Well we finally got rid of our old Lang deck oven dinosaurs and replaced them with Baker’s Pride P44S ovens…
http://www.bakerspride.com/specs/Hearthbake/HB_P44S_P44BL.pdf
For the most part, these ovens are working well for us; much better than the old Lang that I couldn’t even get spare parts for anymore.
Anyway, onto the problem.
We are having problems getting the toppings/cheese to brown before the bottom or upper exposed crust gets too dark to serve to a customer. I have even resorted to cooking the pizza the entire time on a screen, but I still cannot get the top to finish up with those nice brown spots you get on cooked cheese (and we used to get in the old Lang).
The only factor is the new oven. Same Cheese, same toppings, same crust. It doesn’t matter which deck we use or how hot the oven is set to (I have tried temps from 500-550 degrees).
The strange thing is that I called Baker’s Pride and he tells me he has never heard this problem, in fact typically hears the opposite… top cooks, but bottom doesn’t as quickly.
So I am wondering about our dough recipe. What if we cut back on our olive oil? Should that help keep it from getting so dark so fast? Our recipe more less was an evolution of finding something that worked in the old Lang ovens, so I am wondering if it needs adjustment.
Any other ideas?
Thanks
http://www.bakerspride.com/specs/Hearthbake/HB_P44S_P44BL.pdf
For the most part, these ovens are working well for us; much better than the old Lang that I couldn’t even get spare parts for anymore.
Anyway, onto the problem.
We are having problems getting the toppings/cheese to brown before the bottom or upper exposed crust gets too dark to serve to a customer. I have even resorted to cooking the pizza the entire time on a screen, but I still cannot get the top to finish up with those nice brown spots you get on cooked cheese (and we used to get in the old Lang).
The only factor is the new oven. Same Cheese, same toppings, same crust. It doesn’t matter which deck we use or how hot the oven is set to (I have tried temps from 500-550 degrees).
The strange thing is that I called Baker’s Pride and he tells me he has never heard this problem, in fact typically hears the opposite… top cooks, but bottom doesn’t as quickly.
So I am wondering about our dough recipe. What if we cut back on our olive oil? Should that help keep it from getting so dark so fast? Our recipe more less was an evolution of finding something that worked in the old Lang ovens, so I am wondering if it needs adjustment.
Any other ideas?
Thanks

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