The purists will no doubt shake their heads at me but I love using dough after it's been sitting around for a couple of days. What little it loses in rise, it gains in flavor, as the yeast continues to feed slowly (while the dough sits in the refrigerator) producing lactic acid and subsequently, additional complexity and depth of flavor. That said, you do have to let it come to room temperature before using it. Earlier tonight, I worked through the rest of the Reinhart-recipe Roman dough that I made on Sunday by making 3 pizzas, each cooked for about 7 minutes at 550 F on a stone in the upper third of my oven . . .
Sopressata, chihuahua, parmigiano reggiano, Pastorelli, shallots, oreganoNo mozzarella on hand but I did have plenty of chihuahua, so that's what I used. The orange color on the crown is sopressata fat that melted over the edge.
Bufala Mozzarella, shallots, Frantoia, oreganoOnly enough bufala on-hand for one pizza. It was fairly milky (almost like burrata) but it turned out perfectly and definitely produced the best pizza of the night -- salty, mildly sweet and delivering a long-lasting aftertaste.
Sopressata, chihuahua, parmigiano reggiano, Pastorelli, heavy shallots, oreganoI sliced a few too many shallots so I used the remainder of them on pizza #3. I really liked this pizza and will definitely be adding larger amounts of shallots to my future pizzas.
Sopressata, chihuahua, parmigiano reggiano, Pastorelli, heavy shallots, oreganoA closer look at pizza #3.
=R=
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There's a horse loose in a hospital --JM
That don't impress me much --Shania Twain