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Giant bubbles in my pizza
jmsmrdk
Posts: 87
Anybody have a fix for gigantic bubbles in pizza"s? I poke holes in the dough and all that stuff, am I missing something.
Not even close to the biggest bubble of the night. Most had two or more bigger than this.
Four pizza's. 700 degree dome. Big bubbles in all of them. This night was trader joe dough i think. This also happens with our homemade dough.
Is there something i can do to stop this? The pizza was still awesome.
Comments
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No pizza expert here, but I'm going to say too hot and too much moisture in your dough. I do mine at 500* and they turn out just fine. Also, do you have your stone raised off of the platesetter?
Mike
I'm ashamed what I did for a Klondike Bar!!
Omaha, NE -
I would echo what Bowhunr said, I am no pizza expert and the dough is too wet. i would say the holes in the dough are closing up due to how much moisture was in the dough. that just about has to be why there is bubbles in your dough. my .02
Maumelle, Arkansas -
http://www.amazon.com/Ateco-01357-Pizza-Docker/dp/B000ZNPRJ6
From Amazon Description...
Stop your pizzas from forming large buggles during baking by docking the crust before adding sauce and baking. Easy to use and very effective. -
I had the same problem and I read that the bubbles are a result of either over proofing the dough or under proofing the dough. Bubbles from under-proofing are the flat bubbles big in diameter. Bubbles from over proofing are usually high but small in diameter. To prevent adjust fermentation times. Increase fermentation for under proofed dough and decrease fermentation for over proofed dough. Aside from adjusting you proofing of the dough, lessen the moisture in the dough. Or, you could try poking little holes into the dough with a fork prior to putting sauce on. If you still get bubbles, watch through the top vent and open done and pop them if they get too big.Columbia, SC --- LBGE 2011 -- MINI BGE 2013
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Moisture in the dough only has very little to do with it, and the bubbles produced by moisture are generally desirable. The bubbles you are describing are caused by either over or under proofing your dough. Proofing is basically the rise time (fermentation time). Under proofing causes large flat bubbles....think pita bread pockets and over proofing produces smaller higher bubbles. It looks like your're over proofed. The problem with store bought dough is you have no idea how long those balls are on the shelf...they are proofing that whole time. As simple as dough seems, it is really a very complex living thing, that behaves certain ways under certain conditions. Learning how to control and manipulate those conditions to produce desired results is not easy to master.
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What Chubbs said...
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