How can I ensure that my pizza is properly cooked?“Prepared” pizza base - does that mean cooked?How can huge bubbles in pizza crust be prevented?How can I create a sweet pizza that looks like pizza?How to make frozen pizza taste good?How to make pizza that has a fat outer rim?Should chicken be cooked beforehand while making pizza?How do I ensure my deep dish crust gets cookedHow can you pre-bake coca (pizza)?Cooked or raw mushrooms on pizza?Tapioca pizza crust is undercooked?
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How can I ensure that my pizza is properly cooked?
“Prepared” pizza base - does that mean cooked?How can huge bubbles in pizza crust be prevented?How can I create a sweet pizza that looks like pizza?How to make frozen pizza taste good?How to make pizza that has a fat outer rim?Should chicken be cooked beforehand while making pizza?How do I ensure my deep dish crust gets cookedHow can you pre-bake coca (pizza)?Cooked or raw mushrooms on pizza?Tapioca pizza crust is undercooked?
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I occasionally make homemade pizza using pre-made dough (similar to this), however I can never seem to get the dough cooked properly all the way through. It ends up with nicely done edges but an underdone middle, or a properly cooked middle but overdone edges (occasionally I get lucky and get overdone edges with an underdone middle too).
Generally for cooking it I follow the instructions on the packaging, about 15 minutes at about 450F. It is cooked on an upside-down cookie sheet.
What can I do to get a pizza that is the proper done-ness throughout?
pizza
add a comment |
I occasionally make homemade pizza using pre-made dough (similar to this), however I can never seem to get the dough cooked properly all the way through. It ends up with nicely done edges but an underdone middle, or a properly cooked middle but overdone edges (occasionally I get lucky and get overdone edges with an underdone middle too).
Generally for cooking it I follow the instructions on the packaging, about 15 minutes at about 450F. It is cooked on an upside-down cookie sheet.
What can I do to get a pizza that is the proper done-ness throughout?
pizza
1
For the product you linked to, the instructions say bake at 400-425F depending on pan type. That could be why you are not getting the desired results.
– Debbie M.
Feb 27 '18 at 1:57
@DebbieM. That isn't the brand I normally use, just an example of the type of product I'm using. Generally I get whatever the off brand is at the store I am shopping at.
– diego
Feb 27 '18 at 2:01
1
I cheat : slice.seriouseats.com/2010/09/… ; cook the dough in a cast iron pan on the stovetop, flip it, cook the other side, flip again and add toppings, then slide under the broiler. If I'm making a bunch, I'll just cook the crust 'til it's showing color on each side, then move them to a sheet pan so people can top them, and finish it in the oven (baking, not broiling, but you can broil at the end if you want)
– Joe
Feb 27 '18 at 4:24
add a comment |
I occasionally make homemade pizza using pre-made dough (similar to this), however I can never seem to get the dough cooked properly all the way through. It ends up with nicely done edges but an underdone middle, or a properly cooked middle but overdone edges (occasionally I get lucky and get overdone edges with an underdone middle too).
Generally for cooking it I follow the instructions on the packaging, about 15 minutes at about 450F. It is cooked on an upside-down cookie sheet.
What can I do to get a pizza that is the proper done-ness throughout?
pizza
I occasionally make homemade pizza using pre-made dough (similar to this), however I can never seem to get the dough cooked properly all the way through. It ends up with nicely done edges but an underdone middle, or a properly cooked middle but overdone edges (occasionally I get lucky and get overdone edges with an underdone middle too).
Generally for cooking it I follow the instructions on the packaging, about 15 minutes at about 450F. It is cooked on an upside-down cookie sheet.
What can I do to get a pizza that is the proper done-ness throughout?
pizza
pizza
asked Feb 26 '18 at 21:51
diegodiego
12613
12613
1
For the product you linked to, the instructions say bake at 400-425F depending on pan type. That could be why you are not getting the desired results.
– Debbie M.
Feb 27 '18 at 1:57
@DebbieM. That isn't the brand I normally use, just an example of the type of product I'm using. Generally I get whatever the off brand is at the store I am shopping at.
– diego
Feb 27 '18 at 2:01
1
I cheat : slice.seriouseats.com/2010/09/… ; cook the dough in a cast iron pan on the stovetop, flip it, cook the other side, flip again and add toppings, then slide under the broiler. If I'm making a bunch, I'll just cook the crust 'til it's showing color on each side, then move them to a sheet pan so people can top them, and finish it in the oven (baking, not broiling, but you can broil at the end if you want)
– Joe
Feb 27 '18 at 4:24
add a comment |
1
For the product you linked to, the instructions say bake at 400-425F depending on pan type. That could be why you are not getting the desired results.
– Debbie M.
Feb 27 '18 at 1:57
@DebbieM. That isn't the brand I normally use, just an example of the type of product I'm using. Generally I get whatever the off brand is at the store I am shopping at.
– diego
Feb 27 '18 at 2:01
1
I cheat : slice.seriouseats.com/2010/09/… ; cook the dough in a cast iron pan on the stovetop, flip it, cook the other side, flip again and add toppings, then slide under the broiler. If I'm making a bunch, I'll just cook the crust 'til it's showing color on each side, then move them to a sheet pan so people can top them, and finish it in the oven (baking, not broiling, but you can broil at the end if you want)
– Joe
Feb 27 '18 at 4:24
1
1
For the product you linked to, the instructions say bake at 400-425F depending on pan type. That could be why you are not getting the desired results.
– Debbie M.
Feb 27 '18 at 1:57
For the product you linked to, the instructions say bake at 400-425F depending on pan type. That could be why you are not getting the desired results.
– Debbie M.
Feb 27 '18 at 1:57
@DebbieM. That isn't the brand I normally use, just an example of the type of product I'm using. Generally I get whatever the off brand is at the store I am shopping at.
– diego
Feb 27 '18 at 2:01
@DebbieM. That isn't the brand I normally use, just an example of the type of product I'm using. Generally I get whatever the off brand is at the store I am shopping at.
– diego
Feb 27 '18 at 2:01
1
1
I cheat : slice.seriouseats.com/2010/09/… ; cook the dough in a cast iron pan on the stovetop, flip it, cook the other side, flip again and add toppings, then slide under the broiler. If I'm making a bunch, I'll just cook the crust 'til it's showing color on each side, then move them to a sheet pan so people can top them, and finish it in the oven (baking, not broiling, but you can broil at the end if you want)
– Joe
Feb 27 '18 at 4:24
I cheat : slice.seriouseats.com/2010/09/… ; cook the dough in a cast iron pan on the stovetop, flip it, cook the other side, flip again and add toppings, then slide under the broiler. If I'm making a bunch, I'll just cook the crust 'til it's showing color on each side, then move them to a sheet pan so people can top them, and finish it in the oven (baking, not broiling, but you can broil at the end if you want)
– Joe
Feb 27 '18 at 4:24
add a comment |
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
Get a pizza stone. It is important to preheat the stone with the oven. Put it in the oven before you begin to preheat, if your not in a hurry...let the stone and the oven hold at temperature for a while before you put the pizza on it. The stone will radiate heat into your dough evenly. Stones are 'better' than metal (like a cookie sheet) because they release the heat into the dough 'more evenly' If you have a 'pizza pan' putting that on the stone will work well also.
Completely preheat your oven. Many electric ovens use the broiler coil (on top) to heat the oven to the desired temperature faster, if you attempt to bake your pizza during the pre-heat stage the top is likely to cook faster than the dough. You may eyeball your pizza as done because the top 'looks' ready, when the dough is not yet finished.
One of the common culprits in an 'underdone' middle is that liquid has soaked into the dough causing it to cook more slowly. If your sauce is too thin you might want to thicken it up some. Also, spreading a thin coat of soft (not melted) butter over the top will form a barrier to prevent the liquid in the sauce from soaking in. Finally, you might try putting the grated cheese on first and then spreading the sauce over that. As the cheese melts and the sauce warms it will settle into (approximately) the expected layers, but if the sauce has been kept from the dough for a few minutes it will not soak in as much.
If you aren't satisfied with these results then you might try:
Get an oven thermometer. The temperature actually in your oven will vary from 'the dial'. It's expected, just know what you're actually getting. You want your oven to be 'very hot' (professional pizza ovens will range from 600°F - 900°F) your home oven is unlikely to get 'that' hot but 450°F should be close enough to do the job.
As a last resort... par bake the crust. Put the un-covered crust in the oven for a few (5ish) minutes first, pull it, then top it and return it to the oven.
I hope you find something here to help with your pizza woes.
2
+1 for "hold the stove and stone at temp for a while. There is a reason why recipes usually say preheat oven at the beginning of a recipe. A truly preheated oven is one where all the internal components have reached the target temp, not just the air. This allows the oven to spring back to temp when the door is opened. The time recommended by most experienced cooks chefs for pre-heating most ovens is a full 30 minutes.
– Escoce
Feb 28 '18 at 13:30
butter on a pizza? that's a first..
– Agos
Mar 1 '18 at 11:23
@Agos, actually I first saw it from Alton Brown years ago. There are even a number of pizza places where you can taste the butter (that is perhaps too much, but that is a matter of taste)
– Cos Callis
Mar 1 '18 at 14:23
add a comment |
Try preheating your cookie sheet before laying the uncooked pizza on it, otherwise it may act as a heatsink/insulator until it reaches the right temperature, delaying the cooking (particularly near its center of mass). I like using a piece of parchment paper to make transferring the dough between my tray and the counter easier.
A "typical" cookie sheet won't have enough heat capacity to make any difference if it is preheated or not. You need a pizza stone for that to work.
– MaxW
Feb 26 '18 at 22:44
Fair enough, it just seems like a very easy change to make that may solve their problem. IME it makes a difference when cooking frozen pizza. Can't say I've noticed any difference when it comes to my own dough.
– mech
Feb 26 '18 at 22:46
1
@mech : it might not affect how much it's cooked through, but it will affect the browning of the bottom if you're using a shiny pan. I do this when I'm baking empanadas, and it makes a dramatic difference
– Joe
Feb 27 '18 at 4:19
add a comment |
I have a pizza stone, which makes a big difference. But I don't always use it because I have a pizza pan that's bigger than the stone. There are a few things you can try:
Roll the base thinner, so it cooks through quicker. When rolling I tend to flour quite heavily, which reduces the amount the sauce soaks in.
Cook directly on the oven shelf, with a baking tray underneath to catch anything that falls off. This seems to work better for ready-made/par-baked bases. I've never tried parbaking a homemade base but think it would be tricky to get the texture right.
If you like a lot of sauce, heat it just before topping the pizza. This will help the temperature of the base come up quicker.
Don't mess around putting the pizza in -- I've seen people open the oven, walk across the kitchen to fetch the food, position it just perfectly, change their mind about the shelf height, then get round to closing the door. Instead, put the shelf near the top before you preheat, and have the pizza in one hand while you open the door with the other, or at least within reach.
A good preheat is important for something that cooks so quickly, even if your oven doesn't boost the preheat with the grill (broiler) element. I turn the oven on before rolling out/stretching, so it's been preheated for some time when I put the topped pizza in (especially as my small person likes to help withe the topping so it takes a while). This means that all the metal in the oven is up to temperature when it goes in. Note that I don't preheat the pan, as I stretch the base to fill it, then top the pizza on the base -- it's a bit unwieldy otherwise.
Cooking two pizzas on two shelves makes things much harder -- that's partly why I use my (rectangular) tray instead of my stone, and make one big pizza.
add a comment |
I'm making homemade pizza right now. I make my own dough from scratch and incorporate the basil and oregano into the dough as I knead it. I let it rise for 40 min then I punch it down and roll it out to fit my pan. I put the dough on the pan and use a roller perforator to punch hundreds of holes in the crust. I then pre bake the dough at 425 deg for 12-15 minutes till the crust is browned. I then brush on olive oil and crushed garlic then spread the sauce and add all the toppings. I put it back in the oven at 435 and set the timer to 25 min. I then keep checking till all the cheese is melted and the middle is bubbling. Perfect pizza everytime.
New contributor
add a comment |
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4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Get a pizza stone. It is important to preheat the stone with the oven. Put it in the oven before you begin to preheat, if your not in a hurry...let the stone and the oven hold at temperature for a while before you put the pizza on it. The stone will radiate heat into your dough evenly. Stones are 'better' than metal (like a cookie sheet) because they release the heat into the dough 'more evenly' If you have a 'pizza pan' putting that on the stone will work well also.
Completely preheat your oven. Many electric ovens use the broiler coil (on top) to heat the oven to the desired temperature faster, if you attempt to bake your pizza during the pre-heat stage the top is likely to cook faster than the dough. You may eyeball your pizza as done because the top 'looks' ready, when the dough is not yet finished.
One of the common culprits in an 'underdone' middle is that liquid has soaked into the dough causing it to cook more slowly. If your sauce is too thin you might want to thicken it up some. Also, spreading a thin coat of soft (not melted) butter over the top will form a barrier to prevent the liquid in the sauce from soaking in. Finally, you might try putting the grated cheese on first and then spreading the sauce over that. As the cheese melts and the sauce warms it will settle into (approximately) the expected layers, but if the sauce has been kept from the dough for a few minutes it will not soak in as much.
If you aren't satisfied with these results then you might try:
Get an oven thermometer. The temperature actually in your oven will vary from 'the dial'. It's expected, just know what you're actually getting. You want your oven to be 'very hot' (professional pizza ovens will range from 600°F - 900°F) your home oven is unlikely to get 'that' hot but 450°F should be close enough to do the job.
As a last resort... par bake the crust. Put the un-covered crust in the oven for a few (5ish) minutes first, pull it, then top it and return it to the oven.
I hope you find something here to help with your pizza woes.
2
+1 for "hold the stove and stone at temp for a while. There is a reason why recipes usually say preheat oven at the beginning of a recipe. A truly preheated oven is one where all the internal components have reached the target temp, not just the air. This allows the oven to spring back to temp when the door is opened. The time recommended by most experienced cooks chefs for pre-heating most ovens is a full 30 minutes.
– Escoce
Feb 28 '18 at 13:30
butter on a pizza? that's a first..
– Agos
Mar 1 '18 at 11:23
@Agos, actually I first saw it from Alton Brown years ago. There are even a number of pizza places where you can taste the butter (that is perhaps too much, but that is a matter of taste)
– Cos Callis
Mar 1 '18 at 14:23
add a comment |
Get a pizza stone. It is important to preheat the stone with the oven. Put it in the oven before you begin to preheat, if your not in a hurry...let the stone and the oven hold at temperature for a while before you put the pizza on it. The stone will radiate heat into your dough evenly. Stones are 'better' than metal (like a cookie sheet) because they release the heat into the dough 'more evenly' If you have a 'pizza pan' putting that on the stone will work well also.
Completely preheat your oven. Many electric ovens use the broiler coil (on top) to heat the oven to the desired temperature faster, if you attempt to bake your pizza during the pre-heat stage the top is likely to cook faster than the dough. You may eyeball your pizza as done because the top 'looks' ready, when the dough is not yet finished.
One of the common culprits in an 'underdone' middle is that liquid has soaked into the dough causing it to cook more slowly. If your sauce is too thin you might want to thicken it up some. Also, spreading a thin coat of soft (not melted) butter over the top will form a barrier to prevent the liquid in the sauce from soaking in. Finally, you might try putting the grated cheese on first and then spreading the sauce over that. As the cheese melts and the sauce warms it will settle into (approximately) the expected layers, but if the sauce has been kept from the dough for a few minutes it will not soak in as much.
If you aren't satisfied with these results then you might try:
Get an oven thermometer. The temperature actually in your oven will vary from 'the dial'. It's expected, just know what you're actually getting. You want your oven to be 'very hot' (professional pizza ovens will range from 600°F - 900°F) your home oven is unlikely to get 'that' hot but 450°F should be close enough to do the job.
As a last resort... par bake the crust. Put the un-covered crust in the oven for a few (5ish) minutes first, pull it, then top it and return it to the oven.
I hope you find something here to help with your pizza woes.
2
+1 for "hold the stove and stone at temp for a while. There is a reason why recipes usually say preheat oven at the beginning of a recipe. A truly preheated oven is one where all the internal components have reached the target temp, not just the air. This allows the oven to spring back to temp when the door is opened. The time recommended by most experienced cooks chefs for pre-heating most ovens is a full 30 minutes.
– Escoce
Feb 28 '18 at 13:30
butter on a pizza? that's a first..
– Agos
Mar 1 '18 at 11:23
@Agos, actually I first saw it from Alton Brown years ago. There are even a number of pizza places where you can taste the butter (that is perhaps too much, but that is a matter of taste)
– Cos Callis
Mar 1 '18 at 14:23
add a comment |
Get a pizza stone. It is important to preheat the stone with the oven. Put it in the oven before you begin to preheat, if your not in a hurry...let the stone and the oven hold at temperature for a while before you put the pizza on it. The stone will radiate heat into your dough evenly. Stones are 'better' than metal (like a cookie sheet) because they release the heat into the dough 'more evenly' If you have a 'pizza pan' putting that on the stone will work well also.
Completely preheat your oven. Many electric ovens use the broiler coil (on top) to heat the oven to the desired temperature faster, if you attempt to bake your pizza during the pre-heat stage the top is likely to cook faster than the dough. You may eyeball your pizza as done because the top 'looks' ready, when the dough is not yet finished.
One of the common culprits in an 'underdone' middle is that liquid has soaked into the dough causing it to cook more slowly. If your sauce is too thin you might want to thicken it up some. Also, spreading a thin coat of soft (not melted) butter over the top will form a barrier to prevent the liquid in the sauce from soaking in. Finally, you might try putting the grated cheese on first and then spreading the sauce over that. As the cheese melts and the sauce warms it will settle into (approximately) the expected layers, but if the sauce has been kept from the dough for a few minutes it will not soak in as much.
If you aren't satisfied with these results then you might try:
Get an oven thermometer. The temperature actually in your oven will vary from 'the dial'. It's expected, just know what you're actually getting. You want your oven to be 'very hot' (professional pizza ovens will range from 600°F - 900°F) your home oven is unlikely to get 'that' hot but 450°F should be close enough to do the job.
As a last resort... par bake the crust. Put the un-covered crust in the oven for a few (5ish) minutes first, pull it, then top it and return it to the oven.
I hope you find something here to help with your pizza woes.
Get a pizza stone. It is important to preheat the stone with the oven. Put it in the oven before you begin to preheat, if your not in a hurry...let the stone and the oven hold at temperature for a while before you put the pizza on it. The stone will radiate heat into your dough evenly. Stones are 'better' than metal (like a cookie sheet) because they release the heat into the dough 'more evenly' If you have a 'pizza pan' putting that on the stone will work well also.
Completely preheat your oven. Many electric ovens use the broiler coil (on top) to heat the oven to the desired temperature faster, if you attempt to bake your pizza during the pre-heat stage the top is likely to cook faster than the dough. You may eyeball your pizza as done because the top 'looks' ready, when the dough is not yet finished.
One of the common culprits in an 'underdone' middle is that liquid has soaked into the dough causing it to cook more slowly. If your sauce is too thin you might want to thicken it up some. Also, spreading a thin coat of soft (not melted) butter over the top will form a barrier to prevent the liquid in the sauce from soaking in. Finally, you might try putting the grated cheese on first and then spreading the sauce over that. As the cheese melts and the sauce warms it will settle into (approximately) the expected layers, but if the sauce has been kept from the dough for a few minutes it will not soak in as much.
If you aren't satisfied with these results then you might try:
Get an oven thermometer. The temperature actually in your oven will vary from 'the dial'. It's expected, just know what you're actually getting. You want your oven to be 'very hot' (professional pizza ovens will range from 600°F - 900°F) your home oven is unlikely to get 'that' hot but 450°F should be close enough to do the job.
As a last resort... par bake the crust. Put the un-covered crust in the oven for a few (5ish) minutes first, pull it, then top it and return it to the oven.
I hope you find something here to help with your pizza woes.
edited Feb 27 '18 at 1:08
answered Feb 26 '18 at 22:37
Cos CallisCos Callis
16.6k45183
16.6k45183
2
+1 for "hold the stove and stone at temp for a while. There is a reason why recipes usually say preheat oven at the beginning of a recipe. A truly preheated oven is one where all the internal components have reached the target temp, not just the air. This allows the oven to spring back to temp when the door is opened. The time recommended by most experienced cooks chefs for pre-heating most ovens is a full 30 minutes.
– Escoce
Feb 28 '18 at 13:30
butter on a pizza? that's a first..
– Agos
Mar 1 '18 at 11:23
@Agos, actually I first saw it from Alton Brown years ago. There are even a number of pizza places where you can taste the butter (that is perhaps too much, but that is a matter of taste)
– Cos Callis
Mar 1 '18 at 14:23
add a comment |
2
+1 for "hold the stove and stone at temp for a while. There is a reason why recipes usually say preheat oven at the beginning of a recipe. A truly preheated oven is one where all the internal components have reached the target temp, not just the air. This allows the oven to spring back to temp when the door is opened. The time recommended by most experienced cooks chefs for pre-heating most ovens is a full 30 minutes.
– Escoce
Feb 28 '18 at 13:30
butter on a pizza? that's a first..
– Agos
Mar 1 '18 at 11:23
@Agos, actually I first saw it from Alton Brown years ago. There are even a number of pizza places where you can taste the butter (that is perhaps too much, but that is a matter of taste)
– Cos Callis
Mar 1 '18 at 14:23
2
2
+1 for "hold the stove and stone at temp for a while. There is a reason why recipes usually say preheat oven at the beginning of a recipe. A truly preheated oven is one where all the internal components have reached the target temp, not just the air. This allows the oven to spring back to temp when the door is opened. The time recommended by most experienced cooks chefs for pre-heating most ovens is a full 30 minutes.
– Escoce
Feb 28 '18 at 13:30
+1 for "hold the stove and stone at temp for a while. There is a reason why recipes usually say preheat oven at the beginning of a recipe. A truly preheated oven is one where all the internal components have reached the target temp, not just the air. This allows the oven to spring back to temp when the door is opened. The time recommended by most experienced cooks chefs for pre-heating most ovens is a full 30 minutes.
– Escoce
Feb 28 '18 at 13:30
butter on a pizza? that's a first..
– Agos
Mar 1 '18 at 11:23
butter on a pizza? that's a first..
– Agos
Mar 1 '18 at 11:23
@Agos, actually I first saw it from Alton Brown years ago. There are even a number of pizza places where you can taste the butter (that is perhaps too much, but that is a matter of taste)
– Cos Callis
Mar 1 '18 at 14:23
@Agos, actually I first saw it from Alton Brown years ago. There are even a number of pizza places where you can taste the butter (that is perhaps too much, but that is a matter of taste)
– Cos Callis
Mar 1 '18 at 14:23
add a comment |
Try preheating your cookie sheet before laying the uncooked pizza on it, otherwise it may act as a heatsink/insulator until it reaches the right temperature, delaying the cooking (particularly near its center of mass). I like using a piece of parchment paper to make transferring the dough between my tray and the counter easier.
A "typical" cookie sheet won't have enough heat capacity to make any difference if it is preheated or not. You need a pizza stone for that to work.
– MaxW
Feb 26 '18 at 22:44
Fair enough, it just seems like a very easy change to make that may solve their problem. IME it makes a difference when cooking frozen pizza. Can't say I've noticed any difference when it comes to my own dough.
– mech
Feb 26 '18 at 22:46
1
@mech : it might not affect how much it's cooked through, but it will affect the browning of the bottom if you're using a shiny pan. I do this when I'm baking empanadas, and it makes a dramatic difference
– Joe
Feb 27 '18 at 4:19
add a comment |
Try preheating your cookie sheet before laying the uncooked pizza on it, otherwise it may act as a heatsink/insulator until it reaches the right temperature, delaying the cooking (particularly near its center of mass). I like using a piece of parchment paper to make transferring the dough between my tray and the counter easier.
A "typical" cookie sheet won't have enough heat capacity to make any difference if it is preheated or not. You need a pizza stone for that to work.
– MaxW
Feb 26 '18 at 22:44
Fair enough, it just seems like a very easy change to make that may solve their problem. IME it makes a difference when cooking frozen pizza. Can't say I've noticed any difference when it comes to my own dough.
– mech
Feb 26 '18 at 22:46
1
@mech : it might not affect how much it's cooked through, but it will affect the browning of the bottom if you're using a shiny pan. I do this when I'm baking empanadas, and it makes a dramatic difference
– Joe
Feb 27 '18 at 4:19
add a comment |
Try preheating your cookie sheet before laying the uncooked pizza on it, otherwise it may act as a heatsink/insulator until it reaches the right temperature, delaying the cooking (particularly near its center of mass). I like using a piece of parchment paper to make transferring the dough between my tray and the counter easier.
Try preheating your cookie sheet before laying the uncooked pizza on it, otherwise it may act as a heatsink/insulator until it reaches the right temperature, delaying the cooking (particularly near its center of mass). I like using a piece of parchment paper to make transferring the dough between my tray and the counter easier.
answered Feb 26 '18 at 22:08
mechmech
2,14031721
2,14031721
A "typical" cookie sheet won't have enough heat capacity to make any difference if it is preheated or not. You need a pizza stone for that to work.
– MaxW
Feb 26 '18 at 22:44
Fair enough, it just seems like a very easy change to make that may solve their problem. IME it makes a difference when cooking frozen pizza. Can't say I've noticed any difference when it comes to my own dough.
– mech
Feb 26 '18 at 22:46
1
@mech : it might not affect how much it's cooked through, but it will affect the browning of the bottom if you're using a shiny pan. I do this when I'm baking empanadas, and it makes a dramatic difference
– Joe
Feb 27 '18 at 4:19
add a comment |
A "typical" cookie sheet won't have enough heat capacity to make any difference if it is preheated or not. You need a pizza stone for that to work.
– MaxW
Feb 26 '18 at 22:44
Fair enough, it just seems like a very easy change to make that may solve their problem. IME it makes a difference when cooking frozen pizza. Can't say I've noticed any difference when it comes to my own dough.
– mech
Feb 26 '18 at 22:46
1
@mech : it might not affect how much it's cooked through, but it will affect the browning of the bottom if you're using a shiny pan. I do this when I'm baking empanadas, and it makes a dramatic difference
– Joe
Feb 27 '18 at 4:19
A "typical" cookie sheet won't have enough heat capacity to make any difference if it is preheated or not. You need a pizza stone for that to work.
– MaxW
Feb 26 '18 at 22:44
A "typical" cookie sheet won't have enough heat capacity to make any difference if it is preheated or not. You need a pizza stone for that to work.
– MaxW
Feb 26 '18 at 22:44
Fair enough, it just seems like a very easy change to make that may solve their problem. IME it makes a difference when cooking frozen pizza. Can't say I've noticed any difference when it comes to my own dough.
– mech
Feb 26 '18 at 22:46
Fair enough, it just seems like a very easy change to make that may solve their problem. IME it makes a difference when cooking frozen pizza. Can't say I've noticed any difference when it comes to my own dough.
– mech
Feb 26 '18 at 22:46
1
1
@mech : it might not affect how much it's cooked through, but it will affect the browning of the bottom if you're using a shiny pan. I do this when I'm baking empanadas, and it makes a dramatic difference
– Joe
Feb 27 '18 at 4:19
@mech : it might not affect how much it's cooked through, but it will affect the browning of the bottom if you're using a shiny pan. I do this when I'm baking empanadas, and it makes a dramatic difference
– Joe
Feb 27 '18 at 4:19
add a comment |
I have a pizza stone, which makes a big difference. But I don't always use it because I have a pizza pan that's bigger than the stone. There are a few things you can try:
Roll the base thinner, so it cooks through quicker. When rolling I tend to flour quite heavily, which reduces the amount the sauce soaks in.
Cook directly on the oven shelf, with a baking tray underneath to catch anything that falls off. This seems to work better for ready-made/par-baked bases. I've never tried parbaking a homemade base but think it would be tricky to get the texture right.
If you like a lot of sauce, heat it just before topping the pizza. This will help the temperature of the base come up quicker.
Don't mess around putting the pizza in -- I've seen people open the oven, walk across the kitchen to fetch the food, position it just perfectly, change their mind about the shelf height, then get round to closing the door. Instead, put the shelf near the top before you preheat, and have the pizza in one hand while you open the door with the other, or at least within reach.
A good preheat is important for something that cooks so quickly, even if your oven doesn't boost the preheat with the grill (broiler) element. I turn the oven on before rolling out/stretching, so it's been preheated for some time when I put the topped pizza in (especially as my small person likes to help withe the topping so it takes a while). This means that all the metal in the oven is up to temperature when it goes in. Note that I don't preheat the pan, as I stretch the base to fill it, then top the pizza on the base -- it's a bit unwieldy otherwise.
Cooking two pizzas on two shelves makes things much harder -- that's partly why I use my (rectangular) tray instead of my stone, and make one big pizza.
add a comment |
I have a pizza stone, which makes a big difference. But I don't always use it because I have a pizza pan that's bigger than the stone. There are a few things you can try:
Roll the base thinner, so it cooks through quicker. When rolling I tend to flour quite heavily, which reduces the amount the sauce soaks in.
Cook directly on the oven shelf, with a baking tray underneath to catch anything that falls off. This seems to work better for ready-made/par-baked bases. I've never tried parbaking a homemade base but think it would be tricky to get the texture right.
If you like a lot of sauce, heat it just before topping the pizza. This will help the temperature of the base come up quicker.
Don't mess around putting the pizza in -- I've seen people open the oven, walk across the kitchen to fetch the food, position it just perfectly, change their mind about the shelf height, then get round to closing the door. Instead, put the shelf near the top before you preheat, and have the pizza in one hand while you open the door with the other, or at least within reach.
A good preheat is important for something that cooks so quickly, even if your oven doesn't boost the preheat with the grill (broiler) element. I turn the oven on before rolling out/stretching, so it's been preheated for some time when I put the topped pizza in (especially as my small person likes to help withe the topping so it takes a while). This means that all the metal in the oven is up to temperature when it goes in. Note that I don't preheat the pan, as I stretch the base to fill it, then top the pizza on the base -- it's a bit unwieldy otherwise.
Cooking two pizzas on two shelves makes things much harder -- that's partly why I use my (rectangular) tray instead of my stone, and make one big pizza.
add a comment |
I have a pizza stone, which makes a big difference. But I don't always use it because I have a pizza pan that's bigger than the stone. There are a few things you can try:
Roll the base thinner, so it cooks through quicker. When rolling I tend to flour quite heavily, which reduces the amount the sauce soaks in.
Cook directly on the oven shelf, with a baking tray underneath to catch anything that falls off. This seems to work better for ready-made/par-baked bases. I've never tried parbaking a homemade base but think it would be tricky to get the texture right.
If you like a lot of sauce, heat it just before topping the pizza. This will help the temperature of the base come up quicker.
Don't mess around putting the pizza in -- I've seen people open the oven, walk across the kitchen to fetch the food, position it just perfectly, change their mind about the shelf height, then get round to closing the door. Instead, put the shelf near the top before you preheat, and have the pizza in one hand while you open the door with the other, or at least within reach.
A good preheat is important for something that cooks so quickly, even if your oven doesn't boost the preheat with the grill (broiler) element. I turn the oven on before rolling out/stretching, so it's been preheated for some time when I put the topped pizza in (especially as my small person likes to help withe the topping so it takes a while). This means that all the metal in the oven is up to temperature when it goes in. Note that I don't preheat the pan, as I stretch the base to fill it, then top the pizza on the base -- it's a bit unwieldy otherwise.
Cooking two pizzas on two shelves makes things much harder -- that's partly why I use my (rectangular) tray instead of my stone, and make one big pizza.
I have a pizza stone, which makes a big difference. But I don't always use it because I have a pizza pan that's bigger than the stone. There are a few things you can try:
Roll the base thinner, so it cooks through quicker. When rolling I tend to flour quite heavily, which reduces the amount the sauce soaks in.
Cook directly on the oven shelf, with a baking tray underneath to catch anything that falls off. This seems to work better for ready-made/par-baked bases. I've never tried parbaking a homemade base but think it would be tricky to get the texture right.
If you like a lot of sauce, heat it just before topping the pizza. This will help the temperature of the base come up quicker.
Don't mess around putting the pizza in -- I've seen people open the oven, walk across the kitchen to fetch the food, position it just perfectly, change their mind about the shelf height, then get round to closing the door. Instead, put the shelf near the top before you preheat, and have the pizza in one hand while you open the door with the other, or at least within reach.
A good preheat is important for something that cooks so quickly, even if your oven doesn't boost the preheat with the grill (broiler) element. I turn the oven on before rolling out/stretching, so it's been preheated for some time when I put the topped pizza in (especially as my small person likes to help withe the topping so it takes a while). This means that all the metal in the oven is up to temperature when it goes in. Note that I don't preheat the pan, as I stretch the base to fill it, then top the pizza on the base -- it's a bit unwieldy otherwise.
Cooking two pizzas on two shelves makes things much harder -- that's partly why I use my (rectangular) tray instead of my stone, and make one big pizza.
answered Feb 27 '18 at 9:30
Chris HChris H
21.3k13862
21.3k13862
add a comment |
add a comment |
I'm making homemade pizza right now. I make my own dough from scratch and incorporate the basil and oregano into the dough as I knead it. I let it rise for 40 min then I punch it down and roll it out to fit my pan. I put the dough on the pan and use a roller perforator to punch hundreds of holes in the crust. I then pre bake the dough at 425 deg for 12-15 minutes till the crust is browned. I then brush on olive oil and crushed garlic then spread the sauce and add all the toppings. I put it back in the oven at 435 and set the timer to 25 min. I then keep checking till all the cheese is melted and the middle is bubbling. Perfect pizza everytime.
New contributor
add a comment |
I'm making homemade pizza right now. I make my own dough from scratch and incorporate the basil and oregano into the dough as I knead it. I let it rise for 40 min then I punch it down and roll it out to fit my pan. I put the dough on the pan and use a roller perforator to punch hundreds of holes in the crust. I then pre bake the dough at 425 deg for 12-15 minutes till the crust is browned. I then brush on olive oil and crushed garlic then spread the sauce and add all the toppings. I put it back in the oven at 435 and set the timer to 25 min. I then keep checking till all the cheese is melted and the middle is bubbling. Perfect pizza everytime.
New contributor
add a comment |
I'm making homemade pizza right now. I make my own dough from scratch and incorporate the basil and oregano into the dough as I knead it. I let it rise for 40 min then I punch it down and roll it out to fit my pan. I put the dough on the pan and use a roller perforator to punch hundreds of holes in the crust. I then pre bake the dough at 425 deg for 12-15 minutes till the crust is browned. I then brush on olive oil and crushed garlic then spread the sauce and add all the toppings. I put it back in the oven at 435 and set the timer to 25 min. I then keep checking till all the cheese is melted and the middle is bubbling. Perfect pizza everytime.
New contributor
I'm making homemade pizza right now. I make my own dough from scratch and incorporate the basil and oregano into the dough as I knead it. I let it rise for 40 min then I punch it down and roll it out to fit my pan. I put the dough on the pan and use a roller perforator to punch hundreds of holes in the crust. I then pre bake the dough at 425 deg for 12-15 minutes till the crust is browned. I then brush on olive oil and crushed garlic then spread the sauce and add all the toppings. I put it back in the oven at 435 and set the timer to 25 min. I then keep checking till all the cheese is melted and the middle is bubbling. Perfect pizza everytime.
New contributor
New contributor
answered 18 mins ago
Mike PasemkoMike Pasemko
1
1
New contributor
New contributor
add a comment |
add a comment |
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For the product you linked to, the instructions say bake at 400-425F depending on pan type. That could be why you are not getting the desired results.
– Debbie M.
Feb 27 '18 at 1:57
@DebbieM. That isn't the brand I normally use, just an example of the type of product I'm using. Generally I get whatever the off brand is at the store I am shopping at.
– diego
Feb 27 '18 at 2:01
1
I cheat : slice.seriouseats.com/2010/09/… ; cook the dough in a cast iron pan on the stovetop, flip it, cook the other side, flip again and add toppings, then slide under the broiler. If I'm making a bunch, I'll just cook the crust 'til it's showing color on each side, then move them to a sheet pan so people can top them, and finish it in the oven (baking, not broiling, but you can broil at the end if you want)
– Joe
Feb 27 '18 at 4:24