Question:
We're plagued with the presence of a
gel or gum line just beneath the sauce on
many of our pizzas. The problem seems to
be worse on weekends and during busy,
high production periods. What's causing
this problem, and how can we correct it?
Also, our pizza seems to loose its crispiness
very soon after coming out of the
oven. Are these two problems related, or
are they separate problems?
Answer:
We've studied the gum line problem
extensively, at AIB, and we have found the
problem to be common only to certain circumstances.
Once you've identified the
cause, the corrective action is pretty
straightforward. Below, I've identified the
various causes and the suggested corrective
action.
- If you are in the habit of pre-saucing
your pizza skins in preparation for the
rush periods. This can allow time for your
sauce to separate with the water migrating
into the dough. Once in the dough, and
covered with sauce and cheese, it is
impossible to bake this water soaked portion
of the dough to the consistency of
anything but wet pasta. If you insist upon
the need to pre-sauce your skins, we have
found that the application of a light coating
of oil to the surface of the dough goes a long way towards slowing this problem
down, but given sufficient time, the water
will still manage to soak into the dough, so
if you go this route, try to limit the time
that the dough is allowed to stand between
saucing and baking.
- Another causative factor is excessive
thinning of the sauce. I can't tell you
how much or how little water to add to a
sauce to thin it down for use, as this will
depend greatly upon the type and solids
content of the tomato products used in
making your sauce. A good indicator that
you might have too much water in your
sauce is the constant need to stir the sauce
during use. Think about it. If the sauce
begins to separate in the bowl as you are
using it, what will it do on the pizza? A
good test to determine if this might be the
cause of the gum/gel line is to apply only
tomato sauce to the pizza, right out of the
can. Then apply the normal amount of
cheese, and other toppings and bake the
pizza in the normal manner. If no gum/gel
line developed, separation of your sauce
should be highly suspect. If the gum/gel
line is still present, in all its glory, you will
need to look elsewhere for the solution.
- A common problem that crops up
from time to time is that of "fast baking".
When pizzas are fast baked at high temperatures,
the crust might turn a golden
brown in color, and the cheese might be
lightly browned too, but the inside of the
dough has not been in the oven long
enough to allow it to be fully or thoroughly
baked. This was a very common problem
when the new, more efficient, conveyor
ovens first came out. They were being
heavily promoted on the basis that they could dramatically reduce the baking time
of a pizza. Well, if you consider a pizza to
be fully baked when its brown on the outside,
then they lived up to their claims. For
the most part, we found that these new,
efficient ovens could brown the crusts
faster than anything we had previously
seen, but within the baking times being
promoted (that being long enough to make
the crust brown) the interior of the crust
was still only partially baked, and certainly
didn't achieve the amount of bake necessary
to ensure a crispy crust with holding
power at the customer's table or on a
serving line. To se if this might be the
source of your problem, reduce the baking
temperature by 50°F, and lengthen the
baking time by one to two minutes. This
may not fully correct the problem, but if
you see an improvement, it would be an
indication that you're on the right track,
and a few more "tweaks" to the baking
parameters might be in order.
- Lastly, we have occasionally seen
dough formulas that were out of balance in
reference to sugar content. In short, the
sugar level was too high. So how did this
happen? The most common scenario is
where a new oven is purchased. In order
for the dough to color up to the desired
level in the old oven, the sugar content had
to be increased slightly. Old and failing
electric deck ovens can lead you down this
path if you are not careful, then when you
replace that old oven with a new, highly
efficient, state of the art baking machine,
you adjust the baking parameters to give
you a crust with all of the same outward
appearances of the crusts made in the old
oven. This was probably not the right
thing to do. I bet you were impressed by
the faster bake time, and uniform crust
color, but you lost something called crispiness
in the trade. If your sugar levels are
at, or above 2 percent of the flour weight,
first try cutting the amount of sugar added
to the dough in half, or you might even
reduce the sugar level to just 1 percent of
the weight of the flour. This will reduce
the rate at which the dough browns during
baking, allowing you to simply bake the
crust a bit longer, resulting in a better,
more thorough bake, and a crispier crust
characteristic.
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