Degassing dough
Hello Flour Fanatics
Just thought I would post a couple of thoughts and discoveries. The first involves the gentle handling of the dough in order to not degas it. I do my best to handle the dough as little as possible but now i'm not sure how much difference this makes. I made pizza this weekend out of the same dough I use for my everyday bread. I mixed, folded and proofed as usual. I then rolled it out pretty flat before attemting to throw it. Bottom line is I brutalized this dough by my standards. I topped and baked and guess what happened? You got it, tons of bubbles, some were quite large. The edge of the crust was light and airy and full of irregular bubbles. This was no ciabatta but if you saw the dough after the roll out you would not have thought there was a whole lot of gas left in it. Me thinks I have been a little wimpy handling my dough in an attemt to get that crumb we all desire. I therefore have to think that good crumb is more the result of good complete proofing rather than gentle handling? I would be curious to know if any of you have noticed the same thing.
Da Crumb Bum