Can anyone point me to a resource that helps me understand the math behind the dough— eg hydration %, poolish % , how many dough balls, etc. I know I can get a pizza calculator but just want tom understand what it’s calculating.

by TPWPNY16

16 Comments

  1. shockwave_supernova

    I’m getting there myself, try the book Flour Water Salt Yeast. It has detailed explanations of technique, methods of preparation, there are recipe tables with percentage breakdowns, and it will teach you about all kinds of bread, not just pizza.

  2. Hydration % is bakers percentage of water to flour. So 60% hydration is 60grams water with 100 grams flour.

    For 1000 grams of dough, If you use a doughball of 333grams for a 14inch pizza you’ll get 3 pizzas, if you use a 250gram for a 12inch pizza you’ll get 4 pizzas.

    For the poolish, follow the poolish instructions and then subtract each part from the main recipe so as to not double count the same ingredients twice.

  3. Paul102000

    Hydration ist how many water compared to flower. If you have 1kg of flour and 700gramm of water you have 70% hydration. I myself make on pizza 270gramm so you can make 1,7kg/270=6,2 pizzas out of that. With polish you have a percentage of all the flour. So if you have a 30% poolish dough it means you mixed 300gramms of water with 300gramm of flour if you have 1kg of flour in total.

  4. CorneliusNepos

    It’s all based on a percentage of the other ingredients against the total of flour you’re using. So 75g water and 100g flour is 75% hydration. When you plan, add up all your ingredients and make sure you have the right amount of hydration and percentages for each ingredient at the final stage. When you add up all the ingredients in weight, you can divide it by the size of doughball you want.

  5. blindloomis

    Bakers percentages confused me for a long time, but like most everything else, I discovered that it is a very simple concept. The hydration and all other ingredients are a percentage of the amount of flour being used. If you use 100 grams of flour and want 60% hydration, you use 60 grams of water. There are online calculators and apps to do the math for you.

    I no longer use a recipe. I just decide how much dough I want and plug it into the calculator, with the water percentage, along with the percentage of yeast and salt.

    You may want to start around 60% and work your way up from there because the dough starts getting very sticky above 65% and you have to handle the dough differently. Higher hydration will give you a more airy crust and better chew, imo.

  6. I keep my pizza crust recipes on a spreadsheet then I can track my changes and easily scale up or down the crust diameter.

  7. It’s all very simple, as it’s just the percentage of that Ingredient by weight compared to the total weight of the flour in the dough. It gets more confusing when talking about starters and pre ferments. When measuring those the bakers percentage used is the amount of flour in that pre ferment or starter compared to the total amount of flour, not the entire weight of the pre ferment. For example adding 100 grams of sourdough starter that consists of 50/50 flour and water into a dough that will have 500 grams of flour total is not 20% starter, it’s 10% starter. You also have to subtract the amount of flour and water in your pre ferment from the total amount of flour and water you want in the dough when you add the rest of it in. Using pre ferments add a lot more math but once you do it one time if you just write down the amounts for each step it’s fairly easy.

  8. Thoughts on my numbers it happened through trial and error but I came up with this

    Bread flour 600g
    Water 68%
    Oil 3%
    Sugar 2%
    Salt 2.8%
    Yeast .4%

    Edit: this dough cold ferment for 72hrs

    Only issue is my previous dough batch didn’t seem to want to one rise on the crust, and two stretch that easily. The dough also seemed to have an interesting beer scent upon opening containers. I don’t know if it’s a time issue, or if it was my kneading technique.

    Would love some pointers

  9. Syn3sth3tic

    How does pizza like that taste? I wanna try pizza like that so baddd whats it called again? Neopolitian?

  10. The best thing for the individual is to keep notes in a dedicated book. Keep track of everything in weight as it’s more accurate.

  11. ProfessionalForce596

    Perfect nothing like something well done

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