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[personal profile] same_sky
Okay, this has bothered me for years so please don't ignore this question just because it's Friday and LJ is slow on Fridays.

When you look at the directions for frozen pizza, they almost always tell you to place the pizza directly on the oven rack. In a small sidenote, it will say something about how you can put it on a cookie sheet for a softer crust. What I want to know is... does anyone put their pizza directly on the oven rack?

If you do, I would also like to know: does it not bother you that oven racks are not cleaned? Or do you acually clean your oven racks more than I clean mine? Or that pizza cheese and toppings are likely to slide off the edge and burn onto the bottom of the oven, if not during cooking then during transport? And okay, I can see how you could put a frozen pizza INTO the oven and onto a rack successfully, but how would one remove it? I guess that you could use a pizza peel but if you have one of those out where it's easily accessible are you really making that many frozen pizzas? Or maybe you remove the whole oven rack. But still, I am thinking of all the burnt-on places on my pizza pans. Doesn't it stick? And/or create a big mess? Why would you do this in the first place anyway?

Also, does anyone ever fix a frozen pizza without adding more cheese? I personally add more cheese, green peppers and onions (pre-chopped from the freezer, usually) and pepperoni. I recently bought some Freschetta pizzas (on sale, with coupons) and they could probably be used without adding more toppings. I refuse to pay premium frozen pizza prices, though, so maybe that's the difference in adding more toppings.

There are a lot of really important things going on in my head, as you can clearly see. Please given me more frozen pizza information because I seriously want to know.

Date: 2009-05-01 05:50 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ms-jacket.livejournal.com
I love crispy crusts and I even reheat my pizza in the oven without anything. Lately though I bought a pizza stone when I make my own pizza because that's the only way to achieve a truly crispy crust. In that case, then yes I use a peel.

For a Pappy Murphy's or frozen one, I just slide it on the rack and maybe a random topping might fall off but you can grab it up with a wet papertowel or something. You can also put some aluminum foil underneath to catch anything that falls. I do clean my oven so I'm not worried about cleanliness.

I have a gas oven so the middle of the oven is just metal, no element or anything that can't get kak on it. Does this make sense?

Date: 2009-05-01 05:56 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] e11en.livejournal.com
Yes, big difference with a gas stove. If I had a gas oven, I would be more inclined to put it right on the rack. If I had a gas stove I also might not hate cooking as much as I do.

Date: 2009-05-01 06:02 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ms-jacket.livejournal.com
So now you won't respect me when I say I did this even with my electric stove. I had two racks and I put aluminum foil on the rack under the one with the pizza. This way it was still crispy but there was less crap on the oven. I had other stuff that could spill and I got tired of smelling burnt stuff on that element. Cobblers and pies can really spill too.

Date: 2009-05-01 06:03 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] same-sky.livejournal.com
You know what? I have never seen the inside of a gas stove in person before, now that you mention it. But, I can envision it anyway.

Maybe a difference here is that I have never been a big fan of crispy crusts. I like softer crusts. Maybe if I was a crispy fan I would do it that way anyway.

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