Quest for the Perfect Pizza
Quest for the Perfect Pizza
I began my quest for the perfect home baked pizza in 1990. After several failed attempts that produced burnt crust or gooey centers, I was certain that I would never be able to produce a great pie at home. Fortunately I was set on the right path towards pizza nirvana. While on vacation in a northern California coast town, my wife and I stumbled onto a quaint little family run pizza joint. The pizza was fantastic with great crust and creative toppings. I asked the owner what the trick was to producing such a masterpiece. He answered with the standard "If I tell you I'll have to kill you". After downing another bottle of wine and sharing with him my challenges in pizza making, He invited me back to his kitchen. "Heat" he explained, "was the key to a successful pie". His oven was fired up over 600 degrees. The type of heat was important too. I left his kitchen with a list of things that I needed to get in order to produce a decent pizza in my own kitchen.
When I returned home I purchased a large, thick, rectangular pizza stone for my oven. I also picked up a good wooden pizza piel along with other specialty tools. It wasn't long until I was turning out great pizza in my own kitchen. Pizza partys became a weekly event. I experimented with several different dough and sauce recipes until I was happy with the results. For years I was content with the pizza that I was able to turn out. Friends and family were happy too. However, my passion was about to lead me down a new path.
Several years ago I had introduced a good friend to the art of pizza making. Like me, he was soon on a quest of his own. Growing up in New York, he wanted to recreate the perfect New York style pie that he remembered as a kid. The pizza that I was creating had a definite California flare with a thicker crust while the pie that my friend was striving for was thin and chewy. Achieving the perfect east coast style pizza was not an easy task. The most common factor in producing such a pie was the oven. Again, the heat was the key. Most authentic pizzerias were using a brick oven that was fired by wood or coal. We found that all of our favorite pizzas from all over the country came from a brick oven. We both decided that we would build a brick oven of our own some day. We researched many different styles and oven designs. We even checked out the oven at Lombardi's, Americas first pizzaeria, while traveling to New York together .
My opportunity to build my oven finally came during the construction of our new home in 2004. I designed my back yard to include an outdoor kitchen, equipped with a comercial size wood fired brick oven. My oven is based on an old world Italian design that is shaped like an igloo. The inside of the oven is approximately six feet deep by four feet wide. I have included a pictorial history of the construction process on this site. I finished the oven with decretive stone, hand distressed wooden tembers, travertine tiles and a copper roof. I couldn't be happier with the results.
This oven gets HOT! Well over a thousand degrees. Pizzas are done in less then three minutes. It's like an old world microwave. The oven is not just for cooking pizza. It produces a moist heat that is perfect for baking artisan breads and roasting juicy meats. I baked the most delectable turkey for Thanksgiving this past year. I also use it as a slow smoker too, producing fantastic ribs and brisket. Yes, it also produces the "perfect home baked pizza"!
I have read that you should never wash a couche (linen). I would worry about doing that for a couple reasons but mainly I'd be concerned about the unfinished edges unraveling. That being said I worry that my couche doesn't smell as nice and fresh as you might like. What say you bakers out there? What words of wisdom do you have to share?
Thanks
Hi,
so I've been reading a lot about artisan bread baking and I'm trying to understand as much as I can about fermentation. The conventional wisdom says that when you're letting dough rise, a cooler temperature will slow the fermentation, allowing the yeast to bring out more flavor from the dough. This sounds reasonable at first thought, but when I thought about it some more I became confused with why is it any different than raising the temperature and allowing the yeast to work faster? As long as you haven't killed the yeast it is still converting sugars into CO2 and ethanol, thus doing the same thing regardless of temperature. I'm not convinced that slower time gives the yeast more time to interact because it still rises to the same level as a dough that is sitting in higher temperature, it just does it slowly.
So to make a long story short, "bringing out more flavors" feels far too hand wavy to me. Can someone explain the nitty gritty as to why slower fermentation is better?
-Hoi
I tried some of this paper from Fox Run Kitchens. Billed as "parchment style, non-sticking lining for cooking, baking and candy making."
Claims to have "maximum temperature 425F without time limit."
Made in China
Fox Run Craftsman, Ivyland, PA 18974
I baked some bread on it at 425 (my oven fluctuates 10F +- so it was as high as 435F) and it stuck. I used a potato peeler to get it off the bottom crust.
--------------------
Switched to Beyond Gourmet Unbleached Parchment Paper. Product of Sweden. AV Olssuon Trading Co., Inc, Stamford, CT 06902
I have been able to bake bread up to 460F with no sticking.
So here is how my bread ended up coming out. I used the same old recipe used a bit less yeast, took the dough out of the bowl to knead when it was still a little "wet". I worked in flour untile it felt ready. Let it rise once normally, then put it out on the counter and spread it out and did the folding method, let it rise again for about half an our or so, then took it out, flattened it again and formed the loaf............the let it rise in the loaf pan for a lot longer than I usually do.
Overall I am happy with it, the crumb taste really really good. It is a LOT more fluffy than my previous loaves. The crust has just the right amount of chewinesss (yes that is a word..........when you are talking about bread...lol). I am happy that I got a few holes in the bread.........not sure if it's enough though, since i am still new to this.
If anyone has any suggestions they would be appreciated.



In case you want to know how i got here i used this recipe http://www.sourdoughhome.com/bakingintro3.html#windopane
I used Publix brand unbleached AP flour
6g of bulk active dry yeast
Baked for 20 min in over with steam then took it out and brushed with egg white and put Lowry's garlic salt on top of it.
I also baked it in a regular pyrex glass loaf pan.......that's it.
Salutations,
Best Bread tips I've seen on-line.
(Just signed up.)
I'm a 47 year old Bread baking Dad. (3 young children, lovely wife.)
Can't form the proper words to tell you how helpful this site has been.
Unlike most other Bread baking sites this one is free of frustrations.
I very much appreciate that.
All the best,
Mark Wisecarver
Johnson City, TN
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