Classic Margherita Pizza

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50% Caputo Flour (Red Bag) – 50% King Arthur All Purpose Flour (KAAP) – 15% Ischia Starter – 3% Salt – 62% Water - 10 hours rise time at room temperature

Nice Pie!

 

How do you feed/handle/refresh your starter and what is your room temperature. 15% for 10h is very much. That's even more than craig's table would give me. Well, your result shows it is the right amount for your settings.

Do you feed your starter the Italian way or how sourdo.com describes it?

Adrina

Profile picture for user mightypizzaoven

I split my starter into two jars. That I rotate and store in the fridge. I take it out one day before use and let it get to room temperature, discard half, and feed it about 50g flour and 50g water stir (or more but at equal weight), Some time I do one more discard and feeding if the sarter is not active after the first feeding.

 

I used Craig table, at 74 f room temperature. I combinbed both his tables in one article that I posted on my website http://www.mightypizzaoven.com/lactic-acid-and-yeast-fermentation-predictive-model-a-tutorial/ great tool.

Below, dough balled after 5 hours of bulk femrent.

 

Below, dough balls after 5 hours.

 

Image
IMG_7119.jpg

 

Hm, I guess, my starter is just more active as I use it more often, then.

Why do you divide into bulk and ball fermentation if you have enough space/boxes? In my experience 10 to 12 hours of ball fermentation is just perfect for the gluten to relax.

I have similar boxes. I put the ball on the lid and use the bowl as cover though. The dark on the bottom is oil?

 

Adrian

I find it easier to ball after bulk ferment. Also it allow me the stretch and fold each ball one more time.

 

How often you feed your starter?

 

I do oil my containers. I like the idea of placing the ball on the cover, do oil your cover to prevent dough sticking to the container and cover?

It depends on how busy I am. Sometimes it's 7 days between two feedings, sometimes just 1 day.

Yes, I put some oil on the lid, but just very very liddle.

Sometimes a little bit. But that's not much of a problem. From the lid it is easily seperable. Usually the oil suffices; sometimes, if I forgot the oil, I take a dough scraper.

To the container it might stick a bit if not oiled, but with a butter knife or just with a bit of care, it never was a problem.

I really use very little oil and just spread it with a paper towel.

:D Nice pie, really. Less than 2 minutes is just wow.

Thank's for the update

By the way, I cannot see your pictures here (no hotlinking allowed). But I looked at them on pizzamaking.com

 (I don't read it very often, but with the notification from you that there are updates, I had to take a look.)Adrian

Thanks Adrian, I made a mistake of posting the link instead of using the media button. I realized my mistake after I pressed saved. I wish you can edit your post after saving (at least for an hour, pizzamaking allow you 24hours - I think)

 

Regards,

 

Bert

... is possible, if you are logged in. And not just for 24h, like in pm.com

You'll find an edit link below your post.

Adrian