love the scientific approach to simple foods such as pizza and even though its seen as a simple pizza it can be a very deep rabbit hole and complex with the amount of options
I would have loved to see you try out the other cheeses on the NY style pizza as well and see if they have the same issue of breaking from the heat. Mozz can get bland and I've heard quite a few people are starting to use blends. Would love some more depth of flavor to my thinner pies. Thanks Charlie
I love how serious you take your pizza making. Most cooking shows are total crap. With pizza every little detail matters . I've been on a seven-year pizza making journey, and every time I make a pizza I change one little detail, and I write down the results. This is the only cooking show that takes cooking seriously. Every other cooking show is just porn. You're doing God's work brother! I made a Excel sheet for my dinner recipes, but I ditched it for yours. That's a very good one. Anybody who is making pizza needs to get your Excel doc.
I'm glad you enjoy it! I completely agree that the small details really matter when it comes to pizza. I think it's pretty easy to make average pizza at home, but it's hard to make great pizza.
Some of my best pizza's have been cast iron pizza. I consider it my Detroit style because I don't have the pan. Other than that, as long as you make a good dough, the toppings are complimenting the pizza dough. Fermenting the dough gives it much more flavor. Good luck on your pizza adventure!
Check out "New England Style Greek" Pizza. It's made with a dough that's enriched in olive oil, along with thick tomato sauce and a 50/50 blend of Mozzarella and Cheddar and then almost pan-fried for that super crispy bottom and crust. When done right is amazing, my favorite type of pizza!
There are several cheeses available in different parts of the US which are very much like brick. On the west coast we have, for example, Monterey Jack, widely available. More fat and more flavor than mozz. Old country Italians buy Monterey Jack in quantity, wrap it in olive-oiled cheesecloth and store it away for months until it quite dries out. Then it makes a very useful grating cheese. Lots of pizza makers out here use Monterey Jack rather than mozz. It works very well.
Where I'm located, brick cheese is very readily available. If your brick cheese is tangy, it ain't brick cheese. Brick is salty, buttery, and mild. It has poor stretch and very readily oils off. Muenster is the closest substitute however, it's flavor profile is more milky rather than buttery.
I live in Finland and I never use mozzarella on pizza. It's pretty tasteless imo. I use Finnish cheese. its name is "arkijuusto" and translated into English "Everyday cheese" 😅. Awesome video as always!
After a bit of research I discovered Monterey Jack is also made in Wisconsin and probably other non-western states. Many descriptions of Monterey Jack on the internet describe it as a semi-hard. It is not necessarily semi-hard; it comes in several styles and most are semi-soft or sort rather than semi-hard.
We follow you because of the way you do do things. Please dont change. Keep the controversy and keep going. Love the way you do things, brother. Please dont change when the views come!
I've used grocery store Oaxaca cheese instead of mozz and it is FANTASTIC. Your description of brick cheese is kinda similar, but saltier rather than tangier.
@CharlieAndersonCooking You can find Wisconsin Brick Cheese in 8 oz blocks at Marc's stores if you don't want to buy the huge blocks at GFS. I'm pretty sure it's the Great Lakes brand too.
I live 30 miles north of a major city and the small grocery store near me has the brand of Wisconsin brick in this video, and cooper’s American cheese to boot.
I'm glad someone else uses Wisc. brick cheese on pizza. I use a combination of WBC, Oaxaca (Chihuahua cheese), and Provolone to get the taste and texture I desire for my pan pizzas. It's fun to see others trying different ways too.
I'm UK based and I always blend in some of our chedder with mozeralla for the exact flavour I'm looking for, more umami than the mild moz we have in stores anyway
i'd say the higher fat content with the brick cheese is causing the edge to fry even more than the mozz. side. Much like we have on the bottom of pan pizza frying the dough lining it with oil.
A local pizzeria offer half-baked pizzas with a pack of Provolone cheese slices. (They seem to include about a pound!) Most in my family like it when the cheese is cooked to a darker color (without toppings or sauce on top). I wonder how Havarti would do, as it is really good in grilled cheese sandwiches.
based off what Charlie is saying, what I've seen on reddit, as well as the comments of this video, I think I'm going to try a half blend of Muenster and Oaxaca cheese. I've always been moderately disappointed with Mozzarella cheese.
I read that Little Caesar's uses a mix a whole milk mozzarella and Muenster. I have no idea if this is true, but my 2/3 mozz to 1/3 muenster tastes awesome.
I have previously used a combination of the mildest cheddar I can find locally and colby jack, about 40/60 favouring the colby jack. Gonna have to do some experimentation with some of the cheeses you use and see what I can get. Aloha and Mahalo!
Pizza cheese melting from the heat coming from the pizza stone? If that was the case, the crust-side of the cheese would brown first leaving the top side of the cheese less brown.. Since the top is brown and the bottom of cheese is less brown (if you do not broil nor use residual oven heat near the top of the oven). Had you had two pizza stones cooking two pizzas, and you didn't swap them sometime during the cook, the one on the top would have been far more brown than the one on the bottom. Obviously, check pizza stone temps to be the same before cooking. One thing that many do not realize with dynamically heating up things is that the item being heated is subject to its volume to surface area ratio. The higher the ratio, the slower to heat up. The lower the ratio, the faster to heat up. This is why it'd take days to roast an elephant compared to mere moments to roast a hummingbird. Chunks/cubes of cheese with the same weight of shreds of cheese will take on the heat slower than the high surface area shreds. Because the shreds transfer the heat faster, it's more likely to reach a burning/brownies temperature sooner.
Is brick cheese similar at all to deli-style block American cheese like Land-o-lakes or Boar's Head? Based on the video it doesn't seem like it. But regardless, (even if it sounds like total sacriledge) Charlie I would highly recommend you give this cheese a try on your Detroit style. I find it's got just enough funk and creaminess to blend great with mozz on a Detroit style.
I've been curious about using Oaxaca cheese on a pizza. It's a Mexican type cheese developed with cow tripe. It's tangy, melty and stretchy. Ever try it? I might try it on a pizza in my own experiment.
I think Chihuahua would work better if you're doing Mexican cheeses. Oaxaca is a bit stringy and I don't think melts all that well. Now if you were making a margarita style pizza, it would probably work as a good fresh mozzarella replacement
@@bgaviator not super shocked - especially as a pizza maker in Detroit (well, okay, the suburbs). Brick Cheese is weirdly hard to find depending on what vendors you use, at least in Metro Detroit. I've definitely seen it at some of the GFS locations in the area, but also not at others. My usual go-to place is a little hole-in-the-wall retail front for a food service distributor in the area. Very much looks like it's still out of the 80's
If i find any Wisconsin Brick here in Colorado it will be in the saddlebags of a unicorn, so alternatives will rule my day. Using common "pantry" cheeses like the jack/munster/cheddar blend or the Adam Kuban blend of mozz/cheddar/fontina or gouda called out by @jonasaras below would sure make any recipe a LOT more approachable. Keep up the good work, Detroit is all I do recently just to keep up with the experiments 🤪
If it's fattier I'm not interested. Honestly there's a way to do this pizza thing without breaking the caloric budget, I need a pizza I can eat everyday.
I am resisting buying a carbon steel pan for the same reason. I tend to just do a slightly fluffier more artisan NY style dough topped with mutti aromatica sauce and some olive oil. I cook it all the way till charred like it's a tomato pie. Right at the end I top with a parmesan of my liking that I've pre-shredded and let it melt on for 10-15 secs but not separate. It's light but tasty so I can eat it on a regular basis. The parmesan stores much longer in the fridge, easier to grate, less required and has more taste.
@@BlackLotusVisualArchiveDepends how you make it and also what you're comparing it to. It's healthier than a bag of chips for example which may have been the alternative meal.
I like your videos but man, that thing you call "mozzarella" is NOT mozzarella! I know in America you can only get crappy mozzarella but you can try the Supremo Italiano fresh ovoline mozzarella sold in buckets. You can buy them at Restaurant Depots store.
Your videos are interesting however, the metal pizza device that you use can and did damage my oven. The metal got so hot that it cracked the glass door. You should mention this in your videos now I have to go out and replace the oven because of its age and PS the metal plate did not really crisp up the pizza
Bro, I love you. Thanks for the pizza and especially the philly sesame hoagie roll. now, can you please put together how they somehow make their italian hoagies light years better than what i do at home. is it the cuts and brand of meats and cheese, because my grocery store deli meats just don't compare. also, do they do something differently w the dressing e.g olive oil and red wine vinegar and oregano? somehow, the philly hoagie has got an x factor that i can't seem to replicate. LASTly, what do you suggest for homecooks that want the BEST mozzarella cheese closest to grande cheese, which we all know only a restaurant can get.
I think the key to keeping your cheese from separating is to keep it COLD before you're ready to cook. I even throw mine in the freezer about 20 minutes before it goes on the pizza. The cheese goes from cold to melty without passing through the phase where it breaks. Never let your cheese come to room temp before cooking.
Man, nice tip! I'm going to try for sure. I won't find Wisconsin brick cheese in Italy, but I love grandma/Detroit/Sicilian style pizza and I need to try this trick for sure.
for the over charring, fold up paper towels to the size of the side of the pan. Wet the folded up paper towels with water and wrap them on the outside of the pan. it will cool the outside of the pan a little to stop the burning. My mom is a cake maker and she uses this technique when baking cakes.
Aged brick or not??? I'm assuming not, since the aged stuff has a strong funk. But really surprised you didn't address this at all. I once called Buddy's, and they told me they used aged brick on their pizzas.
I am very jealous of your options at GFS. I am in the Chicago area with three GFS stores in short driving distance to me. Across them all, their options for non-grated cheese are extremely limited. None have Wisconsin Brick and the only mozz they sell is Gordon branded.
Yeah it's interesting how different the stock is between locations. I'm currently living in Cleveland, but have to travel back to Michigan sometimes to get certain products from there (like Grande Mozzarella). I was actually surprised that the Cleveland location carried wisconsin brick cheese.
It’s really cool seeing how one can come close to the flavor and texture profile of brick cheese with different types of cheeses! I am very happy that Muenster ended up being used as a cheese for this experiment - the subtle tanginess and creamy mouth fuel has always been my main draw to that cheese, especially on pizza! I’m eager to see what comes next!
Sal’s Ny Pizza here in Australia imports Wisconsin and it really makes their pizzas. I wish I could get ahold of some. I have to go for locally made Mozzarella though, hoping a new one I’ve got with higher fat % will be potentially decent.
@@AvenueD417 Yep well aware of Grande Mozz from my many years on the pizzamaking NY Style forum. I don't know which specific Wisconsin Mozz Sal's are using here in Sydney but it could well be Grande. With that said, I'm not going to lose my sh*t if I find out they aren't as the fact they're the only pizza stores marking a totally credible NY Style here in Australia is a major accomplishment in itself. It's a damn fine pizza.
When I make pizza at home with (full fat) mozzarella it tastes like absolute nothing to me to, like, a concerning degree. But when I buy pizza from somewhere the mozz (I assume) is mild, yet plenty tasty. I don't understand why it's so different at home, but it's driving me nuts trying to figure it out. I've tried different brands of mozz and it's the same bland, completely tasteless result every time. I think I just need to give up and try blends like what you're suggesting.
Probably because pizza shops can order Grande mozz, which is generally considered the best. Have you tried Boar’s Head Full Fat Low Moisture? It’s usually pretty pricey though at like $9/lb
@@bgaviator I've heard the hype around Grande but have never been able to find it. If that's actually the difference maker I would face palm pretty hard. Haven't tried Boar's Head but I'll definitely add that to the list, thanks. It's just the weirdest experience when the cheese tastes like absolutely nothing so I'd love to figure it out.
Heat oven to 500-550F with ¼ inch baking steel on middle rack (steel better than stone for us). Make pizza for 8x10” Lloyd pan, put lots of olive oil in pan, layer dough (rise in pan), seasoned hamburger, cheese (we used 65 grams each of grated sharp white cheddar, muenster, and fontina, for a total of 195 grams), and put sauce stripes on top. We put almost a whole green pepper (thinly sliced) on top of that. Cooked for 13.5 minutes on top of the steel. Good stuff.
@CharlieAndersonCooking Thank you for your NY style aka Joes pizza recipe. I'm near Berlin, Germany and miss my NY pizza so I've been making it here using your recipe. When I make the Detroit style pizza I will definitely have to substitute something for Wisconsin cheese since I don't think I can source it here. I'm thinking Muenster or just mozzarella. I'm curious how shredded gouda could be used on pizza. I'd love to see you create a video about how to create a Chicago style pizza, a Joe's Sicilian and/or a grandma's pizza.
Is it just me or is Muenster cheese highly underrated??? I started making pizzas with Muenster cheese recently, and they're absolutely the best tasting pizzas I've ever made. These are the first pizzas I've made that my wife prefers over take out. Shes an honest critic (to be fair, I ask her for the brutal honesty because I want to improve my pizzas), and she seems to really love the pizzas I'm making these days. Maybe Muenster cheese gets a bad wrap because Little Ceasars uses it? Regardless, it makes an absolutely delicious pizza and i recommend anyone to try it on their next pies.
I haven't managed to get my hands on brick cheese, but I have made a nice detroit style with 2 parts mozz, 1 part Monterey Jack, and a little white cheddar. I actually really enjoyed the flavor combo, almost tasted like a really nice grilled cheese. Definitely something to try if youre craving pizza, but something a little different.
I will definitely look for this and mix, I usually use fontina, and grate aged asiago. mozzarella doesn't have flavor that I want, ok on ...Parm with romano, Parm or aged asiago. I'm open to trying new things
Try mixing in Oaxaca mexican cheese. It's what I use because I can't find any brick cheese and it seems to have all the same characteristics people describe the Wisconsin cheese having.
Northeastern PA pizzeria’s have been using this type of cheese for a century. I’ve worked at many joints and it was never a mix, always straight up white cheddar. So much better than mozzarella.
I'm curious what you would think of shredded Chihuahua cheese on your thin crusts. I think it might have the potential to beat the Mozzarella V&V Supremo is the easiest quality brand to find in the US
love the scientific approach to simple foods such as pizza and even though its seen as a simple pizza it can be a very deep rabbit hole and complex with the amount of options
You are now my go-to guy for pizza perfection!! love your passion!
I would have loved to see you try out the other cheeses on the NY style pizza as well and see if they have the same issue of breaking from the heat. Mozz can get bland and I've heard quite a few people are starting to use blends. Would love some more depth of flavor to my thinner pies. Thanks Charlie
I love how serious you take your pizza making. Most cooking shows are total crap. With pizza every little detail matters . I've been on a seven-year pizza making journey, and every time I make a pizza I change one little detail, and I write down the results. This is the only cooking show that takes cooking seriously. Every other cooking show is just porn. You're doing God's work brother! I made a Excel sheet for my dinner recipes, but I ditched it for yours. That's a very good one. Anybody who is making pizza needs to get your Excel doc.
This is why I love this channel. Pizza is serious business😄
I'm glad you enjoy it! I completely agree that the small details really matter when it comes to pizza. I think it's pretty easy to make average pizza at home, but it's hard to make great pizza.
@@railasvuo drive.google.com/file/d/1G87xXdGQQXoclLIFHub-avo-yRJkOcWI/view?usp=drive_link
@@CharlieAndersonCooking You really pay attention to the details that make a difference. How can I access the recipe Excel sheet?
Some of my best pizza's have been cast iron pizza. I consider it my Detroit style because I don't have the pan. Other than that, as long as you make a good dough, the toppings are complimenting the pizza dough. Fermenting the dough gives it much more flavor. Good luck on your pizza adventure!
I do 25% WM low moisture mozz, 25% part-skim mozz, and 50% Muenster with the Orange rind removed. Has been a good Detroit cheese blend for me
I’ve experimented with Muenster/Mozz and it’s a great blend.
Check out "New England Style Greek" Pizza. It's made with a dough that's enriched in olive oil, along with thick tomato sauce and a 50/50 blend of Mozzarella and Cheddar and then almost pan-fried for that super crispy bottom and crust. When done right is amazing, my favorite type of pizza!
Nice breakdown- looking forward to the next one
Hi, can we do a video on New Haven style pizza? Recently came across your channel and binged everything. Your style to cooking is fantastic!
There are several cheeses available in different parts of the US which are very much like brick. On the west coast we have, for example, Monterey Jack, widely available. More fat and more flavor than mozz. Old country Italians buy Monterey Jack in quantity, wrap it in olive-oiled cheesecloth and store it away for months until it quite dries out. Then it makes a very useful grating cheese.
Lots of pizza makers out here use Monterey Jack rather than mozz. It works very well.
Where I'm located, brick cheese is very readily available. If your brick cheese is tangy, it ain't brick cheese. Brick is salty, buttery, and mild. It has poor stretch and very readily oils off. Muenster is the closest substitute however, it's flavor profile is more milky rather than buttery.
Imagine seeing Charlie in the grocery talking to his shopping cart.
I live in Finland and I never use mozzarella on pizza. It's pretty tasteless imo. I use Finnish cheese. its name is "arkijuusto" and translated into English "Everyday cheese" 😅. Awesome video as always!
If I told my young self I could talk with someone from Finland about pizza cheese, I would not believe it.
@@BigSnipp Haha. Pizza is a universal thing 😄
@@railasvuo Yes. We are united by pizza!
Arkijuusto as made by Valio is preeeetty close to Edam cheese, so people outside Finland can try that.
@@nikomo Right. I forgot to mention this. Imo price quality ratio very good. 1.25kg block 6-7e
After a bit of research I discovered Monterey Jack is also made in Wisconsin and probably other non-western states. Many descriptions of Monterey Jack on the internet describe it as a semi-hard. It is not necessarily semi-hard; it comes in several styles and most are semi-soft or sort rather than semi-hard.
I can't even find low-moisture mozzarella here in Newcastle, England, so there's probably zero chance of finding Wisconsin brick cheese!
Good job with the analysis. I agree with you with the cheese melt.
We follow you because of the way you do do things. Please dont change. Keep the controversy and keep going. Love the way you do things, brother. Please dont change when the views come!
Controversy?
I've used grocery store Oaxaca cheese instead of mozz and it is FANTASTIC. Your description of brick cheese is kinda similar, but saltier rather than tangier.
Oh Yes. That cheese is incredible and is my favorite.
Love your testing process and presentation!
@CharlieAndersonCooking You can find Wisconsin Brick Cheese in 8 oz blocks at Marc's stores if you don't want to buy the huge blocks at GFS. I'm pretty sure it's the Great Lakes brand too.
I live 30 miles north of a major city and the small grocery store near me has the brand of Wisconsin brick in this video, and cooper’s American cheese to boot.
I'm glad someone else uses Wisc. brick cheese on pizza. I use a combination of WBC, Oaxaca (Chihuahua cheese), and Provolone to get the taste and texture I desire for my pan pizzas.
It's fun to see others trying different ways too.
I'm UK based and I always blend in some of our chedder with mozeralla for the exact flavour I'm looking for, more umami than the mild moz we have in stores anyway
i'd say the higher fat content with the brick cheese is causing the edge to fry even more than the mozz. side. Much like we have on the bottom of pan pizza frying the dough lining it with oil.
I also still find the perfect blend for me personally is provolone and mozz.
Provolone and Mozz is a good combo!
Little Caesars uses muenster and mozzarella cheeses for the deep dish.
A local pizzeria offer half-baked pizzas with a pack of Provolone cheese slices. (They seem to include about a pound!) Most in my family like it when the cheese is cooked to a darker color (without toppings or sauce on top). I wonder how Havarti would do, as it is really good in grilled cheese sandwiches.
Half Provolone, half mozz, is what I used when I worked at a buddy's knockoff joint near detroit.
The cheese char is the hallmark for Detroit style pizza!
keep up the work man
based off what Charlie is saying, what I've seen on reddit, as well as the comments of this video, I think I'm going to try a half blend of Muenster and Oaxaca cheese. I've always been moderately disappointed with Mozzarella cheese.
munster is my go to
Love your videos Charlie!
You should do these taste comparisons blindfolded
Love it !
I always put Oaxaca cheese on my pizza.
I read that Little Caesar's uses a mix a whole milk mozzarella and Muenster. I have no idea if this is true, but my 2/3 mozz to 1/3 muenster tastes awesome.
It’s true. Back in the day we would shred from blocks. 3 to 1 Mozz/Muenster. Now it comes pre shredded.
I would love to see you make a Detroit Deep Dish and a NY style pizza, using only Provel cheese.
Why didn't you blend the Mozzarella & Wisconsin brick cheese?
On a side note, thanks for linking to the cheese you used.
Brick is the bomb!
I have previously used a combination of the mildest cheddar I can find locally and colby jack, about 40/60 favouring the colby jack. Gonna have to do some experimentation with some of the cheeses you use and see what I can get. Aloha and Mahalo!
Try Pepato Cheese. It's a real game changer on Pizza.
I believe you said you were in Cleveland? I found the same brick cheese at Marc’s.
Pizza cheese melting from the heat coming from the pizza stone? If that was the case, the crust-side of the cheese would brown first leaving the top side of the cheese less brown.. Since the top is brown and the bottom of cheese is less brown (if you do not broil nor use residual oven heat near the top of the oven).
Had you had two pizza stones cooking two pizzas, and you didn't swap them sometime during the cook, the one on the top would have been far more brown than the one on the bottom. Obviously, check pizza stone temps to be the same before cooking.
One thing that many do not realize with dynamically heating up things is that the item being heated is subject to its volume to surface area ratio. The higher the ratio, the slower to heat up. The lower the ratio, the faster to heat up. This is why it'd take days to roast an elephant compared to mere moments to roast a hummingbird.
Chunks/cubes of cheese with the same weight of shreds of cheese will take on the heat slower than the high surface area shreds. Because the shreds transfer the heat faster, it's more likely to reach a burning/brownies temperature sooner.
try Great Lakes brick cheese. i think it's a lot better than Widmers
You should try making New Haven style pizza
I use 50% whole milk mozz and 50% brick cheese on my DSP
10x better? There's no way, dude... maybe like 10% better.
What is the metal peel that you used in this video? Link to buy??
Is brick cheese similar at all to deli-style block American cheese like Land-o-lakes or Boar's Head? Based on the video it doesn't seem like it. But regardless, (even if it sounds like total sacriledge) Charlie I would highly recommend you give this cheese a try on your Detroit style. I find it's got just enough funk and creaminess to blend great with mozz on a Detroit style.
No
Has anyone ever told you that you and Rob Iler look similar? The son on the Sopranos
I've been curious about using Oaxaca cheese on a pizza. It's a Mexican type cheese developed with cow tripe. It's tangy, melty and stretchy. Ever try it? I might try it on a pizza in my own experiment.
I think Chihuahua would work better if you're doing Mexican cheeses.
Oaxaca is a bit stringy and I don't think melts all that well. Now if you were making a margarita style pizza, it would probably work as a good fresh mozzarella replacement
Wow you back, i mean comeback
Chucky Cheese 🤣I dig the bangin back beat. Try mixing it with something a lil melodic.
I love brick cheese.
Are you using Low Fat Mozzarella or Whole-milk Mozzarella?
feedback for the editing process, the music was very distracting and i couldnt really pay attention to what you were saying.
sick haircut bro
Yum.
GFS always got your back
They don’t sell Brick at my GFS. I could try ordering it but I’m afraid they’d make me order an entire case
@@bgaviator not super shocked - especially as a pizza maker in Detroit (well, okay, the suburbs). Brick Cheese is weirdly hard to find depending on what vendors you use, at least in Metro Detroit. I've definitely seen it at some of the GFS locations in the area, but also not at others. My usual go-to place is a little hole-in-the-wall retail front for a food service distributor in the area. Very much looks like it's still out of the 80's
3000 more subs!!!!
If i find any Wisconsin Brick here in Colorado it will be in the saddlebags of a unicorn, so alternatives will rule my day. Using common "pantry" cheeses like the jack/munster/cheddar blend or the Adam Kuban blend of mozz/cheddar/fontina or gouda called out by @jonasaras below would sure make any recipe a LOT more approachable. Keep up the good work, Detroit is all I do recently just to keep up with the experiments 🤪
Listen all ye that have ears to hear. WHOLE milk low moisture mozzarella. Always salt your cheese. Never pre shredded.
Charlie l live in Wisconsin
You changed my wife and I lives we make such better pizza at home
should the pizza be black??
If it's fattier I'm not interested. Honestly there's a way to do this pizza thing without breaking the caloric budget, I need a pizza I can eat everyday.
I am resisting buying a carbon steel pan for the same reason. I tend to just do a slightly fluffier more artisan NY style dough topped with mutti aromatica sauce and some olive oil. I cook it all the way till charred like it's a tomato pie. Right at the end I top with a parmesan of my liking that I've pre-shredded and let it melt on for 10-15 secs but not separate. It's light but tasty so I can eat it on a regular basis. The parmesan stores much longer in the fridge, easier to grate, less required and has more taste.
It doesn't matter how you make it: Pizza every day isn't healthy. Once a week is best
@@BlackLotusVisualArchiveDepends how you make it and also what you're comparing it to. It's healthier than a bag of chips for example which may have been the alternative meal.
Gangster
I like your videos but man, that thing you call "mozzarella" is NOT mozzarella! I know in America you can only get crappy mozzarella but you can try the Supremo Italiano fresh ovoline mozzarella sold in buckets. You can buy them at Restaurant Depots store.
Your videos are interesting however, the metal pizza device that you use can and did damage my oven. The metal got so hot that it cracked the glass door. You should mention this in your videos now I have to go out and replace the oven because of its age and PS the metal plate did not really crisp up the pizza
My oven has held up well and the pizza is crispier and much better
Oven glass can be replaced. The door comes apart.
The oven glass has been on order for four months now. Thank you, China.
Bro, I love you. Thanks for the pizza and especially the philly sesame hoagie roll. now, can you please put together how they somehow make their italian hoagies light years better than what i do at home. is it the cuts and brand of meats and cheese, because my grocery store deli meats just don't compare. also, do they do something differently w the dressing e.g olive oil and red wine vinegar and oregano? somehow, the philly hoagie has got an x factor that i can't seem to replicate. LASTly, what do you suggest for homecooks that want the BEST mozzarella cheese closest to grande cheese, which we all know only a restaurant can get.
Nothing tops a mix of smoked provolone and brick cheese 🥴🥴🥴
I think the key to keeping your cheese from separating is to keep it COLD before you're ready to cook. I even throw mine in the freezer about 20 minutes before it goes on the pizza. The cheese goes from cold to melty without passing through the phase where it breaks. Never let your cheese come to room temp before cooking.
Man, nice tip! I'm going to try for sure. I won't find Wisconsin brick cheese in Italy, but I love grandma/Detroit/Sicilian style pizza and I need to try this trick for sure.
if my science is correct it has to do with the proteins in the cheese relaxing at room temp (being looser) releasing more of the fat after cooking
Damn, I was hopeful that alternative to brick cheese would be somehting available outside US...
for the over charring, fold up paper towels to the size of the side of the pan. Wet the folded up paper towels with water and wrap them on the outside of the pan. it will cool the outside of the pan a little to stop the burning. My mom is a cake maker and she uses this technique when baking cakes.
munster cheese to the way to go
Just thinking out loud... I wonder if lining the pan with parchment might help with the over-charred cheese edges.
Aged brick or not???
I'm assuming not, since the aged stuff has a strong funk. But really surprised you didn't address this at all.
I once called Buddy's, and they told me they used aged brick on their pizzas.
I am very jealous of your options at GFS. I am in the Chicago area with three GFS stores in short driving distance to me. Across them all, their options for non-grated cheese are extremely limited. None have Wisconsin Brick and the only mozz they sell is Gordon branded.
Yeah it's interesting how different the stock is between locations. I'm currently living in Cleveland, but have to travel back to Michigan sometimes to get certain products from there (like Grande Mozzarella). I was actually surprised that the Cleveland location carried wisconsin brick cheese.
It’s really cool seeing how one can come close to the flavor and texture profile of brick cheese with different types of cheeses!
I am very happy that Muenster ended up being used as a cheese for this experiment - the subtle tanginess and creamy mouth fuel has always been my main draw to that cheese, especially on pizza!
I’m eager to see what comes next!
As a Wisconsinite, I can confirm and agree with your findings.
Sal’s Ny Pizza here in Australia imports Wisconsin and it really makes their pizzas. I wish I could get ahold of some. I have to go for locally made Mozzarella though, hoping a new one I’ve got with higher fat % will be potentially decent.
They definitely must order Grande’ brand mozzarella. That’s the number low moisture whole milk mozzarella used in the best NY pizzerias
@@AvenueD417
Yep well aware of Grande Mozz from my many years on the pizzamaking NY Style forum. I don't know which specific Wisconsin Mozz Sal's are using here in Sydney but it could well be Grande. With that said, I'm not going to lose my sh*t if I find out they aren't as the fact they're the only pizza stores marking a totally credible NY Style here in Australia is a major accomplishment in itself. It's a damn fine pizza.
When I make pizza at home with (full fat) mozzarella it tastes like absolute nothing to me to, like, a concerning degree. But when I buy pizza from somewhere the mozz (I assume) is mild, yet plenty tasty. I don't understand why it's so different at home, but it's driving me nuts trying to figure it out. I've tried different brands of mozz and it's the same bland, completely tasteless result every time. I think I just need to give up and try blends like what you're suggesting.
Probably because pizza shops can order Grande mozz, which is generally considered the best. Have you tried Boar’s Head Full Fat Low Moisture? It’s usually pretty pricey though at like $9/lb
@@bgaviator I've heard the hype around Grande but have never been able to find it. If that's actually the difference maker I would face palm pretty hard. Haven't tried Boar's Head but I'll definitely add that to the list, thanks. It's just the weirdest experience when the cheese tastes like absolutely nothing so I'd love to figure it out.
Salt the chunks or cubes of Mozzarella.
Heat oven to 500-550F with ¼ inch baking steel on middle rack (steel better than stone for us). Make pizza for 8x10” Lloyd pan, put lots of olive oil in pan, layer dough (rise in pan), seasoned hamburger, cheese (we used 65 grams each of grated sharp white cheddar, muenster, and fontina, for a total of 195 grams), and put sauce stripes on top. We put almost a whole green pepper (thinly sliced) on top of that. Cooked for 13.5 minutes on top of the steel. Good stuff.
Yeah buddy!
@CharlieAndersonCooking Thank you for your NY style aka Joes pizza recipe. I'm near Berlin, Germany and miss my NY pizza so I've been making it here using your recipe. When I make the Detroit style pizza I will definitely have to substitute something for Wisconsin cheese since I don't think I can source it here. I'm thinking Muenster or just mozzarella. I'm curious how shredded gouda could be used on pizza. I'd love to see you create a video about how to create a Chicago style pizza, a Joe's Sicilian and/or a grandma's pizza.
Is it just me or is Muenster cheese highly underrated???
I started making pizzas with Muenster cheese recently, and they're absolutely the best tasting pizzas I've ever made. These are the first pizzas I've made that my wife prefers over take out. Shes an honest critic (to be fair, I ask her for the brutal honesty because I want to improve my pizzas), and she seems to really love the pizzas I'm making these days. Maybe Muenster cheese gets a bad wrap because Little Ceasars uses it? Regardless, it makes an absolutely delicious pizza and i recommend anyone to try it on their next pies.
I haven't managed to get my hands on brick cheese, but I have made a nice detroit style with 2 parts mozz, 1 part Monterey Jack, and a little white cheddar. I actually really enjoyed the flavor combo, almost tasted like a really nice grilled cheese. Definitely something to try if youre craving pizza, but something a little different.
Not taking into account the variances between manufacturers. Not very scientific, but a general guidline to experiment with locally available brands.
I will definitely look for this and mix, I usually use fontina, and grate aged asiago. mozzarella doesn't have flavor that I want, ok on ...Parm with romano, Parm or aged asiago. I'm open to trying new things
Im from northern wisconsin so i have a famous cheese store down the road. i do 1/2 brick and 1/2 munster with pretty nice results.
Well damnit I live in Wisconsin and not once have I ever even thought about it and crazy enough almost nobody here even eats it either lol
im from Pennsylvania and it shocks me that people havent ever heard of brick cheese
3:44 not enough cheese on the thin pizza , one of the most important things on pizza is the correct amount of cheese
Muenster is honestly an underrated melting cheese in general
Where is the PROVOLONE!?
Try mixing in Oaxaca mexican cheese. It's what I use because I can't find any brick cheese and it seems to have all the same characteristics people describe the Wisconsin cheese having.
Also muenster + oaxaca is my personal favorite.
Give Provel cheese a try.
can you show us the dog
Northeastern PA pizzeria’s have been using this type of cheese for a century. I’ve worked at many joints and it was never a mix, always straight up white cheddar. So much better than mozzarella.
I'm curious what you would think of shredded Chihuahua cheese on your thin crusts. I think it might have the potential to beat the Mozzarella
V&V Supremo is the easiest quality brand to find in the US