with when colder. I can post a video of how to do crusts pretty if anyone is curious, I only do a few hundred a day. Edit: We use metal screens with a natural gas conveyer belt oven at 455 for 6 minutes and 10 seconds.
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# ? Jan 20, 2012 10:37 |
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indoflaven posted:It's personal preference. I like a thin, cooked sauce. If I could get better mozz I might prefer fresh chunky. If you're cool like me, you braid it.
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# ? Jan 20, 2012 18:08 |
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Made a few 10" pies this weekend. This was my first time making Pizza: Mozzarella, Prosciutto, and Dates: The dates and prosciutto together were a really really nice flavor. I will definitely be making this again, larger. I also made a pepperoni after this, but that's boring. I can't say these were the best pizzas I've ever had, but I can't name another one I've had that was better. I did these in a 14" cutter pan, since I didn't have a stone. Thanks to this thread I ordered a FibraMent that should be able to sit on the bottom of my oven all the time. I just used Alton Brown's basic recipe but it was absolutely delicious.
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# ? Jan 23, 2012 05:15 |
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So I come here today with a trip report of the worst pizza I have ever created. Let me start off by stating that I thought this recipe was doomed from the start, and I only went ahead with this because the wife insisted. She's dead to me now. The recipe was for a Bratwurst pizza with a mustard pretzel crust Crust was fairly standard except for the addition of crumbled mustard pretzel pieces. - OK. Whatever. Cheese was caraway muenster - Unusual, but goes with the other ingredients Here's where it falls apart: "Sauce" was a combination of cream cheese and dijon mustard (yuck) and the abomination was topped with undercooked (per directions) bratwurst disks and crumbled pretzel pieces. The idae being that the bratwurst finishes cooking during the baking. Probably the single worst thing I've created in the past 7-8 years.
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# ? Jan 23, 2012 18:36 |
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Wasn't the title of the old pizza thread something like "even the mistakes are delicious"?
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# ? Jan 23, 2012 19:37 |
I dunno man I think that was referring to funky-shaped crusts, not whatever the hell that dude put together.
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# ? Jan 23, 2012 23:26 |
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Second of two pies made using KA Sir Lancelot for the first time, just cheese and pepperoni on parchment paper on a stone for about 10 minutes at 500: First one came out darn tasty, I was surprised at how much spring and stretch the dough had as opposed to using the bread flour.
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# ? Jan 25, 2012 01:27 |
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CzarChasm posted:So I come here today with a trip report of the worst pizza I have ever created. How could you not get pictures of this for us?
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# ? Jan 25, 2012 03:19 |
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If CzarChasm will provide the recipe, I don't see why we couldn't perfect the perfect Bratwurst pizza with a mustard pretzel crust.
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# ? Jan 25, 2012 04:46 |
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Hello, I'm about to bake my first pizza. I'm using Trader Joe's dough and a cookie sheet. I know this goes against the sacrament. I'm sorry. Is there any hope for me? edit: Updates. Also, i forgot that my oven's heating element never turns off. Ever. I nearly burned my hand just putting the pizza in the oven. The pizzas cooked pretty quickly, maybe 2-3 minutes apiece. The only issue i had was the middle of the pizza being undercooked. Is there any way to fix that? Besides getting a pizza stone. I'm going to be picking one up in the near future though, making your own pizza is way too much fun. hokiehokiehokiehigh fucked around with this message at 11:46 on Jan 25, 2012 |
# ? Jan 25, 2012 05:07 |
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If you had a stone and let it heat up for 40 min or so, I'm willing to bet you could get some incredible temperatures in your oven. As for your pizza not cooking in the middle, stretching the dough a bit thinner might help, as will going lighter on the toppings (although it doesn't look like you did.) angor fucked around with this message at 11:00 on Jan 25, 2012 |
# ? Jan 25, 2012 10:58 |
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angerbeet posted:If CzarChasm will provide the recipe, I don't see why we couldn't perfect the perfect Bratwurst pizza with a mustard pretzel crust. Here's the recipe. Also found Here: http://www.jsonline.com/features/food/brats-are-a-tasty-milwaukee-tradition-np3k12c-136598123.html Looked like the picture in the article, but the crust was yellower (due to the mustard pretzel bits) and the bratwurst was cut thicker. I will also admit to halving this recipe (better to have half a recipe of good food than a full sized version of sucky food) Dough 1 ½ cups room-temperature water 1 tablespoon instant dry yeast 1/3 cup extra-virgin olive oil plus ½ teaspoon oil to coat dough (divided) 2 teaspoons kosher salt 1 cup fine semolina flour 1 ½ cups all-purpose flour 1 ½ cups mustard-onion pretzels bits, ground fine in food processor In a large bowl of an electric mixer with a dough hook, combine water, yeast and 1/3 cup oil. Run on low speed 30 seconds to mix. Let stand 5 minutes. In another bowl, mix the salt, flours and the 1½ cups ground pretzels together and add to the bowl. Mix 10 to 12 minutes on low to medium speed, stopping the machine and pushing the dough off the hook every 4 minutes. Shape dough into a ball and place in a larger bowl with the remaining ½ teaspoon oil and turn dough to coat completely. Cover with plastic wrap or a clean towel and let rest in a warm spot (80 to 85 degrees) 2 hours or until doubled in size. Punch down dough and divide into 4 rounds. Place pieces on plastic wrap and cover with a towel and let rise again. This will take about 1 hour. Or, cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate until ready to use. Dough can be refrigerated up to 12 hours. (You can refrigerate it longer, but dough texture will change a bit.) Pretzel Sausage Pizza with Wisconsin Caraway Muenster Makes four (12-inch) pizzas Dough (see recipe) 1 ½ cups (12 ounces) cream cheese, room temperature ¼ cup Dijon mustard ¾ pound fresh bratwurst, grilled 5 to 6 minutes or until slightly pink, cooled and cut into ¼-inch slices ¾ pound good-quality Wisconsin caraway Muenster cheese (or caraway brick), grated 1 cup mustard onion pretzel bits, chopped into about ½-inch pieces Prepare dough. Set aside. When ready to make pizzas, preheat oven to 450 degrees. If using a pizza stone, place in oven to preheat. In a small bowl, mix cream cheese and mustard. Roll pizza dough into four (12-inch) rounds that are each about ¼ inch thick. Place on preheated pizza stone or a lightly oiled sheet tray and bake in preheated oven 4 minutes. Maintain oven temperature. Remove crusts from oven and spread with a layer of the cream cheese mixture. Divide bratwurst slices and grated cheese over the top. Return to oven and bake 3 to 4 minutes until cheese is melted and crusts are golden. During the last two minutes, sprinkle with pretzel bits, then remove from oven and serve. EDIT: VVVVVVV Noted. CzarChasm fucked around with this message at 18:23 on Jan 25, 2012 |
# ? Jan 25, 2012 18:21 |
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JS Online sucks.
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# ? Jan 25, 2012 18:22 |
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My first thought would be to somehow make the crust like a soft pretzel instead of adding crumbled pretzel bits to it. No idea how you would accomplish that, since a pretzel is boiled, but I bet it would taste way better.
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# ? Jan 25, 2012 19:52 |
I would do a precooked crust type thing. Bagels (which is pretty much what a pretzel is) and pizza are pretty compatible in the first place, so I was actually expecting a lot from the name of the dish. Use a standard pretzel recipe (do a lye dip if you're a man) and preshape it into rounds before the dip, as if it were a pizza. Then bake it off as you normally would a pretzel. Here is a random pretzel recipe I found The tricky part is turning the mustard into a sauce. I think they are on to something with the cream cheese mustard sauce, but it would probably be better to turn it into a bechemel and add the dijon or even an English style mustard. This way you get a much saucier-type finish that will spread easily and there's a lot of pizza precedent for it in the form of chicken alfredo pizzas and spinach-artichoke pizzas. Add the sauce and the cheese (nothing wrong with the muenster here) and fry up the brats properly, drain, slice and add to the top. Throw that into the oven the way you normally would a pizza (500 degrees+ etc etc) until the cheese is melty. For the finishing touch, I thought of something that I've never tried, and which might be either horrible or awesome. Melt a tablespoon of butter and mix in some dry mustard powder, oregano and red chili flake and brush it onto the crust of the finished pizza. I have never tried anything remotely like this dish in my life, but in my head the finished product seems awesome.
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# ? Jan 25, 2012 21:15 |
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Hed posted:Made a few 10" pies this weekend. This was my first time making Pizza: This sounds delicious to me and I want to try it. What kind of dates did you use?
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# ? Jan 25, 2012 22:55 |
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Cpt. Spring Types posted:My first thought would be to somehow make the crust like a soft pretzel instead of adding crumbled pretzel bits to it. No idea how you would accomplish that, since a pretzel is boiled, but I bet it would taste way better. You could do a quick dip in a baking soda bath before topping.
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# ? Jan 26, 2012 01:07 |
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Casu Marzu posted:JS Online sucks. Yeah but Sandy D'Amato doesn't. Dunno wtf is up with that recipe though, apparently he's gone slightly off the deep end.
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# ? Jan 26, 2012 02:53 |
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Does anyone have any tips for wholemeal pizza? I've made it before and it comes out good, but improvements can always be made. I just have a regular fan oven as hot as it goes (about 240C), on a baking tray.
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# ? Jan 26, 2012 03:17 |
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I haven't tried it but the KAF blog had a whole wheat pizza recipe a while ago: http://www.kingarthurflour.com/blog/2011/06/20/a-tasty-whole-grain-pizza-crust-roasted-potatoes-optional/
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# ? Jan 26, 2012 04:01 |
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hokiehokiehokiehigh posted:Hello, I'm about to bake my first pizza. I'm using Trader Joe's dough and a cookie sheet. I know this goes against the sacrament. I'm sorry. Is there any hope for me? You can bake the crust for 2 or 3 minutes, then put the toppings on, then bake again.
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# ? Jan 26, 2012 04:43 |
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Wahad posted:This sounds delicious to me and I want to try it. What kind of dates did you use?
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# ? Jan 26, 2012 05:06 |
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Kathandrion posted:I have never tried anything remotely like this dish in my life, but in my head the finished product seems awesome.
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# ? Jan 26, 2012 08:32 |
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From the OPCasu Marzu posted:Today, I did a pizza dough that was raised overnight in the fridge. I found this to be a lot more workable when trying for that really thin pie, as well as having much more flavor. I tried making that pizza last night, followed the directions as close as possible (used weights of everything instead of cups, tablespoons, etc.) Anyways, after it had stayed in the fridge overnight, I took it out the next day and followed the directions. Couple questions. 1) How many pieces are you supposed to cut this into? The OP didn't specify, but given that you end up with 5" in diameter by about 1/2" thick, I was guessing four pizza crusts? 2) I made them into little disc and let them rest for 2 hours with a bit of olive oil and flour on top, covered with saran wrap. When I went to start making the pie, they were incredibly thin with zero effort on my part. When I scraped them off the counter top initially and put them on my knuckles, they were already spreading way too thin and I was done within 5 seconds, if that. Any more would have made the dough tear. 3) Also, I used a pizza sauce I found in this thread that worked great, and then I was using some balls of mozzarella. Huge mistake. WAY too much water came from the mozzarella which resulted in a pizza with lots of liquid coming out. How do I work around the moisture in the cheese? Do I press it like tofu first? Buy another kind of cheese? So, the first pizza came out pretty well, but because it was so thin, it tore going from the peel to the stone (yes, corn flour was underneath), so it made a bit of mess on my stone. Honestly, this one turned out the best in terms of taste, it just didn't have enough toppings on it (couldn't put much on due to how thin it was). The next pizza I tried combining two of the crusts. Huge mistake.. I was able to fit more on the pizza, but it wouldn't spread out well, perhaps I was too impatient to let it rest for 10 minutes so it would let me work with it more, but it came out WAY too thick. The final pizza started tearing right away, so in an effort to fix that, it turned out to be a mess. It still tasted great, but man...I guess I gotta keep working at it.
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# ? Jan 28, 2012 16:29 |
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The individual crusts in the OP pics are fairly small - if you want one bigger or thicker you're probably better off not splitting the dough ball in the first place, or only splitting it in half, etc. By way of comparison, I use a recipe as per the following: Flour (100%): 653.39 g | 23.05 oz | 1.44 lbs Water (63%): 411.63 g | 14.52 oz | 0.91 lbs IDY (.3%): 1.96 g | 0.07 oz | 0 lbs | 0.65 tsp | 0.22 tbsp Salt (1.75%): 11.43 g | 0.4 oz | 0.03 lbs | 2.38 tsp | 0.79 tbsp Oil (1.75%): 11.43 g | 0.4 oz | 0.03 lbs | 2.54 tsp | 0.85 tbsp Sugar (2%): 13.07 g | 0.46 oz | 0.03 lbs | 3.28 tsp | 1.09 tbsp Total (168.8%): 1102.92 g | 38.9 oz | 2.43 lbs | TF = N/A Single Ball: 551.46 g | 19.45 oz | 1.22 lbs Which makes 2 551g balls, that the person I got the recipe from says should each stretch out to 16-inch NY-style pies. Of course, my stretching technique sucks and I sometimes end up with thick crust and an overly thin center, but you get the idea
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# ? Jan 28, 2012 20:28 |
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I finally managed to both work my dough the right amount and NOT kill my yeast! Some friends got me a food processor for the holidays, which makes dough way better than my terrible kneading, but the first time I made pizza dough with it, I used warm water and the full mix time indicated, killing my yeast and yielding a tasty but flat crust. On advice from here and elsewhere, I upped my hydration and chilled my sponge after an initial proof, got beautiful, perfect dough which, after an 8 hour cool rise, gave me this: crumb shot: so happy.
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# ? Jan 30, 2012 03:50 |
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wormil posted:Anyone used granite or quartz countertop pieces for pizza stones? I googled it a bit and found something about Jamie Oliver recommending granite. Would be heavy though. I know this was from forever ago, but how well would this work? My uncle is doing his kitchen and has some MASSIVE off cuts coming. I can easily get a pizza stone (or 45) out of it. 30mm thick, too
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# ? Feb 9, 2012 21:38 |
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I always figured higher hardness = more crackiness when heating/cooling quickly. Just from a couple of ME courses in college, not any real knowledge. Granite is wicked hard, no?
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# ? Feb 9, 2012 23:01 |
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People have used granite, there is just the danger of ancient hidden moisture pockets that will cause the granite to explode violently when heated, or so they say.
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# ? Feb 10, 2012 00:14 |
Part of why you want to use a quarry stone/unglazed ceramic is that it wicks away moisture as well. Granite doesn't do that.
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# ? Feb 10, 2012 02:34 |
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Isn't there also an issue with granite releasing Radon when heated to a certain point? A low enough point where having it in the oven would be a concern?
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# ? Feb 10, 2012 03:56 |
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ARRGGH. I was finally getting good at this, had managed my first successful toss, and on either pizza three or four of the night (they were small) my stone broke! We're moving in 3-4 months, so I'm just going to pick up unglazed quarry tiles as appropriate for whatever oven we have wherever we wind up, but drat, I was looking forward to at least a couple of spring pizza nights.
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# ? Feb 12, 2012 18:06 |
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Buy a big terracotta pot bottom they cost like $5 and work great!
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# ? Feb 13, 2012 01:10 |
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I used my new FibraMent baking stone for the first time tonight. I already had a decent stone, but it was round and I wanted something that used the rectangular oven space a little more efficiently. I was able to fit two individual-sized pizzas on the stone, and it worked great. One word of warning: The directions for the stone speak of a slight off-odor that may be emitted the first time heating the stone. In reality, it's a strong, chemical glue-like odor that takes several hours at to dissipate. The hood fan didn't do much - you need open windows. After about 5-6 hours in a hot oven, though, the smell is gone. 650g AP flour (I used KA) 14g kosher salt 3g instant yeast 450g cool water Mix together, knead, shape into a ball and put into an oiled/covered bowl. Set at room temp for 30 minutes, then refrigerate overnight. Divide dough balls into 6 pieces, brush with olive oil, let rest for 2 hours. I shaped them by pressing from the center out (no pulling/tossing) on lightly-floured parchment. I brushed the edges with olive oil, trimmed the parchment, then parbaked for a few minutes, then topped and went back into the oven (minus the parchment) for another 4-5 minutes.
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# ? Feb 21, 2012 04:18 |
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Here's some pizza's I made today, used the dough recipe from the op, but I added a bit of garlic powder and sugar since I didn't use instant yeast. they turned out really great. Cooked on my egg using a pizza stone. Precooked the crust for maybe 45 seconds, then added the toppings and back on the grill. the pies just don't want to slide off my peel if I don't pre cook. standarish toppings ala supreme pizza pepperoni and garlic onion chicken olive oil base, spinach, garlic onion chicken and mushrooms
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# ? Feb 26, 2012 03:52 |
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Made another pizza, same dough as before. The crust on this was much closer to what I like, nice and thin, thanks to my new roller. Also got a new pizza blade to cut it, can't stand the normal pizza cutters, as I always just end up pushing all the toppings around.
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# ? Mar 1, 2012 14:20 |
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# ? Jun 8, 2024 09:20 |
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niss posted:Made another pizza, same dough as before. The crust on this was much closer to what I like, nice and thin, thanks to my new roller. Also got a new pizza blade to cut it, can't stand the normal pizza cutters, as I always just end up pushing all the toppings around. I had that problem with standard pizza cutters and then I went the Ice Cream route and would slightly wet my pizza cutter with hot water and the toppings no longer ripped off my pizza.
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# ? Mar 1, 2012 18:45 |