T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
994.1 | Quarry Tiles | PARSEC::PESENTI | JP | Mon Feb 15 1988 07:53 | 6 |
| Try buying unglazed quarry tiles to cover the desired area. I have not done
this myself, but know a couple of folks who have (with gas stoves). Besides,
Julia swears by it!
- JP
|
994.2 | Round Stones at Dish 'n Dat | WAGON::ANASTASIA | It's in every one of us | Mon Feb 15 1988 08:39 | 9 |
| I bought two stones at Dish 'n Dat in Burlington, MA. They are round
and cost $10.95 each. I haven't tried pizza yet, but they work fine
for bread baking. Since my oven is small, about 20 inches wide, I can
only fit one stone at a time. I can bake two small loaves or one
large loaf on each stone. The stones are about 18 einches across.
I am also looking for a place to buy a peel.
Patti
|
994.3 | What's a peel? | XCELR8::CORMIER | | Mon Feb 15 1988 12:16 | 9 |
| What's a peel? I kind of figured it's the paddle you use to slide
pizzas, breads, in and out of the oven. Is that correct?
Also, may I suggest a restaurant supply house for both the "peel"
and the stone? They usually have the larger sized items.
I have seen Julia CHild use unglazed quarry tiles for the same purpose,
also. And I believe they come in all kinds of sizes, too.
Sarah
|
994.4 | Where to find the Peel | 19358::MCKAYJ | | Mon Feb 15 1988 13:59 | 11 |
| I AGREE WITH (RE .3)
I have seen the peels in a resturant supply house Here in Springfield
Mass. If I am not mistaken the cost between $10 - $18. I am not
sure on the stone though.
These store usually do busness with rest. however I have found they
usually won't refuse cash.
John
|
994.5 | Try the Spice & Grain | SALES::RFI86 | You are the eyes of the world | Mon Feb 15 1988 15:21 | 7 |
| The Spice & Grain in Concord carries or at least used to carry
rectangular oven stones. I got two of them there about 2 years ago.
I haven't been in there in awhile so I don't know if they still
carry them. The ones we got are about 10 X 12 and are great for
pizza bread and cookies(use baking parchment).
Geoff
|
994.6 | I think Cook's Nook has appeal (ouch!) | PARSEC::PESENTI | JP | Tue Feb 16 1988 07:25 | 8 |
| re .2
Try Cook's Nook in Lunenburg on Rt 2a near the Fitchburg line. (They might be
listed under Cook Things in the phone book.) I believe you could order by
phone.
- JP
|
994.7 | Pizza ideas | STAR::APPELLOF | Kathy Appellof | Tue Feb 16 1988 16:10 | 19 |
| Every sunday night is pizza night in our house...
My husband, Carl, makes absolutely the BEST pizza I've ever had.
I bought him some very inexpensive unglazed quarry tiles from the
local cheap tile store. He lines the bottom shelf of the oven
(electric) with these tiles and preheats for at least 30 mins. at
550 degrees.
He uses a rather large peel which I purchased for him at Lechmere's.
I think it cost somewhere around 11.99-12.99. The peel is covered
with cornmeal and the pizza is actually made on the peel then slid
into the preheated oven.
All of these ideas came from a book called "The Pizza Book". I
can't recall who the author is, but has wonderful recipes and ideas
in it. The pizza recipe Carl uses is one served by a place in New
Haven, Ct. which is famous for it's pizza.
- Kathy
|
994.10 | stones offer thermal mass | TIGEMS::RYDER | Al Ryder, aquatic sanitary engineer | Thu Feb 18 1988 23:52 | 23 |
| When you open the oven door to insert the food, the hot air escapes,
and the replacement air must then itself be heated before it can start
to heat the food. The slab of clay/brick/stone/whatever cannot cool
that rapidly and offers considerable thermal energy to be conducted
into the food without delay.
This is not a new invention or discovery but rather a substitute for
one of the characteristics of primitive ovens where a fire would be
built directly on the floor of a brick oven, the coals swept out, and
the food baked on the oven floor. The stone is now the hot "floor".
When bread is baked in pans, I don't think there is any benefit to
having a stone under the pans, but I'd like to hear from those with
more experience. The real payoff is in the baking of free-form loaves
and pizza. The rapid heat influx causes the bottom layer of dough to
really rise, to "spring". The cross section of the loaf will tend to
become circular with the edges rounding up off the flat. The center
crust of the pizza bakes well despite the pool of sauce on top.
When you use one, put it in the oven before the start of preheat.
Use cornmeal as a non-stick agent, but not enough to insulate the
dough from the stone. The stone should be everywhere visible through
the sprinkling of cornmeal (or flour).
|
994.11 | how about with gas ovens? | GIDDAY::BRYDEN | | Sun Feb 21 1988 16:35 | 13 |
| Has anyone tried using the oven bricks with a gas oven instead
of an electric? How does the warm up time differ, I know my
oven won't hit 550 deg?
What about any other uses other than bread/pizza?
Dave
Al, could I ask a favor? could we start a new note on pizza
recipes I hate to see good recipes buried in notes where I/other
people can't find.....8^}
thanks
|
994.12 | Works fine in a gas oven | STAR::RUBINO | | Mon Feb 22 1988 07:52 | 6 |
| re .11
We use a pizza stone in a gas oven, works fine. We crank the
oven up to 500 to heat the stone.
mike
|
994.13 | Where to get a peel in Boston | WAGON::ANASTASIA | It's in every one of us | Mon Feb 22 1988 08:07 | 11 |
| I bought a 14" peel at Central Restaurant Equipment & Supply Co, 80 Canal
Street, Boston. They give a 20% discount to cash sales. It came out to be $19.
They have 12", 16", and 18" ($30) peels also, both metal and wood. Right now,
the only 16" ones they have are metal. These peels all have about 3' handles
but the handle can easily be sawwed off. They had a saw there. This store has
everything.
Williams-Sonoma in Faneuil (sp?) Hall has a small peel (12" inches, I think)
that has a short handle (6") for around $18.00.
Patti
|
994.14 | substitute peels, good and bad | SMEGIT::RYDER | Al Ryder, aquatic sanitary engineer | Mon Feb 22 1988 17:03 | 23 |
| The use of a peel with an oven stone was discussed in notes 947.13 and
72.26 (formerly 994.8), although those notes may not have been clear
that the cornmeal was put on the peel, not directly on the stone. At
550 degrees, uncovered cornmeal will burn. Cornmeal on the peel will
be carried onto the stone by the dough and then be sufficiently
protected.
Note 947.13 mentioned substitutes for peels; this note is about a
substitution experience.
My peel was occupied by a loaf of rising bread when my son was ready to
make the pizza for lunch. So I used a piece of clean, 1/4 inch plywood
as a substitute, dusted it with cornmeal, and spread out my dough.
When he had finished building a mountain of sauce, cheese, etc., I
tossed the structure over the oven stone and yanked the peel back. The
cornmeal was not quite adequate over the plywood; the dough sort of
came back with the peel, at least part way back. The cheese decorated
the rear of the oven. For the second pizza, I covered the plywood with
aluminum foil with a wrap around the edge-to-be-held-later. The foil
was then dusted with cornmeal. That combination worked well for both
the second and third pizza. I will never again use bare plywood.
p.s. I now know that my smoke detector is in working order.
|
994.15 | | STAR::OBERLIN | | Fri Feb 26 1988 13:48 | 15 |
| Thanks to Kathy Appellof's reply, I was finally
inspired to get off my duff and buy the quarry
tiles and peel that I'd been threatening to get
for years.
The quarry tiles were $.40 each at Color Tile
on Rte 101a in Nashua, and the peel was $19.99
at That Kitchen Place, Rte 101a in Amherst,
NH.
Thanks, Kathy. The Italian bread was great.
-mrs o
|
994.16 | I bought my stone and peel | RGB::JIM | Jim Pappas | Sun Feb 28 1988 16:06 | 34 |
| Well, I finally bought my Stone and Peel (after authoring .0). Thanks
for the help.
I bought a great book on bread (Clayborn or something like that).
It is the most complete book on bread that I have seen. Over 700
pages. It includes directions for making it by hand, mixer, and
food processor with every recipe. That's a real plus too me since
I use a food processor and the directions are usually a bit different.
I bought another book on pizza. This one gives directions for buying
quarry tile to use in the oven.
They say to specifically ask if any toxic chemicals etc were used
in the manufacture of the tiles. I asked the folk at color tile
and the response was "damn if I know". I decided not to take a
chance.
Cook's Nook in Lunenburg finally got their rectangular stones. I had
originally checked there (before authoring .0) but they only had the
round ones. I bought a 14" X 16" stone for about $25 or $26. It is a
lot more money than quarry tile, but it has two big advantages. First
it is one piece so I dont have to worry about it sepatating while I
slide the pizza onto it. Second, It is much thicker than the tiles and
therefor should have more thermal mass. Since it is made for pizza, I
will make the assumption that it is safe to cook on. I also bought
a peel for $15.50.
Now for my next question. My pizza book says to never wash a peel in
water because it may warp. It says to use mineral oil to season and
protect it. What is this stuff, where do you buy it, and is is safe
for use next to food?
/Jim Pappas
|
994.17 | Very safe | HOONOO::PESENTI | JP | Mon Feb 29 1988 07:12 | 13 |
| Mineral oil is available in many CVSs, and some grocery stores. Make sure to
buy pure mineral oil. It's recommended for butcher block counters and cutting
boards. Its completely safe (sort of, if you take the stuff by the spoonfull,
you'll become as regular as clock ticks). In fact, I believe it's the basis
for Johnson's baby oil.
As I see it you'll only have one problem... What to do with the rest of the
bottle once you've used the tablespoon or so needed to oil your peel.
- JP
|
994.18 | I've used it myself... | BAKHOE::KENAH | My journey begins with my first step | Mon Feb 29 1988 09:20 | 7 |
| From the dictionary: any of several light hydrocarbon oils, especially
a refined distillate of petroleum used as a laxative.
Yes, it's safe -- it's an ideal oil for protecting wood (butcher
blocks, cutting boards, and the like) in that it doesn't turn rancid.
andrew
|
994.19 | mineral oil: revised comments | SMEGIT::RYDER | Al Ryder, aquatic sanitary engineer | Tue Mar 01 1988 06:32 | 13 |
| I agree with JP (994.17).
Mineral oil is another product (like gasoline, motor oil, and paraffin
wax) made from crude oil. Like paraffin, it is more or less tasteless
and indigestible, passing through without assimilation. Soaked into
a wooden utensil with the excess wiped off, it is harmless.
It can be bought at a pharmacy; it is used by the spoonful in the
treatment of constipation. Besides the pharmacies and certain grocery
stores, a local hardware store sells it as "Bemis Wood Conditioner"
! at $3.59 for 8 fl oz., but the price is a lot less at CVS where CVS
! Mineral Oil sells at $2.29 for 16 fl oz. Baby oil is not quite the
! same stuff; baby oil contains fragrance additives.
|
994.20 | The First time... Oh Boy! | EXIT26::VERNAGLIA | | Fri Mar 18 1988 15:24 | 11 |
| I tried out my new stone and peel for the first time last night. I
bet everyone has a first time story similar to mine. I guess I
didn't use enough corn meal! I knew I was in trouble when I tried
to slide the pizza into the oven, and figured right then it would
be no fun to get out! I was right. Well, it wasn't the best looking
pizza, but tasted much better than the ones cooked without the stone!
What about cooking the pizza on a pan placed on the stone? Has anyone
tried this? I do much better with the pan than the peel... Well
a little practice will help!
|
994.21 | | RGB::JIM | Jim Pappas | Mon Mar 21 1988 03:13 | 17 |
| re: .20
Ok, I'll fess up. My first experience with the stone and peel is
worse than yours. Like you, I used too little corn meal. Also,
the peel was unseasoned. The result was a pile of pizza goop on
a 550 degree stone, sizzling, smoking, you name it and it was doing
it. We had just put the baby to bed and all the smoke alarms were
going off.
The stone had big globs of burnt food on it. They were pretty tough
and wouldn't even scrape off. Once through the oven self cleaning
cycle did a nice job cleaning up the stone.
Just today, I seasoned the peel with mineral oil. It seems a bit more
slippery. Next time I attempt a pizza I'll use a lot more corn meal.
BTW, My pizza goop came out like a giant calzone.
|
994.23 | ovenstone vulnerability | LYMPH::RYDER | Al Ryder, aquatic sanitary engineer | Mon Mar 28 1988 13:41 | 4 |
| When sauce leaked out of a calzone onto the oven stone yesterday, the
stone split in half. Sigh. The stone has survived dribbles at the
edges from pizzas, but this was in the center and may have been a small
gush of cold sauce onto a very, very hot stone.
|
994.24 | rectangular stones at the Mall of N.H. | LYMPH::RYDER | Al Ryder, aquatic sanitary engineer | Sat Apr 23 1988 10:21 | 6 |
| After my round ovenstone broke in two I took it back to That Kitchen
Place near MKO and received a merchandise credit; they didn't carry a
rectangular stone. I bought a 14x16x5/8 "Upper Crust" stone made by
Best Manufacturers of Portland, Oregon at the kitchen supplies store in
The Mall of New Hampshire. I'm very pleased. A pair of rye loaves
fits nicely on this shape.
|
994.25 | Cleaning the Stone? | POOL::MARRA | Soon... | Fri Oct 21 1988 18:06 | 6 |
| Has anyone been able to clean up the stains that get left behind
ocasionally? I have a few spill on my stone that won't come off.
I have scraped all the spills off, but the 'stain' won't. Is it
now a part of the stone? Any Suggestions?
.dave.
|
994.26 | burn it off | LYMPH::RYDER | | Fri Oct 21 1988 18:47 | 11 |
| The last time I made pizza [dough], my son blew it when he tossed
the complete pizza onto the stone ---- turned it into a sort of
calzone --- sort of. A mess that he had to shovel off the stone.
(That will teach him to lubricate the peel with enough corn meal.)
I left the stone in the oven and set the oven to self-clean for
the standard [with Jenn-Air] 3 hours. The stone is now very clean,
almost exactly like new.
I have not yet used it since that cleaning. That will be the test
of success.
|
994.27 | What about a cookie sheet ? | PBA::EDWARDS | | Wed Nov 09 1988 12:03 | 5 |
| I wonder what would happen if you left the pizza on a cookie sheet
and put that on the stone - wouldn't the sheet conduct the heat
to the pizza and avoid spills etc ?
Rod
|
994.28 | Pans and stones work okay | HPSCAD::ANASTASIA | Roll with it, baby. | Wed Nov 09 1988 12:57 | 17 |
| re: < Note 994.27 by PBA::EDWARDS >
Rod,
It works. I'm a travelling pizza maker. I lug all my pizza stuff
(stones, peel, etc.) over to friend's houses to make pizza.
Occasionally I forget to bring my peel with me. I just make the pizza
on a lightly greased pizza pan and put the pan on the stone. The
crust isn't as good as it is when it is baked directly on the stone,
but it is much better than it is if you use the pan without the stone.
In my own kitchen, I can easily get the pizza off the peel (except
when I forgot to put cornmeal on it), but I sometimes have a little
trouble in other kitchens - the oven is too high or too low. Using the
pan with the stone is neater but not as much fun.
Patti
|
994.29 | How do you get the Pizza off ??? | BUSHIE::KOTWAL | Louis' out - get the mortein!!! | Tue Jul 04 1989 00:25 | 11 |
| This may sound silly, but I take it you use the peel to get the pizza off
the (very hot) stone?
Does the heat damage the peel any?
Also, how long (on average) does it take the stone to cool down.
Do you leave the stone in the oven when cooking non pizza's - just to get
the heat retention?
Rashid
|
994.30 | | HPSCAD::ANASTASIA | Language is a virus | Fri Jul 07 1989 13:38 | 44 |
| re: < Note 994.29 by BUSHIE::KOTWAL
>This may sound silly, but I take it you use the peel to get the pizza off
>the (very hot) stone?
Yup. You just slide the peel under the pizza and lift it off. Of
course this is sometimes easier said than done. My never fail method
is to place the front edge of the peel under the edge of the pizza,
take a sharp knife and stab the edge of the pizza crust and drag it
onto the peel.
Alot of times when I am making many pizzas, I use the peel to build
them and use a pizza pan to take them out of the oven. I use the stab
and drag method above to get the pizza on the pan.
>Does the heat damage the peel any?
I bought my peel at a restaurant supply store. It's a commercial-grade
wooden peel. I can't remember what kind of wood. It might be ash. It
sometimes seems a little warped. Every so often I place the slightly
warm stone on top of the peel to reflatten it.
>Also, how long (on average) does it take the stone to cool down.
By the time I've served the pizza and cleaned up the kitchen, the
stones are pretty cool. When the weather is cool, I leave the oven
door open to dissipate the heat. But in the summer I leave the oven
closed.
>Do you leave the stone in the oven when cooking non pizza's - just to get
>the heat retention?
I use them for baking bread. The directions for the stone say they are
good for baking cookies too. I never make cookies so I haven't tried
it. I usually forget to take my stones out of the oven. When I open
the oven to put in dinner to bake, I usually find them there. I just
put the baking dish on the stone. It cooks a little faster.
I broke one of my 14" round stones, I just replaced it with a 16"
round stone from Dish n Dat in Burlington, MA. It's so much easier to
use. Using my 14" peel with a 14" stone can be tricky. With the 16"
stone, I know that the pizza won't grow over the edge of the stone.
Patti
|
994.31 | good for cookies too
| TLE::KRUGER | Sharon Kruger | Mon Jul 10 1989 15:09 | 11 |
|
> I use them for baking bread. The directions for the stone say they are
> good for baking cookies too. I never make cookies so I haven't tried
> it. I usually forget to take my stones out of the oven. When I open
> the oven to put in dinner to bake, I usually find them there. I just
> put the baking dish on the stone. It cooks a little faster.
We bake our chocolate chip cookies on our pizza stone. Makes a great chewy
cookie! Let me add that for baking cookies, we don't preheat the stone.
--Sharon
|
994.32 | What temp to bake the pizza at? | HPSCAD::FORTMILLER | Ed Fortmiller, MRO1-3, 297-4160 | Thu Jan 03 1991 08:11 | 3 |
| I see several references in this topic about setting the oven to
500-550 to heat the stone. Do you still leave the oven at 500-550
once the pizza is on the stone or do you reduce the temperature?
|
994.33 | Leave it at 500 | RUSTIE::NALE | Accept No Limitations | Thu Jan 03 1991 09:29 | 5 |
|
I leave the oven at 500. The pizza takes maybe 10 - 15 minutes to
cook.
Sue
|
994.34 | Pizza Screen? | HPSCAD::FORTMILLER | Ed Fortmiller, MRO1-3, 297-4160 | Mon Jan 14 1991 13:31 | 5 |
| A cookbook that my wife was recently looking through said an
alternative to using cornmeal was to use a pizza screen. I guess
the dough is put on the screen and screen put on the stone. Has
anyone used a pizza screen? Know any stores that carry them? What
is the distance between the wires which make up the screen?
|
994.35 | | RUSTIE::NALE | Accept No Limitations | Tue Jan 15 1991 13:49 | 14 |
|
I grease my pizza screen with olive oil. I shape the pizza dough
on the counter, brush it with olive oil, then fold it into quarters
for quick transport to the screen. Once on the screen, I unfold it
and fix the shape a little. I place the screen directly on the
pizza stone (I bought 6 6"x6" unglazed quarry tiles from the tile
store for about $6.).
The screen is ~ 18" in diameter. The holes made by the wires are
diamond shaped and the wires are maybe .25" apart. I bought mine
at The Kitchen in the Pheasant Lane Mall, but I've also seen them
at Crate & Barrel.
Sue
|
994.36 | food for thought | NAC::MICKALIDE | | Thu Jan 31 1991 16:38 | 13 |
| I got a pizza set last year for christmas and have been making my
own pizza ever since. The kit came with the tiles and a metal paddle.
However, I don't care for the taste of the cornmeal on the bottom of
the pizza and have been looking for an alternative. I thought that
the reason the kit suggested cornmeal was because it was a metal paddle
and that if I could find a wooden like they use in the pizza shops I
could get away from using cornmeal. I have watched the pizza shops
make pizza and I have never seen them use cornmeal. Does anyone know
what their secret is?
-Jim-
|
994.37 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Phase II: Operation Desert Storm | Thu Jan 31 1991 16:41 | 1 |
| Some use flour instead.
|
994.38 | Try semolina | RANGER::PESENTI | Only messages can be dragged | Fri Feb 08 1991 13:36 | 0 |
994.39 | If you want something "different" | NOVA::FISHER | Well, there's still an Earth to come home to. | Fri Feb 08 1991 14:11 | 3 |
| I've used wheat germ or wheat bran just for something different.
ed
|
994.40 | cream of wheat also works | TYGON::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Sat Feb 09 1991 16:08 | 3 |
| regular cream of wheat cereal also works...for non continental USA noters,
it is a "cooked cereal" like oatmeal, only it is simply rough ground wheat
berries - without the bran.
|
994.41 | Cooking multiple pizzas in the same session | SCAACT::RESENDE | Digital, thriving on chaos? | Tue Feb 26 1991 08:08 | 26 |
| Well, we finally found recipes for crust and sauce that are good enough
to inspire us to begin cooking pizza the "right" way -- on a stone. So
last weekend was our first encounter. Having read the notes in this
string, we used plenty of cornmeal, and getting the pizza off the peel
wasn't really a problem. It turned out delicious! One thing I found
interesting was that the folks in here have said their pizza cooks in
10-15 minutes on a 550-degree preheated stone. Well, ours was nicely
done in 5 minutes. Perhaps our oven is hotter???
Anyway, I have a question. When we took the pizza out of the oven, the
space directly under it contained un-burned cornmeal since the pizza
had protected it from burning. But the cornmeal that had scattered
around the pizza when it slid off the peel was burned quite black (and
smelled one whole end of the house like burned food, not to mention the
smoke that poured out of the oven). Also, if we had been fixing another
pizza, by the time it was assembled on the peel, the cornmeal that had
been directly under the first pizza would have been burned to a crisp
also, since the oven was still nuclear and the cornmeal was unprotected
once the pizza was removed from the oven. What I was wondering is,
what do you do if you want to cook more than one pizza? The stone is
far too hot to clean the burned (and burning) cornmeal off of it, but I
wouldn't want to slide another fresh pizza onto that black, burned
mess. Did we use too much cornmeal? What do you do for the second
thru nth pizzas??
Steve
|
994.43 | | TAMRC::LAURENT | Hal Laurent @ COP | Fri Jul 29 1994 10:57 | 21 |
| re: .42
> 1. Do I have to preheat the stone?
> 2. Assuming I don't have to preheat the stone can I make/assemble the
> pizza itself right on the stone and then pop it in the oven?
If you don't preheat the stone, then you might as well not use it. The
stone's purpose is to apply intense heat to the pizza crust.
To prevent cracking the stone, you should put it in the cold oven before
preheating.
To get the pizza onto the stone in the oven, I recommend that you get a
wooden pizza peel. This essentially is a wooden paddle with a tapered
edge for sliding off the pizza. Sprinkle the peel with (preferably coarse)
cornmeal, then put the pizza crust on it, add the pizza toppings, then
slide the pizza off of the peel onto the stone. The cornmeal acts like
little ball bearings to allow the pizza to slide. It may take a bit of
practice before this operation can be done without peril. :-)
-Hal
|
994.44 | | DFSAXP::JP | And the winner is.... | Fri Jul 29 1994 14:03 | 7 |
| Also, I would not recommend taking the stone out of the oven until it
is cool. Changing the temperature of the stone too quickly can cause
it to crack. (So basically, the wire rack is not very useful for
transporting the stone.)
Make sure you brush the corn meal off the stone between pizzas or else
it'll smoke.
|
994.45 | | NOVA::FISHER | Tay-unned, rey-usted, rey-ady | Sun Jul 31 1994 21:11 | 3 |
| I haven't used the wire rack since the stone's first days.
ed
|
994.48 | Rolls | HYLNDR::MCFARLAND | | Tue Sep 13 1994 16:50 | 11 |
| Yum, rolls made out of store bought bread dough on the pizza stone
Yummmmmmm
Probably much better when you do it with homemade dough but the store
bought stuff is really good and really easy.
Judie
|
994.47 | | TOOK::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dog face) | Tue Sep 13 1994 20:31 | 3 |
| A pizza stone is great for baking any bread product where you want a good
crispy underside (provided it's self-contained and isn't going to run
all over your stone.)
|