this post was submitted on 07 Sep 2023
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Pizza

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Pizza takes practice! Don't be discouraged by first attempt results. Here's a look back at my progress over 5 years of pizza making in a conventional oven. I do most of the bake these days on a steel in the dedicated broiler drawer of my old oven. Early attempts used 00 Flour which sucks for conventional ovens since it doesn't brown at lower heat. KABF for the win. Recipe below.

Recipe measurements for 3 dough balls about 290g.

King Arthur Bread Flour - 100% - 530g

Water (90-95 degrees F) - 61% - 323g

Sea Salt - 2% - 16g

Instant Dry Yeast - .25% - 1.3g / or two-thirds of a half tsp

Steps:

  1. Dissolve salt in lukewarm water by swishing around in large bowl or food container

  2. Add yeast, and swish around to dissolve

  3. After a minute or two add flour and mix by hand until just incorporated

  4. Cover and let rest for 20 minutes

  5. Remove dough and knead for 30-60 seconds on lightly floured surface

  6. Bulk ferment for 2 hours, covered, at room temp

  7. Divide dough and shape into balls.

  8. Put dough balls on floured plate. Sprinkle with flour, and cover plate with plastic wrap. Or use sealed food containers that provide space to ferment.

  9. Ferment dough in fridge for 24-48 hours.

  10. Remove dough balls 90-120 minutes before baking, during that time preheat your pizza stone at the hottest temp. Roll dough on lightly floured surface to about 13-14 inch diameter

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[โ€“] StableSystem 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

This is really handy. It's encouraging to see the progress, I need to try your recipe and see if it comes out better. Thanks for sharing.

[โ€“] Copernican 2 points 1 year ago

Practice makes perfect! I think I was lucky to start making pizza well before the ooni craze. I will say part of my inspiration was seeing some not very flattering pics of upvoted pizza on reddit and thinking to myself "I could do better". I imagine it's a bit more intimidating these days when it seems that everyone posting pics is using an ooni's these days.