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Untitled Document
In Lehmann's Terms
By Tom Lehmann | The Dough Doctor
Question: We are presently using deck ovens in our
store but we are looking at air impingement
ovens for a second store. I keep hearing
conflicting reports about the air impingement
ovens not being able to bake pizza with a
crispy, hearth-baked characteristic. What's the
real story?
Answer:
A number of years ago a lot of effort on the part
of the major air impingement oven companies went
into developing baking profiles that would effectively
simulate a hearth-baked characteristic. To a great
extent these baking profiles were successful, but
they never really fully captured all of the unique
characteristics of a hearth-baked pizza. Recently, we
have worked with Lloyd Pans (www.lloydpans.com)
to develop a baking disk to impart these unique
characteristics. So what we have now is a new, hearth
bake disk which, when combined with a properly
set-up air impingement oven, and a sugar free dough,
gives a finished pizza with all of the desired hearthbaked
characteristics – such as crispiness, light,
bubbly raised edge, and moderately blistered bottom
appearance, which also imparts a unique flavour
to the crust that used to only come from hearthbaked
pizzas. The answer to your question is yes, it is
possible to get a true, hearth-baked characteristic on
pizzas coming out of an air impingement oven.
Since different oven manufacturers, and even
different ovens within a manufacturer's product
line will require different finger profiles for a
hearth-baked characteristic, it is suggested that
you contact your oven manufacturer to find out
what finger configuration is recommended for your
particular oven. Then, begin experimenting with
baking temperatures in the range of 243 to 254˚C,
with baking times in the range of 5 to 6 minutes.
Experiment to determine which temperature and
baking time gives you the best overall results. If you
happen to have one of the new Lincoln FASTBAKE
ovens, set the temperature at 252˚C and the baking
time at 5 minutes and you're good to go.

Question:
How do you make a good emergency
dough?
Answer:
I'm really not sure that you can make a "good"
emergency dough, but you can make an effective one
that will allow you to keep your doors open when
you might have had to otherwise close down due to
the fact that you didn't have any dough with which
to work.
You might lose your dough due to any number
of reasons, but the most common ones include loss
of power during the night, resulting in your cooler
warming up to the point where the dough began to
actively ferment and grow right out of the dough
boxes. In short, it "blew." Another common reason to
lose a dough is because of an ingredient scaling error
such as: the yeast was not added, sugar or salt were
not scaled, or the salt was scaled as the sugar (after
all, they do look alike), and it was scaled again as the
salt (trust the voice of experience, it can and does
happen). Whatever the reason for dough failure, it is
not pleasant to come into your store in the morning to discover that you don't have
any usable dough for the day. This
is where an emergency dough
comes into play. This is also not
the time to be thinking about
weighing up a dough that has
radically different ingredients or
ingredient amounts from your
regular dough, so for the sake
of simplicity, and comfort level,
we want to keep the emergency
dough as close to our regular
dough as possible. The easiest way
to accomplish this is to base our
emergency dough on our regular
dough formulation with only
some minor changes to allow it to
function as an emergency dough.
Here are the recommended
changes needed to convert
your regular pizza dough into an
effective emergency dough:
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