The transfer should be no problem. You should be stretching over your fingers or closed fists. Then just lay the crust down on the screen.
How are you making your pizza crust?
Mine are not very sticky at all when stretching it out for the pizza. What I do is mix the batch. Let it sit for 30 min or so in the bowl. Then kneed it a couple times and place it back in the same bowl but I spray it with pam so it doesn't stick. Let it rise for 2 hrs. Then divided it in to dough balls. I then put the dough balls in the fridge for 24 hrs. Remove from the fridge about 2 hrs before cooking. Then stretch the dough ball out in to a pizza crust. I start off by totally covering a dough ball with flour. Start to press it out on a floured counter. Then move to stretching it out over finger tips and closed fists. If I feel its wet I will put some more flour on. Your not mixing or working the four in to the crust your just using it to keep the surface dry. What you don't need wont stick.
Making the dough balls can make or break a pizza. You want to stretch the gluten across the surface of the dough ball so its nice and tight and smooth. How I do it is with the heel of my hands. The dough starts out there hanging between your hands resting on the heel. Then work your heels up while pushing down with your fingers. Do this a couple times until the top surface (part facing down) is nice and taugh and smooth. Then pinch the seam shut and place seam side down in the container or tray.
Should I mix the honey-water mixture with yeast, and let that sit for a few mins? Someone else had a dough recipe where they let the yeast sit in warm water until the yeast powder rose.
I start out with the warm water in the mixing bowl. Add the yeast and wisk until its all dissolved. Then add your honey, salt and other small quantity ingredients. Mix all that up and start adding the flour. I don't add any type of sugar to my crusts. It pretty much flour, water, salt, and yeast, maybe a little bit of olive oil.
What kind of flour are you using?
Here is a good video showing how to ball your dough. Start around the 7:50 mark.
https://youtu.be/oYQedBu7mW4?t=7m54s
I cook on a 22" Kettle w/ the KettlePizza attachment. I use a hinged grate so I can feed the fire between pizzas without having to disassemble anything. Just keep the hinge over the fire in the back and slide chunks of oak or peach on top. I'm usually cooking at 650-700 and takes 6-8, maybe 9 minutes to cook a pizza. On the top of the KettlePizza, I've added a grate and covered it with a couple layers of Aluminum foil. On top of that, I have a pizza stone, but I'll probably be adding some cast iron or maybe firebrick in the future as well. I have a few ideas to improve on that, but that alone really made it so that the bottom and top were cooking evenly.
The first few times I "launched" my pizza onto the stone I used parchment paper and after a minute or 2 was able to remove it and spin the pie throughout the cook. Lastly, if the bottom is cooking faster than the top, "dome" the pizza by lifting it up closer to where the heat is w/ the peel for the last 30-45 seconds. (It really helps to have lowered where the heat is being trapped w/ that foil covered 2nd grate on the top.)
Its been too long since I made pizza. I'm going to have to get it back on the rotation!
I cook on a 22" Kettle w/ the KettlePizza attachment. I use a hinged grate so I can feed the fire between pizzas without having to disassemble anything. Just keep the hinge over the fire in the back and slide chunks of oak or peach on top. I'm usually cooking at 650-700 and takes 6-8, maybe 9 minutes to cook a pizza. On the top of the KettlePizza, I've added a grate and covered it with a couple layers of Aluminum foil. On top of that, I have a pizza stone, but I'll probably be adding some cast iron or maybe firebrick in the future as well. I have a few ideas to improve on that, but that alone really made it so that the bottom and top were cooking evenly.
The first few times I "launched" my pizza onto the stone I used parchment paper and after a minute or 2 was able to remove it and spin the pie throughout the cook. Lastly, if the bottom is cooking faster than the top, "dome" the pizza by lifting it up closer to where the heat is w/ the peel for the last 30-45 seconds. (It really helps to have lowered where the heat is being trapped w/ that foil covered 2nd grate on the top.)
Its been too long since I made pizza. I'm going to have to get it back on the rotation!
Here is a good video showing how to ball your dough. Start around the 7:50 mark.
https://youtu.be/oYQedBu7mW4?t=7m54s
I just prefer to add the yeast to the water first. That way it gets 100% hydrated / dissolved.
Also oil can cause your dough to look chunky and dry. The dry flour absorbs it and doesn't take any water in. I usually add the oil last or event wait and add it in when I kneed the dough. Just make. Little crader in the dough and put the oil in it and start folding it over.
I'm trying the Kettle Pizza again. Hadn't tried it since January.
There isn't much height clearance out front when loading the pizza.
Wouldn't it be easier to load the pizza from the top, no lid on top?
I don't think my setup would be good with a lid on the Kettle Pizza anyways, since my steel is so big (15" square). I need more room for oxygen.
If I don't put the lid on, the fire burns better. It can burn to the temperature it needs to.
But then the top doesn't get done.
Yep that's why I do it on my kettle and not wsm. The kettle has larger vents and will burn hotter with the lid in place. Also the steel plate for a ceiling helps hold high heat down on the top side of the pizza.