Ask Tom Lehmann a Question

Do you actually use exactly 32# of water? (4 gallons * 8#) If so, that would be 64% hydration for your regular dough. We weigh water for every batch of dough. If it is off just a little bit it gets too tough or too gooey.
 
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Hi Tom and greater PMQ community,

My cousin and I purchased a local pizzeria in my hometown a little over one month ago, and while both of us have solid experience in the industry (at the specific shop we took over), it has been a wild ride getting up and running to say the least. My personal primary focus has been on dough quality and management, and so far have had success improving on the previous owner’s recipe, thanks largely to this forum and community (THANK YOU!!!). I honestly don’t know what we would have done had I not discovered this AMAZING resource in the weeks leading up to our opening.

One aspect of the dough making process I’ve had some trouble finding clarity on is the use of oil, particularly vegetable oil as opposed to olive oil, which most of the recipes on this forum seem to use. I have been sticking to Tom’s recommendation of 3% [olive] oil for a batch using a 50lb bag of flour, which comes to 2.87 cups of oil. I have been using Divo vegetable oil (inherited from previous ownership), which is 90% vegetable & 10% olive oil. My question is; Should the amount of oil used be adjusted based on the type of oil?

Also, the way we were trained to handle dough out of the mixer involves using oil instead of flour throughout the cutting and rolling process (i.e. - small amount of oil on table where dough is set for cutting and rolling). The only explanation given to us has been “it’s just how we do it.” I’m not a fan of the type of mess oil leaves, and it seems to me the additional oil absorbed by the dough in this process could have a negative effect on the end product (pure speculation). Also, every single video I’ve seen about dough making has shown flour used on both the table and dough itself once out of the mixer. Is there any benefit to using flour as opposed to oil throughout the cutting and rolling process?

Thank you!
-K. Mann
 
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I’m having a mixing and proofing issue. I believe it’s been going on for a lot longer than I realized.

First, My Recipe:

55lbs Flour (00 Caputo Antico Molino Pizzeria bags)
25lbs water (including any ice during hot months)
3.5lbs Cola (Yes, CocaCola… I worked at a Pizzeria 20+ years ago where the owner did this and we got rave reviews about our crust so I just imported it to my application :))
2.5lbs Hot Water (100-110f, for yeast)
(31 lbs total hydration / 56%)
17.5oz (2%) Oil (was EVOO, now, we use a blend)
17.5oz (2%) Salt
3oz (.34%) Fleischmann’s IDY

I put all liquids in the mixing bowl with the flour and salt and mix for 3min on low speed. After it stops, we add the oil and originally we mixed it on speed 2 for close to 11 minutes. (At one point we were told by our mixer technician to NEVER run the dough on speed 2 so for a while, we just ran it for close to 14 min on speed 1.) The dough came out around 80 degrees f and we ball Small dough balls around 10oz for 12" shells and Large dough balls around 18oz for 16" shells. The balls go 8 to a tray for smalls and 6 to a tray for larges, then we oil the tops of the dough, offset-stack them for about 2 hours in the walk-in (too small to cross stack), then nest them.

For service, we dont have an area where we can keep the proofed doughs to get them to room temp so for years, we’ve stacked about 8-9 trays in a reach-in refrigerator convenient to the pizza prep line and they grab them drectly from the reach-in, cold, and open to order. Essentially, they are refrigerated during service and even with us going in and out of that reach-in, they dont ever get up over 50f)

We’ve never had any problems opening the dough or baking them. In fact, we have rave reviews for the texture and the flavor.

(We open the doughs in neapolitan style… very thinly in the center, leaving most of the weight around the cornice for a larger pillowy cornicione, and we bake in a 625f Marsal MB90)

Now for the Issues:
  1. Dough Blowing Out. After several months, we noticed an issue of the dough blowing out after barely 36hrs… definitely not lasting 48hrs. Typically we make dough today for use tomorrow, but if it ever goes beyond the 1st use day, the doughs just turn into dough-soup in the proofing boxes and we cant even come close to using them for pizza shells. I originally reduced the hydration and the yeast (they were higher before, around 60% hydration and almost 4oz (.45% IDY) but the problem persisted. We tried to start with colder dough (adding ice to the water) and that didnt do anything. This is problem #1… dough blowing out.
  2. Dough Mixing Consistency. The dough was coming out too cold only mixing on speed 1, even for as long as 14 additional minutes after the initial delayed-oil 3min pre-mix. So, I’ve gone back to the speed 2 mixing and have tried anywhere between 8min and 12 min and I still have the same issue. The dough, once mixed, proofed overnight and stretching open for a pizza shell, isnt smooth. The balls look wonderful on the outside but opening them up, the center of the dough looks like a spider web with noticeable cross-strands of dough and it gets super thin at points, almost popping holes.
Even with these issues, we typically have a very solid consistent product that bakes well and everyone seems to love… but I would LOVE to figure out how to keep the dough from blowing out past 36-48 hours (so that we can use the dough we made a ton of on Monday, thru Tuesday and on Wednesday).

Thanks!
-Rich
 
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Hey Tom!
Im using a recipe similar to your New York style recipe, it is as follows:
Water 60.0%
Yeast 0.9% (IDY)
Salt 3.0%
Sugar g 1.5%
Oil 1.5%
Flour: Molino Pasini Verde 00

I started experimenting with this recipe a few days ago. The results have been interesting but my pizzas feel a little too chewey and hard than i want them to be. Whats the best way to balance that out?

The reason i use a 00 flour is because here in Pakistan its hard to find good flour for pizza locally. The best flour i could source was 00 flour already being imported into the country. Im trying to do a New York style pizza. Im using a gas fired deck oven and im baking at 570 F.

Thanks!
Omar
 
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Hello Doctor,

My name is Zad Youshei, and I need your help bringing my concept to life. Although my concept already exists in many forms across the country, I am attempting to add a little twist to it.

I am investing in opening up a delivery service which is completely automated. Meaning: all the orders would be coming through online platforms such as custom app, website, uber eats, grub hub, etc….
I am even looking into setting up all calls to be received by a call center abroad. Basically I’m jumping on the internet bandwagon and hoping to get out of the store front retail and focusing more on where people are actually spending all their money.

Last year, I left the family owned pizza shop and ventured out on my own, separating my sushi catering company from the enterprise. I know a little about pizza and was able to learn a few tricks from you from the 2015 pizza expo and your articles in the magazine.
Never the less, I am faced with the challenge of coming up with a dough recipe which will be cost effective and still high in quality. I am planning on using a dough press to stretch the skins out, therefore I also need your advice on what kind of oven to use as well.
My concept is going to based on fast food prices and speed, with gourmet quality.

Please let me know what you’re thoughts are.
 
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Submit your questions here.
Tom, For a cracker crust dough using Cerosota All purpose flour what is the hydration is it 45%? Also is oil used in mix and does that count for the hydration? thanks
 
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Tom,

I have a question about dough for baking sandwich rolls. We’ve been using the following recipe to make rolls of for our cheese steaks and hoagies

-16 qts water at 50 degrees F
-16 g yeast
-48 g “Easy Kaiser” a product from Puratos foods (let me know if you need more details)
-50lbs high gluten flour

We recently switched our dough dividing machine from an “Atwood Scale-O-Matic” to a new “Vemag” dough divider. We use the machine to roll out a 6 oz ball and we run each of those through a dough moulder to get the roll.

For some reason our recipe doesn’t go well with the new Vemag machine. The dough doesn’t prove as well and ends up cooking flat, even after a good bit of time in the proofer.

Is there something we should be changing with the recipe to get a better product with the new machine? Where should we start?

Thank You,

Mike
 
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Hi Tom,

New here. I’m planning to open a pizzeria in my hometown in India. I’ll be very grateful if you can help me clear some of my queries and suggest me a few things. Firstly, i’m planning to start off small, as pizzerias here don’t run as busy as in US or other places. So, i’m planning to go with a KitchenAid Commercial 6.9l Mixer to make my dough (will have to make it a few times rather than just once, compared to a large planetary mixer). I will be following the autolyze process and the recipe as given by you.
I am planning to go with the thick crust (pan crust pizzas) like Dominos, i noticed they use some kind of butter (not the garlic butter rub on top) but even inside their crust, its buttery. So i thought, to mix in some butter in my dough. Do i need to adjust water or oil accordingly? Also, i saw your videos on PMQ, and i will be following it completely.

However, i am confused at one point. Some videos i saw, say to leave the dough balls at room temperature at at a slightly warm place for 8-12 hours. (with a damp towel on top). You, however, are teaching cold ferment. How are both processes different, in terms of the output of the dough? Again, i am not gonna be making a Authentic pizzeria- new york style or others, just going with simple pan pizzas, freshly made. Also, people here are not nerds for the crust- all they like is a soft buttery crust, not much chewy! In order to achieve this- should i do a cold ferment, or can i go with the room temperature ferment?
I won’t be able to afford a cold storage or walk-in room. I can have a seperate cold freezer/chiller wherein i can maintain the 32 F temperature for the dough as i saw in your PMQ video. Is that gonna have the same affect, Tom? Since, i only expect about 100 pizzas to be sold a day, atleast initially, do you think a cold chiller/freezer (with enough capacity to fit the trays, ofcourse) would do the job? Please help!
 
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