Pizza represents huge business for caterers. It provides a focused menu, fast throughput
of customers, has global appeal and does require the kind of kitchen staff training
that a full service restaurant needs. There is also a range of dedicated kitchen
equipment available which makes preparation and cooking of pizzas consistent and
quick.
You can buy
Pizza Dough Rollers,
Pizza Ovens,
Pizza Prep,
Prep Tops,
Refrigerated Preparation Tables,
Salad Prep
and
Heated Display Units for Pizza
at caterstop.com
Dough Mixers
There are three types of
Pizza dough mixers
- planetary, spiral and vertical cutter mixers. The spiral mixer has a large bowl
and an agitator that looks like a giant corkscrew. These are excellent for mixing
dough, but some do not have attachments for additional preparation work such as
sauce preparation, cheese grating or chopping vegetable toppings.
Vertical Cutter Mixers
These are high speed mixers with agitator speeds at about 1700 rpm. The dough mixing
times for vertical cutters is between 75 to 120 seconds. This is useful if you like
to mix your dough fresh during the day rather than a large batch done ahead of opening
time. This type of mixer can also be used to grate cheese, but is not recommended
for sauces because they can pulverise items such as chunky tomato sauce.
Planetary Mixers
A planetary mixer consists of a large bowl for ingredients and a dough hook agitator
that stirs the dough. There is also usually an attachment point for driving a grater
or vegetable preparation equipment. The planetary action causes the agitator to
move in a figure-eight motion, allowing the dough to uniformly mix.
Pizza Rolling and Forming
Low volume outlets can weigh out a doughball and roll with a wooden pin doing work
and turn to fit the baking dish or required diameter. Hand-tossing is wonderful
cooking theatre, but requires great skill by the pizza chef.
Using mechanical presses gives a uniform shape and thickness. There are three types
of mechanical
pizza press,
the sheet roller, the cold press and the hot press. The sheet roller is a type of
pastry roller, through which dough is fed to produce a large flat sheet. A hand
cutter is then used to cut out the required diameter of pizza dough and the leftover
dough goes back into the roller. This is for very high volumes of fresh pizza.
A cold dough press has a portion of dough placed on a baking dish and the dough
is pressed to shape. Cold pressing gives a very uniform crumb structure, more like
a bread than a crispy thin pizza. Hot pressing forms a skin on the pizza dough,
which can allow for a rising up of the edges (deep-pan) and give a more crispy finished
base after cooking than cold pressing does.
Refrigerated Preparation Tables
Refrigerated Preparation Tables
are essential for any busy pizza operation. They combine three things for speed
and food safety. There is a flat surface for working, usually in stainless steel
but can be in granite or Corian, which is an acrylic polymer which has many of the
features of granite. At the back of the work surface should be pick-bins, which
will contain all the ready-prepared toppings such as onion, tomato base, olives,
ham, etc, and all within reach for the pizza maker. Below the preparation surface
will be refrigerated drawers for items that need keeping under refrigeration, such
as extra cheeses, speciality ham, tuna, prawns, etc, as well as dough balls for
rolling out. Most pizza preparation units are standard zero-plus refrigeration,
but it is possible to get them with both freezer and refrigerated compartments.
Pizza Ovens
The way the pizza is cooked is as important to the finished quality of the pizza
as is the dough. There are traditional stone ovens and high-speed ovens – the choice
is as much about the volumes needed as the style of pizza offering and restaurant
ambience. The fastest type of
pizza oven
is the conveyor oven, either radiated heat or forced hot air (impinger ovens), both
of which are covered in the fast food cooking systems section of this guide. These
are the fastest ways to cook pizzas from scratch, but they may not deliver the final
taste, appearance and restaurant atmosphere the high end of pizza restaurants want.
There are two speciality pizza ovens, the deck oven and the traditional stone oven.
Traditional Pizza Stone Ovens
Open brick ovens are wonderful theatre reminiscent of old Naples and produce a pizza
with a great taste and crispness, but require more effort and experience by the
operator. They can come as wood-fired, gas or electric ovens.
The taste varies from pizzas cooked in conveyors because the pizza is placed directly
on the cooking surface and bakes the bottom crust differently. Another difference
in the crust is that the bottom is usually coated with flour or cornmeal to prevent
the pizza from sticking to the surface, which adds a different texture, appearance
and taste.
Stone baking surfaces have several advantages. Because pizza is best cooked from
the bottom up to get a crispy crust and cook toppings, stone works well. Stone holds
heat on the surface better than metal, so less heat is lost in cooking. Another
advantage to stone is that it absorbs oils and moisture that is released from pizzas
making them dryer. These ovens can be used for much more than pizza, such as toasting
the surface of a lasagne, making garlic bread or cooking meat and fish in a cooking
dish.
Pizzas cooked in wood-fired ovens look and can taste different and are generally
darker in colour than those cooked in other styles of ovens. Partly because they
absorb some of the smoke, depending on the type of wood used, and the bottom crusts
tend to be a little crispier because of the intense heat of the cooking stone.
Deck Pizza Ovens
These are multi-level conventional-style ovens each with their own door. There may
be as few as two decks or as many as five or even more. This allows many pizzas
to be cooked in the one unit with different start and finish times. Because they
are for pizza production, each oven is quite shallow. The base is usually stone
or ceramic tile, so the effect on the finished pizza is similar to the traditional.
They are controlled in the same way as a conventional oven and have a door to keep
the heat in.