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   <title>Slice Pizza Blog - The Pizza Lab</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://slice.seriouseats.com/" />
   
   <id>tag:slice.seriouseats.com,2013://25</id>
   <updated>May 19, 2013  7:27 PM</updated>
   <subtitle>Dedicated to unraveling the mysteries of home pizza making through science.</subtitle>
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<atom10:link xmlns:atom10="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" rel="self" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/SeriousEatsSlice-thepizzalab" /><feedburner:info xmlns:feedburner="http://rssnamespace.org/feedburner/ext/1.0" uri="seriouseatsslice-thepizzalab" /><atom10:link xmlns:atom10="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" rel="hub" href="http://pubsubhubbub.appspot.com/" /><entry>
   <title>The Pizza Lab: Why Don't We See More Kimchi on Pizza?</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://slice.seriouseats.com/archives/2013/04/the-pizza-lab-why-dont-we-see-more-kimchi-on-pizza.html" />
   <id>tag:slice.seriouseats.com,2013://25.250207</id>
   
   <published>2013-04-29T17:00:00Z</published>
   <updated>2013-04-29T17:12:32Z</updated>
   
   <summary>It doesn't necessarily sound like it's going to be great, but once you try it, the combination of spicy, garlicky, pickled kimchi and ooey, gooey cheese is tough to turn your back on.</summary>
   <author>
      <name>J. Kenji López-Alt</name>
      <uri>http://www.seriouseats.com</uri>
   </author>

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            <img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/04/20130427-kimchi-pizza-1.jpg" />
        
            
        <p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/04/20130427-kimchi-pizza-1.jpg" /><p>[Photographs: J. Kenji Lopez-Alt]</p></p>

<p>It doesn't necessarily <em>sound</em> like it's going to be great, but once you try it, the combination of spicy, garlicky, pickled kimchi and ooey, gooey cheese is tough to turn your back on.</p>

<p>My first experience was at the Broadway Cafe in Ann Arbor, a take out sandwich shop that specialized in Philly-style shaved beef cheesesteaks, and Korean bulgogi. If you ask extra nice, you can get the old Korean owner to slap the two together with a big scoop of spicy kimchi into a Bulgogi Hoagie, one of the finest sandwich creations known to man.</p>

<p>There is a history of American cheese and Korean food mingling since post Korean war times, and even in Korea, it's not uncommon to eat jjigae-style stews or ramen with a slice of American cheese melted into it.</p>

<p>The Kogi Barbecue Truck popularized the kimchi quesadilla about half a decade ago. We liked it so much that went on to put up a recipe in our book, as well as on the site.</p>

<p>Heck, just yesterday I put up a recipe for Kimchi Grilled Cheese sandwiches. They are good.</p>

<p>Today's recipe is better though, and it's something I've never actually seen before.</p>

<p>Putting kimchi on pizza is one of those things that I thought of and immediately slapped myself in the forehead for not thinking of it sooner. It makes a ton of sense. Pickled things go great on top of pizza. If you don't believe me, head over to Best Pizza in Williamsburg, try out their pickled vegetable pizza, and tell me it's not awesome. Go on. I'll wait.</p>

<p>Just kidding, I won't. You'll just have to take my word for it. The spicy pickled cabbage adds its signature garlicky bite, but its intense sour/hot flavors are balanced by the gooey cheese on top of a New York-style pie. I like to pair it up with some hot and spicy soppressata. Pork and kimchi are friends. Pork and pizza re friends. Put all three together and you've got yourself a party with attending.</p>

<p>According to my Pizza Snob's Approach to Toppings, toppings should be limited to those that are either as intense, or more intense than those applied previously. So I finish off my pie with a couple of extra strongly-flavored ingredients: maitake mushrooms are some of the strongest 'shrooms around (you could sub with shiitake, or morel if you've got'em. I'd avoid watery/bland button or cremini here). Slivers of sliced scallion seemed natural with the kimchi, and they get nice and sweet as they bake. Finally, some coarsely grated ginger adds some fresh bite and a bit more heat.</p>

<h4>Get The Recipe!</h4>

<p><strong>New York Style Pizza with Kimchi, Soppressata, and Maitake Mushrooms »</strong></p>

<p><strong>About the author</strong>: J. Kenji Lopez-Alt is the Chief Creative Officer of Serious Eats where he likes to explore the science of home cooking in his weekly column The Food Lab. You can follow him at @thefoodlab on Twitter, or at The Food Lab on Facebook.</p>
        

        
         
            
                
                    <a href="http://www.seriouseats.com/recipes/2013/04/new-york-pizza-kimchi-soppressata-maitake-recipe.html">Get the Recipe!</a>
                
            
            
        
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<entry>
   <title>The Pizza Lab: Combine The KettlePizza and the Baking Steel For The Ultimate Home Pizza Setup</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://slice.seriouseats.com/archives/2013/04/the-pizza-lab-combine-the-kettlepizza-and-the-baking-steel-for-the-ultimate-home-pizza-setup.html" />
   <id>tag:slice.seriouseats.com,2013://25.247949</id>
   
   <published>2013-04-15T13:47:00Z</published>
   <updated>2013-04-15T13:57:38Z</updated>
   
   <summary><![CDATA[It's exciting times indeed in the world of backyard pizza-making. Last year, I tested out two fantastic products that improved the quality of my home-baked pizzas by leaps and bounds. This year, I've combined their powers to produce the ultimate&mdash;and inexpensive&mdash;home pie-slinging setup.]]></summary>
   <author>
      <name>J. Kenji López-Alt</name>
      <uri>http://www.seriouseats.com</uri>
   </author>

    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://slice.seriouseats.com/">
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            <img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/04/20130410-kettle-pizza-baking-steel-pizza-primary.jpg" />
        
            
        <p>It's time for another round of The Food Lab. Got a suggestion for an upcoming topic? Email Kenji here, and he'll do his best to answer your queries in a future post. Become a fan of The Food Lab on Facebook or follow it on Twitter for play-by-plays on future kitchen tests and recipe experiments.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/04/20130410-kettle-pizza-baking-steel-pizza-primary.jpg" /><p>[Photographs: J. Kenji Lopez-Alt]</p></p>

<p>It's exciting times indeed in the world of backyard pizza-making. Last year, I tested out two fantastic products that improved the quality of my home-baked pizzas by leaps and bounds. This year, I've combined their powers to produce the ultimate&mdash;and inexpensive&mdash;home pie-slinging setup.</p>

<p>The first was the KettlePizza, a third party after-market contraption that turns a kettle grill into a wood-burning pizza oven. The second was the Baking Steel, a 1/4-inch steel plate designed to take the place of your baking stone (see my full review here).</p>

<p>The KettlePizza consists of a foot-tall folded stainless steel cylinder that raises the lid of your grill and adds a door through which you can transfer pizzas to a preheated stone inside.</p>

<p>I had a bit of trouble getting it to work straight out of the box, but after a few minor modifications (adding a second stone to the top, along with a layer of foil), it was pumping out beautiful pizzas with bake times under four minutes.</p>

<p>This is what the original model looked like, with the grill's lid removed.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120530-pizza-kettle-test-three-works-01.jpg"></img></p>

<p>I had a few issues with it. Primarily, the round shape of the stone made it tough to launch pizzas&mdash;you had to hit dead center with a large pie or it would drape off the sides and burn. The other problem was that adding extra fuel proved very difficult. You essentially had to remove the entire contraption, including a 600°F stone, to refuel your grill. This severely limited baking times.</p>

<p>Last summer, former Slice Queen Meredith Smith and I took a trip out to visit Al Contarino, the inventor of the KettlePizza, in his workshop outside of Boston. After a long, interesting conversation, he assured us that he'd start work straight away on a new model that would address our concerns.</p>

<p>A few months later, he revealed the KettlePizza ProGrate & Tombstone Combination Kit ($129.95). I put it through its paces last week.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/04/20130410-kettle-pizza-baking-steel-pizza-01.jpg" /></p>

<p><strong>Among the improvements:</strong> The new tombstone-shaped stone is heavier, sturdier, and larger, making it easier to properly launch pies. The sides and backs of the insert are cut out, allowing you to add extra coal or wood to your fire in between pies (I used my metal steel to load extra coal). Finally&mdash;and this is the real kicker&mdash;there's a basket that slides into the back of the Tombstone ProGrate, elevating a small portion of your fuel and drastically increasing the air temperature above the pizza. The result? Pies that puff and brown properly, not to mention easily.</p>

<p>Every one of these design changes was a noticeable improvement over past models. I can now fully endorse this product with no real reservations. It's well-constructed, performs as advertised, and doesn't have any more annoying, "if only it did <em>this</em> it'd be great," features.</p>

<p>Even so, you still need to add some thermal mass to the upper surface of the insert if you want the best pies&mdash;the thin lid of the kettle grill simply doesn't radiate enough heat to get maximum oven spring and leopard spotting.</p>

<p>In the past, I'd used a stone and a sheet of aluminum foil; I also ended up cracking my stone in the process.</p>

<p>But this year, we've gone and one-upped ourselves. The Baking Steel is the most pie-changing piece of equipment I've ever tested. It's also one of the simplest. Essentially just a 1/4-inch thick sheet of steel, it takes the place of a traditional baking stone, offering better thermal properties (it both conducts heat faster and stores more heat energy per unit volume than a pizza stone), and a more robust design (good luck ever breaking this thing).</p>

<p>So I thought to myself, <em>these products are great on their own, but with their powers combined, could they&mdash;<strong>dare I say it?</strong>&mdash;take over my grill?</em></p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/04/20130410-kettle-pizza-baking-steel-pizza-03.jpg" /></p>

<p>I built a big ol' coal fire, laying out about a chimney-and-a-half (roughly 7 quarts) of charcoal briquettes along the back of my grill. I added the KettlePizza insert, along with the Tombstone ProGrate combo, followed by a second grate and my baking steel*. I then covered the second grate with aluminum foil (in order to direct flames forward towards the mouth of the kettle), put the lid on, and let the sucker preheat.</p>

<p>*For the record, I accidentally left my steel out during a freak rainstorm in which the rain knocked the lid off my grill and the steel got wet, hence the rust. It all came right off when I heated it.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/04/20130410-kettle-pizza-baking-steel-pizza-04.jpg" /></p>

<p>I sat, staring into the mouth of the beast as it slowly came up to temperature.</p>

<p>About 45 minutes later, here I was:</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/04/20130410-kettle-pizza-baking-steel-pizza-05.jpg" /></p>

<p>The base stone temperature varied between around 530°F and 650°F. That's just below the range of a full-fledged Neapolitan pizza oven&mdash;and hotter than most half-fledged pizza ovens. What I was really interested in was the upper temp:</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/04/20130410-kettle-pizza-baking-steel-pizza-06.jpg" /></p>

<p>Bam. 718°F. What's also important to note here is that the baking steel is more radiant than a baking stone. That means that given identical surface temperatures, a steel will actually heat an object below it <em>faster</em> than a stone.</p>

<p>The setup was so darn hot that I completely miscalculated the time it would take for a pie to cook and ended up burning my first one, a plain cheese pizza using my New York-style dough.</p>

<p>Here's what we got:</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/04/20130410-kettle-pizza-baking-steel-pizza-07.jpg" /></p>

<p>It took under four minutes to reach that state. Get a load of the bubbling!</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/04/20130410-kettle-pizza-baking-steel-pizza-08.jpg" /></p>

<p>The underbelly is equally pretty, with plenty of nice dark spots. </p>

<p>I paid a bit more attention to my next pie&mdash;another New York number topped with a bacon-cherry pepper relish and coppa (get the recipe here)&mdash;and it came out gorgeously. I mean, just check out the coloring on that crust!</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/04/20130410-kettle-pizza-baking-steel-pizza-15.jpg" /></p>

<p>This is the stuff NY pizza dreams are made of.</p>

<p>The crust was also perfectly poofy with an airy, tender, moist crumb. With a bake time of under four minutes, it's not quite as cooked or crisp as what you'd find at a typical slice joint. It reminds me more of a typical coal-fired NY pizzeria (like Patsy's or Lombardi's), but with a definite Neapolitan bent.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/04/20130410-kettle-pizza-baking-steel-pizza-16.jpg" /></p>

<p>With those successes under my belt, I decided to see what this puppy could do if I loaded some wood into the new basket insert that comes with the Tombstone ProGrate. With my coals blazing, I added two big chunks of oak and watched as they ignited, burying the needle of the built-in thermometer and pushing my infrared thermometer past its 800°F maximum threshold. Without a thermometer to measure it, I can't be positive, but I'd conservatively guess that air temperatures under the steel were pushing past 900°F and inching on toward 1,000°F.</p>

<p><strong>Now we're playing with fire!</strong></p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/04/20130410-kettle-pizza-baking-steel-pizza-10.jpg" /></p>

<p>Of course, every new setup takes some getting used to, so once again I burned the bejeezus out of my pepperoni pie* pie, this time actually setting one edge of the crust on fire.</p>

<p>*Have you ever wondered why pepperoni curls? Here's your chance to find out!</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/04/20130410-kettle-pizza-baking-steel-pizza-11.jpg" /></p>

<p>Luckily, I have a friend who enjoys eating burnt crust (and yet oddly has never been to DiFara), so all was well. It's a pity, because if you take out that burnt edge, that's one mighty fine looking pepperoni pizza.</p>

<p>For my final pie of the evening, I went again with a New York-style dough, this time topping it with more traditional Neapolitan margherita-style toppings: fresh San Marzano tomatoes crushed with salt, fresh buffalo mozzarella, basil, and olive oil, being extra careful to keep an eye on it during the entirety of its 2 1/2-minute bake time.</p>

<p>Here's what emerged:</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/04/20130410-kettle-pizza-baking-steel-pizza-primary.jpg" /></p>

<p>As far as New York/Neapolitan pies go, this is the best pizza I've made at home. Supremely tender and chewy, with a paper thin crackling crust and plenty of smoky charred spots around the edges. </p>

<p>A quick look at the underbelly reveals a near picture-perfect char pattern.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/04/20130410-kettle-pizza-baking-steel-pizza-14.jpg" /></p>

<p>I felt as giddy as I did the very first time I pulled the head off of my sister's Barbie doll.</p>

<p>I just can't wait to try it out again on a straight-up Neapolitan-style pizza dough.</p>

<p>There was only one way I could think of to really improve this latest setup: What if Andris Lagsdin, creator of the Baking Steel and Al Contarino, inventor of the KettlePizza were to get together to create a model based on their two products that works exactly like my set up straight out of the box?</p>

<p>What if I told you that perhaps the inklings of such a project are already in the works?</p>

<p>@andrislagsdin @thefoodlab @bakingsteel Andris great talking to you today. Looking forward to exploring how we can work together!</p>&mdash; KettlePizza.com (@KettlePizza) April 12, 2013


<p>Like I said, exciting times indeed!</p>

<h4>Order Online</h4>

<p>I know I might sound like a broken record or even a shill about these products, but seriously folks, I don't know anyone who hasn't been pleased with the results they deliver, and if you're the type who can tell the quality of a pizza through photos, then I can only say scroll up and take a look, the proof is in the pudding.</p>

<p>Order the Baking Steel here ($79), or the KettlePizza here ($299.95 for full KettlePizza Pro Kit, which includes Tombstone ProGrate, and an aluminum pizza peel).</p>

<h4>Get The Recipe!</h4>

<p><strong>New York Style Pizza with Bacon-Cherry Pepper Relish »</strong></p>

<p><strong>About the author</strong>: J. Kenji Lopez-Alt is the Chief Creative Officer of Serious Eats where he likes to explore the science of home cooking in his weekly column The Food Lab. You can follow him at @thefoodlab on Twitter, or at The Food Lab on Facebook.</p>
        

        
         
            
                
                    <a href="http://www.seriouseats.com/recipes/2013/04/new-york-style-pizza-bacon-cherry-pepper-relish-coppa-recipe.html">Get the Recipe!</a>
                
            
            
        
    ]]>
    </content>
</entry>

<entry>
   <title>The Pizza Lab: Pesto Pizza</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://slice.seriouseats.com/archives/2013/04/the-pizza-lab-pesto-pizza.html" />
   <id>tag:slice.seriouseats.com,2013://25.246706</id>
   
   <published>2013-04-09T14:17:00Z</published>
   <updated>2013-04-09T14:38:00Z</updated>
   
   <summary>Back when I was a wee food labber who spent his summers at band camp,* my favorite day of the summer was when the camp's cook, Glen, would make his pesto. We'd have a camp-wide pesto spaghetti eating contest, in which I may have been the only competitor. This simultaneously made me a winner and a complete loser each time. What can I say? I loved my pesto back then as much as I love it now. Today, we're gonna stick it on pizza. But first, a few words to the wise.</summary>
   <author>
      <name>J. Kenji López-Alt</name>
      <uri>http://www.seriouseats.com</uri>
   </author>

    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://slice.seriouseats.com/">
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            <img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/04/20130320-pesto-pizza-1.jpg" />
        
            
        <p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/04/20130320-pesto-pizza-2.jpg" /><p>[Photographs: J. Kenji Lopez-Alt]</p></p>

<p>Back when I was a wee food labber who spent his summers at band camp,* my favorite day of the summer was when the camp's cook, Glen, would make his pesto. We'd have a camp-wide pesto spaghetti eating contest, in which I may have been the only competitor. This simultaneously made me a winner and a complete loser each time.</p>

<p>*Ok, chamber music camp. But really the same sort of hormonal, nerdy crew.</p>

<p>What can I say? I loved my pesto back then as much as I love it now. Today, we're gonna stick it on pizza. But first, a few words to the wise.</p>

<p>When we talk pesto here, we're talking the genovese variety made with basil, pine nuts, and cheese that we're most familiar with. There are, of course, other varieties of pesto kicking around, but we're not gonna bother with them for now.</p>

<p>The easiest way to make genovese pesto is in the food processor**; just throw in your ingredients (that's basil, pine nuts, parmesan cheese, garlic, and olive oil), buzz it up, and you're good to go. But there are ways to improve it.</p>

<p>**You mortar and pestle purists can balk all you want. Meanwhile, I'll be enjoying my pesto while I wait for you to finish yours.</p>

<p>For one thing, pesto made in this way has a tendency to lose its color, turning from a rich, deep green to a drab olive green, especially if you let it sit in the fridge for a night or two. How do you prevent this from happening? <strong>Blanch the basil</strong>.</p>

<p>See, puréed basil leaves lose their color as air and natural enzymes interact with pigments in the leaves. Blanching the leaves by dunking them in boiling water for just a few moments (about 15 to 30 seconds) will deactivate those pesky enzymes, helping your pesto to stay deep, bright green, even after days of storage and cooking.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/04/20130320-pesto-pizza-5.jpg" /></p>

<p>See?</p>

<p>I also like to add some spinach to the mix, to add some more green without overwhelming the other flavors with excess basil.</p>

<p>As for application, you can't just use the exact same pesto you'd use on pasta, throw it on a pizza, and expect it to work. The problem is the oil. In a dish of pasta, the excess olive oil combines with the pasta water to form a sauce. On a pizza, all it does is pool into greasy slicks on the surface of the pizza.</p>

<p>You have two options. If you want to make an all-purpose pesto, you can make it as normal*** and then blot out some of the excess oil before adding the pesto to your pizza. Alternatively, just make it with a bit less oil to begin with. My recipe is made with equal parts (by weight) basil, spinach, parmesan, and pine nuts, with a single garlic clove (also added to the blanching water as the spinach and basil cook, to take away some of its sharpest edges) and 1/3 cup of olive oil.</p>

<p>***in the recipe linked, increase the oil from 1/3 cup to 1/2 cup</p>

<p>A teaspoon of lemon zest adds some brightness and balances the whole thing out.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/04/20130320-pesto-pizza-3.jpg" /></p>

<p>When it comes to application and other toppings, I like to keep things sparse. Some folks like to spread the pesto around like a tomato sauce. I prefer applying in discrete spots to create some points of interest as you work your way through the pie.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/04/20130320-pesto-pizza-7.jpg" /></p>

<p>Speaking of cheese, I'm going with a three-part mix. A bottom later of grated parmesan, followed by fresh mozzarella (di bufala if you're wearing your fancy pants), and dollops of ricotta. As the pie bakes, the mozzarella spreads out into a milky blanket, while the dollops of ricotta soften and the pesto spreads, touching and mingling with the ricotta in a way that would be considered inappropriate in some, more restrictive, societies.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/04/20130320-pesto-pizza-8.jpg" /></p>

<p>If you're feeling extra feisty, you can always add more toppings if you desire. Pesto is a pretty strongly flavored sauce to begin with, and according to The Pizza Snob's Approach to Toppings, every topping must be more flavorful than the one that came before it. Thus for topping a pesto pie, you'd need to go with bold flavors like sun-dried tomatoes, anchovies, capers, and olives.</p>

<p>At least, that's what I'd do. Feel free to do whatever the heck you'd like. It's your pizza; nobody's stopping you.</p>

<h4>Get The Recipe!</h4>

<p><strong>Pizza with Pesto, Ricotta, and Mozzarella »</strong></p>

<p><strong>About the author</strong>: J. Kenji Lopez-Alt is the Chief Creative Officer of Serious Eats where he likes to explore the science of home cooking in his weekly column The Food Lab. You can follow him at @thefoodlab on Twitter, or at The Food Lab on Facebook.</p>
        

        
         
            
                
                    <a href="http://www.seriouseats.com/recipes/2013/04/pizza-pesto-ricotta-mozzarella-recipe.html">Get the Recipe!</a>
                
            
            
        
    ]]>
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</entry>

<entry>
   <title>The Pizza Lab: The Best French Bread Pizza</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://slice.seriouseats.com/archives/2013/03/the-pizza-lab-the-best-french-bread-pizza.html" />
   <id>tag:slice.seriouseats.com,2013://25.243145</id>
   
   <published>2013-03-05T14:52:00Z</published>
   <updated>2013-03-05T19:02:40Z</updated>
   
   <summary>French bread pizza doesn't have to be that boring, overly sweet, soggy staple of cafeteria lunches that we all know. Here's how to make a version that's boldly seasoned, well balanced, and perfectly textured.</summary>
   <author>
      <name>J. Kenji López-Alt</name>
      <uri>http://www.seriouseats.com</uri>
   </author>

    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://slice.seriouseats.com/">
    <![CDATA[
        
            
                
                <image src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/assets_c/2013/03/20130305-french-bread-pizza-pizza-lab-28-thumb-500xauto-310161.jpg" alt="Slideshow" title="View Slideshow" />
            
            <p><a  href="http://slice.seriouseats.com/archives/2013/03/the-pizza-lab-the-best-french-bread-pizza-slideshow.html" target="slideshow">VIEW SLIDESHOW: The Pizza Lab: The Best French Bread Pizza</a></p>
        
        
                    
            <img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/03/20130305-french-bread-pizza-pizza-lab-28.jpg" />
        
            
        <p>[Photographs: J. Kenji Lopez-Alt]</p>

<p>It's time for another round of The Food Lab. Got a suggestion for an upcoming topic? Email Kenji here, and he'll do his best to answer your queries in a future post. Become a fan of The Food Lab on Facebook or follow it on Twitter for play-by-plays on future kitchen tests and recipe experiments.</p>

<p>"Is there anyone who doesn't like French bread pizza?," I asked my wife the other day, as I pulled another tray of garlic-scented, oozy, toasty, cheese-covered, sauce-smothered bread from the oven.</p>

<p><em>No response</em>. Figuring she didn't hear me the first time, I walked a little closer to where she was sat at her desk, concentrating intently on some sort of mathematical business (or was it computer science-y business?) on her computer screen. I said it again, louder, using my hands to try and waft some of the scent towards her.</p>

<p>"Mmhmm," she said, raising her hand in that "I love you, but please don't talk to me now" move that she's now got down pat, and that I've finally started recognizing as a legitimate form of communication.</p>

<p>I contemplated flinging a bit of molten-hot mozzarella, imagining its parabolic trajectory towards the back of her head, but then realized that the trail of extra-virgin olive oil it would leave in its wake would finger me unmistakably as the culprit. Instead I resorted to eating a slice myself and letting the dogs lick a bit off my fingers. <em>If she won't acknowledge the awesomeness of my pizza, at least I'll be sure that the dogs love me just a little bit more than they love her</em>, I thought to myself. But the fact remains: It <em>was</em> darn delicious French bread pizza.</p>

<p>Created by the late Bob Petrillose at Cornell University in the legendary Hot Truck in Ithaca, New York, French bread pizza has been a staple of hungry students and busy parents since 1960. </p>

<p>I know that here on Slice, we're all about homemade dough, cold fermentation, hydration level this, protein content that, and all other manner of obsessiveness. But if the data is correct, even serious pie-heads like you, my dear readers, are happy to give themselves a break and admit the simple pleasures of a virtually work-free pizza alternative: According to our polls, French bread pizza is the second most popular choice in such situations, just behind heating up a frozen pie.</p>

<p>When it's great, it can be fantastic. Crisp and soft, with just the right amount of tender, doughy, sauce-soaked bread under its oozy cheese surface. It's tangier and more heavily seasoned than most regular pizza, but that ain't a bad thing.</p>

<p>On the other hand, bad French pizza can be truly abysmal. Bland, leather-like cheese, with a crust that's either too soggy or too crisp. My goal was to up French Bread pizza's game and make it into a dish that you'd be proud to serve <em>any</em> time&mdash;not just when you're rushed, and to do so just about as quickly as you can defrost and heat up a frozen pizza.</p>

<h4>The Bread</h4>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/03/20130305-french-bread-pizza-pizza-lab-03.jpg" /></p>

<p>It's <em>called</em> French bread pizza, but what it really should be called is "that stuff they call French bread in the supermarket, or sometimes they call it Italian, but either way it's soft and squishy and sort of big and and not too crusty, and it's not really European at all but it's still good for pizza" pizza. I tried making pizza out of real French bread&mdash;a nice crusty baguette&mdash;and found that it was all wrong. Not only is a baguette too crusty and chewy (French bread pizza should be crisp and tender, not crunchy and hard to bite through), but its open hole structure also makes it difficult to top properly. Sauce and cheese fall into the craters.</p>

<p>Traditional supermarket "French" it is.</p>

<h4>The Sauce</h4>

<p>My most basic pizza sauce is nothing more than crushed canned tomatoes seasoned with salt. It's what I use on my Neapolitan pies, and even my New York-style pies these days when I don't feel like making a full-blown cooked sauce. But with French bread pizza, that intensely flavored sauce is part of its basic flavor profile.</p>

<p>I started off making a standard simple marinara with garlic, oregano, and a pinch of red pepper flakes cooked down in extra-virgin olive oil before being simmered with some crushed tomatoes, but the sauce needed some more intensity. I decided to increase the amount of garlic to about quadruple my normal ratio, along with using a mixture of butter and olive oil in place of the straight olive oil (those milk solids in butter add a ton of flavor&mdash;I add butter to many of my tomato-based sauce). A sprinkling of fresh parsley and basil finished it off.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/03/20130305-french-bread-pizza-pizza-lab-04.jpg" /></p>

<p>With a good sauce, the right bread, and some quality fresh Mozzarella, I figured it's as easy as layering it all together and baking it. But I wasn't particularly happy with those results.</p>

<p>Here was the problem:</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/03/20130305-french-bread-pizza-pizza-lab-18.jpg" /></p>

<p>When you throw sauce directly on top of the soft bread, is soaks in, turning the whole thing unpleasantly mushy and soggy. I tried simply toasting the bread beforehand, which certainly helped, but then I realized&mdash;hey, I'm making this tasty garlic butter, why not start with a garlic bread base before I layer on the other ingredients?</p>

<p>I spread the garlic mixture on top and gave the bread a preliminary pit stop in the oven before adding my sauce and cheese.</p>

<p>The pre-toasting helped in both the flavor and sogginess departments&mdash;my best pizza yet&mdash;but there was still some amount of sogginess occurring, along with another problem:</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/03/20130305-french-bread-pizza-pizza-lab-22.jpg" /></p>

<p>There's this odd curling phenomenon that occurs when you pre-toast your bread before topping and baking it again, the centers sinking down rather than laying flat. Seems that the soft bready part shrinks as it toasts, causing the bread to curl up like a bi-metal strip. To combat this problem, I engaged in a simple bit of brute force:</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/03/20130305-french-bread-pizza-pizza-lab-06.jpg" /></p>

<p><em>That's right, stay down</em>, I said to my bread. Compressing it pre-baking under a rimmed baking sheet tamed it just enough to get it to stay flat. It also made it much easier to top.</p>

<p>As for handling the remainder of the sogginess issues? Turned out to be simple enough: I added a preliminary layer of cheese that was <em>just</em> thick enough to prevent too much sauce from seeping in, but not so thick that it formed a completely impenetrable barrier&mdash;after all, I wanted a bit of that soft, doughy texture at the sauce-bread interface. Par-baking it helped it to spread evenly across the surface.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/03/20130305-french-bread-pizza-pizza-lab-10.jpg" /></p>

<p>After that, all it needed was a layer of sauce and more cheese before a second trip to the oven. To bang up the flavor even more, I took some tips from DiFara in Brooklyn:</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/03/20130305-french-bread-pizza-pizza-lab-16.jpg" /></p>

<p>Adding a sprinkling of rough-grated parmesan cheese, along with a sprinkle of fresh herbs and a drizzle of olive oil, <em>after</em> it comes out of the oven, so that the flavors stay bright and fresh.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/03/20130305-french-bread-pizza-pizza-lab-23.jpg" /></p>

<p>Even before you bite into it, it looks like good pizza. And unless you are irrationally obsessed with computer science conundrums as my dear wife is, the smell will probably knock your socks off as well.</p>

<p>Just in case anyone is questioning whether all these little extra steps really make a difference in the final product, let me just show you first a French bread pizza made on untoasted bread with no garlic butter, and no finishing aromatics. Just sauce on bread with cheese:</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/03/20130305-french-bread-pizza-pizza-lab-21.jpg" /></p>

<p>Not terrible looking, but you can tell it's going to be soggy and bland. Now compare that with this:</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/03/20130305-french-bread-pizza-pizza-lab-27.jpg" /></p>

<p>The bread stays, well, bready, with just a hint of garlicky olive oil and butter soaking in for flavor. The sauce stays put above its protective layer of pre-melted cheese, while the cheese on top is enhance by a layer of parmesan and fresh herbs. I dunno about you, but I know which one I'd rather eat.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/03/20130305-french-bread-pizza-pizza-lab-32.jpg" /></p>

<p>In all honesty, this stuff is pretty darn delicious. Better than a good deal of the real pizza I've eaten in my life, even when I've made it myself. The fact that it's on the table hot and gooey in about 20 minutes is just a bonus. A sweet, sweet bonus. You know what? I'm <em>glad</em> I have an excuse to eat it all myself. The dogs can share if they want.</p>

<h4>Get The Recipe!</h4>

<ul><li><strong>Get the recipe for The Best French Bread Pizza »</strong></li>
<li><strong>Click here for a step-by-step slideshow »</strong></li></ul>

<p><strong>About the author</strong>: J. Kenji Lopez-Alt is the Chief Creative Officer of Serious Eats where he likes to explore the science of home cooking in his weekly column The Food Lab. You can follow him at @thefoodlab on Twitter, or at The Food Lab on Facebook.</p>
        

        
         
            
                
                    <a href="http://www.seriouseats.com/recipes/2013/03/the-best-french-bread-pizza-recipe.html">Get the Recipe!</a>
                
            
            
        
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<entry>
   <title>The Pizza Lab: How To Make Vegan Pizzas That Really Work</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://slice.seriouseats.com/archives/2013/02/the-pizza-lab-how-to-make-vegan-pizzas-that-really-work.html" />
   <id>tag:slice.seriouseats.com,2013://25.239892</id>
   
   <published>2013-02-11T18:00:00Z</published>
   <updated>2013-02-11T19:56:25Z</updated>
   
   <summary>I don't miss too many foods as a vegan, but... pizza. My first true love. Light of my life and fire of my loins. It will forever rest in that OMG WANT corner. Fortunately, as I found, great pizza is not off-limits to vegans by any means. Here's how to make vegan pizza every bit as satisfying and delicious as a cheese-topped pie.</summary>
   <author>
      <name>J. Kenji López-Alt</name>
      <uri>http://www.seriouseats.com</uri>
   </author>

    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://slice.seriouseats.com/">
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            <img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/02/20120206-vegan-pizza-potatoes-zucchini-01.jpg" />
        
            
        <p><strong>Note:</strong> For the 32 days between February 1st and March 4th, I'm adopting a completely vegan lifestyle. Every weekday I'll be updating my progress with a brand new recipe. For past posts, check here!</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/02/20120206-vegan-pizza-potatoes-zucchini-10.jpg" /><p>[Photographs: J. Kenji Lopez-Alt]</p></p>

<p>The Vegan Experience this time 'round has been <em>far</em> easier than it was the first time. I don't get hungry, I haven't been at a loss for what to eat, my fridge is bursting with more fresh vegetables and beans than I know what to do with,* and I've had pretty much zero cravings for non-vegan food.</p>

<p>*my dogs have a pretty good idea of what they want me to be doing with it, and Hambone has enjoyed a ball of falafel or two recently.</p>

<p>Strike that. I have had <em>one</em> major craving. It strikes several times a day as I walk down the streets of New York, its unmistakable aroma wafting out the windows of nearly every corner shop. That elusive combination of crisp, golden-brown bread and Italian herbs. If one food is going to do me in, it's pizza. I grew up eating it; I'll probably die eating it. Heck, I even write an entire monthly column about how to make it at home.</p>

<p>Last year, I came up with a little diagram that I used to chart my cravings. It looked something like this:</p>

<p><img src="http://www.seriouseats.com/images/2012/02/20120206-vegan-experience-day-24-pizza.jpg"></img></p>

<p>My graph this year would look a little different. I don't have intense bacon or Spotted Pig Hamburger cravings anymore (those mostly died out by the end of last year's Vegan Experience and have largely not come back); I have now replaced my regular mapo tofu with a 100% vegan mapo tofu recipe that's better than the real thing; and I can totally do without milk. Indefinitely.</p>

<p>But pizza. My first true love. Light of my life and fire of my loins. It will forever rest in that OMG WANT corner.</p>

<p>Fortunately, as I discussed last year, great pizza is not off-limits to vegans by any means. <strong>You just have to realize that great pizza does not require cheese.</strong></p>

<p>To some folks, I know that sounds downright sacrilegious. <em>Pizza without cheese?!? Isn't pizza <strong>defined</strong> by cheese?</em> Well, I'm afraid I'm not going to be of much help to you, so you can turn around right now and walk out the door. And make sure you take that icky Daiya stuff with you.</p>

<p>But the truth is, good pizza is really about good crust and well-balanced toppings, which needn't include cheese. Indeed, many classic pies&mdash;the <em>Marinara</em> of Naples, which combines tomatoes, olive oil, garlic, and oregano, is one of the most ancient pizzas in existence. Head over to Rome and you'll find pizza bianca, formed into 6-foot long rectangles, dimpled with crevices to catch olive oil and rosemary, and sprinkled with coarse sea salt. No sauce, no cheese, <em>niente</em>, but one of the most delicious things I've ever put in my mouth.</p>

<p>Every pizzeria in New Haven, famed for its coal-fired <em>apizza</em> (the local vernacular for pizza), and perhaps the highest ranking great-pizza-per-capita city in the country, offers 100% vegan tomato pies as their base. In fact, you have to <em>ask</em> to add cheese to it. In New York, <strong>Paulie Gee's</strong> out in Greenpoint is one of the finest pizzerias in the city, and features a full six pies on their vegan pizza menu. <strong>None of them resort to faux cheese to get there.</strong></p>

<p>What do all of these vastly differing, but all 100% vegan, pizzas have in common? Great crust, high-quality ingredients, and balanced flavors.</p>

<p>And if <em>they</em> can do it, we can certainly do it at home, right?</p>

<h4>Topping Shopping</h4>

<p>I have a number of good pizza dough recipes, but I've recently been loving the incredible ease and foolproofness of my Foolproof Pan Pizza dough, as well as my Basic Square Pan Pizza Dough. Both of them are vegan, require very little effort, and basically spread themselves into the pan; no rolling, tossing, or stretching required.</p>

<p>This leaves plenty of time to focus on toppings. Last year, I wrote a brief manifesto on the subject and called it A Pizza Snob's Approach To Toppings. While veganism may have lowered my cholesterol and increased my moral fiber, it has had just about zero effect on my pizza-topping-snobbishness, so the basic tenet at the core of my approach still applies. Which is:</p>

"Whatever is added to my pizza must be more flavorful than the last thing I put on it, and no single topping shall be so strongly flavored that it masks the flavor of those that come before it."

<p>Now, with a tomato- and cheese-topped pizza, this statement severely limits your choice of toppings. The most common cheese pizza toppings are highly flavorful things like cured meats (think: pepperoni, sausage, anchovies, or bacon) or highly flavorful vegetables (think: olives, pickled peppers, onions). They have to be, in order to compete with creamy, fatty cheese and brightly acidic tomatoes.</p>

<p>Take that cheese and sauce out of the picture, and you've opened yourself up to a whole new world of more delicate, subtle, but still delicious, topping alternatives. Here are a few of my favorites.</p>

<h4>Potatoes, Onions, Rosemary</h4>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/02/20120206-vegan-pizza-potatoes-zucchini-06.jpg" /></p>

<p>Ok, so this isn't exactly the <em>healthiest</em> pizza one could make, but since when is pizza meant to be healthy, vegan or not?</p>

<p>The base of the pie starts out a lot like the fantastic potato-topped pizza bianca at Sullivan Street Bakery (there's also a great version on the bar menu at Maialino): thin slices of potato shingled on top of a moist pizza bianca dough, strewn with onions, and drizzled with olive oil. As it bakes, the potatoes crisp up and the onions brown, lending some sweetness and a bit of bite to the affair.</p>

<p>A sprinkle of rosemary <em>always</em> works with potatoes, in my opinion.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/02/20120206-vegan-pizza-potatoes-zucchini-01.jpg" /></p>

<p>The raw slices of potato cook nicely and are moderately creamy inside, but I longed for even more smooth richness, so I decided to take a page out of Bar's playbook. The New Haven pizzeria is famous for its thin crusted pies, particular their mashed potato pizza. It sounds strange on paper, but what you actually get there is a thin crust topped with creamy, chunkily-mashed potatoes that crisp up around the edges.</p>

<p>To take this effect to the extreme, I dolloped on olive oil-enhanced mashed potatoes in irregular clumps. As the pizza cooked, the clumps harden and brown on the exterior, almost like a perfect roast potato, but with a creamy, olive oil-scented interior.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/02/20120206-vegan-pizza-potatoes-zucchini-08.jpg" /></p>

<p>Delicious!</p>

<h4>Zucchini, Squash, Red Onions, and Pistachios</h4>

<p>Considering that a poor summer squash-topped pizza was what prompted my original toppings manifesto, it's ironic that one of my favorite vegan pies is made with that same vegetable. The difference? Mine doesn't include cheese or pesto&mdash;two ingredients that completely drown out any chance that the squash has of asserting itself.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/02/20120206-vegan-pizza-potatoes-zucchini-04.jpg" /></p>

<p>In this pie, the layered zucchini and squash are cooked long enough that they lose most of their moisture, either to the dough underneath or to the air of the oven. The dough ends up delightfully chewy, while the slices brown a bit around the edges, adding both flavor and texture to the mix.</p>

<p>To the top, I add sliced red onions and a pinch of thyme leaves. As with the potato pie, the red onion slices caramelize intensely, to the point that they're almost crisp, but don't taste burnt. Finally, after the pie comes out of the oven, I sprinkle on some pistachios. The red onion-pistachio combo is one I ganked from Chris Bianco at Pizzeria Bianco in Phoenix. It's a really great combo.</p>

<h4>Sun Dried Tomatoes, Olives, Caramelized Onions, and Breadcrumbs</h4>

<p>Having recently gotten back from a trip to Sicily with my wife, I've been playing around with a lot of those regional flavors&mdash;intense olives and olive oil-drenched vegetables; sweet, salty, and briny. I already have a recipe for Sfincione, the original Sicilian pizza eaten around New Years, which is made with tomatoes, caramelized onions, anchovies, caciocavallo cheese, and breadcrumbs. That recipe inspired this one, which is a variation on the theme. </p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/02/20120206-vegan-pizza-potatoes-zucchini-02.jpg" /></p>

<p>It starts out pretty similar, with a layer of crushed tomatoes and richly caramelized onions for sweetness. Rather than anchovies and caciocavallo, I used a mix of chopped olives and sun-dried tomatoes, adding that briny, rich element to the pie.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/02/20120206-vegan-pizza-potatoes-zucchini-03.jpg" /></p>

<p>The whole thing gets topped with breadcrumbs tossed with olive oil (use panko for some extra crunch, though make sure they're a vegan brand&mdash;some are made with honey).</p>

<p>What emerges from the oven less than half an hour later is this beaut:</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/02/20120206-vegan-pizza-potatoes-zucchini-09.jpg" /></p>

<p>Ain't she purty? That basil is entirely optional, but I happen to have an over-abundant basil plant in my living room. I generally find high productivity to be a good trait in the flora and fauna I choose to enter relations with, but this thing is just ridiculous.</p>

<h4>Get The Recipes!</h4>

<ul><li><strong>Easy Pan Pizza With Potato, Onion, and Rosemary »</strong></li>
<li><strong>Easy Pan Pizza With Zucchini, Red Onion, and Pistachios »</strong></li>
<li><strong>Easy Pan Pizza With Sun-dried Tomatoes, Olives, Caramelized Onions, Olives, and Breadcrumbs »</strong></li></ul>

<p><strong>About the author</strong>: J. Kenji Lopez-Alt is the Chief Creative Officer of Serious Eats where he likes to explore the science of home cooking in his weekly column The Food Lab. You can follow him at @thefoodlab on Twitter, or at The Food Lab on Facebook.</p>
        

        
            
         
            <h4>Recipes!</h4>
            <ul>
            
                <li><a href="http://www.seriouseats.com/recipes/2013/02/easy-party-pan-pizza-sun-dried-tomatoes-olives-caramelized-onions-sfinzione-sicilian-recipe.html">Easy Pan Pizza With Sun-dried Tomatoes, Caramelized Onions, Olives, and Breadcrumbs (Vegan)</a></li>
            
                <li><a href="http://www.seriouseats.com/recipes/2013/02/easy-pan-pizza-potato-onion-rosemary-vegan-recipe.html">Easy Pan Pizza With Potato, Onion, and Rosemary (Vegan)</a></li>
            
                <li><a href="http://www.seriouseats.com/recipes/2013/02/easy-pan-pizza-zucchini-red-onion-pistachio-vegan.html">Easy Pan Pizza With Zucchini, Red Onion, and Pistachios (Vegan)</a></li>
            
            </ul>
        
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</entry>

<entry>
   <title>The Pizza Lab: Foolproof Pan Pizza</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://slice.seriouseats.com/archives/2013/01/the-pizza-lab-the-worlds-easiest-pizza-no-knead-no-stretch-pan-pizza.html" />
   <id>tag:slice.seriouseats.com,2013://25.237806</id>
   
   <published>2013-01-22T21:15:00Z</published>
   <updated>2013-01-23T02:07:28Z</updated>
   
   <summary>I've got a confession to make: I love pan pizza.

I'm not talking deep-dish Chicago-style with its crisp crust and rivers of cheese and sauce, I'm talking thick-crusted, fried-on-the-bottom, puffy, cheesy, focaccia-esque pan pizza, dripping with strings of mozzarella and robust sauce.

If only pizza that good were also easy to make at home. Well here's the good news: It is. This is the easiest pizza you will ever make. Seriously. All it takes is a few basic kitchen essentials, some simple ingredients, and a bit of patience. 
</summary>
   <author>
      <name>J. Kenji López-Alt</name>
      <uri>http://www.seriouseats.com</uri>
   </author>

    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://slice.seriouseats.com/">
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                <image src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/assets_c/2013/01/20130121-pan-pizza-lab-recipe-14-thumb-500xauto-300627.jpg" alt="Slideshow" title="View Slideshow" />
            
            <p><a  href="http://slice.seriouseats.com/archives/2013/01/the-pizza-lab-the-worlds-easiest-pizza-no-knead-no-stretch-pan-pizza-slideshow.html" target="slideshow">VIEW SLIDESHOW: The Pizza Lab: Foolproof Pan Pizza</a></p>
        
        
                    
            <img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/01/20130121-pan-pizza-lab-recipe-14.jpg" />
        
            
        <p>[Photographs: J. Kenji Lopez-Alt]</p>

<p>It's time for another round of The Food Lab. Got a suggestion for an upcoming topic? Email Kenji here, and he'll do his best to answer your queries in a future post. Become a fan of The Food Lab on Facebook or follow it on Twitter for play-by-plays on future kitchen tests and recipe experiments.</p>

<p>I've got a confession to make: <strong>I love pan pizza</strong>.</p>

<p>I'm not talking deep-dish Chicago-style with its crisp crust and rivers of cheese and sauce, I'm talking thick-crusted, fried-on-the-bottom, puffy, cheesy, focaccia-esque pan pizza of the kind that you might remember Pizza Hut having when you were a kid, though in reality, most likely that pizza never really existed&mdash;as they say, pizzas past always look better through pepperoni-tinted glasses.</p>

<p>It would arrive at the table in a jet black, well-worn pan, its edges browned and crisped where the cheese has melted into the gap between the crust and the pan. You'd lift up a slice and long threads of mozzarella pull out, stretching all the way across the table, a signpost saying "hey everyone, it's this kid's birthday!" You'd reach out your fingers&mdash;almost involuntarily&mdash;grasping at those cheese strings, plucking at them like guitar strings, wrapping them around your fingers so you can suck them off before diving into the slice itself.</p>

<p>That perfect pan pizza had an open, airy, chewy crumb in the center that slowly transformed into a crisp, golden-brown, fried crust at the very bottom and a soft, thin, doughy layer at the top right at the crust-sauce interface. It was thick and robust enough to support a heavy load of toppings, though even a plain cheese or pepperoni slice would do.</p>

<p>It's been years since I've gone to an actual Pizza Hut (they don't even <em>exist</em> in New York aside from those crappy "Pizza Hut Express" joints with the pre-fab, lukewarm individual pizzas), but I've spent a good deal of time working on my own pan pizza recipe to the point that it finally lives up to that perfect image of my childhood pan pizza that still lives on in my mind.</p>

<p>If only pizza that good were also easy to make. Well here's the good news: <strong>It is.</strong> This is the easiest pizza you will ever make. Seriously. All it takes is a few basic kitchen essentials, some simple ingredients, and a bit of patience. </p>

<p>The way I see it, there are three basic difficulties most folks have with pizza:</p>

<ul><li><strong>Problem 1: Kneading.</strong> How long is enough? What motion do I use? And is it really worth the doggone effort?</li>
<li><strong>Problem 2: Stretching.</strong> Once I've got that disk of dough, how do I get it into the shape of an actual pizza, ready to be topped?</li>
<li><strong>Problem 3: Transferring.</strong> Ok, let's say I've got my dough made and perfectly stretched onto my pizza peel. How do I get it onto that stone in the oven without disturbing the toppings or having it turn into a misshapen blob?</li></ul>

<p>This recipe avoids all three of those common pitfalls, making it pretty much foolproof. To be perfectly honest, every single one of these steps has been done before, and none of it is rocket science. All I'm doing is combining them all into a single recipe.</p>

<p>You can jump straight into a  full step-by-step slideshow of the process or find the exact measurements and instructions  in the recipe here, or read on for a few more details on what to expect and how we got there.</p>

<h4>No Kneading</h4>

<p>By now, everybody and their baker's heard about no knead dough. It's a technique that was developed by Jim Lahey of Sullivan Street Bakery and popularized by Mark Bittman of the New York Times. The basic premise is simple: mix together your dough ingredients in a bowl just until they're combined, cover it, and let time take care of the rest. That's it.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/01/20130121-pan-pizza-lab-recipe-15.jpg" /></p>

<p>So how does it work? Well the goal of kneading in a traditional dough is to create <em>gluten</em>, a web-like network of interconnected proteins that forms when flour is mixed together with water. All wheat flour contains some amount of protein (usually around 10 to 15%, depending on the variety of wheat). In their normal state, these proteins resemble tiny crumpled up little balls of wire. With kneading, your goal is to first work these proteins until they untangle a bit, then to rub them against each other until they link up, forming a solid chain-link fence.</p>

<p>It's this gluten matrix that allows your dough to be stretched without breaking, and what allows it to hold nice big air bubbles inside. Ever have a dense under-risen pizza crust? It's because whoever made it didn't properly form their gluten in the process.</p>

<p>Now you can see how how this can take a lot of work. Kneading, aligning, folding, linking. That's why most pizza dough recipes takes a good ten to twenty minutes of elbow grease or time in a stand mixer.</p>

<p>But there's another way.</p>

<p>See, flour naturally contains enzymes that will break down large proteins into smaller ones. Imagine them as teeny-tiny wire cutter that cut those jumbled up balls of wire into shorter pieces. The shorter the pieces are, they easier it is to untangle them, and the easier it is to then align them and link them up into a good, strong network. No-knead dough recipes take advantage of this fact.</p>

<p>Over the course of an overnight sit at room temperature, those enzymes get to work breaking down proteins. Meanwhile, yeast starts to consume sugars in the flour, releasing carbon dioxide gas int he process. These bubbles of gas will cause the dough to start stretching, and in the process, will jostle and align the enzyme-primed proteins, thereby creating gluten.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/01/20130121-pan-pizza-lab-recipe-18.jpg" /></p>

<p>Simply allowing the dough to sit overnight will create a gluten network at least as strong (if not stronger!) than a dough that had been kneaded in a mixer or by hand, all with pretty much zero effort. Indeed, the flavor produced by letting yeast do its thing over the course of this night will also be superior to that of any same-day dough. Win win!</p>

<p>Other than time, the only real key to a successful no-knead dough is high hydration. Specifically, the water content should be at least 60% of the weight of the flour you use. Luckily, high hydration also leads to superior hole structure upon baking. I go for about 65%.</p>

<p><strong>Problem 1: Avoided</strong></p>

<h4>No Stretching</h4>

<p>One of the happy side effects of having a loose, moist dough is that it practically stretches itself. Form the dough into a ball and let it sit around at room temperature and you'll see it spreading slowly outwards until it it nearly disk-shaped. The only thing holding it back? Friction. It sticks to the countertop or board.</p>

<p>What do you use to eliminate friction? Grease. Coating the dough ball in grease and placing it on a smooth surface (such as, say, the inside of a skillet or round cake pan) allows it to stretch completely under its own power.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/01/20130121-pan-pizza-lab-recipe-21.jpg" /></p>

<p>All that's needed is a few gently pokes with your fingertips to do the final shaping and to eliminate any ultra-large air bubbles.</p>

<p>You may wonder why we'd want to get rid of those bubbles, when an open, airy structure is what we're after. Well, it's because this dough is almost <em>too</em> good. It's so loose and easy to stretch that large bubbles will form giant domes, shedding their cheese and sauce, eventually collapsing into large barren craters when you pull the pies out of the oven, like this:</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/01/20130121-pan-pizza-lab-recipe-03.jpg" /></p>

<p>Some simple fingertip docking eliminates that problem while sill keeping your dough plenty light and airy.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/01/20130121-pan-pizza-lab-recipe-04.jpg" /></p>

<p><strong>Problem 2: Avoided</strong></p>

<h4>No Transferring</h4>

<p>Do I need to spell it out here? If your pizza is constructed in a pan, there's no need to use a peel or a stone. Just throw the pan straight into the oven.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/01/20130121-pan-pizza-lab-recipe-28.jpg" /></p>

<p>As the pizza bakes, the olive oil it was stretched out in will allow the bottom and sides to fry, getting them extra-crisp.</p>

<p>The one issue you might run into is this:</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/01/20130121-pan-pizza-lab-recipe-06.jpg" /></p>

<p>Air bubbles that form under the crust as it rises will pull away from the pan bottom, preventing them from browning and crisping properly. To avoid that, I make sure to give the dough a quick lift around the edges before topping it, just to release any air bubbles that may be trapped.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/01/20130121-pan-pizza-lab-recipe-07.jpg" /></p>

<p>You end up with a nice, even golden brown like this:</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/01/20130121-pan-pizza-lab-recipe-08.jpg" /></p>

<h4>The Details</h4>

<p>Really, that's the sum of the process. Most other details are incidental. You can use whatever sauce you'd like, whether it's simply pureed canned tomatoes with a bit of salt and olive oil, or a cooked pizza sauce. You can use grated mozzarella, or go for a more eclectic choice like cheddar or jack.</p>

<p>Here are a few tips.</p>

<h3>Cook Hot</h3>

<p>I max out my oven (550°F) when I bake pizza. Why? Hotter cooking leads to a few differences in the end product. For one thing, it produces more micro-bubbles on the exterior, giving your pie more crunch and character. These microbubbles form because air and water vapor inside the dough expands rapidly under high heat, filling up and stretching out gluten-walled bubbles before they harden and crisp. The hotter the oven, the faster these bubbles will expand.</p>

<p>You can easily see the difference in the texture of a crust cooked at 400°F:</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/01/20130121-pan-pizza-lab-recipe-09.jpg" /></p>

<p>Versus one cooked at 500°F:</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/01/20130121-pan-pizza-lab-recipe-10.jpg" /></p>

<p>Cook it even hotter and the differences become more clear.</p>

<p>High temperature cooking also leads to superior interior structure for the same reason: bubbles inflate rapidly, giving a pizza cooked at a high temperature a more open, airy crumb.</p>

<p>Again, here's a pie cooked at 400°F:</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/01/20130121-pan-pizza-lab-recipe-11.jpg" /></p>

<p>And the identical dough cooked at 550°F:</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/01/20130121-pan-pizza-lab-recipe-14.jpg" /></p>

<p>The difference is striking.</p>

<h3>Top Away!</h3>

<p>Normally I'm a minimalist when it comes to pizza. I like my New York or Neapolitan-style pies with either no toppings, or at most one or two carefully selected items. With a thick, robust pan pizza, on the other hand, I'll add as many toppings as it'll hold, which is a whole lot. Multiple cheese (a good melting cheese as the base and a hard grating cheese to add at the end is my go-to), some pickled items, fresh vegetables, cured meats, whatever.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/01/20130121-pan-pizza-lab-recipe-22.jpg" /><p>Toppings</p></p>

<p><strong>This pizza can handle whatever you throw at it</strong>.</p>

<h3>Be Generous With The Sauce</h3>

<p>Again, it's counterintuitive&mdash;normally I'd advise a thin, thin layer of sauce&mdash;but for a thick pie like this, you <em>need</em> a nice thick layer of sauce.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/01/20130121-pan-pizza-lab-recipe-23.jpg" /><p>Sauce well</p></p>

<p>I go with around 3/4 of a cup per 10-inch pie.</p>

<h3>Cheese to the Edges</h3>

<p>With a New York pie, the <em>cornicione</em>, or pizza bones are essential to the slice. For many folks, they're the best part.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/01/20130121-pan-pizza-lab-recipe-24.jpg" /><p>Cheese to the edges</p></p>

<p>With a pan pizza, on the other hand, I've got no such need or desire for those edge crusts. I'd much rather have my pie fully topped from edge to edge, allowing some of that cheese to drip into the cracks between the crust and the pan, browning into those wonderful crisp, charred bits.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/01/20130121-pan-pizza-lab-recipe-29.jpg" /></p>

<h3>Add Some Post-Bake Flair</h3>

<p>Some toppings are best added before baking. But a few are better added once the pie emerges from the oven.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/01/20130121-pan-pizza-lab-recipe-32.jpg" /></p>

<p>Topping that list? Hard cheeses. I like to add grated Parmigiano-Reggiano by the fistful to the top of the pie after it emerges from the oven. I love the contrast you get between the browned, bubbly bits of mozzarella and the sharp, fresh bite of the un-cooked parmesan.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2013/01/20130121-pan-pizza-lab-recipe-01.jpg" /></p>

<p>Other than that, there's really not much more to say. Like I said, the recipe is stupid-easy. Mix together ingredients, then let'em sit for a while. Top them, and bake them. It's as easy as that.</p>

<p>Next time someone asks you "I want to make pizza at home. Know any good recipes for beginners?" (and if your life is anything like mine, you hear that question at least a couple times per week), you'll know where to send them.</p>

<h4>Get The Recipe!</h4>

<p><strong>For a full step-by-step slideshow, head right this way! »</strong></p>
<p><strong>Or get the recipe for Foolproof Pan Pizza here! »</strong></p>

<p><strong>About the author</strong>: J. Kenji Lopez-Alt is the Chief Creative Officer of Serious Eats where he likes to explore the science of home cooking in his weekly column The Food Lab. You can follow him at @thefoodlab on Twitter, or at The Food Lab on Facebook.</p>
        

        
         
            
                
                    <a href="http://www.seriouseats.com/recipes/2013/01/foolproof-pan-pizza-recipe.html">Get the Recipe!</a>
                
            
            
        
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    </content>
</entry>

<entry>
   <title>The Pizza Lab: A Computer Simulation of a Pepperoni Slice Curling</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://slice.seriouseats.com/archives/2012/12/pizza-lab-computer-simulation-pepperoni-slice.html" />
   <id>tag:slice.seriouseats.com,2012://25.233836</id>
   
   <published>2012-12-14T19:30:00Z</published>
   <updated>2012-12-14T19:58:57Z</updated>
   
   <summary>Last week, I wrote a piece about a pet obsession of mine: What makes pepperoni slices curl? The final conclusion was that it largely has to do with temperature differentials between the top surface heating faster than the bottom, as well as meat flow patterns inside the sausage caused by the stuffing horn being slimmer than the casing.

A few hours after the post went live, I got an email from my friend Evros Loukaides, a research student at Cambridge University studying the behavior and applications of thin morphing structures. Apparently, curling pepperoni falls squarely in the line of his work simulating thin morphing structures.</summary>
   <author>
      <name>J. Kenji López-Alt</name>
      <uri>http://www.seriouseats.com</uri>
   </author>

    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://slice.seriouseats.com/">
    <![CDATA[
        
        
                    
            <img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/12/20121211-pepperoni-curl-pizza-lab-01.jpg" />
        
            
        <p>It's time for another round of The Food Lab. Got a suggestion for an upcoming topic? Email Kenji here, and he'll do his best to answer your queries in a future post. Become a fan of The Food Lab on Facebook or follow it on Twitter for play-by-plays on future kitchen tests and recipe experiments.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/12/20121211-pepperoni-curl-pizza-lab-01.jpg" /><p>[Photographs: J. Kenji Lopez-Alt]</p></p>

<p>One of the benefits of having gone to a school well known for its concentration of nerds is that many of my close friends are, well, nerds. And there are few greater sources of excitement than when two separate spheres of nerd-dom collide in a synergistic orgy of geekitude. Those are truly the times when human knowledge seems to advance in leaps and bounds</p>

<p>Last week, I wrote a piece about a pet obsession of mine: What makes pepperoni slices curl? The final conclusion was that it largely has to do with temperature differentials between the top surface heating faster than the bottom, as well as meat flow patterns inside the sausage caused by the stuffing horn being slimmer than the casing.</p>

<p>A few hours after the post went live, I got an email from my friend Evros Loukaides, a research student at Cambridge University studying the behavior and applications of thin morphing structures. Apparently, curling pepperoni falls squarely in the line of his work:</p>

 Kenji! You are dangerously close to my research topic with your latest post. As in, I'm about to forward it to my supervisor. We study the morphing capabilities of thin structures and the resulting shapes. If you are considering doing similar work about the shapes of chinese crackers, we might wanna talk to you about a joint publication. :)

<p>If you require any computational modelling of food structures, to make your articles geekier than they already are, I'm your man.</p>

<p>Require? No. Really really want? You bet! I jokingly tasked him with creating a computer model of a pepperoni slice being heated on top of a pizza. An hour later, this hit my inbox:</p>

Challenge accepted! (sort of)

<p>Let me start with my assumptions: I model a slice of pepperoni as a disk with a radius of 15mm and a thickness of 3mm. I start the entire model at 300°K (80°F) and apply heat as a boundary condition on the top side, until it reaches 480°K (404°F). I also apply heat on the sides and bottom but of lower magnitude.  </p>

<p>Since the geometry is trivial, the key is knowing the properties of the material. If those are accurate, you can usually get really good approximations for reality. I'm not a material scientist&mdash;I mostly deal with the effects of geometry on structural properties.  Even if I was, the mechanical properties of tissue are still only partially understood&mdash;especially if you're interested in processed meats, which contain a collection of tissues (fat, ligaments, muscle, etc.) in a casing of separate properties. So basically we'll need to make a ton of assumptions and simplifications which pretty much render the results irrelevant to reality. <strong>But hey, why not? It's all good fun.</strong></p>

<p>What are the parameters we need? You already showed that conductivity of the material is significant&mdash;otherwise the directionality of the heat gradient wouldn't matter. The specific heat capacity is also relevant to this, and in turn this depends on the density of the material. The coefficient of expansion, which in this case is obviously negative is probably the controlling parameter. The Young Modulus&mdash;the stiffness of the material&mdash;will show how much it needs to move to accommodate this heat gradient. Most tissue is usually modelled as hyperelastic, but for higher temperature, this effect is reduced, and we observe almost linear behaviour. But do keep in mind that all of these parameters depend on temperature: For example intuitively you can see that dried/cooked meat is stiffer than raw meat. I'm using an elastic model here as a demonstration but of course the slice deforms plastically. </p>

<p>I tried to find some numbers from the literature, but they are scarce and only tangentially related to our quest. For example one reference quotes the thermal conductivity of various tissues, but for raw tissue in its natural state. Still, it gives us a rough figure.</p>

<p></p>

<p>[Simulation: Evros Loukaides]</p>

<p>He finished with this:</p>

I'll spare you the details, but by pulling numbers out of thin air in a similar manner for the remaining parameters, I was able to construct something resembling an approximation for your entertainment. If you need an accurate model, I'll need a lot more experimental data and time. <strong>And pizza.</strong>

<p>Evros, having been to Pizza Express in Cambridge, I can only say that you <em>deserve</em> better pizza. I'll do my best to get it to you.</p>

<p><strong>About the author</strong>: J. Kenji Lopez-Alt is the Chief Creative Officer of Serious Eats where he likes to explore the science of home cooking in his weekly column The Food Lab. You can follow him at @thefoodlab on Twitter, or at The Food Lab on Facebook.</p>
        

        
            
        
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</entry>

<entry>
   <title>The Food Lab: Why Does Pepperoni Curl?</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://slice.seriouseats.com/archives/2012/12/the-pizza-lab-why-does-pepperoni-curl.html" />
   <id>tag:slice.seriouseats.com,2012://25.232355</id>
   
   <published>2012-12-11T18:45:00Z</published>
   <updated>2013-01-04T20:10:25Z</updated>
   
   <summary>Today's installment of The Pizza Lab presents what is probably the most important work of my career. Nay, my life. It's a story of such unparalleled importance that it makes pressing international issues like comparative baking surfaces and cold fermentation seem trivial in comparison. I'm talking about pepperoni curl. What it is, what makes it happen, and how to maximize it.

It's far more fascinating than you may think.</summary>
   <author>
      <name>J. Kenji López-Alt</name>
      <uri>http://www.seriouseats.com</uri>
   </author>

    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://slice.seriouseats.com/">
    <![CDATA[
        
        
                    
            <img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/12/20121211-pepperoni-curl-pizza-lab-01.jpg" />
        
            
        <p>It's time for another round of The Food Lab. Got a suggestion for an upcoming topic? Email Kenji here, and he'll do his best to answer your queries in a future post. Become a fan of The Food Lab on Facebook or follow it on Twitter for play-by-plays on future kitchen tests and recipe experiments.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/12/20121211-pepperoni-curl-pizza-lab-01.jpg" /><p>[Photographs: J. Kenji Lopez-Alt]</p></p>

<p>Today's installment of The Pizza Lab presents what is probably the most important work of my career. Nay, my life. It's a story of such unparalleled importance that it makes pressing international issues like comparative baking surfaces and cold fermentation seem trivial in comparison. <strong>I'm talking about pepperoni curl</strong>. What it is, what makes it happen, and how to maximize it.</p>

<p>It's far more fascinating than you may think.</p>

<p>There are times when I'll head into a bog-standard New York slice joint, see those pre-cooked squares with their flat disks of pepperoni, watch some poor sap order them, and think to myself: <em>Ah, you've fallen victim to one of the two classic blunders, the most famous of which is "never question your pizza toppings in Asia," but only slightly less well known is this: <strong>"Never order a Sicilian when you spy flat-laying pepperoni on the line."</strong></em></p>

<p>To me, flat pepperoni just doesn't fit the bill. It sits there, wan and pliable, its grease spreading over the top of semi-coagulated cheese like an oil spill, dripping off the edges of a slice, making the whole endeavor so treacherous that some folks even resort to blotting with paper napkins.</p>

<p>On the other hand, what you <strong>should</strong> be having is this:</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/12/20121129-Prince-Street-Pizza-1.jpg" /></p>

<p>As the pizza bakes, the edge of the pepperoni curls upwards, forming a distinct lip. Once exposed like this, the lip cooks faster than the base, which is insulated by the cheese and crust, and thus crisps and renders its fat faster. This fat drips down into the center of the cup. What you're left with is a gloriously flavorful little sip of pepperoni grease, neatly contained within its own, crisp-lipped edible container. The browned lip takes on an almost bacon-like quality&mdash;melt-in-your-mouth crunchy. It's one of the true joys of a pepperoni pizza, and once you've experienced it, plain old flat pepperoni just won't do.</p>

<p>I first read the term "grease chalice" in the winning entry of a "pie-ku" contest run by Adam Kuban way back in 2005, before Serious Eats even existed. The winning entry:</p>

<p>crisp pepperoni</p>
<p>edge curled from heat</p>
<p>a chalice of sweet, hot oil</p>
<p>&mdash;Mr. Sin

<p>Have you ever read anything so beautiful or profound?</p>

<p>A few months back, Serious Eats Community Member ratbuddy charged us with reporting on what makes pepperoni cup when you cook it.</p>

<p>A number of theories were thrown around in that thread, and after talking to a couple of experts, I've heard a few more. The question it, which one is correct?</p>

<p>For the past few months, I've been meticulously testing various types, brands, styles, thicknesses, orientations, configurations, amalgamations, and fibrillations of pepperoni in order to figure it out. <strong>Here's what I got:</strong></p>

<h4>The Theory Of The Curl</h4>

<p>There are a few basic hypotheses that try to explain pepperoni curl. Two seem intuitive, while others require a bit more specialized knowledge. The first two are:</p>

<ul><li><strong>Hypothesis #1: It's the thickness.</strong> When you cook a piece of pepperoni on a pizza, the top of the pepperoni is exposed to the air of the oven and heats faster than the bottom, which is insulated from heat by the cheese and the dough (both are fantastic insulators, bread because of its air spaces, cheese because of its fat content). The thicker the slice, the bigger the difference in heating rate between the top of the slice and the bottom. As the top cooks faster than the bottom, it shrinks more, causing the pepperoni to curl. Once it starts curling and the edges lift slightly and start cooking faster themselves, that differential is exacerbated causing it to cup even more severely.</li>
<li><strong>Hypothesis #2: It's the casing.</strong> Most high-quality pepperoni sticks are made by stuffing a spiced pork-and-beef sausage mix into a casing, either natural pork casing, or a collagen-based casing designed to act like a natural casing. As we know with natural casing hot dogs and sausages, those casings shrink up when cooked (that's part of what makes a sausage plump as you cook it). Because the edges of the pepperoni shrink more than the center, the slice buckles and cups.</li></ul>

<p>These both seem like very valid, and luckily, very testable hypotheses, so we'll start with them before moving on.</p>

<h4>Hypothesis #1: The Thickness</h4>

<p>To test this, I cooked slices of pepperoni on a pizza in varying thicknesses. I used a Natural casing Boar's Head pepperoni stick, hand sliced for this test.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/12/20121211-pepperoni-curl-pizza-lab-02.jpg" /></p>

<p>I used calipers to precisely measure the pepperoni slices, testing 8 different thicknesses that ranged from .25 inches (6.4 millimeters), all the way down to .05 inches (1.3 millimeters)</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/12/20121211-pepperoni-curl-pizza-lab-03.jpg" /></p>

<p>I placed them all on top of a single pie I made using my Basic New York-Style Pizza Dough with a simple sauce and dry mozzarella cheese, then slipped it on top of a pre-heated baking steel.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/12/20121211-pepperoni-curl-pizza-lab-05.jpg" /></p>

<p>5 minutes later, I had my results.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/12/20121211-pepperoni-curl-pizza-lab-06.jpg" /></p>

<p>The first thing you'll notice is that the thinnest slice actually got swallowed whole by the cheese. Oops.</p>

<p>I measured the amount of cuppage on each slice visually, and by measuring the height to which the highest point of the cup curled up beyond the interior base of the cup, which would correspond to the original height of the cup edge.</p>

<p>Turns out that thickness <em>does</em> have an effect on pepperoni curl, but not all that much. The very thinnest slices showed a conservative amount of curling, not really picking up until the .1 inch (2.5 millimeter) range, but after that, cuppage was excellent all the way until we got to the very thickest slice, which was simply too bulky and thick to be able to curl properly. You could see it trying, but failing:  </p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/12/20121211-pepperoni-curl-pizza-lab-07.jpg" /></p>

<p>While the test may answer a few questions, I've certainly seen slices of pepperoni in that thickness range that don't do any curling at all, so there has to be more to the story than just thickness.</p>

<p>Let's move on.*</p>

<p>*For an interesting computer simulation visualization of this model, please jump to the bottom of this post!</p>

<h3>corollary to hypothesis #1: heat source direction</h3>

<p>Part of the thickness hypothesis posits that a directional heat source is required. That is, the pepperoni curls only when heated from one side, and it curls in the direction of the heat source. To confirm this, I did another quick test, frying six slices of pepperoni in a skillet (they were placed in different orientations so that some faced up while others faced down relative to each other).</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/12/20121211-pepperoni-curl-pizza-lab-17.jpg" /></p>

<p>As expected, they all curled downwards (towards the heat source), confirming that there is <em>something</em> to the first hypothesis after all.</p>

<h4>Hypothesis #2: The Casing</h4>

<p>I've seen pepperoni sold in three forms: natural casing, collagen casing, and casing-free. To get a bit more info on these style, I spoke with Eric Cherryholmes of the Ezzo Sausage Company of Columbus OH, one of the finest pepperoni makers and wholesale distributors around (their product is not available retail, but you've probably had it on a pizza before).</p>

<p>According to Eric, the cupping has everything to do with the casing. As he said to me, "our Classic pepperoni is stuffed in a fibrous casing that gets stripped before slicing and lays flat when cooked. The GiAntonio [their brand name] is stuffed in collagen casing and gets sliced in its casing and applied. The casing shrinks when cooked, causing the cupping of the product."</p>

<p>I had Eric send me a few sticks of his pepperoni (and man, was it tasty!), asking him to leave all of the casings&mdash;including the fiber casing&mdash;intact so that I could get a look at them.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/12/20121211-pepperoni-curl-pizza-lab-16.jpg" /></p>

<p>Next I cooked them side-by-side on a pizza. Indeed, the collagen-casing sticks <em>do</em> shrink more than the fiber casing sticks, which tend to lay completely flat, even limping a bit to conform to the contours of the crust and cheese.</p>

<p>But the question I had was this: Is it specifically the casing that shrinks, causing it to cup, or is it perhaps something to do with the nature of a sausage that's already been stuffed inside a natural casing? In other words, once the pepperoni is stuffed and cured, does the casing make any difference at all?</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/12/20121211-pepperoni-curl-pizza-lab-10.jpg" /></p>

<p>I peeled the casings off of an ezzo stick, as well as adding in a stick from Boar's Head, which uses a natural pork casing. I baked them all side by side with slices that still had their casings intact.</p>

<p>Guess what? <strong>Every single slice of pepperoni curled, regardless of whether or not the casing was left on</strong>.</p>

<p>So <strong>that's</strong> interesting. You <em>need</em> to make your pepperoni with a natural or collagen casing to get it to curl, but once it's been stuffed, that casing no longer plays a role. What the heck? What's special about that casing?</p>

<p>My next clue came from our very own Community Member Meat guy, who, if you've been around these parts, is a great authority on all things sausage and meat related, having spent his life in the field. According to him:</p>

The meat, if stuffed using a smaller than desired stuffing horn for the casing, (casings that are in sticks generally the horn is about 1/3 of the diameter of the casing) and it is held about 1 inch back from the end of the horn. This causes the meat to flow into the casing in a U shape, so when you slice the meat, that is the pattern that is reinforced as it cooks and shrinks,causing the cup to form. When I worked for another major Pepperoni producer, our cup proof pepperoni was hand stuffed using casings that were as close to the diameter of the stuffing horn a possible creating a straight line flow and no discernible flow pattern, and the product never cupped. Other companies have cuts and holes drilled into the end of the horn to change the dynamics.

<p><strong>A-ha!</strong></p>

<p><strong>NB:</strong> Perhaps even more interesting than the statement above is the following: "the reason chains like it cup proof is so they don't have some yahoo suing them because they burned their mouth on the 450 Degree grease pocket in the pepperoni cup. Sort of like spilling coffee in your lap." What has society come to that we live in a world where the joy of cupped pepperoni is trumped by the fear of litigation?!</p>

<h4>Hypothesis #3: The Fluid Dynamics of Stuffing</h4>

<p>I called up Eric at Ezzo to inquire about Meat guy's statement, and he confirmed. "When we stuff our collagen casing pepperoni, it doesn't stretch as much, so the meat is forced down the center and sticks more to the sides. The fiber casing stretches as you stuff it, so you get an even stuffing density."</p>

<p>I took a length of collagen casing pepperoni generously donated by Vermont Smoke and Cure*, and sliced it in half lengthwise. According to Meat guy, I should be able to see a U-shaped meat pattern inside.</p>

<p>*My new favorite brand</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/12/20121211-pepperoni-curl-pizza-lab-18.jpg" /></p>

<p>And there it is: you can clearly see a U-shaped pattern in the meat and fat striations (in the picture above, the U dips downwards in the center of the sausage), as opposed to a fiber casing pepperoni, which shows a more homogenous mixture:</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/12/20121211-pepperoni-curl-pizza-lab-19.jpg" /></p>

<p>Could this be the answer I was looking for? I still had a couple of doubts, the main one being this: if the U-shaped flow pattern of meat and fat in a stick of pepperoni is what causes pepperoni to curl, how come the curl of pepperoni is not directional? That is, if we randomly place a bunch of slices of pepperoni on a pizza and bake it, shouldn't some of the slices curl up, and others curl down if the curl is based on meat flow patterns?</p>

<p>Or perhaps it <em>would</em> work that way, except for the fact that the heat differential discussed in hypothesis #1 ends up overriding its natural tendency to curl in one direction or another.</p>

<p>To test this, I placed slices of pepperoni on top of a paper towel-lined plate and simply microwaved them. Microwaves heat via charged electromagnetic waves that cause water molecules to vibrate. The waves can penetrate through a few millimeters of meat  fairly easily, so microwaved slices of pepperoni will cook evenly throughout their volume and thus  <em>should</em> curl in the direction they're naturally inclined to curl in, with no heat differential to get in the way.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/12/20121211-pepperoni-curl-pizza-lab-14.jpg" /></p>

<p>On the plate above, slices marked with an X are facing down, while slices marked with an O are facing up. I microwaved the plate for 30 seconds.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/12/20121211-pepperoni-curl-pizza-lab-15.jpg" /></p>

<p>Lo and behold, the pepperoni <em>does</em> curl differentially! I repeated the test several more times. 48 slices of microwaved pepperoni and a shot of pepto-bismol later, I noted that every single one curled in the predicted direction, indicating that there is a good degree of truth in Hypothesis #3 as well, though heat differential overrides curl direction.</p>

<h3>Corollary to Hypothesis #3: Drying and Density

<p>There's another factor that should be considered when talking about cured meats: they are dried after stuffing. Since cured meat products all dry out from the outside inward, the outer layers of the stick should be dryer, and therefore denser than the center of the stick. Eventually, after the stick leaves the curing room and gets stored in a moisture-sealed plastic package for transport and storage, this moisture level will even out to a degree. I confirmed this by meticulously punching out the centers from 50 slices of pepperoni and comparing the density of the centers to that of the edges. They were virtually identical.</p>

<p>However, not all moisture is moisture, as it were. Moisture that is contained within a well-emulsified sausage is bound by protein, making it difficult to escape. The moisture that migrates to the outer layers of a cured sausage during storage, however, is <em>not</em> bound as tightly. So upon cooking a slice of pepperoni, even though the relative density of the center and edges may be identical to start, moisture will evaporate from the edges faster than from the center, causing those edges to shrink, like a belt being cinched around your waist.</p>

<p>Again, microwaving the separated edges of the slices side by side with the centers of the slices and measuring their relative weight loss confirmed this.</p>

<p>This final factor on its own is not enough to cause significant curling&mdash;otherwise we'd see the fiber casing pepperoni curling as well&mdash;but it certainly exacerbates a slice that is already naturally inclined to curl.</p>

<h4>Final Analysis and Conclusion</h4>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/12/20121211-pepperoni-curl-pizza-lab-13.jpg" /></p>

<p>So where do we stand in the final analysis? We know of three factors that definitely affect curling:</p>

<ul><li><strong>The way the meat is stuffed</strong> into its casing affects its shape inside the pepperoni stick. For the curliest pepperoni, look for pepperoni that was stuffed into a natural or collagen casing. Whether that casing is intact or not when you cook it makes no difference at all.</li>
<li><strong>The heat differential caused by uneven cooking</strong> between the top and the bottom of the slice. This enhances curl, and also determines the direction in which the pepperoni will cup. Thick slices are needed to maximize the temperature differential, but too thick and it becomes too stiff to curl. Go for slices between .1 inch (2.5 millimeter) and .225 (5.6 millimeter) range for optimal cuppage.</li>
<li><strong>The moisture retention ability of the center vs. the edges of the slice</strong> will enhance cuppage, but since we have no control over this, it shouldn't affect your shopping or slicing decisions.</li>

<p>This entire exploration was basically just a fascinatingly roundabout way of coming to a conclusion that I think most of us already knew: <strong>For the cup-iest pepperoni, get natural casing, and slice it medium-thick.</strong></p>

<p>But sometimes the journey is the destination, no?</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/12/20121211-pepperoni-curl-pizza-lab-11.jpg" /></p>

<h4>UPDATE: Pepperoni Computer Simulations</h4>

<p>One of the benefits of having gone to a school well known for its concentration of nerds is that many of my close friends are, well, nerds. And there are few greater sources of excitement than when two separate spheres of nerd-dom collide in a synergistic orgy of geekitude. Those are truly the times when human knowledge seems to advance in leaps and bounds</p>

<p><br />
A few hours after this post went live, I got an email from my friend Evros Loukaides, a research student at Cambridge University studying the behavior and applications of thin morphing structures. Apparently, curling pepperoni falls squarely in the line of his work:</p>

 Kenji! You are dangerously close to my research topic with your latest post. As in, I'm about to forward it to my supervisor. We study the morphing capabilities of thin structures and the resulting shapes. If you are considering doing similar work about the shapes of chinese crackers, we might wanna talk to you about a joint publication. :)

<p>If you require any computational modelling of food structures, to make your articles geekier than they already are, I'm your man.</p>

<p>Require? No. Really really want? You bet! I jokingly tasked him with creating a computer model of a pepperoni slice being heated on top of a pizza. An hour later, this hit my inbox:</p>

Challenge accepted! (sort of)

<p>Let me start with my assumptions: I model a slice of pepperoni as a disk with a radius of 15mm and a thickness of 3mm. I start the entire model at 300°K (80°F) and apply heat as a boundary condition on the top side, until it reaches 480°K (404°F). I also apply heat on the sides and bottom but of lower magnitude.  </p>

<p>Since the geometry is trivial, the key is knowing the properties of the material. If those are accurate, you can usually get really good approximations for reality. I'm not a material scientist&mdash;I mostly deal with the effects of geometry on structural properties.  Even if I was, the mechanical properties of tissue are still only partially understood&mdash;especially if you're interested in processed meats, which contain a collection of tissues (fat, ligaments, muscle, etc.) in a casing of separate properties. So basically we'll need to make a ton of assumptions and simplifications which pretty much render the results irrelevant to reality. <strong>But hey, why not? It's all good fun.</strong></p>

<p>What are the parameters we need? You already showed that conductivity of the material is significant&mdash;otherwise the directionality of the heat gradient wouldn't matter. The specific heat capacity is also relevant to this, and in turn this depends on the density of the material. The coefficient of expansion, which in this case is obviously negative is probably the controlling parameter. The Young Modulus&mdash;the stiffness of the material&mdash;will show how much it needs to move to accommodate this heat gradient. Most tissue is usually modelled as hyperelastic, but for higher temperature, this effect is reduced, and we observe almost linear behaviour. But do keep in mind that all of these parameters depend on temperature: For example intuitively you can see that dried/cooked meat is stiffer than raw meat. I'm using an elastic model here as a demonstration but of course the slice deforms plastically. </p>

<p>I tried to find some numbers from the literature, but they are scarce and only tangentially related to our quest. For example one reference quotes the thermal conductivity of various tissues, but for raw tissue in its natural state. Still, it gives us a rough figure.</p>

<p></p>

<p>[Simulation: Evros Loukaides]</p>

<p>He finished with this:</p>

I'll spare you the details, but by pulling numbers out of thin air in a similar manner for the remaining parameters, I was able to construct something resembling an approximation for your entertainment. If you need an accurate model, I'll need a lot more experimental data and time. <strong>And pizza.</strong>

<p>Evros, having been to Pizza Express in Cambridge, I can only say that you <em>deserve</em> better pizza. I'll do my best to get it to you.</p>

<p><strong>About the author</strong>: J. Kenji Lopez-Alt is the Chief Creative Officer of Serious Eats where he likes to explore the science of home cooking in his weekly column The Food Lab. You can follow him at @thefoodlab on Twitter, or at The Food Lab on Facebook.</p></ul></h3></p>
        

        
            
        
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<entry>
   <title>The Pizza Lab: Baking Steel vs. Lodge Cast Iron Pizza </title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://slice.seriouseats.com/archives/2012/10/the-pizza-lab-baking-steel-lodge-cast-iron-pizza.html" />
   <id>tag:slice.seriouseats.com,2012://25.224616</id>
   
   <published>2012-10-02T14:15:00Z</published>
   <updated>2012-10-02T18:56:09Z</updated>
   
   <summary>I first reviewed the Baking Steel a few weeks ago, a new home pizza-making tool that delivered the best crust I've ever made in a home oven, over and over again. Since then, some folks have been asking questions: How does the new half-inch version compare? How does the Lodge cast iron pizza pan stack up?

I headed into the kitchen and baked off a dozen pies to see if we could answer those questions.</summary>
   <author>
      <name>J. Kenji López-Alt</name>
      <uri>http://www.seriouseats.com</uri>
   </author>

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            <img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/10/20121001-baking-steel-thick-pizza-lab-01.jpg" />
        
            
        <p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/10/20121001-baking-steel-thick-pizza-lab-01.jpg" /></p>

<p>[Photographs: J. Kenji Lopez-Alt]</p>

<p>I first reviewed the Baking Steel a few weeks ago, a new home pizza-making tool that delivered the best crust I've ever made in a home oven, over and over again.</p>

<p><strong>Quick recap</strong>: the Baking Steel is a quarter-inch-thick, 15-pound steel plate that you place in your oven in lieu of a pizza stone. The idea is that all else being equal&mdash;same recipe, same oven temperature&mdash;because of its superior thermal qualities (higher volumetric heat capacity, as well as higher conductivity than stone), you can cook pizzas faster than you'd be able to with a regular stone. I've made well over two dozen pies on the steel, comparing them side-by-side with pies baked on stone. The pies baked on steel were superior in every way.</p>

<p>Better hole structure due to faster oven spring. Cooking times about half as long, leading to a softer, springier, moister crumb. A crisper, more nicely charred underbelly. And of course, superior durability.</p>

<p>Since then, some folks have asked a couple of important questions:</p>

<ol><li>There's a new half-inch Baking Steel on the market. How does it compare?</li>
<li>How does the Baking Steel compare to the existing Lodge Cast Iron Pizza Pan?</li></ol>

<p>Good questions.</p>

<p>I fired off another dozen pies this weekend to figure it out. All of the pies were made using my New York-style Pizza Dough recipe, cold fermented for 2 days, and baked in the exact same manner: I preheated the baking surface on the very top shelf of the oven (a few inches under the broiler) with the oven set to 550°F for 45 minutes. I then registered their temperature, switched the oven over to broil, and waited for the broiler to kick in. With the broiler running, I pulled the rack with the baking surface out, slid my pizza onto it, then pushed it back under the broiler.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/10/20121001-baking-steel-thick-pizza-lab-02.jpg" /></p>

<p>I started the timer counting up, and removed the pies once they reached what I determined to be the optimal level of browning&mdash;that is, just at the point when the darkest bubbles were on the verge of turning completely black. In other words, the darkest spots on every pie were all equivalent.</p>

<p>I then marked down the cooking times, and tasted the pizzas. All tests were repeated four times. For the first of the tastings, there were 8 other tasters judging the crusts completely blind. The remainder I was judging on my own (there's only so much pizza my friends will eat).</p>

<p>Here's what I found.</p>

<h4>Quarter-Inch Baking Steel</h4>

<p><strong>Cost:</strong> $72 from Stoughton Steel.<br />
<strong>Approximate Weight:</strong> About 15 pounds.<br />
<strong>Average Cook Time:</strong> Just under 4 minutes.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/10/20121001-baking-steel-thick-pizza-lab-05.jpg" /></p>

<p>The quarter-inch steel produced the same admirable pies that it's been producing in my kitchen for the last few weeks. Nicely charred with a good contrast between the darkest and lightest spots on the crust, and a rapid rise and bake. The average cook time was just under 4 minutes, but a couple of pies managed to get into the 3 minute 30 second range.</p>

<p><em>Why is speed of cooking important?</em> Fast cooking accomplishes two goals.</p>

<p>First, it makes for better oven spring&mdash;the initial "poofing" a pizza does as soon as it enters a hot oven. This is what determines the pie's final hole structure. <strong>Good energy transfer = better oven spring = poofier, airier crust = better pie.</strong> Poor oven spring leads to dense pies and more even browning.</p>

<p>Secondly, it ensure that the exterior of the pie crisps before the interior becomes too dry or tough. The ideal pizza should have a thin, thin layer of crispness around the exterior of the crust, with a pillowy, chewy, airy interior.</p>

<p>The quarter-inch steel accomplishes these goals admirably, baking pies even faster than the average New York pizzeria.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/10/20121001-baking-steel-thick-pizza-lab-06.jpg" /></p>

<p>Taking a look at the underbelly, you see some nice spotting as well.</p>

<h4>Half-Inch Baking Steel</h4>

<p><strong>Cost:</strong> $110 from Stoughton Steel.<br />
<strong>Approximate Weight:</strong> About 30 pounds.<br />
<strong>Average Cook Time:</strong> 3 minutes 10 seconds.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/10/20121001-baking-steel-thick-pizza-lab-03.jpg" /></p>

<p>The pies the half-inch steel produced were no doubt superior&mdash;better spotting, a nicer char, bigger, poofier bubbles, and a  cook time that even broke the 3-minute threshold in some instances. At least, in my assessment it was superior. Tasters were more mixed. The half-inch-steel pies edged out the quarter-inch, but not by a large margin.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/10/20121001-baking-steel-thick-pizza-lab-04.jpg" /></p>

<p>The underbelly is also superior, with some really nice charring action going on, and a great contrast between the light and the dark, making for a more complex flavor profile.</p>

<p>The downside? The half-inch Baking Steel is <strong>heavy</strong>. Seriously so. I was afraid it was going to bend my oven rack and that the whole thing might come crashing down. I had trouble lifting it and sliding it into place, and ended up burning my thumb when I tried to move the steel while it was still hot.</p>

<h4>Lodge Cast Iron Pizza Pan</h4>

<p><strong>Cost:</strong> $44 on Amazon.<br />
<strong>Approximate Weight:</strong> About 10 pounds.<br />
<strong>Average Cook Time:</strong> 4 minutes 20 seconds.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/10/20121001-baking-steel-thick-pizza-lab-07.jpg" /></p>

<p>The Lodge Cast Iron Pizza Pan was the winner of our previous pizza baking surface testing, so we wondered how it'd fare against our current favorite.</p>

<p>The pies produced on the Lodge Cast Iron Pizza Pan were inferior by my standards. By the time any amount of dark charring occurred on the edges, the entire edge crust was a uniform dark brown, with none of the leopard spotting you get in the steel-baked pies.</p>

<p>This is mostly a factor of oven spring. With less oven spring, you get fewer, smaller bubbles inside the crust. With fewer bubbles, inside, the surface of the crust is less stretched out, making it thicker. Thicker dough takes longer to cook, and cooks more evenly. Rather than plenty of small, thin-walled bubbles that char quickly, you get a more uniform dark brown expanse.</p>

<p>It's not a terrible crust, by any means, but not ideal.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/10/20121001-baking-steel-thick-pizza-lab-08.jpg" /></p>

<p>The underbelly shows more of a problem: pretty much no charring at all. The thinner gauge of the Lodge pan simply does not have the thermal mass required to pound that underbelly with energy the way necessary to produce a truly superior pizza crust.</p>

<h4>Other Considerations</h4>

<p>Form factor was one major issue I found with all three products. While the Lodge was the easiest to maneuver with its built-in handles, it has a raised lip that makes it difficult to slide pizzas on and off with a peel. The rim-less Baking Steels, on the other hand, are great for maneuvering pies and offer more surface area for larger pies, but are very difficult to maneuver. Once you've stuck that steel in the oven and started it preheating, you're pretty much married to that spot unless you want to risk burning yourself.</p>

<p>I can live with that.</p>

<p>For me, it's pretty clear that either Baking Steel is superior to the Lodge Cast Iron pizza pan, though any of them will do you better than a traditional stone. Sure, they're a little pricier than the cheapest stone, but bear in mind that you'll <strong>never</strong> break them. I've spent more money replacing broken stones in my life than the cost of all of these guys combined.</p>

<p>As for the half-inch versus the quarter-inch? Again, it depends on your goals. If the best pizza&mdash;no compromises, damn-the-inconvenience&mdash;is your  mission, then the half-inch steel is the way to go. Personally, I'm willing to take a small cut in quality (and I mean <em>very</em> small) in order to keep the increased mobility and easier storage of the quarter-inch version.</p>

<h4>More on the Baking Steel</h4>

<ul><li><strong>Early Word On Baking Steel: It Works</strong></li>
<li><strong>The Pizza Lab: the Baking Steel Delivers</strong></li></ul>

<p><strong>About the author</strong>: J. Kenji Lopez-Alt is the Chief Creative Officer of Serious Eats where he likes to explore the science of home cooking in his weekly column The Food Lab. You can follow him at @thefoodlab on Twitter, or at The Food Lab on Facebook.</p>
        

        
            
        
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<entry>
   <title>The Pizza Lab: The Baking Steel Delivers</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://slice.seriouseats.com/archives/2012/09/the-pizza-lab-the-baking-steel-delivers.html" />
   <id>tag:slice.seriouseats.com,2012://25.220551</id>
   
   <published>2012-09-11T14:00:00Z</published>
   <updated>2012-09-25T04:49:23Z</updated>
   
   <summary>I came out with the early word on the Baking Steel, a product which at the time was in Kickstarter mode trying to raise enough money for their first run. Thanks to crazy pizza heads like you, they managed to blow past their initial investment requirements by several thousand dollars. By all accounts, founder Andris Lagsdin is  in over his head trying to keep up with demand on that first run. This is good news for him, and even better news for home piemakers, because I've got to tell you: This is the most impressive home pizza product I've ever tested.</summary>
   <author>
      <name>J. Kenji López-Alt</name>
      <uri>http://www.seriouseats.com</uri>
   </author>

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        <p>It's time for another round of The Food Lab. Got a suggestion for an upcoming topic? Email Kenji here, and he'll do his best to answer your queries in a future post. Become a fan of The Food Lab on Facebook or follow it on Twitter for play-by-plays on future kitchen tests and recipe experiments.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/08/20120826-pizza-lab-pizza-steel-testing-9.jpg" /><p>[Photographs: J. Kenji Lopez-Alt]</p></p>

<p>I came out with the early word on the <strong>Baking Steel</strong>, a product which at the time was in Kickstarter mode trying to raise enough money for their first run. Thanks to crazy pizza heads like you, they managed to blow past their initial investment requirements by several thousand dollars. By all accounts, founder Andris Lagsdin is  in over his head trying to keep up with demand on that first run. This is good news for him, and even better news for home piemakers, because I've got to tell you: <strong>This is the most impressive home pizza product I've ever tested</strong>.</p>

<p>I've been making the finest indoor-oven pies I've ever made in the last few weeks. Better than what I can get with my inch-thick stone. More consistent than what I get from my skillet-broiler method (my previous go-to). And of course, easier than setting up the also-awesome KettlePizza insert on my outdoor grill.</p>

<p>By all accounts, <strong>this is the answer I've been waiting for</strong> to produce consistently awesome pizza over and over, straight out of the box.</p>

<p>Let me share some details with you:</p>

<h4>The Concept:</h4>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/08/20120828-baking-steel-pizza.jpg"></img></p>

<p>The folks over on the pizzamaking.com forum have been talking about using steel plates to bake pizza for a number of years, but the concept really hit the big time when Nathan Myhyrvold recommended it in his uber-cookbook Modernist Cuisine. After seeing a demo of the process, Andris Lagsdin, a former employee at Todd English's Figs chain of pizzerias realized, <em>hey, maybe there's a business opportunity here</em>. And thus was born the Baking Steel, a 1/4-inch, 15-pound plate of food-grade steel designed to be used in your oven as a replacement to a traditional pizza stone.</p>

<p>It's the same concept that makes the skillet-broiler method work, but it makes the whole affair much easier, as well as offering you a thicker metal base than any cast iron pan I can imagine.</p>

<p>On paper, the idea makes sense. Metal conducts heat better than stone and it stores more heat per unit volume than stone&mdash;both key characteristics to creating a pizza that cooks up both light and crisp with the characteristic hole structure and char that you look for in a good Neapolitan or New York-style pie.</p>

<p>I've made over a dozen pies in the past week testing out the stone in various configurations, as well as various recipes, and in every single case it produced results superior to anything I've ever been able to make with a standard stone. Here are a few highlights:</p>

<h4>Stone Vs. Steel: New York Pie</h4>

<p>To start with, I made two New York-style pies baking them exactly as the instructions on the baking steel recommend&mdash;the steel in the bottom of the oven, the oven on full blast for 45 minutes. My basic New York Style Pizza recipe gets baked on a stone in a 500°F oven, which results in a bake time of around 12 to 15 minutes.</p>

<h3>Floor Temperature</h3>

<p>With a stone, if I crank my oven up to 550°F (not possible for all home cooks, hence the 500°F temperature in the recipe), I can pie baked in about 7 or 8 minutes. </p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/08/20120826-pizza-lab-pizza-steel-testing-1.jpg" /><p>Stone</p></p>

<p>A stone in a 550° oven will stabilize at around 500 to 525°F, as you can see.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/08/20120826-pizza-lab-pizza-steel-testing-2.jpg" /><p>Steel</p></p>

<p>The steel, on the other hand, stabilizes at around 450°F (though in some tests it peaked at closer to 500°F). This is due to the steel's radiative properties. It's constantly giving off heat even as it absorbs it, causing it to stabilize at a temperature that's slightly cooler than the air around it.</p>

<p>I measured the air temp in my oven with a dry bulb thermometer that registered between 500°F and 550°F, depending on the oven's cycle.</p>

<p>Now you may be thinking, <em>wouldn't a lower floor temperature lead to longer cooking times and therefore an inferior pizza?</em> The answer is no, and it has to do with the relative conductivity of the two materials. Even though the steel is cooler than the stone, it is far superior at transferring its energy to whatever is placed on top of it than the stone, which more than accounts for the lower temperature.</p>

<p>It's the same principle that allows you to stick your hand in a 212°F oven, while sticking it into a pot of boiling 212°F water would scald it.</p>

<h3>The Pies</h3>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/08/20120826-pizza-lab-pizza-steel-testing-3.jpg" /><p>Stone</p></p>

<p>The stone-cooked version came out the way my New York pies usually do (that is, excellent), with some nice bubbling, melted cheese, and a golden brown crust with a few darker spots, all in about 8 minutes.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/08/20120826-pizza-lab-pizza-steel-testing-4.jpg" /><p>Steel</p></p>

<p>My baking steel-baked pie, on the other hand, was brown and bubbly in just 6 minutes, with a more appealing, spotty browned crust.</p>

<h3>The Undercarriage</h3>

<p>Here's where you begin to see some <em>real</em> differences</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/08/20120826-pizza-lab-pizza-steel-testing-5.jpg" /><p>Stone</p></p>

<p>With the stone, the undercarriage was a relatively even brown with a few slightly lighter and darker spots. It was moderately crisp, with a fair amount of chew.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/08/20120826-pizza-lab-pizza-steel-testing-6.jpg" /><p>Steel</p></p>

<p>The undercarriage of the steel-cooked pie, on the other hand, was a near-flawless example of what a New York slice should look like, with a mottled brown crust and plenty of dark and light spots. On top of that, it was supremely crisp.</p>

<h3>Hole Structure</h3>

<p>How does the baking surface affect hole structure? Well those crust holes develop when air and water vapor trapped inside the dough matrix suddenly expand upon heating in a phenomenon known as oven spring. The faster you can transfer energy to the dough, the bigger those glorious bubbles will be, and the airier and more delicate the crust.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/08/20120826-pizza-lab-pizza-steel-testing-8.jpg" /><p>Stone</p></p>

<p>Stone showed decent structure here&mdash;better than 99% of what you'd get out in the wild&mdash;but still a bit flat towards the rim.</p>

<p>Let's see what we get with steel:</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/08/20120826-pizza-lab-pizza-steel-testing-7.jpg" /><p>Steel</p></p>

<p>Whoah bubbles! Check out those holes. This is a fine crust indeed, the kind that makes you want to pick up your neighbors bones and eat them. (p.s. don't do that, it's rude.)</p>

<p>So just straight out of the box used exactly as directed, it shows a few pretty clear advantages over a regular stone.</p>

<h4>With A Second Stone</h4>

<p>Now that I have both a stone and a steel in my oven, for my next test, I tried emulating a more traditional pizza oven by placing my stone on one shelf with the steel on the shelf just underneath it. The idea is that radiant energy from the stone would help cook the top of the pizza faster, creating better charring on the top surface, and hopefully reducing cook time even more. Here's what I got:</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/08/20120826-pizza-lab-pizza-steel-testing-10.jpg" /></p>

<p>The pie stuck to the peel a tiny bit as I was transferring it, which it why it's not perfectly round. Don't you hate when that happens?</p>

<p>Nonetheless, the browning was indeed superior, with an even poofier edge crust and some great blistered bubbles. Unfortunately, most folks don't have two stones. No matter, there's an even better way to cook pies:</p>

<h4>With the Broiler</h4>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/08/20120826-pizza-lab-pizza-steel-testing-9.jpg" /></p>

<p>This is where things really took a turn for the better. The skillet-broiler method is was my go-to method for cooking pies, but you can consider me officially converted to the Baking Steel-broiler method.</p>

<p>For this pie (and a number of other pies since), I heated up the baking steel on the second-to-top shelf of my oven set at 550°F until it was holding a steady temperature (this took about half an hour, the steel held steady at around 500°F). Then just before sliding the pie into the oven, I cranked up the broiler to high. (I have an oven with a broiler on the top shelf. If your broiler is under the oven, you'd have to preheat the steel under the broiler).</p>

<p>In order to ensure that the broiler didn't cycle off (it has a thermostat that shuts it off if the oven gets too hot), I kept the oven door barely cracked with a metal spoon, like this:</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/08/20120826-pizza-lab-pizza-steel-testing-11.jpg" /></p>

<p>The first pie I baked cooked in just under four minutes, and the half dozen I've baked using this method since have all been in the three and a half to four and a half minute range.</p>

<h4>Neapolitan Style</h4>

<p>Here's the thing: You're <em>never</em> going to be able to produce a perfect Neapolitan-style pie in a home oven. They simply don't get hot enough. A traditional Neapolitan pie is baked in a wood-fired oven with a floor temperature of 700 to 800°F, and an air temp that can push 1,000°F near the dome. Pies cook in about 90 seconds. You <em>need</em> this kind of temp to get the supremely blistered, poofy, black-and-white beauties that the finest Neapolitan joints produce.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/08/20120826-pizza-lab-pizza-steel-testing-12.jpg" /></p>

<p>That said, there ain't no harm in trying to get as close as you can, right?</p>

<p>I baked a few pies using my standard Neapolitan pizza dough recipe. It's pretty basic&mdash;finely milled flour, water, yeast, and salt. That's it. Like my last New York pies, I baked it on the second to top shelf (no room to fit a pie if I put the steel on the very top shelf), with the broiler cranked full blast.</p>

<p>The toppings were simple and traditional: sauce (made with crushed San Marzanos and salt), buffalo mozzarella, olive oil, salt, and fresh basil leaves.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/08/20120826-pizza-lab-pizza-steel-testing-13.jpg" /></p>

<p>This pie took just under 4 minutes to bake. Not half bad from the top. Obviously you're not going to get the level of charring and spotting that you look for in a perfect pie, but I'm pretty pleased with the large bubbles and general cooked-ness of the pizza.</p>

<h3>Undercarriage</h3>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/08/20120826-pizza-lab-pizza-steel-testing-15.jpg" /></p>

<p>Again, this is where the Baking Steel really shines&mdash;producing a fantastic crisp, thin,  spotty crust.</p>

<h3>Hole Structure</h3>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/08/20120826-pizza-lab-pizza-steel-testing-14.jpg" /></p>

<p>And the holes look pretty great too&mdash;a thin layer of browned crust, with plenty of super-airy tender bubbles inside.</p>

<p><strong>Verdict:</strong> It's a keeper. Definite keeper.</p>

<p>Bonus points: on top of its clear thermal superiority, it's also far more durable (how many of you have cracked a pizza stone, raise your hands?). And, as I found out after I laid it to rest on top of my stovetop after my first day of pie making, it fits over two burners perfectly, allowing it to double as a stovetop griddle. I'll be making french toast and eggs for a crowd on this baby from now on.</p>

<p>Andris, you out there? If you get the message, design a model that's reversible with a griddle with a grease trapping channel on the second side!</p>

<p>New to the lineup is a half-inch (and even a 3/4 inch) model, which Slice will get its hands on in a few weeks. Just thinking through it, I can't imagine that the benefit of an extra quarter inch of steel will outweigh the cost of having to pick up and move a 30-pound object around my kitchen&mdash;the 15 pounds of the 1/4-inch version nearly threw out my back as is, but I promise we'll report back in a few weeks.</p>

<p>The Baking Steel Kickstarter Campaign is over, but you can still contact Andris through that link for ordering information.</p>

<p><strong>See also: The Best Surface for Baking Pizza: Finale &#187;</strong></p>

<p><strong>About the author</strong>: J. Kenji Lopez-Alt is the Chief Creative Officer of Serious Eats where he likes to explore the science of home cooking in his weekly column The Food Lab. You can follow him at @thefoodlab on Twitter, or at The Food Lab on Facebook.</p>
        

        
            
        
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<entry>
   <title>The Pizza Lab: Three Doughs to Know</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://slice.seriouseats.com/archives/2012/07/the-pizza-lab-three-doughs-to-know.html" />
   <id>tag:slice.seriouseats.com,2012://25.213743</id>
   
   <published>2012-07-10T14:45:00Z</published>
   <updated>2012-07-10T17:01:36Z</updated>
   
   <summary>We've gone through a lot of pizza styles and recipes here at The Pizza Lab, but I still often get asked "what's the best pizza crust recipe you know?"

When I'm in the mood to fire up the grill or heat up the broiler, I might take my time and make a Neapolitan-style lean dough. If I want to relive my childhood without stepping out my apartment door, it's a New York-style. Company coming over and I want to feed a crowd without messing up the kitchen? It's Sicilian-style square pie all the way. Here's a brief run-down on the three recipes that every home pie-maker should have in their arsenal to tackle all manner of pizza-centric circumstances.</summary>
   <author>
      <name>J. Kenji López-Alt</name>
      <uri>http://www.seriouseats.com</uri>
   </author>

    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://slice.seriouseats.com/">
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            <img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/07/20101029-pizza-lab-primary.jpeg" />
        
            
        <p>It's time for another round of The Food Lab. Got a suggestion for an upcoming topic? Email Kenji here, and he'll do his best to answer your queries in a future post. Become a fan of The Food Lab on Facebook or follow it on Twitter for play-by-plays on future kitchen tests and recipe experiments.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/07/20110114-three-doughs-to-know-primary.jpg" /></p>

<p>[Photographs: J. Kenji Lopez-Alt]</p>

<p>We've gone through a lot of pizza styles and recipes here at The Pizza Lab, but I still often get asked "what's the best pizza crust recipe you know?"</p>

<p>Well that's a tough question to answer. I like lager, my wife likes lager, sometimes cider. Different drinks for different needs, if you know what I mean. When I'm in the mood to fire up the grill or heat up the broiler, I might take my time and make a <strong>Neapolitan-style</strong> lean dough. If I want to relive my childhood without stepping out my apartment door, it's a <strong>New York-style</strong>. Company coming over and I want to feed a crowd without messing up the kitchen? It's <strong>Sicilian-style</strong> square pie all the way.</p>

<p>Here's a brief run-down on the three recipes that <em>every</em> home pie-maker should have in their arsenal to tackle all manner of pizza-centric circumstances.</p>

<h4>The Classic: Neapolitan-Style Pizza Dough</h4>

<p><img src="http://newyork.seriouseats.com/images/20120616-Don-Antonio-13.jpg"></img></p>

<h3>The Skinny:</h3>

<p>Neapolitan pizza is where it all started. In some ways, it's the simplest form of pizza out there&mdash;it has the fewest ingredients of any. In other ways, it's the most complicated. Few ingredients and blazing hot temperatures in excess of 900°F mean that the slightest mistakes will amplify in the finished product. Producing a perfect Neapolitan pie is no easy feat, but it's not impossible.</p>

<p>Neapolitan pizza is made from a lean dough&mdash;that is, it's got nothing but flour, water, salt, and yeast. No oil, no sugar, nothing. The flour is generally a high-protein flour, often of the Italian "OO" type, which is ground extra fine, giving it a unique texture and the ability to absorb more water without becoming soupy.</p>

<p>With so few ingredients, the key to great Neapolitan pizza crust is a good long fermentation period during which time starches will break down into simpler sugars, yeast will create flavorful by-products, and gluten formation will occur, allowing you to stretch the dough out easily and making for a dramatic rise and good charring in the oven.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/07/20120530-pizza-kettle-test-three-works-16.jpeg" /></p>

<p>The best Neapolitan pies should have a thin, thin layer of crispness to the crust, followed by an interior that is moist, poofy, and cloud-like with good, stretchy chew, and plenty of flavor. Even browning is not what you're looking for. Rather, you want a leopard-spotted look, with many small dark spots surrounded by paler dough. True Neapolitan pies are not stiff&mdash;you can't pick them up as a slice&mdash;a fork and knife are perfectly acceptable utensils.</p>

<p>Neapolitan pies are traditionally cooked in wood-fired ovens and go from raw to finished in about 90 seconds or so. <strong>But baking excellent Neapolitan pizza does not require a fancy oven.</strong> There are many hacks that'll allow you to cook up quality pies at home with great spotting and a tender-crisp crust. Here are a few of our favorites:</p>

<ul><li>The Skillet-Broiler Method</li>
<li>The Stove-top Method (A.K.A. Skillet Pizza)</li>
<li>Using the Kettle-Pizza Grill Insert</li>
<li>Directly On the Grates of the Grill</li></ul>

<h3>What Makes It Unique:</h3>

<p>Lean, simple dough cooked at ultra-high temperatures to ensure good puffing and charring before it can dry out and become tough.</p>

<h3>Type of Flour:</h3>

<p>Any sort of high protein flour, though for the most "authentic" results, use a finely milled Italian-style flour, such as Caputo "OO" or King Arthur's "Italian-Style" flour.</p>

<h3>Mixing Method:</h3>

<p>No-knead is the easiest method and coupled with a long cold ferment&mdash;that is, a retarded rising period in the refrigerator of at least three days and up to five&mdash;it makes for a dough that's extremely flavorful with virtually no work involved. Mix up the ingredients, cover it, and just let it sit until you're ready to roll.</p>

<h3>The Ratios (for the nerds):</h3>

<p>All-purpose or bread flour: 100%<br />
Salt: 2%<br />
Instant yeast: 1.5 %<br />
Water: 65%</p>

<h3>Get The Recipe!</h3>

<p><strong>Basic Neapolitan Pizza Dough »</strong></p>

<h4>The Modern: New York-Style Pizza Dough</h4>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20101029-pizza-lab-1.jpg"></img></p>

<h3>The Skinny:</h3>

<p>New York-style pizza dough is an offshoot of Neapolitan-style dough designed to be cooked in a slightly cooler-burning coal-fired (or as is more often the case in modern New York pizzerias, gas-fired) ovens. It's stretched out slightly thicker than a Neapolitan base, though on the scale of pizzas, it's still considered "thin crust."</p>

<p>The crust has to be sturdy enough, but&mdash;and this is important&mdash;<em>just</em> sturdy enough. Crunchy, tough, or cracker-like are <em>not</em> adjectives that can ever accurately describe a great New York pizza. The slice must <em>crackle and give</em> gently as you fold it, never crack or split. When bent slightly down the center (A.K.A. the "New York Fold"), it should cantilever out straight under its own support.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/07/20101029-pizza-lab-primary.jpeg" /></p>

<p>After the bottom layer of crispness, the next 3-4 millimeters are devoted to a thin layer of soft, slightly chewy, and tender cooked dough. This layer must be as flavorful as the best bread with a savory, wheaty, and complex aroma. The very top 1-2 millimeters of crust&mdash;the bit in closest contact with the sauce and cheese&mdash;should be a slick, and nearly doughy, though it shouldn't taste raw. This crust-to-sauce interface is one of my favorite parts of the pizza, and should not be taken lightly. Unlike the poofy, leopard-spotted edge of a Neapolitan, a New York pie has a crust that's only slightly raised. It should show some spotting, but in general, will be more of an even golden brown than a Neapolitan.</p>

<h3>What Makes It Unique:</h3>

<p>New York pizzas take between 12 and 15 minutes to bake. A Neapolitan-style dough would dry out, becoming tough and crackery during this period. New York pizza owes its unique texture and flavor to two key components added to it: oil and sugar. Oil coats individual granules of flour, effectively lowering the total amount of gluten formed and thus creating a more tender finished product, even though it takes a longer time to bake than a neapolitan crust.</p>

<p>Sugar helps the crust to brown more evenly at lower oven temperatures. Without it, you'd end up with a paler, less flavorful crust.</p>

<h3>Type of Flour:</h3>

<p>Bread flour is best, all-purpose will do just fine.</p>

<h3>Mixing Method:</h3>

<p>Either the stand mixer or the food processor will do. I prefer the latter, as it develops gluten a bit faster and with New York dough, you can essentially bake it the day after it's made, so no need for the long, slow ferment that best benefits no-knead doughs or stand mixer doughs.</p>

<h3>The Ratios (for the nerds):</h3>

<p>All-purpose or bread flour: 100%<br />
Sugar: 2%<br />
Salt: 1.5%<br />
Instant yeast: 1.5 %<br />
Olive oil: 5%<br />
Water: 67%</p>

<h3>Get The Recipe!</h3>

<p><strong>Basic New York-style Pizza Dough »</strong></p>

<h4>The Best For Parties: Sicilian-style Pizza Dough</h4>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20110114-square-pie-pizza-primary1.jpg"></img></p>

<h3>The Skinny:</h3>

<p>This is the simplest, most forgiving pie in my arsenal, and the one that I reach for most often when I have company coming over. It's ready to eat within hours of starting, and it doesn't even require any rolling or stretching or messing up your counter. Everything takes place in the bowl of a stand mixer and an oiled sheet tray.</p>

<p>In New York City, it's called Sicilian pizza, and it comes in inch-and-a-half-thick slabs coated with a thick layer of garlic-heavy tomato sauce and melted mozzarella cheese. To a true-blooded Sicilian, the real pizza is sfincione&mdash;a thinner, chewier version dotted with salty anchovies and pungent pecorino. Long Islanders refer to square pies Grandma-style (aka <em>nonna</em>-style) pies; chewier, slightly thinner versions of a Sicilian with a garlic-loaded tomato sauce.</p>

<p>In any case, the basic process is the same: make a variant of a New York-style pizza dough, then bake it in a tray loaded with olive oil. As it bakes, the bottom of the pie essentially fries, coming out ultra-crisp and flavorful.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/07/20111220-sfincione-sicilian-pizza-making-28.jpeg" /></p>

<p>For me, the ideal square pie needs to combine bits of <em>all</em> of these square-pie styles. A soft, moderately chewy, and pliant crust, with a few large bubbles here and there, a distinct sweetness and a fried crispness to the bottom. The end crust should be well-browned with bits of crisp aged cheese, and like in a good New York-style pizza, there should be a thin layer right at the interface between the bread and the toppings where the crumb remains ever-so-slightly doughy and chewy.</p>

<p>For a while I was making my square pie with a cooked potato added to the dough, which added a starchy richness and sweetness to the dough without interrupting gluten formation. These days, I stick with straight flour, making for a much faster, easier finished product, and with this style of pizza, more pie-for-your-time is a good thing.</p>

<h3>What Makes It Unique:</h3>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/2012/07/20111220-sfincione-sicilian-pizza-making-19.jpeg" /></p>

<p>With all the oil, crispness, and fryed-ness in this dough, you still develop plenty of flavor even without a slow ferment, which is another thing that makes this dough great for parties. You can start from scratch and have a finished pie in a matter of hours.</p>

<p>The other great thing? With so much water in it (70% hydration!), it basically stretches itself. I mix mine in the stand mixer, dump it into an oiled baking sheet, lightly cover, then wait for it to spread out naturally. All it requires is a bit of stretching by hand at the very end before topping and baking.</p>

<h3>Type of Flour:</h3>

<p>All-purpose or bread flour. This one is the easiest and most forgiving recipe of all, designed for anyone to make, from really basic pantry staples. No special flour required.</p>

<h3>Mixing Method:</h3>

<p>A stand mixer makes for the fastest results. It won't work in a food processor as the dough is just a bit too wet and ends up gumming up the works. No-knead methods will work too, but require an 8 to 12 hours of rising.</p>

<h3>The Ratios (for the nerds):</h3>

<p>All-purpose or bread flour: 100%<br />
Salt: 2%<br />
Instant yeast: 1.5 %<br />
Olive oil: 3%<br />
Water: 70%</p>

<h3>Get The Recipe!</h3>

<p><strong>Basic Square Pan Pizza Dough Recipe (Sicilian-Style Dough) »</strong></p>

<p><strong>About the author</strong>: J. Kenji Lopez-Alt is the Chief Creative Officer of Serious Eats where he likes to explore the science of home cooking in his weekly column The Food Lab. You can follow him at @thefoodlab on Twitter, or at The Food Lab on Facebook.</p>
        

        
            
         
            <h4>Recipes!</h4>
            <ul>
            
                <li><a href="http://www.seriouseats.com/recipes/2012/07/basic-square-pan-pizza-dough-recipe-sicilian-recipe.html">Basic Square Pan Pizza Dough Recipe (Sicilian-Style Dough)</a></li>
            
                <li><a href="http://www.seriouseats.com/recipes/2012/07/basic-neapolitan-pizza-dough-recipe.html">Basic Neapolitan Pizza Dough</a></li>
            
                <li><a href="http://www.seriouseats.com/recipes/2012/07/basic-new-york-style-pizza-dough.html">Basic New York-style Pizza Dough</a></li>
            
            </ul>
        
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    </content>
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<entry>
   <title>The Pizza Lab: In Which We Get The KettlePizza Insert Working And Meet Its Maker</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://slice.seriouseats.com/archives/2012/06/pizza-lab-in-which-we-get-the-kettlepizza-insert-working-and-meet-its-maker.html" />
   <id>tag:slice.seriouseats.com,2012://25.209537</id>
   
   <published>2012-06-19T19:45:00Z</published>
   <updated>2012-06-19T19:06:28Z</updated>
   
   <summary>Good news: we finally got some good results out of the KettlePizza after-market insert that supposedly turns your kettle grill into a wood-burning pizza oven. Strike that, we actually got great results. In fact, I'd even say the pies I've been pulling off my grill for the past few weeks have been some of the best I've ever made at home. This time, we've tried out a few different inexpensive hacks to modify the existing insert into something that really produces a great pie. By the time we were through, we were pulling out neapolitan-style pies that cooked through in a mere two to three minutes, producing excellent charring, a moist, cloud-like interior, and a crackly, blistered crusts.</summary>
   <author>
      <name>J. Kenji López-Alt</name>
      <uri>http://www.seriouseats.com</uri>
   </author>

    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://slice.seriouseats.com/">
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            <img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120530-pizza-kettle-test-three-works-19.jpg" />
        
            
        <p>[Photographs: J. Kenji Lopez-Alt]</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120530-pizza-kettle-test-three-works-19.jpg" /></p>

<p>Good news: we finally got some good results out of the KettlePizza after-market insert that supposedly turns your kettle grill into a wood-burning pizza oven. Strike that, we actually got <em>great</em> results. In fact, I'd even say the pies I've been pulling off my grill for the past few weeks have been some of the best I've ever made at home.</p>

<p>But hold up, what's going on? Haven't we already reviewed the original insert along with the new and improved model and achieved only mediocre-to-poor results?</p>

<p>Yes indeed. But those tests were on the KettlePizza insert, straight-out-of-the-box, no hacking no modifying, working with them exactly as instructed. This time, we've tried out a few different inexpensive hacks to modify the existing insert into something that <em>really</em> produces a great pie. By the time we were through, we were pulling out neapolitan-style pies that cooked through in a mere two to three minutes, producing excellent charring, a moist, cloud-like interior, and a crackly, blistered crust.</p>

<h4>The Problems With the Original</h4>

<p>Here's what the insert looks like out of the box:</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120530-pizza-kettle-test-three-works-01.jpg" /></p>

<p>A steel ring with a door cut in it, and a stone that you place on your grill rack. That's it. The problem here is that when you bake your pizzas, even with an air temperature over nearly 1000°F, the tops of the pies don't cook nearly fast enough. You end up with something charred on the bottom but barely pale blond on top.</p>

<p>Now for some people, this isn't a big deal. We visited the KettlePizza inventor Al Contarino at his small warehouse-style factory just north of Boston and chatted with him about his goals and his market. "Most of our customers are dads who just want to cook a few pizzas with the kids in the backyard. They aren't the hardcore pizza guys, they're happy just to get decent results."</p>

<p>That makes a lot of sense, and by all accounts, those casual pizza-making customers are very happy with the results.</p>

<p>That said, I wondered if we couldn't right the thing up to work for <em>you</em> guys, the Slice'rs and real pie-heads.</p>

<p>I had two theories as to why the top of the pizzas aren't cooking fast enough. The first is that there is too much volume in the grill once the insert is placed and the domed lid is in place. Air circulates around the top, up and over the pie, then goes straight out the door in the front. Your pizza ends up missing the bulk of the hot air.</p>

<p>The second theory is that a kettle grill lid is simply too thin and conductive. Rather than storing heat and re-emitting it as radiant energy the way a real stone oven does, heat is conducted then radiated outwards into the air. Your pizza doesn't get enough radiation, and thus doesn't cook fast enough.</p>

<h4>Testing Theory #1</h4>

<p>Theory 1 is easy to test. If it's simply a matter of air volume, reducing that headspace should make for a superior end product. To test this, I covered the entire top surface of the KettlePizza insert with heavy duty aluminum foil before placing the lid on it to keep it in place.</p>

<p>After firing it up and preheating, I baked off a pie. After about 5 minutes, here's what emerged from the oven:</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120530-pizza-kettle-test-three-works-18.jpg" /></p>

<p>A definite and huge improvement, but still not quite the bumpy, blistery, charred look I was going for. Looks like the thermal mass issue would have to be addressed.</p>

<h4>Testing Theory #2</h4>

<p>KettlePizza inventor Al is a clever man and designed his gadget to be used not just as a pizza oven, but also as a "double cooker," allowing you to grill foods on two different levels simultaneously, which he demonstrates in this video. The idea is that you put your chicken or steak or whatever on the bottom grill close to the coals, then insert a second grill (you can get them for under $20 on Amazon) where you can slowly cook your corn or other vegetables.</p>

<p>What I saw was an opportunity to solve the thermal mass problem. </p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120530-pizza-kettle-test-three-works-01.5.jpg" /></p>

<p>I set up the KettlePizza with a stone on the bottom, a second grate, and a large stone on the top (Ideally I would have like a completely circular one to cover the entire top surface), then sealed up all the edges with heavy duty aluminum foil and lit'er up.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120530-pizza-kettle-test-three-works-01.6.jpg" /></p>

<p>After about 20 minutes of preheating, I hit temperatures that seemed reasonable for pizza: a little over 500°F on the floor (which actually rose up to around 650°F by the time I was on my third pie), and nearly 800°F on the top stone, with air temps somewhere in the 800 to 900°F range.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120530-pizza-kettle-test-three-works-11.jpg" /></p>

<p>For this particular test, I didn't go straight for a traditional Neapolitan style, but instead did a sort of hybrid mix of a Neapolitan with a New York style pizza, using a no-knead, cold fermented Neapolitan dough, along with a cooked New York style pizza sauce and some aged, full-fat, shredded mozzarella.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120530-pizza-kettle-test-three-works-13.jpg" /></p>

<p>I knew I was in good shape when I made my first turn after 45 seconds and saw the great charring on the bones.</p>

<p>Here's what popped out about 4 minutes later:</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120530-pizza-kettle-test-three-works-14.jpg" /></p>

<p>Neapolitan? No. I'd compare it in flavor more to the smoky, New York style pies you can get at Best Pizza in Williamsburg, though mine definitely had much more charring and a lighter, poofier crust.</p>

<p>I mean, check out this <em>cornicione</em>: </p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120530-pizza-kettle-test-three-works-16.jpg" /></p>

<p>As the grill continued to heat up, the pies became increasingly better, cooking faster and faster. They peaked at about 2 minutes before the coals started to lose some of their heat. I'd imagine that the heat from the dying coals would be perfect for cooking some rustic Italian or French-style bread.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120530-pizza-kettle-test-three-works-20.jpg" /></p>

<p>My favorite pie of the night was made with pepperoni (unfortunately no natural casing, though they still managed to get some nice charred, crisp edges), along with some homemade sausage (using my recipe here) which I threw on in raw chunks lightly dusted in flour for easier application and better browning.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120530-pizza-kettle-test-three-works-21.jpg" /></p>

<p>As for the bottom of the pies, they were coming out gorgeously crusty and charred:</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120530-pizza-kettle-test-three-works-24.jpg" /></p>

<p>This is a method I'll definitely be using in the future, and once you've actually got the KettlePizza insert, remarkably simple and inexpensive to throw together&mdash;far easier than some of the other hacks I've seen out there.</p>

<p>Though I do think I'm going to have to invest in a more heavy duty stone:</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120530-pizza-kettle-test-three-works-06.jpg" /></p>

<h4>Would You Buy This?</h4>

<p>After chatting with Al a bit longer, we got the idea perhaps there's a market in the pro-pizza audience for a <strong>Special Edition KettlePizza Insert</strong> aimed directly at the type of people who want to be able to cook at near Neapolitan speeds in their backyards. Right now, your only real options are to hack something together (and thus far this seems to be the cheapest and easiest gadget to hack), or go all out and build yourself a real pizza oven.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120530-pizza-kettle-test-three-works-22.jpg" /></p>

<p>So my question to you guys is: If you could buy something that allowed you to convert your kettle grill into a hardcore pizza oven, right out of the box, no hacking required, for the fraction of a cost of a real pizza oven, would you want it?</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120530-pizza-kettle-test-three-works-23.jpg" /></p>

<p>Who knows&mdash;if there's enough support for the idea, it may become a reality some time in the future. Until then, I think I've finally come around and been convinced: With some minimal hacking, the KettlePizza Insert is a great solution for home pizza makers wishing to produce stone-oven quality pizza at home.</p>

<p><strong>About the author</strong>: J. Kenji Lopez-Alt is the Chief Creative Officer of Serious Eats where he likes to explore the science of home cooking in his weekly column The Food Lab. You can follow him at @thefoodlab on Twitter, or at The Food Lab on Facebook.</p>
        

        
            
        
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<entry>
   <title>The Pizza Lab: We Test The New and Improved KettlePizza Grill Insert</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://slice.seriouseats.com/archives/2012/05/the-pizza-lab-we-test-the-new-and-improved-kettlepizza-grill-insert.html" />
   <id>tag:slice.seriouseats.com,2012://25.207160</id>
   
   <published>2012-05-23T13:15:00Z</published>
   <updated>2012-05-26T10:03:57Z</updated>
   
   <summary>We tested the KettlePizza insert  back in 2010 when it first came out and were not extremely impressed with the results. Since that early look, the inventor, Al Contarino has jumped into the conversation to let us know that he's come up with a new and improved model that should address many of the problems we had with the old one. We were all too happy to give the new model another shot. Here's how it went down.</summary>
   <author>
      <name>J. Kenji López-Alt</name>
      <uri>http://www.seriouseats.com</uri>
   </author>

    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://slice.seriouseats.com/">
    <![CDATA[
        
        
                    
            <img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120520-kettle-pizza-insert-round-two-01.jpg" />
        
            
        <p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120520-kettle-pizza-insert-round-two-01.jpg" /><p>[Photographs: J. Kenji Lopez-Alt]</p></p>

<p>If you're a pizza geek, no doubt you've seen the KettlePizza insert. It's an after-market device that you add to your weber grill which increases its volume, and provides an opening for inserting and removing pizzas from a stone you place on the grill grate. The food blogs all seem to love the thing. Food Republic has called it a "grilling gamechanger". The Daily What says that it's  "life altering". Laughing Squid says it'll turn your kettle grill "into an outdoor oven", while Urban Daddy says it'll "turn an everyday backyard grill into a sublime pizza-making machine".</p>

<p>Sounds like a dream come true, right?</p>

<p>Except for one thing: <em>none of those folks have actually tested the darn thing</em>. Well we did, back in 2010, when it first came out (see the full results here), and were not extremely impressed with the results. We ended up having to use several times more coal than was recommended to get results that were only mildly better than what you can get out of a home oven, and not nearly as good as what you can get by cooking directly on the grill or using the skillet-broiler method in a regular old oven.</p>

<p>Since that early look, the inventor, Al Contarino has jumped into the conversation to let us know that he's come up with a new and improved model that should address many of the problems we had with the old one.</p>

<p>We've also heard from Serious Eats shill commenter Elijahdavid912 that he was able to bake 60-90 second pies on his, calling it "The Answer To All Our Prayers". Those numbers are nowhere near what we managed, even with 3 1/2 times the recommended amount of charcoal being used.</p>

<p>We were all too happy to give the new model another whirl. Here's how it went down.</p>

<h4>The Basic Science</h4>

<p>Before we jump in, just a quick refresher course on some of the basic science of heat transfer in grilled pizzas:</p>

<p>Frequent Slice readers may know this already, but for those who don't, a Neapolitan pizza cooks via two modes of heat transfer: <strong>The bottom of the pizza is cooked by conduction,</strong> the direct transfer of energy from the stone to the crust. <strong>The top of the pizza is cooked via convection,</strong> the transfer of energy via hot air.

<p>Conduction is a much more efficient method of heat transfer, which is why in a professional oven, to cook a pizza properly, the base of the oven need only be around 750°F or so, while the air above must be significantly hotter&mdash;in the 1,000°F to 1,200°F range.</p></p>

The problem with trying to cook a pizza on a stone in a regular kettle grill is that, as many people have pointed out, the stone gets really hot, and it's hard to get the air temp above the pizza hot enough to match it. The bottom of the pizza burns before the top takes on any color. You might think that raising the lid higher and adding an opening would have the opposite of the desired effect, lowering the temperature inside the oven and making the top cook even less efficiently, but this is not the case. The important thing to remember is that <strong>moving air cooks a lot more efficiently than still air</strong> (think: convection mode in an oven vs. standard mode. The only difference is a fan circulating the air).

So really, the goal when cooking a pizza on the grill should be <strong>to get as much hot air circulating over the top surface of the pizza as fast as possible. </strong> The main advantage that I see to using the Kettle Pizza insert is that when you get the fire and positioning of the stone right, <strong>it creates good convection currents.</strong> With the coals banked in the back, hot air rises off the coals toward the domed lid, then gets pulled back down and out the oven door opening. <strong>This moving air cooks the top of the pizza a lot faster than the relatively still air inside a completely sealed kettle.</strong>

<p>That's the theory. <strong>But does it hold up?</strong></p>

<h4>The New Model</h4>

<p>There are a couple changes that have been made. First, it's now made of a heavier gauge steel and completely unpainted (the old version had a coat of black paint that would burn off at high temperatures). It's also got a cute little "HOT" sign cut into its front, as well as a slightly modified shape to decrease the volume inside the oven.</p>

<p>Al also pointed out that for best results, we should use charcoal briquettes as our base fire and add a few big chunks of hardwood oak to pump up the temperature right before we start cooking the pies.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120520-kettle-pizza-insert-round-two-02.jpg" /></p>

<p>It also comes with its own line of accessories now, depending on the model you get. Ours came with a nifty metal peel with a built-in beer bottle opener (how thoughtful!), as well as an American-made round stone for the grill and an aluminum pan, so you have your choice of baking method.</p>

<p>I fired up a full, overflowing chimney of coals, spread'em out in a C-shape (as recommended) in the back of the grill, then put the stone and cover on to preheat. About 15 minutes later, the stone temp was at around 450°F, while the top of the dome was at around 500°F. The air temp inside according to the probe thermometer built into the device was pushing 700°F.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120520-kettle-pizza-insert-round-two-03.jpg" /></p>

<p>For the dough, I used my basic Neapolitan Pizza Dough&mdash;the kind of pizza dough typically used in the super-hot ovens the PizzaKettle is meant to emulate. Just before stretching and topping the dough, I added a few planks of oak to the fire, quickly replacing the lid to trap the heat.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120520-kettle-pizza-insert-round-two-04.jpg" /></p>

<p>By the time I finished stretching and topping the dough, there was a raging inferno going on back there. It buried the needle of the probe thermometer. I'd guess the air temp was around 1,000°F or so, which <em>seems</em> like it should work for Neapolitan pizza.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120520-kettle-pizza-insert-round-two-05.jpg" /></p>

<p>The pie went in, and I waited... and waited... and waited... After the first 90 seconds (the amount of time it typically takes to cook a Neapolitan pie start-to-finish), it had shown some decent oven spring and a bit of char on the bottom surface touching the stone, but there was essentially no browning at all on the top surface.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120520-kettle-pizza-insert-round-two-06.jpg" /></p>

<p>On the PizzaKettle website, it's suggested that you can "dome" the pies to get more browning on the top; That is, put them on the peel and lift them towards the top of the oven where the air is hotter and the convection currents are faster.</p>

<p>I did this, holding up the pie for several minutes before I finally started to see a hint of browning in the crust.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120520-kettle-pizza-insert-round-two-09.jpg" /></p>

<p>The first pie took a total of nearly 7 minutes to cook through, and even then, it was still a bit anemic looking on the top surface.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120520-kettle-pizza-insert-round-two-08.jpg" /></p>

<p>Take a look at the cross-section to check out the internal structure:</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120520-kettle-pizza-insert-round-two-11.jpg" /></p>

<p>Again, decent, but not spectacularly poofy, without the thin-crisp exterior and moist-airy interior you look for in a great pie.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120520-kettle-pizza-insert-round-two-12.jpg" /></p>

<p>The undercarriage, on the other hand, looks pretty good to me. Nicely charred and spotty.</p>

<p>As I got ready for round two, I noticed that the temperature had already dropped significantly. Adding a few more chunks of hardwood boosted it again, and I threw in my second pie.</p>

<p>This time, it took even longer to bake, and no amount of doming seemed to help cook the top. I pulled the pie when the bottom was threatening to burn&mdash;at around 10 minutes.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120520-kettle-pizza-insert-round-two-13.jpg" /></p>

<p>The top of the pie was still completely pale and the crumb was quite dry after that extended baking time.</p>

<h4>Why Doesn't It Work?</h4>

<p>Unfortunately, the device doesn't produce pizzas as good as what you can get in a real wood-fired stone oven, or even a regular home oven made using the skillet-broiler method. The question is, with the air temp reading off the charts, why <em>doesn't</em> it work? My guess is it all comes down to a lack of radiant heat.</p>

<p>As I mentioned above, pizza cooks via several different modes of heat transfer. Convection is important for the top of the crust, conduction is important for the undercarriage, but radiant heat&mdash;that's heat energy transferred directly via electro-magnetic radiation&mdash;is also essential for proper browning and charring on the top surface.</p>

<p>With a stone pizza oven, it's not just the air temperature that matters. The amount of energy stored in the stone walls of the oven and re-emitted as infrared radiation is also important. That's why a stone oven needs to be preheated for several hours before you can start baking in it&mdash;that energy takes a while to build up. With a kettle grill, you have no material to store the energy. Rather than being collected in thick stone walls, it's conducted straight through. That's all energy that <em>should</em> be going into your pies, but instead is being lost to the air outside.</p>

<h4>The Verdict</h4>

<p>Our recommendation from our first round of testing still stands: If you want to bake outdoors and get results marginally better than in a regular oven (that is, a regular oven using regular baking methods on a pizza stone), then you might enjoy this product. It's fun, it's pretty, it's well-crafted, and it gets a certain job done.</p>

<p>If, on the other hand, great Neapolitan-style pizza is what you're after&mdash;pizza that cooks in a matter of minutes with a charred crust and soft, airy interior&mdash;then we recommend using either the skillet-broiler method, or just cooking directly on the grill grates. Both methods will give you superior end results.</p>

<p>Did we miss something here? Have you had a different experience with the KettlePizza? We'd love to hear about it. We've still got the guy set up on our grill, so if you have any suggestions as to how to improve our results, we're more than happy to give it another whirl!</p>

<p><strong>About the author</strong>: J. Kenji Lopez-Alt is the Chief Creative Officer of Serious Eats where he likes to explore the science of home cooking in his weekly column The Food Lab. You can follow him at @thefoodlab on Twitter, or at The Food Lab on Facebook.</p>
        

        
            
        
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<entry>
   <title>EAT THIS NOW!: Fried Pizza with Homemade Sausage, Egg, Parmesan, and Hollandaise</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://slice.seriouseats.com/archives/2012/04/eat-this-now-fried-pizza-with-homemade-sausage-egg-parmesan-and-hollandaise.html" />
   <id>tag:slice.seriouseats.com,2012://25.201882</id>
   
   <published>2012-04-18T15:45:00Z</published>
   <updated>2012-04-18T16:22:10Z</updated>
   
   <summary>In yesterday's Pizza Lab article about how to make fried pizza, I mentioned that the most popular pie of the night was a breakfast-themed pie. I've got to say that it was one of the most seriously delicious pies to come out of my kitchen, and I'm saying that as one who is not even a huge fan of breakfast pizzas or egg-on-pizza in general.
</summary>
   <author>
      <name>J. Kenji López-Alt</name>
      <uri>http://www.seriouseats.com</uri>
   </author>

    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://slice.seriouseats.com/">
    <![CDATA[
        
        
                    
            <img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120415-fried-pizza-15.jpg" />
        
            
        <p>It's time for another round of The Food Lab. Got a suggestion for an upcoming topic? Email Kenji here, and he'll do his best to answer your queries in a future post. Become a fan of The Food Lab on Facebook or follow it on Twitter for play-by-plays on future kitchen tests and recipe experiments.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120415-fried-pizza-14.jpg" /></p>

<p>[Photographs: J. Kenji Lopez-Alt]</p>

<p>In yesterday's Pizza Lab article about how to make fried pizza, I mentioned that the most popular pie of the night was a breakfast-themed pie. I've got to say that it was one of the most seriously delicious pies to come out of my kitchen, and I'm saying that as one who is not even a huge fan of breakfast pizzas or egg-on-pizza in general.</p>

<p>What made it work so well? I think it was the fact that with regular baked breakfast pizza, you end up with a strange juxtaposition of two things that don't necessarily go well together. The pizza crust is just too, well, <em>pizza crust-y</em>, if you know what I mean. The eggs, sausage, and crust are all great on their own, but they don't come together in a particularly compelling way for me.</p>

<p>Deep frying changes all this.</p>
        <p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120415-fried-pizza-07.jpg" /></p>

<p>When you deep fry the dough, you first of all, convert it into a form of food that is at home on the breakfast table&mdash;essentially, you've created a giant, yeasted donut. The fried texture of the crust just seems like a natural pair with breakfast foods.</p>

<p>Not only that, but the added slight greasiness helps as well, allowing the pie to meld with the sausage fat and the oozy yolks. The sausage goes on raw in tiny little chunks which just barely cook through and release their juices into the surrounding bread in the short time the pizza spends in the oven after frying.</p>

<p>For this particular pie, I used a homemade breakfast sausage spiked with maple syrup which gives the whole thing a faint sweetness. That whole sweet-salty thing might come up all the time these days, but it's with good reason. I drizzled on a little bit of extra maple syrup just to play it up.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120415-fried-pizza-15.jpg" /></p>

<p>Finally, what would a good breakfast be without hollandaise?</p>

<p>For me, a perfect hollandaise should be creamy, light, and almost fluffy in texture. Josh's recipe is a great start, though personally I like to melt the butter and whisk it in instead of whisking in the solid pats to give the sauce a bit more volume. Either way, drizzle it on after the pie is done cooking, and be generous with it!</p>

<h4>Get The Recipe!</h4>

<p><strong>Deep Fried Breakfast Pizza with Sausage, Eggs, Parmesan, and Hollandaise »</strong></p>

<p><strong>About the author</strong>: J. Kenji Lopez-Alt is the Chief Creative Officer of Serious Eats where he likes to explore the science of home cooking in his weekly column The Food Lab. You can follow him at @thefoodlab on Twitter, or at The Food Lab on Facebook.</p>

        
         
            
                
                    <a href="http://www.seriouseats.com/recipes/2012/04/deep-fried-breakfast-pizza-with-sausage-eggs-parmesan-hollandaise-recipe.html">Get the Recipe!</a>
                
            
            
        
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</entry>

<entry>
   <title>The Pizza Lab: How To Make Fried Pizza At Home (à la Forcella)</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://slice.seriouseats.com/archives/2012/04/the-pizza-lab-how-to-make-fried-pizza-at-home.html" />
   <id>tag:slice.seriouseats.com,2012://25.201883</id>
   
   <published>2012-04-17T14:00:00Z</published>
   <updated>2012-04-17T16:00:02Z</updated>
   
   <summary>Neapolitan style pizza with one key difference. Before going in the oven, the stretched-out disk of dough is deep fried until crisp. I figured it was worth a deeper look. I'm glad I did, because I can tell you that these were some of the finest pies to ever come out of my home kitchen, and believe it or not, it's remarkably simple to do.</summary>
   <author>
      <name>J. Kenji López-Alt</name>
      <uri>http://www.seriouseats.com</uri>
   </author>

    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://slice.seriouseats.com/">
    <![CDATA[
        
        
                    
            <img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120415-fried-pizza-01.jpg" />
        
            
        <p>It's time for another round of The Food Lab. Got a suggestion for an upcoming topic? Email Kenji here, and he'll do his best to answer your queries in a future post. Become a fan of The Food Lab on Facebook or follow it on Twitter for play-by-plays on future kitchen tests and recipe experiments.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120415-fried-pizza-11.jpg" /></p>

<p>[Photographs: J. Kenji Lopez-Alt]</p>

<p>There hasn't really been a lack of coverage on fried pizza here on Slice. The first I heard of it was probably about the same time that most of you heard about it as well: when Adam first wrote about the Montanara at Forcella in July of last year. And that's with good reason. At that point, Forcella was the first and only place in New York (perhaps in the country?) serving fried pizzas of this particular style, and according to owner Giulio Adriani, modeled after only a handful of restaurants in Naples that served them.</p>

<p>For the record, what we're talking about here is an entirely different beast than the battered and deep fried regular pizza slices that have been popping up at state fairs and fry-everything bars in Scotland&mdash;ever since that fateful night when a fry cook and a stoner got drunk together. (Or perhaps the two were one and the same).</p>

<p>The fried pizza we're talking about is made much in a Neapolitan style&mdash;that is, dough topped with a simple sauce of pureed tomatoes, salt, a bit of fresh mozzarella (smoked mozzarella in the case of the Montanara), olive oil, and basil, all cooked in a hot, wood-burning stone oven. The key difference? Before any of this happens, the stretched-out disk of dough is deep fried until crisp.</p>
        <p>Since being introduced to this style, we've taken you on a behind the scenes tour of how the Montanara (as the fried pizza is called) is made, we've seen the opening of La Montanara&mdash;an all-fried pizzeria on Ludlow street&mdash;named after the signature pie, and we've even been taken on a tour through its history, courtesy of Scott. Fried pizzas have indeed come a long way.</p>

<p>But there was one part of Scott's post that really intrigued me: while many people find deep frying to be a technique relegated to the professionals with restaurant kitchens, in Naples, the traditional fried pizza is quite a different beast&mdash;a creature of the home kitchen created in order to quickly cook a pizza <em>without</em> the benefit of a blazing hot wood-burning oven.</p>

<p>Home pizza technique, eh? Sounds intriguing!</p>

<p>While Scott briefly explained the method back then, I figured it was worth a deeper look. I'm glad I did, because I can tell you that these were some of the finest pies to ever come out of my home kitchen, and believe it or not, it's remarkably simple to do.</p>

<h4>No Smoking</h4>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120415-fried-pizza-04.jpg" /></p>

<p>I'll get to the frying method in a moment, but first I'd like to discuss an issue that has deeply troubled me for most of my life: Most smoked mozzarella stinks. It's either made with the dry, aged stuff so that comes out more similar to a smoked gouda than a mozzarella, or it loses so much of its fresh, soft, milky texture that it comes off  as something more suitable to playing a round of handball with (Alleva dairy, I'm looking at you!).</p>

<p>It wasn't until I tried the imported smoked mozzarella in the Montanara, that I realized that you could have a cheese that combined a sweet, balanced, subtle smokiness, along with the creamy, moist melting qualities of a great mozzarella. The problem is that I have no clue where to get good imported smoked mozzarella in New York, which leaves one solution: <strong>do it myself</strong>.</p>

<p><img src="http://www.seriouseats.com/images/20100701-wok-skills-smoking-3.jpg" /></p>

<p>My first attempt was to actually smoke the mozzarella using my standard wok-smoking technique&mdash;you line a wok with foil, put wood chips (or whatever) on the bottom with the food on a rack above it. Heat it up on a stovetop, then when it starts smoking, seal the foil trapping the smoke inside. The cheese definitely got smoky, but it also got far too hot, losing its soft, tender texture, and squeezing out all of its whey.</p>

<p>I've also had good luck cold-smoking cheeses in the past using a smoking gun&mdash;a hand-held cold food smoker. Unfortunately, they cost around $100.</p>

<p>The final solution I ended up with is one that's liable to get me banned from barbecue websites and competitions around the country, but it's one that I stand behind 100%: just use liquid smoke.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120415-fried-pizza-02.jpg" /></p>

<p>I know, I know. It's unnatural, acrid, and all that stuff. And some brands are. But not all of them. A few brands, like Wright's, are 100% natural, made by smoking real wood chips in a moist environment, running the moist smoke through a condenser, then collecting the concentrated liquid that drips out the other side. It's precisely the same stuff that ends up penetrating your meat when you smoke it in a real wood smoker. Indeed, when I worked at Cook's Illustrated a few years ago, I made some for myself just to prove it.</p>

<p>Point is: used sparingly and applied in the right way, liquid smoke works.</p>

<p>Having just explored ways in which to improve poor mozzarella a couple weeks back, I knew that you could soak mozzarella in a warm, salty bath of milk to help it get softer and creamier. So I figured, why not just add a few drops of liquid smoke to the mix as well?</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120415-fried-pizza-03.jpg" /></p>

<p>The method worked. Before adding the mozzarella to the smokey milk bath, I ripped it into rough chunks to increase its surface area to absorb more smoke flavor. What I ended up with was a nice, subtly smokey cheese with all the moist, creamy, melting qualities of a 100% fresh mozzarella.*</p>

<p>*In fact, at Don Antonio, the cheese they use on their pizza is stretched in milk, not in water, to add creaminess. Cool!</p>

<h4>Time to Fry</h4>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120415-fried-pizza-01.jpg" /></p>

<p>Having read through Scott's experiments and having seen the pizza men fry their pies at Don Antonio, I had a pretty good grasp of the basics. But there were still a few things to tweak.</p>

<p>To start with, I began with my basic no-knead pizza dough, the dough which I use for most of my pizza projects these days. It's a moist, supple, slightly difficult to work with dough, but produces excellent, bubbly, puffy crusts. There's a direct relation between the amount of water you put into a dough and how much the dough will puff when it bakes, but with too much water, you run the risk of making a dough that's impossible to handle.</p>

<p>This particular dough is hydrated at 75% (that is, the water in the dough weighs 75% as much as the flour), a <em>very</em> high water content that puts this dough at just about the limit of what I can handle in a normal cooking environment. I quickly discovered that what works in the oven becomes dangerous in a wok full* of oil. Imagine trying to gingerly lower a slippery conger eel slowly into a pool without getting any water on you, except instead of water, the pool is filled with 350°F oil.</p>

<p>You end up getting burned. (Or at least, I do).</p>

<p>*yes, the wok it the best vessel for deep frying at home)</p>

<p>I found that lowering my water content all the way down to 62.5% made for a much more manageable dough that could still stretch quite easily. I was afraid that with less water, it wouldn't puff up dramatically enough as it cooked&mdash;I like my pizza with big, airy pockets&mdash;but it worked out just fine. See, that puff&mdash;which bakers call "oven spring"&mdash;is caused by air and water vapor rapidly expanding inside a stretchy network of interconnected flour proteins. The faster you can transfer energy to the dough, the faster it'll inflate, and the better your oven spring.</p>

<p>That's why pizzas baked in a 900°F Neapolitan wood-burning oven end up so nice and poofy, while your home-baked crusts may only rise a little bit.</p>

<p>Well, turns out that oil is such a terrific transferrer of energy that even at 375° and a lower hydration, your crust ends up getting just as much oven spring (or should I say "fryer spring"?) as it would in a very hot oven with a wetter dough.</p>

<p>Poofiness was not an issue. What <em>was</em> an issue was this:</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120415-fried-pizza-10.jpg" /></p>

<p>Oops. Looks like I didn't learn the first lesson of fried dough&mdash;you must make ventilation holes. Without them air and water vapor collect under the center of the crust, which bubbles up into a dome. Press down on that dome to try and release the gas, and it comes out&mdash;FAST. It basically bubbles up and out through the hot oil like a geyser, causing it to fly up and over the edge of the wok and reminding you exactly why restaurant kitchens have a "no open-toed shoes" policy in place.</p>

<p>Want to save your feet? Do a bit of this:</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120415-fried-pizza-05.jpg" /></p>

<p>And once it goes in the oil, hold it in place with a large wire-mesh strainer (a couple of slotted spoons would work just fine.</p>

<p>The key to this stage is that you want to cook the pizza just long enough to puff and being to develop some crispness. You don't want to fry it 100% of the way or it'll end up drying out in its subsequent visit to the oven. About a minute and a half total is what I did. I tried both flipping the dough and simply holding it down with the strainer and didn't find that either one produced a noticeably better crust. Flipping was definitely easier though, so that's what I'll do from now on.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120415-fried-pizza-07.jpg" /></p>

<p>Once it comes out of the fryer, it goes into a metal pan (I used a pre-heated cast iron skillet), gets topped with tomato sauce, smoked mozz, and basil, then finished off in a hot oven to melt the toppings and char the crust slightly. You'd think that the hoels in the crust would lead to drip through, but I made over a dozen pies when testing this and not a single one had that problem.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120415-fried-pizza-08.jpg" /></p>

<p>I used my go-to broiler method for the final oven visit.</p>

<p>Note to those of you who've made pizza under the broiler before: a fried pizza crust burns MUCH faster than a regular pizza does.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120415-fried-pizza-09.jpg" /></p>

<p>Now <em>that</em> looks like a pizza that was fried by Dom DeMarco himself.</p>

<p>Cutting down the cooking time delivered this beaut:</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120415-fried-pizza-11.jpg" /></p>

<p><strong>[ASIDE:]</strong> And it was then that I had an insight about one of the big problems I have with homemade pizza&mdash;the cheese always browns or burns before the crust is properly browned. My theory is that with good neapolitan pizza, the outer rim of the crust bubbles up above the level of the cheese, and thus cooks faster. Homemade Neapolitan pies don't show quite as much oven spring, so the crust ends up not much higher than the cheese, and thus doesn't brown as fast.</p>

<p>It's just a theory, but one working into. <strong>[/ASIDE]</strong></p>

<p><em>You want fryer spring? You want fryer spring? I'll get you your fryer spring.</em></p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120415-fried-pizza-12.jpg" /></p>

<p>How's <em>that?</em> And notice, if you will, the micro-bubbling on the crust. It's shockingly, beautifully crispy. Enough so that one of my tasters during round 1 of testing asked me if there was corn meal in the crust.</p>

<p>And I'm sure you're all wondering, "but isn't it greasy?" The answer is no. Not in the slightest. Sure, it doesn't taste <em>exactly</em> like a regular oven-fired pizza, in that it's crisper and puffier, but the grease itself has very little impact on the flavor, and you're certainly not left with oil running down your arms or anything like that. Besides, pizza ain't health food.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120415-fried-pizza-13.jpg" /></p>

<p>This is a plain homemade sausage and tomato pie I made for a friend with a dairy allergy. The sausage fat soaks into the crust quite nicely without a cheese barrier protecting it. I may have to try this again.</p>

<p>To tell you the truth, I'm pretty enamored with this technique. Indeed, it may well be the crispest, puffiest, best-textured pizza ever to come out of my home kitchen, and it all came with very little work.</p>

<p>As it so happens, I have been working on a number of recipes for the breakfast chapter of my book (homemade breakfast sausage, foolproof no-whisk no-double-boiler hollandaise, and perfect poached eggs), so I figured <em>what the heck</em> and made a breakfast pie with sausage, egg, parm, and a drizzle of hollandaise to finish it off.</p>

<p><img src="http://slice.seriouseats.com/images/20120415-fried-pizza-14.jpg" /></p>

<p>Guess what? That bad boy was the sleeper hit of the night. (Stay tuned for a full recipe tomorrow).</p>

<h4>Get The Recipe!</h4>

<p><strong>Deep Fried Pizza »</strong></p>

<p><strong>About the author</strong>: J. Kenji Lopez-Alt is the Chief Creative Officer of Serious Eats where he likes to explore the science of home cooking in his weekly column The Food Lab. You can follow him at @thefoodlab on Twitter, or at The Food Lab on Facebook.</p>

        
         
            
                
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