🍕 Pizza Log

Experiment 3

Experiment date: 20th February 2021

Objective: See how far I can take cold proving

Abstract: Due to rising ambient temperature as winter fades towards spring, the

cold-proving chamber (garage) wasn't quite cold enough, and so I accidentally

made alco-bread. 10/10, would make alco-bread again.

Reagents

I really liked last week's recipe, so I'm keeping it exactly the same except

for the hydration level. By jacking it up to 80% I hope to achieve a softer

dough, without too great a hazard to kneading, as my flour is very strong. This

is Matthews Cotswold Flour Strong White, and it's goooood.

Method

This week I activated the yeast at 41°C. After ten minutes, I had very little

foam, and started to worry that the dried yeast had died in the fridge. I gave

it another ten minutes, and got a slight amount more foam. I hoped that this

slight amount was enough to get it started.

Cold-proving in the garage worked well last week, but I only gave it six hours

or so. This week I left it for twenty-six and a half hours, just because that

was the time window between my dough-making opportunity and my pizza-eating

opportunity.

Unfortunately, it is no longer deep winter here. Temperatures are far milder

than they were seven days ago. I measured the ambient garage temperature as

11.4°C - at least ten degrees warmer than it was a week ago. The temperature

inside the dough was surely even higher. As a result, this cold-proving was not

truly cold. I checked after a few hours, and indeed the dough had filled the

clingfilmed bowl entirely. Still, I left it overnight to see what would happen.

The next day, I found a significantly collapsed dough, and upon unwrapping it

was greeted with a powerful sharp-smelling whiff. Uh-oh. I feared I had left the

realm of dough-making and entered the realm of brewery. Was this fermentation?

Or rotting?

Nevertheless, I strongly believe that even bad pizza is still good, and I'm not

one to abandon an experiment midway, so after cutting and shaping and leaving

for an hour, I was ready to bake. The dough was a lot wetter than last week. I'm

not sure if this was because of the hydration level, or because of the

collapsing. It looked thoroughly puddle-like on the baking tray, but I was able

to press it out into circles with oiled fingers.

Taking my key learning from last week on board, I prebaked the dough for 8

minutes, and was granted hope by its nice rise after all. On went the usual

toppings, and in they went for another ten minutes at 230°C.

Sauce

No oil this week. I'd like to say it was out of health concerns, but actually I

just put the tinned tomatoes in the pan first, forgetting to fry the garlic. By

putting the garlic in second, I effectively boiled it in the tomatoes.

I simmered this for 25 minutes, reducing it to a thick sauce.

Toppings

Mozzarella, pepperoni, 🧅 shallot and 🍍 pineapple.

I roasted the pineapple chunks beforehand to drive out most of the moisture.

Result

Despite worrying that I was about to get everybody drunk, the pizzas turned out

to be truly awesome. There wasn't a huge amount of rise in the centre, but the

dough was cooked through almost perfectly, with some nice bubbles and the right

balance of crispy crust with soft interior. Whatever alcohol was in the bread

had surely been cooked off, and only a pleasant well-developed fermenty-yeasty

taste remained. It was really, really good!

10/10 scores across the board from all judges.

Little Miss: "I don't think you could have done better. It was perfect."

Next time

Was it truly tastier than last week's? Did the overlong warm-proving help or

hinder? If it helped, was the extra taste worth the extra effort? A week is a

long time, with many tastebud resets, so next week I aim to do some A/B

testing.

I'm also trying to drive out my remaining non-vegan dietary inputs, and pizza

is holding me back, so I am going to restart experimenting with purely

plant-based toppings soon.

Technical Appendix 1

There are currently no Unicode emojis for flour, yeast, oil, mozzarella,

pepperoni, dough, oven, cold-proving, alco-bread, leavening, or maillard

reaction.

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