I don’t know what was the problem with my dough yesterday, but I think I might have reballed it too much or either the temperature when I made the final dough made a difference. Last week when I balled two different batches of dough, I did reballed on one batch of dough balls two times. I thought last week, they were harder to open than normal, but wasn’t sure. I decided on Monday to reball the dough balls from two batches 1 time again. This sure could have been a mistake. I had good luck with reballing a higher hydration dough like Reinhart NY style dough two times or more. That is one reason I was experimenting on the preferment Lehmann dough balls. Yesterday those two batches of dough balls were really hard to open and some of the skins wanted to tear in a few places. Usually when opening the dough balls there aren’t any problems with opening the dough balls. We broke a record for temperatures in our area on Monday when I made the final dough. It was 84 degrees F. I still don’t know if this also might have caused the problems with opening the dough, but it might have. I sure didn’t like how these dough balls behaved. Even Steve opened a few dough balls and had the same problems. I surely don’t want these problems every week. The dough balls seemed to ferment so much faster too, when left out at room temperatures to temper, yesterday. I don’t usually open my dough balls right out of the cooler, but that seemed to work better. It was cooler in our area yesterday (47 degrees F and raining most of the day). From the experiments in reballing in the last two weeks, I think, but am not sure, knowing when to reball can be complicated. There must be some relation to hydration, temperature, and just enough tightness in the dough balls. All these dough balls were left to cold ferment for almost a day, so I would have thought the gluten would have been aligned okay. At least these are my opinions for now.
http://www.pizzamaking.com/forum/index.php/topic,9908.msg135118.html#msg135118
Norma
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