Pigmon,
As you say, they just opened but...
I must say that from the looks of things in the photos, I'm strongly inclined to wonder how much experience they have. Of course, from a few photos, one can hardly judge more than a few things with any degree of certainty but given those photos and your commentary, it seems that the consistency and form of the crust is not satisfactory, not only from a 'Neapolitan' standpoint in the narrowest sense, but from a broader and basic Italian standpoint.
I've made a lot of bread and pizza dough and, while I've long been aware that the Neapolitan pizzerie use '00', I find it doesn't especially do anything for me in that application and I have stuck to the unfashionable but -- if properly handled -- more than serviceable good old all-purpose unbleached flour. For someone like Bill SF/NM and others who have the right oven, yes, imported Neapolitan '00' pizza flour makes great sense but in a basic kitchen oven running at 500, I think it's wasted and the all-purpose might actually work better.
Anyway, it seems inevitable that lots of people will jump on the Neapolitan pizza band-wagon but, as is usually the case, most of them will not 'get it'. To me, as I've said so many times, good pizza is based on good bread, good dough (-- and that view seems to be universal among people who are really interested in making fine pizza). Good dough is made not by using the most exotic or expensive flour but by getting the proportions and texture right (a question of feel) and controlling the fermentation. Don't get me wrong: I'm not poo-pooing Caputo's '00', not by a long shot. For someone who is already a knowledgeable, experienced baker/pizzaiolo
with great equipment, it makes perfect sense to keep striving for perfection on any and all fronts. But when you're cooking at 500º or even 600º F,* there are things you have to do to make the pizza work and using Caputo's '00' doesn't seem to me to be one of them. Of course, for 'p.r.' purposes it may be a good thing to be able to claim but the best p.r. for a place that wants to be known for making Italian pizza is making quality dough and with that a properly formed and cooked crust.
From what I see in the pictures, I think they need to work on the basic techniques of dough making and pizza forming, at least if they are in any serious sense trying to produce a Neapolitan or Italian style pizza. As you say, though, the crust of the one pie in the photos looks more like a 'cracker' style crust. That and the pastry style crust so popular around here are relatively easy to make and require neither an imported oven nor imported flour. The other pie (with rocket and Parma ham) has a crust that definitely looks more bread-like with some good airiness but it also is clearly improperly cooked (it also seems like the crust may be kind of thick but it's hard to tell for sure without a cross-section view).
I'd like to give them a try some time in a few weeks
inshAllah for fairness' sake, and with an open mind, when they've had a chance to settle into a routine and rhythm. They just opened and maybe the pizzas pictured above are not fully indicative of what they're aiming for. We'll see.
Antonius
* Rob: did you ask them why they were cooking the pies at that temperature? I thought their oven could do 750º and if I could hit 750º on my oven, I'd be thrilled. That's still not optimal but it would be a lot better than 500º or 600º.
Alle Nerven exzitiert von dem gewürzten Wein -- Anwandlung von Todesahndungen -- Doppeltgänger --
- aus dem Tagebuch E.T.A. Hoffmanns, 6. Januar 1804.
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Na sir is na seachain an cath.