How can I prevent the cheese on my homemade pizza from hardening too soon?

How can I prevent the cheese on my homemade pizza from hardening too soon? - Sliced Pepperoni Pizza on White Ceramic Plate

I am on my road to perfecting thin crust pizza, but a major problem is that about 5 to 10 minutes after getting it out of the oven the cheese begins to congeal and harden, making my homemade pizza taste like it just came out of the fridge.

Why does it happen? I know the cheese in commercial pizzas from Dominos or Italian mergheritas from Rome both retain somewhat desirable texture for more than 30 minutes after serving. Even as those pizzas get colder, their cheese "coating" does not harden as mine.

Recipe: 500g white flour /335 ml water with 7g dried yeast and 1tbsp of salt / knead for 10 minutes or so / proof for 2 hours / 220c in the oven for 7 minutes

The cheese was a think layer of grated Parmeggiano Reggiano with 18% Mozarella Fresca and a little olive oil with a sprinkle of kosher salt.



Best Answer

The easiest solution is to use different cheeses.

Most commercial pizzerias, like Domino's or Pizza Hut do not use expensive cheeses like Parmesean or fresh mozzerella... they use crappy cheese designed to be stretchy and to stay that way when warm instead of hot. In general, they use part-skim mozzarella, which is often sold pre-shredded and in hard blocks like you'd find cheddars. This is addressed in another answer, here.

Hard cheeses like Parmesan are unlikely to melt at all and, when they do, they will firm up quickly as they lose heat. You should rarely expect a hard cheese to melt well. Most of them don't. They also lose a lot of oils when they melt, causing unsightly separation. They're great for a burst of salty cheese flavor but they won't behave like Domino's cheese. This is why it's common to top a completed pizza with shredded Parmesan but you wouldn't want to use it as your primary base cheese for the unbaked pizza.

Fresh cheeses like ricotta and mozzarella have the opposite problem. Their high moisture content will often make pizza unappetizingly soggy.

In contrast, the part skim mozzarella used in pizzerias is specifically chosen because it has low water content.

Check out the two questions linked here for a ton more info.

You should consider doing some research into which cheeses melt well as opposed that separate into an gross mess. Note, this list, like many others includes Asiago but it's important to notice that the list refers specifically to fresh Asiago, not the Parmesan-like aged sibling.




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Quick Answer about "How can I prevent the cheese on my homemade pizza from hardening too soon?"

I recommend putting your pizzas in a place where they stay warm. An isolated box, or in your bed in a carton box. The dough will get soggy eventually, though. Domino's gets away with this because the dough is thicker so it takes a while.

Why does cheese get hard on pizza?

If the question is why did the mozzarella cheese on Pizza A not melt as well as the mozzarella cheese on Pizza B, then it's likely due to the following: Fresh mozzarella (high moisture, whole milk) melts better than the bricks of low-moisture whole milk mozzarella. Whole milk low moisture cheese melts better part-skim.

How do you keep pizza from getting hard?

How To Make Pizza Crust Softer
  • Add Extra Hydration To Your Pizza Dough.
  • Let Your Pizza Dough Rest For As Long As Possible.
  • Always Shape Your Pizza Dough By Hand.
  • Don't Bake Your Pizza For Too Long.


  • How do you make cheese stay on pizza?

    the simplest way to fix it is mechanically - mixing part of the cheese into the sauce. This helps add moisture to the cheese, since it is coated in the sauce, and helps dry the sauce (less cheese on top means the sauce is more exposed).

    How do you keep mozzarella from hardening?

    Use Low Heat Using low heat is going to be better than turning the heat on to a very high setting to start. Gradual temperature changes are better than fast ones. When you melt the cheese using low heat, it'll prevent the fat from separating from the melted cheese.



    How to Prevent The Pizza From Getting SOGGY




    More answers regarding how can I prevent the cheese on my homemade pizza from hardening too soon?

    Answer 2

    I recommend putting your pizzas in a place where they stay warm. An isolated box, or in your bed in a carton box.

    The dough will get soggy eventually, though. Domino's gets away with this because the dough is thicker so it takes a while.

    If you want crispy, nice, fresh pizza, I recommend eating them fresh, especially because you are making them fresh anyway. I wouldn't really recommend switching to thick dough Domino's-like pizza, because they are designed to be transportable, not the best quality pizza you can have. If you make the effort to make them at home, you can do better!

    Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

    Images: Sydney Troxell, Polina Tankilevitch, Polina Tankilevitch, Polina Tankilevitch