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19th May 17:02
External User
Posts: 1
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I have just tried for the 3rd time the oft-quoted Chicago Pizza Recipe
found here and elsewhere and still am having trouble. Each time i make it, i use the regular "low moisture" mozzarella (have tried block, sliced and shredded) well-drained crushed/diced tomatoes and equally well-drained toppings (so far no veggies, only sausage and pepperoni) Every time it comes out though i have a puddle of water forming under the crust and the crust is soggy. I know this moisture must come from the massive amount of cheese required by a proper Chicago pizza but how do I get rid of it? Is there a good way of dehydrating the cheese partially? could I put it out on a baking sheet in the open air for a day? wrap it in paper towel and put it in the fridge? Something to reduce the moisture contained inside. The resulting pizza is not only soggy but the cheese becomes stringy instead of a creamy and melted as it is in a professional pizza. I look forward to all of your help! Please email me a reply as i do not get on here often enough! AJR_C6H6@HOTMAIL.COM |
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2
19th August 02:13
External User
Posts: 1
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since i've still got peter reinhart's "american pie" out from the library,
i can tell you what he that he bakes the dough in the pan for 3-4 minutes before, letting cool for 5 minutes, adding mozzarella cheese as the first layer, then crushed tomato sauce, etc. etc. etc. i haven't seen that before, though most people seem to use a cheese-first layering for deep dish. i think that is supposed to help seal the crust. fwiw ... great book: http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg...757542-2087063 (funny, my library copy has a pizza on the cover with eggs as a topping. it looks like they were broken onto the pizza and cooked in place. but the book never mentions eggs as a topping. i see that the book at amazon has a different cover.) |
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5
19th August 02:13
External User
Posts: 1
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I see a few things that could cause problems.
- too much sauce (this is usually what craters my pizzas when they crater) - uncooked meats - cheese. Try a 50/50 split of whole milk mozarella and provolone. Try the mozarella/provolone mix. That's what the pros do. By and large. -- -Brian James Macke macke@strangelove.net "In order to get that which you wish for, you must first get that which builds it." -- Unknown |
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