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January 6, 2010 at 7:29 AM #500314January 6, 2010 at 9:21 AM #499445AnonymousGuest
Nice prose Allan.
My kids are almost at the age where they will start playing team sports. I will certainly enjoy watching them play, but I’m not looking forward to the company I’ll have to keep if I sit in the bleachers.
January 6, 2010 at 9:21 AM #499596AnonymousGuestNice prose Allan.
My kids are almost at the age where they will start playing team sports. I will certainly enjoy watching them play, but I’m not looking forward to the company I’ll have to keep if I sit in the bleachers.
January 6, 2010 at 9:21 AM #499991AnonymousGuestNice prose Allan.
My kids are almost at the age where they will start playing team sports. I will certainly enjoy watching them play, but I’m not looking forward to the company I’ll have to keep if I sit in the bleachers.
January 6, 2010 at 9:21 AM #500083AnonymousGuestNice prose Allan.
My kids are almost at the age where they will start playing team sports. I will certainly enjoy watching them play, but I’m not looking forward to the company I’ll have to keep if I sit in the bleachers.
January 6, 2010 at 9:21 AM #500334AnonymousGuestNice prose Allan.
My kids are almost at the age where they will start playing team sports. I will certainly enjoy watching them play, but I’m not looking forward to the company I’ll have to keep if I sit in the bleachers.
January 6, 2010 at 10:00 AM #499460UCGalParticipantHijack:
[quote=scaredycat]a pizza stone will help. I use my pizza stone a lot–i put lots of things on it. i cooked french fries and eggs for dinner last night, i put the frozen frenchfries on the stone; not sure it makes a difference, but since i have the stone, i want to use it. i think i may have a low quality pizza stone though. it was very inexpensive. maybe try a better stone, or rent it instead of buying it.[/quote]
Are you getting your stone super hot before using it – that’s the key. We do homemade pizza a lot and the key is to preheat the stone HOT, then put the pizza directly on the stone (not in a pan). (Corn meal helps for sliding the pizza on/off the stone – and you need a pizza paddle.)
It’s all about thermal mass. If you don’t preheat the stone super hot then it actually can draw heat OUT of the cooking item. It should be hotter than the oven temp.
I have a friend who’s got a pizza oven in the backyard – wood fired… He starts getting it hot more than an hour before he wants to cook in it. But he produces FABULOUS crispy, thin crust pizza – like you’d find in Naples. He’s a professional chef so he’s worked hard to perfect his system at home.
January 6, 2010 at 10:00 AM #499611UCGalParticipantHijack:
[quote=scaredycat]a pizza stone will help. I use my pizza stone a lot–i put lots of things on it. i cooked french fries and eggs for dinner last night, i put the frozen frenchfries on the stone; not sure it makes a difference, but since i have the stone, i want to use it. i think i may have a low quality pizza stone though. it was very inexpensive. maybe try a better stone, or rent it instead of buying it.[/quote]
Are you getting your stone super hot before using it – that’s the key. We do homemade pizza a lot and the key is to preheat the stone HOT, then put the pizza directly on the stone (not in a pan). (Corn meal helps for sliding the pizza on/off the stone – and you need a pizza paddle.)
It’s all about thermal mass. If you don’t preheat the stone super hot then it actually can draw heat OUT of the cooking item. It should be hotter than the oven temp.
I have a friend who’s got a pizza oven in the backyard – wood fired… He starts getting it hot more than an hour before he wants to cook in it. But he produces FABULOUS crispy, thin crust pizza – like you’d find in Naples. He’s a professional chef so he’s worked hard to perfect his system at home.
January 6, 2010 at 10:00 AM #500006UCGalParticipantHijack:
[quote=scaredycat]a pizza stone will help. I use my pizza stone a lot–i put lots of things on it. i cooked french fries and eggs for dinner last night, i put the frozen frenchfries on the stone; not sure it makes a difference, but since i have the stone, i want to use it. i think i may have a low quality pizza stone though. it was very inexpensive. maybe try a better stone, or rent it instead of buying it.[/quote]
Are you getting your stone super hot before using it – that’s the key. We do homemade pizza a lot and the key is to preheat the stone HOT, then put the pizza directly on the stone (not in a pan). (Corn meal helps for sliding the pizza on/off the stone – and you need a pizza paddle.)
It’s all about thermal mass. If you don’t preheat the stone super hot then it actually can draw heat OUT of the cooking item. It should be hotter than the oven temp.
I have a friend who’s got a pizza oven in the backyard – wood fired… He starts getting it hot more than an hour before he wants to cook in it. But he produces FABULOUS crispy, thin crust pizza – like you’d find in Naples. He’s a professional chef so he’s worked hard to perfect his system at home.
January 6, 2010 at 10:00 AM #500098UCGalParticipantHijack:
[quote=scaredycat]a pizza stone will help. I use my pizza stone a lot–i put lots of things on it. i cooked french fries and eggs for dinner last night, i put the frozen frenchfries on the stone; not sure it makes a difference, but since i have the stone, i want to use it. i think i may have a low quality pizza stone though. it was very inexpensive. maybe try a better stone, or rent it instead of buying it.[/quote]
Are you getting your stone super hot before using it – that’s the key. We do homemade pizza a lot and the key is to preheat the stone HOT, then put the pizza directly on the stone (not in a pan). (Corn meal helps for sliding the pizza on/off the stone – and you need a pizza paddle.)
It’s all about thermal mass. If you don’t preheat the stone super hot then it actually can draw heat OUT of the cooking item. It should be hotter than the oven temp.
I have a friend who’s got a pizza oven in the backyard – wood fired… He starts getting it hot more than an hour before he wants to cook in it. But he produces FABULOUS crispy, thin crust pizza – like you’d find in Naples. He’s a professional chef so he’s worked hard to perfect his system at home.
January 6, 2010 at 10:00 AM #500349UCGalParticipantHijack:
[quote=scaredycat]a pizza stone will help. I use my pizza stone a lot–i put lots of things on it. i cooked french fries and eggs for dinner last night, i put the frozen frenchfries on the stone; not sure it makes a difference, but since i have the stone, i want to use it. i think i may have a low quality pizza stone though. it was very inexpensive. maybe try a better stone, or rent it instead of buying it.[/quote]
Are you getting your stone super hot before using it – that’s the key. We do homemade pizza a lot and the key is to preheat the stone HOT, then put the pizza directly on the stone (not in a pan). (Corn meal helps for sliding the pizza on/off the stone – and you need a pizza paddle.)
It’s all about thermal mass. If you don’t preheat the stone super hot then it actually can draw heat OUT of the cooking item. It should be hotter than the oven temp.
I have a friend who’s got a pizza oven in the backyard – wood fired… He starts getting it hot more than an hour before he wants to cook in it. But he produces FABULOUS crispy, thin crust pizza – like you’d find in Naples. He’s a professional chef so he’s worked hard to perfect his system at home.
January 6, 2010 at 10:57 AM #499485CoronitaParticipant[quote=UCGal]Hijack:
[quote=scaredycat]a pizza stone will help. I use my pizza stone a lot–i put lots of things on it. i cooked french fries and eggs for dinner last night, i put the frozen frenchfries on the stone; not sure it makes a difference, but since i have the stone, i want to use it. i think i may have a low quality pizza stone though. it was very inexpensive. maybe try a better stone, or rent it instead of buying it.[/quote]
Are you getting your stone super hot before using it – that’s the key. We do homemade pizza a lot and the key is to preheat the stone HOT, then put the pizza directly on the stone (not in a pan). (Corn meal helps for sliding the pizza on/off the stone – and you need a pizza paddle.)
It’s all about thermal mass. If you don’t preheat the stone super hot then it actually can draw heat OUT of the cooking item. It should be hotter than the oven temp.
I have a friend who’s got a pizza oven in the backyard – wood fired… He starts getting it hot more than an hour before he wants to cook in it. But he produces FABULOUS crispy, thin crust pizza – like you’d find in Naples. He’s a professional chef so he’s worked hard to perfect his system at home.[/quote]
So, I tried using a wooden plank (the ones you usually use to cook fish on) on a BBQ grill. Seemed to work for me, if I don’t forget and burn the damn thing. In the past i’ve tried to BBQ an entire turkey. (It worked, except I burned the bottom.)
I’ve got other creative ways to cook to. I once stuck a salmon wrapped in foil next in engine bay.. Works best if you have a turbo charged car and stick it right next to it. ..20 mins of driving, it’s pretty well done. Just make sure you wrap it really good in foil so the sauce doesn’t leak…
Inspired by
http://www.howcast.com/videos/1225-How-To-Cook-on-Your-Car-Engine
January 6, 2010 at 10:57 AM #499635CoronitaParticipant[quote=UCGal]Hijack:
[quote=scaredycat]a pizza stone will help. I use my pizza stone a lot–i put lots of things on it. i cooked french fries and eggs for dinner last night, i put the frozen frenchfries on the stone; not sure it makes a difference, but since i have the stone, i want to use it. i think i may have a low quality pizza stone though. it was very inexpensive. maybe try a better stone, or rent it instead of buying it.[/quote]
Are you getting your stone super hot before using it – that’s the key. We do homemade pizza a lot and the key is to preheat the stone HOT, then put the pizza directly on the stone (not in a pan). (Corn meal helps for sliding the pizza on/off the stone – and you need a pizza paddle.)
It’s all about thermal mass. If you don’t preheat the stone super hot then it actually can draw heat OUT of the cooking item. It should be hotter than the oven temp.
I have a friend who’s got a pizza oven in the backyard – wood fired… He starts getting it hot more than an hour before he wants to cook in it. But he produces FABULOUS crispy, thin crust pizza – like you’d find in Naples. He’s a professional chef so he’s worked hard to perfect his system at home.[/quote]
So, I tried using a wooden plank (the ones you usually use to cook fish on) on a BBQ grill. Seemed to work for me, if I don’t forget and burn the damn thing. In the past i’ve tried to BBQ an entire turkey. (It worked, except I burned the bottom.)
I’ve got other creative ways to cook to. I once stuck a salmon wrapped in foil next in engine bay.. Works best if you have a turbo charged car and stick it right next to it. ..20 mins of driving, it’s pretty well done. Just make sure you wrap it really good in foil so the sauce doesn’t leak…
Inspired by
http://www.howcast.com/videos/1225-How-To-Cook-on-Your-Car-Engine
January 6, 2010 at 10:57 AM #500031CoronitaParticipant[quote=UCGal]Hijack:
[quote=scaredycat]a pizza stone will help. I use my pizza stone a lot–i put lots of things on it. i cooked french fries and eggs for dinner last night, i put the frozen frenchfries on the stone; not sure it makes a difference, but since i have the stone, i want to use it. i think i may have a low quality pizza stone though. it was very inexpensive. maybe try a better stone, or rent it instead of buying it.[/quote]
Are you getting your stone super hot before using it – that’s the key. We do homemade pizza a lot and the key is to preheat the stone HOT, then put the pizza directly on the stone (not in a pan). (Corn meal helps for sliding the pizza on/off the stone – and you need a pizza paddle.)
It’s all about thermal mass. If you don’t preheat the stone super hot then it actually can draw heat OUT of the cooking item. It should be hotter than the oven temp.
I have a friend who’s got a pizza oven in the backyard – wood fired… He starts getting it hot more than an hour before he wants to cook in it. But he produces FABULOUS crispy, thin crust pizza – like you’d find in Naples. He’s a professional chef so he’s worked hard to perfect his system at home.[/quote]
So, I tried using a wooden plank (the ones you usually use to cook fish on) on a BBQ grill. Seemed to work for me, if I don’t forget and burn the damn thing. In the past i’ve tried to BBQ an entire turkey. (It worked, except I burned the bottom.)
I’ve got other creative ways to cook to. I once stuck a salmon wrapped in foil next in engine bay.. Works best if you have a turbo charged car and stick it right next to it. ..20 mins of driving, it’s pretty well done. Just make sure you wrap it really good in foil so the sauce doesn’t leak…
Inspired by
http://www.howcast.com/videos/1225-How-To-Cook-on-Your-Car-Engine
January 6, 2010 at 10:57 AM #500123CoronitaParticipant[quote=UCGal]Hijack:
[quote=scaredycat]a pizza stone will help. I use my pizza stone a lot–i put lots of things on it. i cooked french fries and eggs for dinner last night, i put the frozen frenchfries on the stone; not sure it makes a difference, but since i have the stone, i want to use it. i think i may have a low quality pizza stone though. it was very inexpensive. maybe try a better stone, or rent it instead of buying it.[/quote]
Are you getting your stone super hot before using it – that’s the key. We do homemade pizza a lot and the key is to preheat the stone HOT, then put the pizza directly on the stone (not in a pan). (Corn meal helps for sliding the pizza on/off the stone – and you need a pizza paddle.)
It’s all about thermal mass. If you don’t preheat the stone super hot then it actually can draw heat OUT of the cooking item. It should be hotter than the oven temp.
I have a friend who’s got a pizza oven in the backyard – wood fired… He starts getting it hot more than an hour before he wants to cook in it. But he produces FABULOUS crispy, thin crust pizza – like you’d find in Naples. He’s a professional chef so he’s worked hard to perfect his system at home.[/quote]
So, I tried using a wooden plank (the ones you usually use to cook fish on) on a BBQ grill. Seemed to work for me, if I don’t forget and burn the damn thing. In the past i’ve tried to BBQ an entire turkey. (It worked, except I burned the bottom.)
I’ve got other creative ways to cook to. I once stuck a salmon wrapped in foil next in engine bay.. Works best if you have a turbo charged car and stick it right next to it. ..20 mins of driving, it’s pretty well done. Just make sure you wrap it really good in foil so the sauce doesn’t leak…
Inspired by
http://www.howcast.com/videos/1225-How-To-Cook-on-Your-Car-Engine
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