Exposing the Biggest Lie in Pizza Making

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  • Опубліковано 25 кві 2024
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    📃 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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    Written and Filmed by: Charlie Anderson
    Edited by: Van Clements and Charlie Anderson
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 210

  • @emrom918
    @emrom918 15 днів тому +86

    btw you dont need to spend 200 dollars on a pre seasoned baking steel. i ordered a 1/4" slab of steel online for like 40 dollars a few years ago and removed the machine oil with vinegar and seasoned it myself. Definitely more work but it was worth the effort to save so much money.

    • @bennyb.1742
      @bennyb.1742 15 днів тому +4

      I was just going to ask about this. I'm a metal worker so I was wondering what sort of steel it is, if it's anything weird or exotic but apparently now. Time to jam a big off cut of .250 plate into the oven and rock n roll.

    • @emrom918
      @emrom918 15 днів тому +1

      @@bennyb.1742 thermal conductivity probably doesn't change to any noticeable degree with different common steel alloys. thats definitely the best way to do it imo, good luck :p

    • @leifericson923
      @leifericson923 15 днів тому +1

      @@bennyb.1742i made one of my own out A36 steel, i tried looking up what they’re made of and it seems that’s it, it’s at least safe for it, the worst part is getting the mill scale off of it if you get it hot rolled. I tried vinegar but couldn’t find a tub big enough for the steel so i just used a grinder

    • @haha7836hahah
      @haha7836hahah 15 днів тому

      @@leifericson923i am also thinking of making it on my own. Do you recommend a36 or 304?

    • @joeofloath
      @joeofloath 15 днів тому +2

      This is what I did too. I bought a big sheet of 6mm mild steel from an online metal supplier for 1/6 the cost of the same piece of steel sold as a pizza steel.

  • @kylelitwack
    @kylelitwack 15 днів тому +34

    Here is my budget recommendation. Lodge sells a cast iron pizza pan and it's pretty big. I use it like a stone/steel but it's priced like stone and works more like a steel. I paid $20 on sale and I think it's normally like $30.

    • @DKTD23
      @DKTD23 13 днів тому +1

      Link?

    • @DanielJacksonisbiggerinside
      @DanielJacksonisbiggerinside 11 днів тому

      A pizza screen is also worth investigating. If your rack can get close to the heating element, the screen allows hot air and radiant heating to do a pretty decent crisp. (Think toaster-like results.)

    • @Grunttamer
      @Grunttamer 10 днів тому

      If you can get a cheap carbon steel sheet it will transfer heat better than the cast iron. If the cast iron is working for you though probably not worth the minor upgrade

    • @Iisakkiik
      @Iisakkiik 9 днів тому

      I've used my lodge cast iron pan as a pizza steel, flipped upside down in the oven. Work's okay'ish, but definitely not as good as a pizza steel. Definitely worth a try if you already have one for other things.

    • @AlokSomani
      @AlokSomani 9 днів тому

      We also use cast iron. We cook multiple pizzas in succession, so the heat retention is important. Still helps to preheat for an hour or so btw.

  • @t20sgrunt36
    @t20sgrunt36 14 днів тому +13

    I have had the same stone for 12 years. My current oven goes to 500, which I preheat for 30 mins. Then turn on the broiler for 10 minutes. I kick the oven back to the highest baking temp before I slide the pizza in. I keep the stone on an upper rack and it gets ripping hot. While a steel may be better, this little technique has given me good crispy crust

    • @Mr._Chievous
      @Mr._Chievous 10 днів тому

      forget pre-heating for a half our. just go straight to the broiler to pre-heat and save yourself 20 minutes

    • @tonyd0001
      @tonyd0001 10 днів тому +1

      If you switch to a steel, I guarantee your results improve drastically

    • @Grunttamer
      @Grunttamer 9 днів тому

      @@Mr._Chievous that’s a joke right? Broiler on a cold stone is a recipe for a cracked stone

  • @Sleezy.Design
    @Sleezy.Design 15 днів тому +22

    I've always wondered why people are using stones in their home oven, when metal conducts heat way more efficiently. I bought a pizza stone to a while ago and I was extremely underwhelmed.

    • @annchovy6
      @annchovy6 15 днів тому +1

      For pizza and flatbreads the steel wins, but stones are good for loaves since they need to bake much longer.

    • @AlexT-sy6nm
      @AlexT-sy6nm 15 днів тому +2

      ​@@annchovy6I use cast iron for all my bread-baking and get terrific rise and crip bottom crusts. It's not even a dutch oven, I use an 11 3/4 #10 Griswold or more usually an 11 1/4 Wagner griddle. And spritz with water every 4 mins 3x. Can't see how a pizza stone would give better results.

    • @DKTD23
      @DKTD23 13 днів тому

      Yeah for a home oven I'd upgrade to steel. The outdoor Gozney's do just fine with a stone, but they can also get double the heat output.

  • @VindictiveMoose
    @VindictiveMoose 15 днів тому +10

    I've always hated pizza stones. Drop it and they break, they're difficult to keep clean (in my opinion) and like you mentioned, they don't do the best at transferring heat to create a crispy crust.

    • @Knight_Kin
      @Knight_Kin 14 днів тому

      Yeah you have to clean them with an oil, soap and water destroys stones and will guarantee they will crack in the oven.

  • @user-cj5zo4zm6j
    @user-cj5zo4zm6j 15 днів тому +3

    Every since watching your trial and error of making the perfect pizza, I've wanted a pizza steel. Thanks for sharing your favorite brand ❤

  • @bcatbb2896
    @bcatbb2896 15 днів тому +3

    I’ve been using the pizza circle rings used in pizza shops
    The metal actually create these burn marks on the bottom like it’s searing the bottom

  • @Jimmyjames19833
    @Jimmyjames19833 15 днів тому +5

    Love my steel, plus seems like a big heat sink that helps regulate Temps in my gas oven during regular every day cooks

  • @CheeseDud
    @CheeseDud 15 днів тому +14

    9:43 Missing file. Early enough that you could fix and reupload if you want.
    I'm saving for my first pizza steel. For now, I use the Helen Rennie method of putting the pizza on parchment paper directly on the bottom rack

    • @CharlieAndersonCooking
      @CharlieAndersonCooking  15 днів тому +12

      Whoops, thanks for the heads up. It was just a previous comment where someone said my baking steel is seasoned to the high heavens haha.

  • @stenquists1
    @stenquists1 15 днів тому +7

    There is a lodge cast iron round pizza pan that I think would be great to try because it is only $40, but I have a 1/2in steel so I have never had a reason to try.

    • @michaelmashburn6068
      @michaelmashburn6068 15 днів тому

      I have one of these, and it's nice because you can use it for more than just pizza

    • @kylelitwack
      @kylelitwack 15 днів тому

      Yo! This is what I use. I got in on sale for only $20. Only down side is that you have to wait a good while before baking a second pizza for good results, but I assume a steel is pretty similar.

  • @zay-lias
    @zay-lias 15 днів тому +4

    You getting pretty jacked up Charlie… keep the gains going my dude!!!

  • @thegolfcartshop
    @thegolfcartshop 14 днів тому

    one of my fav channels keep doing you bro

  • @Outerspacepotatoman423
    @Outerspacepotatoman423 15 днів тому +1

    I got a 15 inch Lodge cast iron pizza pan and that bad Larry is way better than the stone I was using before. Definitely recommend it!

  • @andrewgarcia4168
    @andrewgarcia4168 15 днів тому +1

    I pretty consistently get a bake equivalent to your steel bake example, on my home oven pizza stone. It’s 16x16 squared stone, and gets to nearly 600°F on my convection roast setting.

  • @eyeofbass
    @eyeofbass 11 днів тому

    This weekend I did broiler only, up at the top. About 6-min/pie. No par-baking was needed. Pie on a 1/4” pizza steel. Will be my go-to method going forward and I’ve experimented a lot with temps, times, and par-baking.

  • @ThisRandomGuyYouDidntNotice
    @ThisRandomGuyYouDidntNotice 13 днів тому

    couldn't make great pizza for years, then discovered how to make german "flame cake" and now my pizzas are bueno too. imho regular metal baking tin and oven at least 210°C. high temp really makes the difference :)

  • @7Swans0n
    @7Swans0n 15 днів тому

    My first great pizza was in a 8" stainless steel pan, actually it was pretty close to neapolitan (high bubbly edges). I just threw it on my stove at first, assembled the pizza in the pan while actively heating it on the stove (can be tricky to land the dough in perfectly but with small pizzas its fine) and then go under a preheated broiler.
    These days I use a large cast iron round pizza plate by lodge (idk what its called really) so i guess it is closer to steel than stone. The results are gorgeous for a home oven

  • @indellibleink
    @indellibleink 15 днів тому

    I have a nerd chef ultimate half inch steel on the top rack directly under the broiler.
    I usually do a hour on high broil to heat up the steel and then set the oven to 550 for an hour before baking to get the max heat into the steel.
    Then it's 2 minutes then spin for another 2 minutes. Broil on high for 30 secs spin for another 30 secs. Done.
    When broiling just keep an eye on it so you can get the desired finish to your liking.

  • @dinein1970
    @dinein1970 6 днів тому

    If you set your pizza steel about 2/3 down, you then can make use of your broiler as well. I preheat my oven to 550F, then I crank on the broiler, which helps to get the floor of the steel up to 670F. Switch back to 550F oven, launch the pizza... then you can pop back on the broiler as you want to to help finish the pizza.

  • @boolaga
    @boolaga 15 днів тому +4

    9:43 Missing File. Now I'll never know. 😢

    • @CharlieAndersonCooking
      @CharlieAndersonCooking  15 днів тому +1

      Whoops, yeah it was just a comment from a previous video where someone said my baking steel is seasoned to the high heavens haha.

  • @bloozedaddy
    @bloozedaddy 11 днів тому +1

    Steels are great for your grill as well...smash burgers...veggies, etc . and of course you can do this method with pizza and have your oven broiler up and running for the transfer. You can also get your grill hotter than most ovens . I prep the pie on parchment paper on the tray for easy transfer to the steel then you let the dough start to cook and set for about two minutes. The paper will brown a bit but not burn. Then you just lift up the pizza with a spatula a little and pull the paper out. Easy Peasy. From then on you can turn /remove your pie with your spatula ..metal one of course .

    • @eyeofbass
      @eyeofbass 11 днів тому +1

      This man knows what he’s talking about. Well done. 👍

  • @sandhill9313
    @sandhill9313 15 днів тому

    Another brilliant presentation 🙂
    Money money money...the last 14" stone I bought from Walmart was like $13 which is attractive compared to the least expensive steel, and for someone starting from zero a decent way to dip a toe, make a few dozen on stone and if you (like me) get addicted to making your own pies, a steel becomes easy to justify. I am very satisfied with 1/4 inch as I only make one in a session.
    I've never tried the sheet pan method, never occurred to me, but will, just for fun.
    My setup in my 60 year old electric which struggles to hit 475 is steel second rack up, 1/2" thick stone top rack for the broiler phase, move the pie when the time is right.
    There are a lot of candied dates for BIGGEST Lie in Home Pizza Making, I'm not sure stones vs other surfaces rises to the top though.
    Anyone who pays attention to your YT videos and really tries to follow your advice will make better and better pies with practice, we can't ask for much more, thanks.

  • @Daseril
    @Daseril 15 днів тому +1

    How often do you actually eat pizza? Is it pretty much every day? or do you try to space it out and keep things balanced?

  • @fuchsiasdreams
    @fuchsiasdreams 15 днів тому +1

    I've been using a 7$cad walmart steel pizza pan and it seems to do the trick, nice and dark bottom, transfers heat too well sometimes hahaha

    • @fuchsiasdreams
      @fuchsiasdreams 15 днів тому

      On the cheapest GE electric oven that runs to 500 it takes 10 min per pizza so a steel would help a lot with that. This oven won't let you run the broiler and main heating unit at the same time so you lose a ton of heat.

  • @AlokSomani
    @AlokSomani 9 днів тому

    I'm curious how cast iron works compared to your steel. We went from a stone to cast iron and haven't looked back, especially because we cook at least a couple pizzas in succession, so the heat retention is important.
    We preheat it on the bottom rack for 60 minutes at 475F, and cook it on the bottom rack. We use a little semolina or corn meal to help with the sliding off of the peel.

  • @apatterson8128
    @apatterson8128 15 днів тому

    Myself and some friends have purchased our steels from 222 Steel Designs in Pennsylvania. Local company, Made in USA. 1/4” A36 seasoned steel. Not the most expensive, but not the cheapest. My steel is a GAME-CHANGER!

  • @guycoburn1633
    @guycoburn1633 9 днів тому

    Making home pizza on a budget -- instead of using a purchased Pizza Stone or Steel, I use an unglazed Floor tile from a big-box home store. It cost less than $5 and works great. I measured the inside of my oven and then got the largest unglazed Floor Tile that would fit in the oven.
    Frankly, to get the crust more crunchy, I just leave it in an extra couple of minutes.

  • @lanceuppercut2204
    @lanceuppercut2204 14 днів тому

    I got a baking steel because it would not crack and took up less space, good to know it works better too.
    The upside down baking tray/sheet method is what I was doing before I got a baking steel and it's good enough if you only make pizza once in a while even in a electric oven

  • @dirkdiggler9482
    @dirkdiggler9482 8 днів тому

    The main problem with baking stones is that there are just so many bad ones on the market. The one I use is a Food Network brand stone that cost $40 back in 2012, and was absolutely one of the best kitchen investments I've ever made. I don't think that item is made any more, and I've never since seen anything even close to it's quality in any store. I've made countless pizzas on it, and it's never let me down. I've since bought a pizza steel, and that does give slightly better results with pizza. But the stone is definitely still great.
    Another thing to consider is that there are plenty of people who make pizza and also bake bread, and this is where a stone is really more useful than a steel. While a baking steel gives slightly (or even a lot in some cases) better results with pizza than a stone, it actually conducts heat a little _too_ well for bread. A quick bake at ten minutes or less is where a steel really shines, but at longer bake times with bread, it will actually just burn it. A stone gives a better bake with a longer time in the oven, without a doubt- or at lest a good stone does. So I'd say it's really a bit of a stretch to say that there's no reason to buy a stone, unless pizza is the only thing you'll ever make with it.

  • @THCV4
    @THCV4 12 днів тому +1

    I know this sounds crazy, but I have gotten the best results from a home oven by using a thin pizza stone directly on top of a baking steel. The baking steel burns the underside of the pizza before the top is done, but the stone helps mellow out the heat. By having the steel under the stone, this ensures that the stone doesn’t lose too much of its heat during the cooking process. Best of both worlds!

  • @schubser3327
    @schubser3327 14 днів тому

    I bought a pizza stone a couple of years ago for my electric kitchen oven. I switched from the oven to a BBQ, and the results improved dramatically. Also, I pre-bake my pizza with only the tomato sauce and the parmigiano reggiano on top for two minutes first to get a crunchy bottom and crust without burning the other toppings like the mozzarella or the onions. Nevertheless, it seems the steel plate would still be the better choice.

  • @imbykji
    @imbykji 15 днів тому +3

    I don't remember who recommended it, but I switched to steel about 5 years ago after my stone cracked.

  • @Kato22PR
    @Kato22PR 15 днів тому

    Thank you for this video, I was buying a stone cause I saw this video recommending it.

  • @falafavasofa
    @falafavasofa 15 днів тому

    For people who have both and making a few pizzas at a time, you could stack the steel on the stone to keep the steel heated longer as the stone "charges" the heat retention of the steel. Be careful of the oven rack from bowing due to the large amount of weight and possibly coming off the side rails.

  • @fireblast133
    @fireblast133 15 днів тому

    so basically, if you're using something that can get to those high temperatures that professional ovens can reach, a baking stone is good cause you won't burn the pizza. but in the oven it's not necessary

  • @xlilsasuke4x
    @xlilsasuke4x 11 днів тому +1

    My oven has the broiler below the oven. I just take all the racks out and place my stone on the bottom of my oven. I believe this allows the stone to reach a higher temp because it has direct contact for heat transfer vs the air

  • @kraftzion
    @kraftzion 15 днів тому

    IA quick Google search says iron is 3x as dense as granite. Let alone more conductive. If you order pizza in, fry it in butter In a cast iron pan once you get it home. Fair warning, you'll never be able to eat pizza straight from the pizzeria again. Doesn't matter how good the initial pizza oven was, they don't come close to the crispness achieved by this extra step.

  • @cristianespinal9917
    @cristianespinal9917 10 днів тому

    I have a stove top cast iron griddle with one flat side. I put that in the oven and make oval pizzas. Works great

  • @leafster1337
    @leafster1337 14 днів тому

    i bought a 30-35 lb pizza steel which was in slightly rough condition, but just the smallest amount of polishing then only 2 seasonings and it makes a very good steel...so good that if u preheat max next to the heat coils it will incinerate the pizza. for neapolitan, new haven, and new york styles with works very well, as all other styles too. for neapolitan style i preheat in the oven max right next to my bottom coil bc that one switches on the most (ive tried top and middle and the results were not good), then after 50 minutes i move the steel to the top and preheat my broiler which takes about 2-3 minutes, then i bake. i constantly rotate (spinning, middle, left and right) so it doesnt keep burning the same spot, and also the lifting time spares some incineration. isnt done in a minute, but maybe 2 sometimes 3. then i have to put it at the bottom and preheat maybe 5-10 minutes then do it all again, but itll never be as good. preheating again 15-20 is the best, but dont wanna wait that long for more pizzas. idk if having such a large and heavy steel does anything special (it covers about the whole oven rack, and the thickness i think is .4". the breadth of it is nice bc i can bake many things across the whole thing at once)
    ps: mine was $70 off amazon, and has a hanging hole in two corners, though i just leave it in the oven

  • @slaplapdog
    @slaplapdog 15 днів тому

    I use screens,clean up is the obly downside.
    Even commercial sheet pans seem to warp at the highest temperatures my oven gets to.

  • @Adamthehoff
    @Adamthehoff 14 днів тому

    I found a 16” rounds lodge cast iron with no walls that works great. Only spent 30 dollars on it. It was probably the best upgrade for my home pizza making.

    • @DKTD23
      @DKTD23 13 днів тому

      Online?

  • @MisterM2402
    @MisterM2402 14 днів тому

    Preheating for 90 minutes is quite a long time. I wonder if you could do a comparison for length of preheating at 30-minute intervals maybe? Leaving the oven running on high for so long is a lot of extra cost and pre-planning so it would be interesting to see if there's a point of diminishing returns.

  • @MikeKasprzak
    @MikeKasprzak 14 днів тому

    With my electric oven at 525 F and a pizza steel, I need about 8 minutes per pie. 6 minutes baked, turning half way through, then 2 minutes of broiler. I also use the 2nd from the top rack, and get best results after a 2 hour preheat (90 minutes isn't enough).

  • @th6252
    @th6252 13 днів тому

    There’s a seller on Etsy that sells all different sizes of 3/8” A36 baking steel that’s pre-seasoned. Can make custom sizes as well. Still pricey but cheaper than Baking Steel.

  • @ryuvereignnolife3980
    @ryuvereignnolife3980 4 дні тому

    stone stores the heat longer and steel gets hotter faster

  • @AnthonyManzo-oo7ss
    @AnthonyManzo-oo7ss 14 днів тому

    wonder how cool it would be to bake on a pink salt block. It has even more conductivity then steel.

  • @dle4811
    @dle4811 15 днів тому +2

    You can make a baking steel for cheaper by buying A36 hot rolled steel (some options online). The only downside is that there's a lot of prepwork like soaking the whole thing in vinegar to get gunk off of it and then seasoning it. It ends up being 1/2 or even 1/3 the cost of official ones, so the effort was worth it for the better pizza.

    • @walterw2
      @walterw2 15 днів тому +1

      yeah, i wrangled a 1/4" thick 18x18 steel for like $30; i just needed to file off some sharp edges, then clean and season it

    • @simonandersson9179
      @simonandersson9179 15 днів тому

      As long is foodgrade

    • @Knight_Kin
      @Knight_Kin 14 днів тому

      Oh you certainly can but I wouldn't recommend the home brew method for most cooks. Understanding steel grades, how to modify the steel, how to prep and deburr it, how to prep it for being food grade........ It's nice to know it can be done but realistically I recommend people just buy the correct product. You're talking 20 or 40 dollars, i mean come on.

    • @jssdl4287
      @jssdl4287 9 днів тому

      @@simonandersson9179 Flat top griddles used in diners and restaurants are made from A36 steel.

    • @jssdl4287
      @jssdl4287 9 днів тому

      @@Knight_Kin the price difference is more like $100

  • @jennypuggle886
    @jennypuggle886 15 днів тому +1

    Or how about a thin pizza pan made of steel that you can build a pizza on without extra equipment. No peel no pizza steel just let if finsh in the steel sheet pan and let it melt and brown without the broiler. Why make it so complicated. Grocery stores sell 16" pizza pans with holes in them that work so good! Without much preheat. And you don't need to use a pizza peel.

    • @jennypuggle886
      @jennypuggle886 15 днів тому

      I wish Charlie would test a Calphalon pizza pan. Build the pizza on it put it in.

  • @cjaquilino
    @cjaquilino 15 днів тому

    Vevor sells baking steel plates 0.2" or 0.4" thick for around $50 or less on eBay.
    Only downside is the dimensions are odd, like 20" x 14.2"or 16.2"x 14.2". But you solve that by buying a smaller steel (hot rolled/a36/mild steel) plate of similar thickness that fills out the short dimension your bigger plate. Just clean and season it before using.

  • @ZagnutBar
    @ZagnutBar 14 днів тому

    This is the Dunkin' Donuts coffee scenario with pizza.
    In the 1980s, coffee in America was terrible. Percolator, burned and old. Dunkin' Donuts got a reputation for great coffee because they actually made it fresh throughout the day- not because the coffee itself was particularly extraordinary. That reputation has stuck for decades.
    Similarly with pizza stones, the advice is based on a pre-steel context. Baking steels have really only been around for ten years or so. Before then, a stone was WAY better for baking pizzas than using a regular sheet pan, which is what most Americans would have baked their pizzas on. )I know that's what I did as a kid on the 80s being Appian Way pizza mix). And that's how stones got their reputation asx essential pizza making kit.
    Yes, it's worth reevaluating advice as tone goes by. But it's important also to understand the context in which this advice was given.
    By the way Serious eats recommends using a steel for the cooking surface and a stone for the "lid" of the pizza oven, radiating heat down to cook the top.

  • @jjdawg9918
    @jjdawg9918 10 днів тому

    I was using stones long before steels were a thing(and I'm not saying they are better). Stones seem to work but only if placed on the bottom/sole of the oven and that typically requires a gas oven and almost a 45min to 1 hr preheat at 525. I also cook the pizza on the stone for about 3 minutes to char the crust and move to an upper rack to finish it off. That said I would probably buy a steel now days.
    One small advantage a stone may have is that some situations they can absorb small amount of moisture/steam instead of trapping it between your pizza/bread and the stone...no rust and no seasoning required. Probably another reason you see them in pizza ovens. You can just scrape and brush them down.

  • @superviola88
    @superviola88 15 днів тому

    would cast iron pan be a good alternative?

  • @aaronkindig8016
    @aaronkindig8016 8 днів тому

    I have a steel in my oven. And literally have 9 clay bricks in my gas grill I use as a stone when it's warm out.

  • @ThatGamerDude9000
    @ThatGamerDude9000 14 днів тому

    My issue is that the oven in my apartment has the broiler in the pull out drawer below the main oven compartment, which I use to store all my excess cake tins. So my steel gets too hot and burns my pizza by the time the cheese is all nice and gooey. My apartment doesn't have the cabinet space to store my excess baking belongings.

  • @filmsarefriends1950
    @filmsarefriends1950 15 днів тому +1

    I have always seen these videos and have consistently read that steels are better, but I’ve always achieved amazing results with my stone. Perhaps it’s my oven or the dough recipes I use, but my stone-baked pizzas always come out looking like yours cooked on your steel. I don’t have convection either.

  • @davidfuller581
    @davidfuller581 9 днів тому

    Stones have a place, I greatly prefer them to steels for things like bagels since they're slower.

  • @MostHolyPlace2
    @MostHolyPlace2 15 днів тому +2

    I have tried both the stone and the steel. The steel is way better.

  • @nicosgeo
    @nicosgeo 11 днів тому

    Either stone, steel or baking tray, if I don't pre cook I cant get the bottom done before browning the cheese.

  • @bpc23
    @bpc23 11 днів тому

    I bought 6" square unglazed clay tiles from a flooring store and arrange those on the oven rack. Very inexpensive and easy to replace one if it cracks.

  • @lowellhall7927
    @lowellhall7927 15 днів тому

    The Lodge cast iron pizza pan is a good alternative for less money than a steel, browning on the bottom looks about the same

  • @haha7836hahah
    @haha7836hahah 15 днів тому

    Which type of steel is your pizza steel made of? In my country i am not able to find a prebuilt product so need to get it custom made. What type of steel do i need?

  • @MichaelNKaboose
    @MichaelNKaboose 11 днів тому

    There are some Etsy sellers who sell baking steels at whatever size/thickness you need pre-seasoned for much cheaper (for the same size/thickness) than the big companies. Still gonna be $70-150 for a nice sized one, but better than $150+.

  • @johndavidson940
    @johndavidson940 15 днів тому

    You sir are becoming the George Motz of the Pizza making world. I am not really interested making fresh pizza. Though during the shutdown, I discovered using Naan Bread from the store can be used as a pizza crust. It works for me well enough for a personal size pizza. I also discovered, I can make a pizza on the stove top in a cast iron square pan. I put a top on it to help it cook from the bottom and the top to help melt the cheese. Get the cast iron pan screaming hot in the oven, dress your Naan bread pizza and put it in the cast iron pan on the stove top. Cooks in about 7 - 9 minutes. Again, works for me. I like stones for frozen pizzas. I think it helps with absorbing the moisture frozen pizzas can have. I really enjoyed this video. I am going to keep my 25 year old pizza stone for frozen pizza. If I get into making fresh pizza, I will certainly think about getting a baking steel.

  • @Knight_Kin
    @Knight_Kin 14 днів тому

    The Steel is nice and efficient once it's heated but waiting an hour and a half just to preheat the steel is not practical for most home use. It sure does give you nice results though.

  • @Flatule
    @Flatule 14 днів тому

    I have 2 baking sheets. I guess stacking them would improve things a bit?

  • @famistudio
    @famistudio 15 днів тому

    I recently got a steel and I'm never going back to a stone, there is no comparison! :) One other thing that should be mentioned about stones is that they are quite easy to break. I broke at last 2 stones in the past : dropped one, other cracked in oven, presumably because i didn't let it fully dry after cleaning.

    • @prndownload
      @prndownload 14 днів тому

      Why would it be wet for cleaning?

  • @joetacchino4470
    @joetacchino4470 15 днів тому +1

    What if you have an outdoor gas oven like an Ooni. Would you replace the stone with steel?

    • @ledheavy26
      @ledheavy26 15 днів тому +2

      I would think the higher temperature in the Ooni wouldn't be good with the steel. I've been able to get my steel up to 600°F in my home oven and it will really get the bottom of the pizza dark and crispy in the time it takes to cook how I like, if the temp was higher I feel like it would be too much for the steel.

    • @CharlieAndersonCooking
      @CharlieAndersonCooking  15 днів тому +1

      Yeah exactly what ledheavy26 said! I’ve tried steel in higher temperature ovens, and it just burns the bottom. At temperatures above about 600F, stone is more ideal.

  • @KirschFamilyVideos
    @KirschFamilyVideos 5 днів тому

    Curious... what hydration rate was the dough you used in these tests?

  • @pslavish
    @pslavish 12 днів тому

    Does anyone use a steel and a stone at the same time? I have a baking steel pro which is primarily what I use now, but have an old stone which I used to use. Thought steel up top (top gas broiler) and stone on a lower rack to crisp up towards end of baking might work well. Curious if anyone else has tried that?

  • @jamesellsworth9673
    @jamesellsworth9673 15 днів тому

    I use an Anova oven with steam injection and a baking steel. For years I used pizza stones in gas and electric ovens. Steel works best and I can clean carbon deposits off it as well.

  • @Xanthopteryx
    @Xanthopteryx 14 днів тому

    I have a stone. Granite. 30 millimeters thick!
    It really makes a difference.
    And turn the oven up to 300 degree C.
    The heat stored in the stone is really noticeable. Even after opening the oven it still keeps the heat really well, and more even.
    Would be interesting to see you do a compare of that.
    Use a 30 millimeter thick granite stone that is as large as fits the oven. And 300 degree C.
    And use a proper oven - if you have that over there?

  • @chongli297
    @chongli297 14 днів тому

    What about using 2 pizza stones? One at the top, one at the bottom. Start the pizza on the bottom then transfer to the top to finish. No need to worry about moving heavy 500 degree objects, just move the pizza!

  • @Thelatenightchaud
    @Thelatenightchaud 14 днів тому +1

    Why wood oven is the biggest lie in professionnal pizza making

  • @zackvirgo3597
    @zackvirgo3597 4 дні тому

    How do you feel about cast iron vs steel?

  • @blockchainfork
    @blockchainfork 15 днів тому

    why not turn the stone over, move to top rack, then start cooking? or did i miss that?

  • @walterw2
    @walterw2 15 днів тому

    speaking of helen rennie, she has a video showing that your super-dark well-seasoned baking sheet tray, far from being something you just have to "accept", is in fact what you _want_ here!
    the darker it is the faster it browns what you put on it

  • @Retfosho
    @Retfosho 15 днів тому

    I've been thinking about why New York pizzerias have their own unique taste that is difficult to replicate at home. The seasoning on a stone, with months/years of use, might deposit flavor into it that you can smell just firing up the stone itself. I noticed this when firing up my outdoor propane pizza oven that uses a stone.
    The oven in a NY pizzeria is also used pretty much every day of the week, indoors, and with pizzas going in and out every hour. On top of that the years of experience the pizzeria owners have, they know much more in depth about every single detail that goes into a good New York slice.

  • @peteraaronbaron1702
    @peteraaronbaron1702 14 днів тому

    Hi mate , have you ever tried making pizza with spelt flour ? If not I’d be very interested in seeing you try as spelt is low GI for those people who can’t handle high gluten.

  • @Nosiu
    @Nosiu 15 днів тому

    Perhaps it depends on the stone and oven, but I can't really justify buying a baking steel right now, especially when my pizza stone gives me the result that looks like your steel pizza. Maybe someday I'll splurge, but not today.

  • @oldmanfigs
    @oldmanfigs 14 днів тому

    My pizza stone has never given the desired results….I’m looking at a baking steel!

  • @JB-mm5ff
    @JB-mm5ff 15 днів тому

    So why am I buying a $100 pizza steel when I can buy two or three metal pans from Walmart for pennies and stack them up?

  • @peterinbrat
    @peterinbrat 15 днів тому

    They're like $20. I put it under the boiler first which gets the stone plenty hot. I also use a screen which works fine for frozen pizzas.

  • @jamkpa
    @jamkpa 11 днів тому

    Good demo!

  • @0066keith
    @0066keith 15 днів тому

    To each his own, I guess. I wouldn't take $100 for my $30 stone, purchased 38 years ago. It's what they call "seasoned."

  • @wayned5872
    @wayned5872 14 днів тому

    Im wondering if cast iron would be better than steel & stone

  • @ryuken4065
    @ryuken4065 15 днів тому +1

    I just use a thin steel pan with oil drizzled on it. No pizza peel i spread the pizza on the pan and load it at 500 degrees (highest temp on my oven) on the lowest rack for 12 min and it comes out perfect each time.

    • @AlokSomani
      @AlokSomani 9 днів тому

      You don't preheat the pan? I find a huge difference in both the rise of the crust and overall crispiness between preheating and not preheating.

    • @ryuken4065
      @ryuken4065 4 дні тому +1

      @@AlokSomani No i don't, i build my pizza directly on the pan to avoid the need of using a peel and having the need to transfer a built 16" pizza onto a "16 inch pan which is rather difficult to line up once the pizza is built. If i had a 20" pan for transferring a 16" pizza it would be easier. But so far I'm very comfortable doing it my current way and it saves a transferring step which i like. Drizzling a bit of avocado oil on the pan is what gets it crispy. I've never seen anyone do this on their pan pizzas and thought I'd try it. I know everyone has their own style but this is the research I've done for my setup and everyone i let try says it's some of the best pizza they've ever had.You can try this technique if you like but imo the best way is what you can dial in for your setup.

    • @AlokSomani
      @AlokSomani 4 дні тому +1

      @@ryuken4065 Cool, yeah, whatever works for you. I haven't tried cooking pizza in a steel pan, so I don't know how much difference preheating that would make anyway (they tend to be pretty thin). I use a thick cast iron pizza pan, so it definitely needs the preheating. But yes, the transfer is a hassle after fully building even a 14 inch pizza. Corn meal or semolina helps there.
      Steel pan with oil seems like it would be crispy and tasty.

    • @ryuken4065
      @ryuken4065 3 дні тому

      @@AlokSomani Yess the pan is thin but i've never burned my pizzas. When i first tried this technique i thought i'd start mid oven so i don't burn the pizza but it turns out better when i tried lowest rack closer to heating element.

  • @joetacchino4470
    @joetacchino4470 15 днів тому +3

    Also, what happened with the bagels? Still working on it?

    • @CharlieAndersonCooking
      @CharlieAndersonCooking  15 днів тому +2

      It didn’t seem to have a ton of interest relative to pizza stuff, so I took a break from it. I’m hoping to get back to it at some point though and come up with a final recipe!

    • @joetacchino4470
      @joetacchino4470 15 днів тому

      @@CharlieAndersonCookingcool! My daughter asks like every week. Lol.

  • @Kineon_
    @Kineon_ 11 днів тому

    damn, now i can't take people serious anymore if they're recommending pizza stones for home use 😂

  • @dangshnizzle6929
    @dangshnizzle6929 15 днів тому +1

    Cast Iron?

  • @celestial5693
    @celestial5693 13 днів тому

    If anyone here can recommend a decent steel in the UK that they have used - let me know. A lot of them are quite pricey and I want to make sure I get one that’s decent!

  • @gil9417
    @gil9417 6 днів тому

    Electric oven and Steel works great for me! Thanks for your demo...solid Pizza

  • @woolfel
    @woolfel 14 днів тому

    before I switched to steel, I broke 2 stones. if you take into consideration breaking stone vs steel. Steel wins

  • @carpediem5232
    @carpediem5232 13 днів тому

    Why start with Adam Raguseas voiceover to get a pizza stone? He himself switched to a baking steel and made a video about it.

  • @jasont9863
    @jasont9863 15 днів тому

    What about cast iron vs steel? Would one have an advantage over the other?

    • @walterw2
      @walterw2 15 днів тому

      the steel won't break if you drop it, otherwise i'm pretty sure they're thermally the same

    • @jasont9863
      @jasont9863 15 днів тому

      @@walterw2 I'm using a lodge cast iron pizza pan and was wondering if a baking steel would be an upgrade or not, thanks for the help

  • @dankodanko9099
    @dankodanko9099 15 днів тому

    We don't have pizza steel in my country, at all. Something you didn't consider.

  • @toportime
    @toportime 15 днів тому

    Thank you for clearing that up, I thought it was common sense... but clearly it isn't.

  • @Apathymiller
    @Apathymiller 15 днів тому

    If ya have it already just use a big cast iron skillet

  • @Hesthegreatest1
    @Hesthegreatest1 15 днів тому

    It’s crazy though because I’ve cooked your recipe on my stone several times and my pizzas always crisp up nice with a nice bottom just like you show in this video with the pizza cooked on a steel. In fact i would even say mine typically look better than what you have shown in this video. So maybe a steel is better but I’m getting the same results and better with my stone on the lowest rack at 550F preheated for one hour.

  • @gerber8915
    @gerber8915 15 днів тому +1

    Can you do a review on this stupid piezano thing? It seems to put out high temp pizzas on a stone, on a countertop device. I haven't seen one bad review yet, but that might be the algorithm. Thoughts?

    • @CharlieAndersonCooking
      @CharlieAndersonCooking  14 днів тому +1

      It does seems interesting! I’ll definitely try to give it a shot soon

  • @BlackLionV
    @BlackLionV 15 днів тому

    First, most “steels” aren’t steel. They are cast iron. A few on the market are carbon steel. Steel is good for a home oven that can’t get the high heat of commercial gas, coal or wood. Stone is used for these high heat environment and pretty much useless in a home oven. And not all stones are the same. Just like how most steel are not steel.
    You can find carbon steel online and season it for a fraction of the cost.