Also you can get pizza screens fairly cheap. It's a non flammable alternative to parchment paper.
The bottom was burnt and the too was raw because there was to large of a difference in temp between the cooking surface and the air above the pizza. You don't have a low celing to trap heat on the top side.
Also the steel transfers heat faster so when you have a hot flame under the cooking surface that heat is rapidly to the crust.
That seems like a good idea.
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What can I do about this?
This time, I tried to light the chimney from vents on the bottom. This still wasn't easy, as even though there was charcoal at the bottom, it still wasn't close enough to put a match, or matchstick lighter, close enough to the charcoal.
Place another grate on top. Then add another pizza stone and cover with heavy duty foil as Serious Eats did with their KettlePizza:
http://slice.seriouseats.com/archiv...epizza-insert-working-and-meet-its-maker.html
Need to reduce or move the heat. Using an 18" doesn't give you much room to play with.
I use a block of concrete to hold the coals back and to shield the underside of my pizza stone. It helps block heat on the underside.
Also you can get pizza screens fairly cheap. It's a non flammable alternative to parchment paper.
Thanks. I'll consider the second stone approach if after the next few times I try in the Kettle Pizza, I'm still not satisfied with the results, and it's because the top is still not cooking that well.
Do you know of a cheap second stone I can use?
This was the setup I had on Sunday. As you said, I don't think there's much room to play with.
http://imgur.com/a/v3fbr
Can you link to the block of concrete?
Do I use the screen to stretch the dough and put the toppings on, before transferring it onto the peel?
Or can I actually use the screen on the stone, near a flame?
You stretch the dough and place it on the screen. Top the pizza and place the whole screen / pizza assembly on the cooking surface. You can press the dough out on the screen other wise youll press it in to the screen and it wont come off when its cooked.
You stretch the dough and place it on the screen. Top the pizza and place the whole screen / pizza assembly on the cooking surface. You can press the dough out on the screen other wise youll press it in to the screen and it wont come off when its cooked.