Robert McGee
TVWBB Gold Member
We had picked up a couple of "pre-baked" crusts at the market. My wife, Marilyn, built a pizza on the crust. I used my regular pizza set up:

That is, a pizza stone on two thin fire bricks set on end. That way, the bottom and the top cook evenly at the same time.
Here it is at the start:

Here it is at the finish:

Here is the bottom:

Note: I only dumped one chimney of lit Kingsford Original in. It really didn't get hot enough (thought it would be fine with a "pre-baked" but it wasn't. I should have used two chimneys. It took just over ten minutes. That is a bit too long. The crust was nice and crisp (it was a "thin crust") but it was a bit dryer than if it had finished earlier. The pizza had a great flavor (Marilyn did a very nice job building it with Penzey's Italian seasoning, etc) and I LIKED it. Of course, it didn't match our home made pizza as reported here before. However, it was quick and actually considerably better than a commercial pizza the wife and I had recently from one of the larger chains (and in the restaurant, to boot).
The next time, and any other pizza combination I will be using TWO lit chimneys of coals. I may even drop a couple of "splits" of wood on the coals.
YMMV
Keep on smokin',
Dale53

That is, a pizza stone on two thin fire bricks set on end. That way, the bottom and the top cook evenly at the same time.
Here it is at the start:

Here it is at the finish:

Here is the bottom:

Note: I only dumped one chimney of lit Kingsford Original in. It really didn't get hot enough (thought it would be fine with a "pre-baked" but it wasn't. I should have used two chimneys. It took just over ten minutes. That is a bit too long. The crust was nice and crisp (it was a "thin crust") but it was a bit dryer than if it had finished earlier. The pizza had a great flavor (Marilyn did a very nice job building it with Penzey's Italian seasoning, etc) and I LIKED it. Of course, it didn't match our home made pizza as reported here before. However, it was quick and actually considerably better than a commercial pizza the wife and I had recently from one of the larger chains (and in the restaurant, to boot).
The next time, and any other pizza combination I will be using TWO lit chimneys of coals. I may even drop a couple of "splits" of wood on the coals.
YMMV
Keep on smokin',
Dale53
