I’m hoping someone can help me solve this the mystery of why the top/edges of my rim are completely white and soft, while the cheese and bottom crust are nicely browned.
I bake in a gas oven, on a 16” round 3/8” thick steel slab. The steel heats on the top rack for an hour at 550F. Then I bake for 3 mins, turn it 180 degrees, then broil for another 3 mins. By that time, the cheese and bottom crust are nicely browned
I can’t broil it any longer, otherwise the cheese would burn. I’m already pushing it. It’s a reasonably high-fat/low-moisture cheese (Saputo Mozzarellissima), which I grate myself, and I use quite a bit —approx 500g, for a 16” pie. Similarly, I’m afraid the bottom will burn if I put it on a lower rack, because it gets just the right amount leopard spotting on the top rack at that 6-min mark.
I’m using a high-protein flour (a 14% no-name bread flour I get at Walmart in Canada), I use ~71% filtered tap water, 3% salt, 2% sugar, 1.1% olive oil, and .3% IDY.
I can’t understand how the toppings could get that brown, while the adjacent crust remains ghostly white. Can’t imagine it’s the process, more likely something about the ingredients?? I recently ran out of my normal brand of Robin Hood flour, and had to settle for this no-name Walmart brand in a pinch. I wonder if this could be the problem. Also note that I didn’t have this problem when I used to use a much thinner steel, on the middle rack, with no broil. But that was an 8-9 min bake, which I found yielded a dry-ish dough. The new steel cuts the time by 3 mins and produces a nicer crust, with the exception of this weird anomaly.
Any help would be appreciated.