bTW not sure you need to be a member to eat at the cafe, so you can probably get away with not being a member since that's where you pay for them [Reply]
Originally Posted by mikeyis4dcats.:
bTW not sure you need to be a member to eat at the cafe, so you can probably get away with not being a member since that's where you pay for them
I'll go to the Costco cafe and try that first. If not, you may be right. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Fire Me Boy!:
So the frozen things - is it just dough balls? Then you rise and bake? Or are they partially baked already?
totally frozen, unbaked. they come sealed in an oiled bag, so you pull it out of the freezer and thaw it right in the bag.
I leave it on the counter to rise while I'm at work, rip open the bag, roll it a bit to flatten, then stretch on the pan. I've taken to parbaking them just because I seem to have issues getting them done in the middle, but I am just wary of cooking them too long with too many toppings.
Incidentally last nights was great, but my first one with a dough ball was still my best one cook-wise. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Fish:
I've never had much success with the low moisture mozzarella. I always get the normal stuff and it seems to melt much better.
Low moisture or part skim? And by "normal" do you mean fresh? Fresh isn't very good melting cheese.
Flavor-wise, whole milk mozz is much better. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Fish:
I've never had much success with the low moisture mozzarella. I always get the normal stuff and it seems to melt much better.
Do you buy shredded or shred your own? Shredded cheese is bad anyway and the low moisture mozz may be the worst of it. [Reply]
Originally Posted by mikeyis4dcats.:
the Stella is perfect pizza cheese. It's what a lot of mom & pop pizza places use. It's also cheap, $10.83 for 5#.
I hate fresh mozz on a pizza.
Fresh mozz is some of the best imo. Topped with sliced cherry tomatoes, arugula, artichoke hearts and prosciutto. I sometimes sprinkle with a little Gorgonzola as well. Depends if I'm feeling crazy. [Reply]
Originally Posted by :
I have a similarly basic question for you all this week—do you prefer fresh, high-moisture mozzarella on your pizza, or the regular, low-moisture stuff?