Why does my pizza dough (and other doughs) go sticky on freezing and defrosting?

Why does my pizza dough (and other doughs) go sticky on freezing and defrosting? - Person Holding Pepperoni Pizza on Tray

I make this simple sourdough pizza dough, with the slight variation that I weigh my starter. A half quantity does me 2 pizzas. So that's 150g 100% hydration starter, 125ml water, 250g flour, kneaded in a stand mixer and rested (30 minutes to 2 hours depending on my evening). That gives me a nice easy to work dough. But I only want to make one pizza, so I freeze half of the dough - I roll it into a ball, roll it in flour, and put it in a generously floured plastic container, then freeze for about a week.

When I defrost it (in the fridge for 24 hours), it's always stickier and harder to work with than it was before freezing, despite having added a little flour in the dusting. The resulting pizza is just as good though (fairly thin, baked at 240°C on a slab of preheated granite).

It happens consistently, and I've noticed the same with naan dough. The last 2 batches of pizza dough I froze with a note about how easy they were to handle, to be sure I hadn't just made a sticky batch and forgotten by the time I defrosted it.

Why is this, and is there anything I can do about it?



Best Answer

There are several effects which I think are at work here:

  • starch hydrates over time. Sure, within an initial kneading, it already hydrates quite a bit, but if you leave it longer, it continues changing. (That's also why it is recommended to rest crepe batter). So the starch which was somewhat-dry is now completely wet, making the dough as a whole stick. If you had patches of completely dry flour on the outside left from shaping, they are now also completely wettened, giving you more initial sticking at your first touch of the dough, which probably contributes to the sticky impression even more.

  • 24 hours is quite long for an already-risen dough, even though the temperature is very low (starts from frozen). I wouldn't be surprised if the overleavening process starts already in that timeframe, and overleavened dough is sticky.

  • the gluten mesh is susceptible to physical disruption. I mostly notice this with home-ground wholemeal flour, the bran basically cuts it too much for proper rising. I guess that the formation and expansion of ice crystals also has a bit of an effect on your gluten, even though it's milder because of the lack of kneading while the crystals are present.

So I think this is to be expected, and not exactly worrisome. If you want to reduce the effect, you can freeze the dough in discs instead of a cuboid or cylindrical container. You will then have shorter defrosting times, and your dough won't overleaven on the outside while the center is still defrosting.




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Why does my pizza dough (and other doughs) go sticky on freezing and defrosting? - From above of broken eggs on flour pile scattered on table near salt sack and kitchenware
Why does my pizza dough (and other doughs) go sticky on freezing and defrosting? - Person Slicing A Pizza With A Pizza Cutter
Why does my pizza dough (and other doughs) go sticky on freezing and defrosting? - Cooked Pizza



Quick Answer about "Why does my pizza dough (and other doughs) go sticky on freezing and defrosting?"

This is because gluten-free doughs are typically wetter and more sticky than regular pizza dough. Not using a sufficient quantity of oil or flour will result in the dough sticking to the inside of the bag and becoming very hard to work with when thawed.

Why did my pizza dough turn out sticky?

There are many reasons your pizza dough may end up being stickier than you initially intended. It could be that you added too much water, you haven't kneaded the dough enough, you used cold water, or your kitchen is just humid. Adding flour to the dough can help reduce the stickiness.

What is the best way to defrost frozen pizza dough?

Put the dough in an airtight bag and completely submerge it in a bowl of cold water. After one to two hours, the dough would have defrosted and would feel soft. Remove the dough from the airtight bag. Then let it rest in a dry bowl or tray for around one hour to proof.

Can you unfreeze and refreeze pizza dough?

It is safe to refreeze homemade/store-bought pizza dough if you thawed it in a refrigerator. Not letting it sit out of the fridge for more than 2 hours and quickly refreezing it can enable you to store the pizza dough for four months and sometimes even longer.

Should I thaw frozen pizza dough before baking?

The Best Way To Defrost Pizza Dough: Take frozen dough from freezer the night before and place it in the fridge. The next day, the dough should be completely thawed, but still very cold. 1-2 hours before baking time, let the dough proof at room temperature.



How To Prevent The Pizza Dough From Getting STICKY




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