NetWareHead
THAT guy
- Aug 10, 2002
- 5,847
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well, i'm pretty good at the homemade pizza game, but i can't give you advice unless you give me the full, detailed process and ingredients you are using.
however, i can give you *one* advice;
are you using an electric oven?
gas ovens burn gas, and oxygen with it, so they have a vent in the back to cycle air. electric ovens do not have it, obviously, since they don't need it.
what the vent also does is let out steam that comes from any water that might be in whatever you are cooking. so, gas ovens are dryer than electric ovens.
if you are using an electric oven then, when it's up to temperature and you put your pizza on the stone, jam a wooden spoon in the oven door, just enough to leave an half-inch opening. some heat will escape, but also some humidity, which will help make your pizza into the crispy goodness we italians love so much.
other than that, good work, keep practicing.
I'm going to disagree with gas ovens being drier than electric ovens. The byproduct of burning natural gas are water and carbon dioxide. Electric ovens are a LOT drier (cooks call it a "harsh heat") than gas. That's why you only see gas ovens in restaurants.
Awesome! Next step is to get a Turbochef Fire oven:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MkFrsUP9QUU
Or if you're more into DIY, build a traditional wood-fired oven:
http://www.traditionaloven.com/ovens.html
:awe:
anyway, whatever the byproduct of burning gas might be (i wasn't aware gas contained water, and i'm not yet convinced), we are talking parts per million, while the water content of a pizza ball is way more. gas ovens are dryer; the produce crust. gas ovens don't. i have yet to observe water condensation or vapour inside a gas oven, yet i see it in electric ovens.
Hmm even my electric oven has a vent for moisture... or smoke if it gets to hot.
Heat the stone in the oven. You want the oven to be around 450F.
Made a pizza when I was 8 years old. Never again.

Natural gas is composed of methane. Methane is CH4. When methane is combusted it reacts with oxygen. The chemical formula is as follows: CH4 + 2 O2 = CO2 + 2 H2O. There is no water in methane per se, but the combustion products of methane contains H2O, and being hot is vaporized into water vapor.
Electric ovens are drier because the heat is provided by an electric coil/element that when energized, introduces only thermal energy to the oven. There is no combustion product that is vented to the interior of the oven.
You see moisture condensing in electric ovens since the oven is sealed. When food cooks in a sealed oven, it releases moisture and it has no place to go. Hence, the moisture condensing on the interior is from the food baking.
A gas oven relies on a draft effect to support the burning and the oven needs to be vented from the top and the bottom. Oxygen enters from the bottom, combusts with gas and the heat (and combustion products including H2O) enters the oven. The vent at the top of the oven releases the combustion products and provides a draft effect for the process. Since the gas oven is not sealed, there is less chance for moisture to condense as the moisture has an outlet for escape.
QFT with one clarification - the stone should be pre-heated in the oven before you put the crust on it.
That is:
Pre-heat stone
Remove from oven
Dust with corn meal or course flour
Assemble pizza on stone
Add to oven
My wife has been doing that for years now and the crust comes out perfect each time. And to your question - the crust does not stick that way either.
QFT with one clarification - the stone should be pre-heated in the oven before you put the crust on it.
That is:
Pre-heat stone
Remove from oven
Dust with corn meal or course flour
Assemble pizza on stone
Add to oven
My wife has been doing that for years now and the crust comes out perfect each time. And to your question - the crust does not stick that way either.
We also learned a hard lesson when we got our first stone. A pizza should not be the first thing you cook on it. The dough will fuse to the stone and you will need a chisel to remove it. Season the thing. Coat it with oil and bake it, cook a few strips of bacon on it the first few times you use it, etc. Anything but a pie until it is properly seasoned. And yes, even when it's seasoned, coat it with cornmeal
I am confused. You heat the stone and then remove it from the oven? What?
Here is what I do: Place stone in oven, pre heat oven to desired temperature, let stone heat to temp (about 30 minutes, I take this time to make my dough and let it rest), assemble pizza, place pizza on stone.
Did you have any better luck with the crust? Looks like in the original, it rose too much and caused all of the topping to slide into the center of the pie.
You see moisture condensing in electric ovens since the oven is sealed. When food cooks in a sealed oven, it releases moisture and it has no place to go. Hence, the moisture condensing on the interior is from the food baking.
