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re: Pizza steels; which one should I buy?

Posted on 5/14/19 at 7:33 pm to
Posted by Tiger In the Swamp
Louisiana
Member since May 2014
841 posts
Posted on 5/14/19 at 7:33 pm to
Guess I need to research the steels a little more. I've owned like 5 pampered chef pizza stones. We take them out of the oven with pizzas on them when theyre hot, then actually cut them on the stone. Only issue is if you put them on a semi hot burner accidently, or put them in sink hot, they break. Just tired of buying them. I figured the steel would work the same but wouldn't have to worry bout breaking them. What do most people cut pizzas on, fresh cooked or frozen cooked? Hate to dirty a big arse cutting board, plus don't have one that big. Looking for tips how others do it. Hell I even want to be able to dishwash my stone or steel, laying flat on bottom rack. Thanks
This post was edited on 5/14/19 at 7:35 pm
Posted by fightin tigers
Downtown Prairieville
Member since Mar 2008
73681 posts
Posted on 5/14/19 at 7:49 pm to
The steel will burn the bottom of your pizza if you leave it on at length.

I think my timing was about 5 minutes for a pizza crust that was done.
Posted by Trout Bandit
Baton Rouge, LA
Member since Dec 2012
13320 posts
Posted on 5/14/19 at 8:56 pm to
So you'd rather break a baking stone instead of dirtying a cutting board??
Posted by KosmoCramer
Member since Dec 2007
76551 posts
Posted on 5/14/19 at 9:17 pm to
quote:

Guess I need to research the steels a little more. I've owned like 5 pampered chef pizza stones. We take them out of the oven with pizzas on them when theyre hot, then actually cut them on the stone. Only issue is if you put them on a semi hot burner accidently, or put them in sink hot, they break. Just tired of buying them. I figured the steel would work the same but wouldn't have to worry bout breaking them. What do most people cut pizzas on, fresh cooked or frozen cooked? Hate to dirty a big arse cutting board, plus don't have one that big. Looking for tips how others do it. Hell I even want to be able to dishwash my stone or steel, laying flat on bottom rack. Thanks



If you're cooking pizza correctly, your stone/steel is as hot as possible (550+).

Also are you only cooking one pizza?

But a large enough plastic or wooden cutting board once, and transfer the pizza there to cut. Then you wont break your stone? It's a simple rinse when done.

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