Originally Posted by TimBone:
If it's alright with you regulars, I'm gonna go ahead and ban FMB from the thread based on that last little tidbit of info.
Originally Posted by TimBone:
If it's alright with you regulars, I'm gonna go ahead and ban FMB from the thread based on that last little tidbit of info.
They're better than canned green beans. :-) [Reply]
Originally Posted by Inmem58:
Starting my first week of food prep. BBQ'd chicken, sweet potatoes and roasted Brussels sprout. Egg muffins with cheese and bacon for breakfast. I'm down 34 lbs and feeling very good.
How long have you been dieting or working on your health? What's your goal?
I resigned from my job in the DC area back in Feb and drove cross country to Scottsdale with the sole purpose of losing 100-105 pounds by Dec 1st with little to no work to interfere with my plans. Since I began BOTH my diet and exercise program on March 25th, I'm down 23-24 pounds in just about 5 weeks. I feel so much better already and over the hump of getting to the gym on a regular basis.
Originally Posted by Buzz:
I have a bag of the frozen green beans I could have used, the wife prefers the canned. If I told her the guys on CP prefer frozen over canned, well, I won't go there.:-)
Let me guess, she would throw the can of green beans at you! :-) [Reply]
Originally Posted by Fire Me Boy!:
As a matter of fact, I was so focused on it being for sandwiches this week, I forgot to plan for side dishes. And I'm embarrassed to admit, those are instant potatoes.
Originally Posted by Fire Me Boy!:
I totally forgot about this exchange. Search for "kettlepizza" and found this. I just bought one, expecting it next week! Got the steel top, too!
I have a full sized baking steel in the oven. Think it would be overkill to use that instead of the tombstone?
Congrats.
The only problem I've run into is that I have a hard time getting the dome temp up quite as high as I'd like without making the bottom too hot. I think the answer would be just a shitload of lump charcoal around the edges making sure that there's no direct heat on the stone but rather high enough convection above it that it eventually heats on its own. You need real lump charcoal for the BTUs but it burns so fast that it takes a lot of tendering. Maybe just fill that back basket with a shitload of good quality lump as a compromise. Trying to get underneath it while it cooks is just so damn hard that I always use briquettes down there b/c of the long cook time.
What I've done recently is cheat a little bit. I'll launch my pizza, rotate it for a bit to get the leopard spotting, then I'll grab my metal 'retrieval' peel, pull the pizza and set my grill scraper underneath it; one of these cheap, shitty things (I'm pretty sure an in-law got me that thing at some point):
There's no real surface area in contact with the stone or the peel at that point so you have no more conductive heat from the bottom passing through the peel. It's all just radiant/convection heat. And when the peel has been out of the grill, it's cool enough to by a lot of time.
By raising the top of the pizza near the top of the baking steel that has all that heat trapped in it due to thermal mass, it essentially acts as a broiler that browns/crisps anything on top that hasn't gotten where you want it without burning the bottom. You can rest the handle of the scraper and peel on the lip of the kettle pizza and it keeps everything nice and level. If you try it, you'll see what I mean.
It's a work around for when you don't have your oven dialed in exactly right but it's a pretty bulletproof method. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Fire Me Boy!:
I'm taking a Craftsy class from King Arthur called "Mastering the Art of Pizza." It's really quite interesting.
Today I learned that if you're making dough, there's a formula to figuring out how hot the water should be. It's different if you use a preferment. But you want the dough temp to be 75-78 degrees, so you multiply that by 4, and subtract flour temperature, the poolish temperature, room temperature and friction factor (10 degrees if by hand, roughly 30 if by mixer). So if room temp is 69 and flour is 68, poolish is 75 and you're mixing by hand: water temp = (4x78)-(69+68+75+10); 312-22=90 degrees. Water should be 90 degrees.
I don't use instant yeast so I have to bloom it. Proper bloom temp is anywhere from 90-110. So I go with 110 and I'm guessing that by the time it's rested/bloomed, I'm at 90 anyway.
So sometimes you just stumble ass-backwards into the right answer. Or, more accurately, sometimes the right answer isn't nearly as precise as some would have you believe... [Reply]
Originally Posted by DJ's left nut:
I don't use instant yeast so I have to bloom it. Proper bloom temp is anywhere from 90-110. So I go with 110 and I'm guessing that by the time it's rested/bloomed, I'm at 90 anyway.
So sometimes you just stumble ass-backwards into the right answer. Or, more accurately, sometimes the right answer isn't nearly as precise as some would have you believe...
Yeah, there's no way I'm gonna do that math. I've never had trouble with 100 degree water. [Reply]