walter wade wrote:In the restaurant Brick Ovens, eg, Spacca Napoli, what is their cooking oven temperature???
Anybody know for sure?? I thought maybe 800-900 degrees??
Whole Foods is only 560 or so, for their brick oven.
Wally Wade

jblth wrote:I was thinking about getting a perforated metal pizza peel (like this http://www.amazon.com/PROFESSIONAL-PIZZ ... 00BM8PSB0/). Does anyone know where you could find one locally in Chicago?
mhill95149 wrote:
unch pizza off the BGE
pancetta, walnuts, gorgonzola, red onion & arugula pizza.
Dome 750˚stone 625˚cook time 4 min 30 seconds. bottom a bit too charred
Not Wimperoo, but I am of the plate setter/pizza stone on the Big Green Egg school. In fact I made a few pizzas Saturday on my Big Green Egg.Davooda wrote:Wimperoo - do you cook directly on the plate setter on your BGE or use the grill and a metal pizza grate?



dansch wrote:I want to fire up my Weber and see what I can do outside, thought my last set of Weber kettle pizza baking experiments gave me good charred bottoms and barely cooked tops. I've got a few ideas on how I can improve on those results, so I just need to get out there and try.
-Dan


bean wrote:I think I could do at hot coal circle around the edges of the grill.
Any comment Gary W?
stevez wrote:bean wrote:I think I could do at hot coal circle around the edges of the grill.
Any comment Gary W?
Bean,
To hold in the heat properly, you need something like this or this .

leek wrote:Not sure if this is new, but I found Italian "granoro" brand of 00 flour at Mariano's in the Italian section.
http://www.granoro.it/en/d/45/152/215/farina-00-1kg

leek wrote:Not sure if this is new, but I found Italian "granoro" brand of 00 flour at Mariano's in the Italian section.
http://www.granoro.it/en/d/45/152/215/farina-00-1kg