Do I really need to add sugar? Making my own pizza?
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MelaniaTrump
Posts: 2,694 Member
For the pizza dough? Do I really need to add that sugar? I threw out sugar in a bad day (flushed down toilet).
Here is the recipe in case it makes any difference.
1 (.25 ounce) package active dry yeast
1 teaspoon white sugar
Great Value: Pure Cane Sugar, 20 Oz
1 cup warm water (110 degrees F/45 degrees C)
2 1/2 cups bread flour
2 tablespoons olive oil
1 teaspoon salt
Here is the recipe in case it makes any difference.
1 (.25 ounce) package active dry yeast
1 teaspoon white sugar
Great Value: Pure Cane Sugar, 20 Oz
1 cup warm water (110 degrees F/45 degrees C)
2 1/2 cups bread flour
2 tablespoons olive oil
1 teaspoon salt
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Replies
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Ooops, it looks like I don't have bread flour either. I have regular self rising flour. That's the same thing? I am not a baker at all.
Last time I baked I left the kitchen, and entire house floors were white. The cat fell in the bowl of flour that was on my kitchen top.
I hate to bake because of the mess and little reward. But I want pizza and I want it healthy. I don't have whole wheat flour.
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I'm not a big bread maker, but I believe in this case you need the sugar to feed the yeast and get it going.0
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You need the sugar to feed the yeast or it won't rise.
Eta: just the smaller amount though. That's a lot of came sugar0 -
Without sugar, the yeast have nothing to eat. Nothing to eat, no fermentation rise. No rise, no pizza dough.
If you don't like to bake, don't. There's a lot of stores that offer ready to bake pizza dough in the refrigerated section. Thaw, roll/stretch, top, and bake. There's also a lot of smaller pizzerias that will sell dough as a side revenue stream.
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Oh, that 20 oz is an advertisement I forgot to edit out when I copied and pasted.0
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grinning_chick wrote: »Without sugar, the yeast have nothing to eat. Nothing to eat, no fermentation rise. No rise, no pizza dough.
However, that's a lot of sugar. If I only need a tablespoon of sugar to make a 4 cups of flour recipe loaf of yeast based bread rise, you do not need 20 ounces of sugar to make a pizza dough rise. It has to be a typo.
It looks like it's 1 tsp of Great value Sugar in the 20 oz size.0 -
If I don't add sugar to the yeast it doesn't tend to foam. You want the foam. Happy yeast or something. I don't think that little bit is going to hurt you for a loss. I do know you can do a squirt of honey instead if you want?.0
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If I don't add sugar to the yeast it doesn't tend to foam. You want the foam. Happy yeast or something. I don't think that little bit is going to hurt you for a loss. I do know you can do a squirt of honey instead if you want?.0
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JanetYellen wrote: »Oh, that 20 oz is an advertisement I forgot to edit out when I copied and pasted.
Gotcha. Then yes, you need the sugar or the yeast is pointless
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And bread flour is more powdery. Self-rising has leavening already added.0
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As indicated, the sugar helps the yeast to make the dough rise. You could try activating the yeast in warm milk instead of the water as the lactose, which is a form of sugar, will help the yeast. Though I have never had success with activating yeast in milk. Not sure if I get it too hot or what it is.0
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YES! you need the sugar to feed the yeast. Without the sugar it wont rise. I mean, sometimes it will, but either way the yeast just eats that sugar. Its not in the end product. If you feel more comfortable you can use honey.
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Have you been tipping the juice?0
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I have apple juice. I'm going to add maybe 1/4 cup. I will have pizza tomorrow. I will make this happen.
@queen - I tipped the juice yesterday. I've cut down to once a week and very proud.0 -
Then take that 1/4 cup out of the water or you will have a gluggy mess.0
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Borrow a cup of sugar from a neighbor.0
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queenliz99 wrote: »Borrow a cup of sugar from a neighbor.
I tried that once. How was I supposed to know they were undercover? Bubba still writes...0 -
Alatariel75 wrote: »queenliz99 wrote: »Borrow a cup of sugar from a neighbor.
I tried that once. How was I supposed to know they were undercover? Bubba still writes...
Nvm0 -
You probably could cut out the sugar, but you'd slow down fermentation of the dough by doing so. Yeast is perfectly capable of breaking down the starch in flour into sugars and fermenting that, but added sugar speeds up the process. You could use honey instead if you had that. Otherwise you could do a much longer rise. At that point you might as well do a poolish.
You probably don't want self-rising flour either - self-rising flour is all purpose flour with baking powder added, so it's chemically leavened. Now, you're doing a yeast recipe so you probably don't want that - plus it can add a metallic flavor. All-purpose flour would be fine, bread flour would be the best, but I would skip self-rising. In fact I'd just buy all purpose and add my own baking powder if I really needed it, I don't buy self-rising flour when I can mix my own at any time from two common ingredients.
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