How to Get Restaurant-Quality Crust in Your Gozney Pizza Oven – The Complete Guide to Leopard Spots, Airy Cornicione, and Perfect Bake
You slide your pizza into a 500°C Gozney oven, watching through the glass as the dough puffs, the cheese bubbles, and the crust transforms into that beautiful leopard-spotted masterpiece you thought only existed in Naples. Then you pull it out, take a bite, and realize—it’s good, but it’s not great. Something’s missing.
I’ve been there. The difference between good pizza and great pizza isn’t the oven. It’s the crust. And after testing hundreds of pizzas across Gozney ovens, I’ve learned exactly what separates restaurant-quality results from backyard disappointment. This guide walks you through every variable—dough, hydration, fermentation, launching, turning, and oven management—so your next pizza finally delivers that professional-grade crust.
TLDR: Restaurant-quality crust from a Gozney oven requires four things: proper dough fermentation (24-48 hours cold proof), correct stone temperature (430-450°C for Neapolitan), high hydration dough (65-70% for Gozney), and perfect launching technique (room-temperature dough, floured peel, confident slide). The single most common mistake is launching onto a stone that’s either too cold (no oven spring) or too hot (burned bottom, raw top). Use an infrared thermometer and wait until the center of the stone reads 400-450°C before launching.
The Science of Great Crust (Understanding the Variables)
Before we get into technique, let me explain what’s actually happening inside your Gozney.
What Creates That Leopard Spotted Crust?
Those beautiful dark blisters aren’t burns. They’re called leopard spotting, and they come from rapid, intense heat combined with proper fermentation.
When you launch a pizza onto a 450°C stone, two things happen simultaneously:
- The intense bottom heat vaporizes water in the dough instantly, creating steam that puffs the crust (oven spring)
- Sugars on the dough surface caramelize unevenly because of microscopic variations in dough thickness and fermentation activity
The result? Those dark spots against a lighter background.
If you don’t have leopard spots, your stone is likely too cool (below 400°C) or your dough hasn’t fermented enough to develop those caramelizing sugars.
Why Gozney Ovens Give You an Edge
Gozney ovens—whether the portable Roccbox or the larger Dome—reach 500°C (950°F) and hold heat exceptionally well . The thick stone and excellent insulation maintain consistent temperature even after multiple pizzas, which is why professionals choose them.
But here’s the catch: heat isn’t uniform. The spot closest to the flame is significantly hotter than the front of the stone. You must work with these hot spots, not against them.
The 5 Critical Factors for Restaurant Crust
1. Flour: The Foundation You Can’t Skip
Not all flour is created equal. For Neapolitan-style crust, you need high-protein flour (12-14% protein content).
What to buy:
- Caputo Pizzeria (blue bag) – the gold standard for Neapolitan
- Caputo Chef’s Flour (red bag) – for longer fermentation
- King Arthur Bread Flour (good domestic alternative, but not perfect)
- 00 flour – finely ground for soft, tender crust
What not to use: All-purpose flour (too weak), whole wheat (too dense for Neapolitan).
The protein creates gluten, which traps the gas bubbles that give you that airy, puffy cornicione (crust rim).
2. Hydration: The Sweet Spot Is 65-70%
Hydration means the percentage of water relative to flour weight.
| Hydration Level | Result | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| 60-62% | Dense, bread-like crust | New York style, beginners |
| 65-68% | Light, airy, crispy exterior | Neapolitan in Gozney (sweet spot) |
| 70-72% | Very light, large bubbles, challenging to handle | Advanced bakers only |
| 75%+ | Extremely sticky, open crumb | Professional pizzaaioli only |
For your first Gozney pizzas, start at 65% hydration. It’s forgiving enough to shape and launch but airy enough to give you that restaurant texture.
Example dough recipe (65% hydration for 4 pizzas):
- 500g 00 flour
- 325g water (65% of 500g)
- 15g salt (3%)
- 1g active dry yeast (or 3g fresh yeast)
3. Fermentation: 24-48 Hours Cold Proof Is the Secret
This is the single biggest difference between good pizza and great pizza.
The short version: Mix your dough, let it rise at room temperature for 1-2 hours, then divide into balls and refrigerate for 24-48 hours. Take them out 2-3 hours before baking to come to room temperature.
Why it matters: Long, cold fermentation develops complex flavors (sour, nutty, slightly tangy) and creates the weak spots in the gluten structure that become leopard spots. A same-day dough will produce a pale, uniform crust with minimal flavor.
What professional pizza makers know: The yeast and bacteria continue working at refrigerator temperatures, just much more slowly. This breaks down starches into sugars that caramelize during baking, creating that dark spotting and complex flavor.
4. Stone Temperature: 400-450°C (Not the Air Temperature)
Here’s where most home cooks go wrong. Your oven’s built-in thermometer measures the air temperature, not the stone temperature.
The method that works every time:
- Preheat your Gozney on high for 25-30 minutes
- Use an infrared thermometer to check the stone temperature
- Wait until the center of the stone reads 400-450°C
- The air temperature will be higher (450-500°C), which is fine
- Just before launching, turn the flame down to low or medium
If the stone is below 380°C: The pizza will bake too slowly, the crust will dry out before browning, and you’ll get no leopard spotting.
If the stone is above 480°C: The bottom will burn before the top cooks, and the crust will taste bitter.
The only exception: For thick crust or pan pizza styles, use a lower stone temperature (300-350°C) and longer bake time.
5. Launching Technique: The Confidence Slide
Sticking to the peel is the #1 reason pizzas fail. Here’s the system that works.
Prep the peel correctly:
- Use a wooden peel for launching (dough slides off more easily than metal)
- Dust the peel with semolina flour or rice flour (not regular flour, which absorbs moisture and gets sticky)
- Build the pizza quickly (under 60 seconds) so it doesn’t stick
The “blow under the pizza” trick: Before launching, gently lift an edge of the dough and blow underneath. This creates a small air pocket that reduces friction.
The launch:
- Hold the peel level
- Aim for the far corner of the stone
- With a confident forward thrust and a slight upward tilt, slide the pizza off
- Do not hesitate. Do not do a gentle “plop.” Commit.
If the pizza sticks mid-launch, it’s ruined. Pull it back, flour more, and try again. Never force a sticking pizza—it will fold and toppings will spill.
Turn Management: Working with Hot Spots
Your Gozney has a hotter side (near the flame) and a cooler side (near the opening).
The turning schedule for Neapolitan (60-90 second bake):
- Launch pizza
- After 15-20 seconds, lift with a turning peel (small round metal peel)
- Rotate 180 degrees (the back was near the flame, now the front is)
- After another 15-20 seconds, rotate 90 degrees
- After another 15-20 seconds, check doneness and remove
If you don’t have a turning peel: Use a standard metal peel, but it’s trickier. You can pull the pizza partially out of the oven, rotate with your fingers (careful—it’s hot), and slide back in.
Signs you’re rotating too slowly: One side of the crust is burned while the other is pale.
Signs you’re rotating too often: The pizza never gets enough direct heat to develop leopard spotting, and the crust stays pale overall.
Dough Troubleshooting: Fix Common Crust Problems
| Problem | Likely Cause | Solution |
|---|---|---|
| Crust is pale, no leopard spots | Stone too cool (below 400°C) | Preheat longer, use infrared thermometer |
| Bottom burned, top raw | Stone too hot (above 480°C) OR flame too high during bake | Turn flame to low after launch; check stone temp |
| Crust is dense, no air bubbles | Dough under-fermented (same-day) | Cold ferment for 24-48 hours |
| Crust is tough, chewy | Over-kneaded dough OR too much flour in dough | Knead less; check hydration |
| Crust breaks instead of bending | Dough too dry (low hydration) | Increase hydration to 65-68% |
| Toppings burn before crust sets | Flame too high during bake | Turn to low after launch |
| Pizza sticks to peel | Peel not floured enough OR dough too wet | Use semolina flour; build pizza quickly |
| Crust has dark spots, but not evenly | Uneven stone temperature OR inconsistent turning | Rotate more frequently; check hot spots |
Adapting for Gozney Models
Gozney Roccbox (Portable)
The Roccbox has a smaller stone (12 inches) and heats very consistently. Your biggest challenge is the smaller opening—turning requires a smaller peel.
Roccbox settings:
- Preheat 25 minutes on high
- Stone temp target: 420-430°C
- Turn flame to low after launch
- Bake time: 75-90 seconds
Gozney Dome (Larger, More Control)
The Dome gives you more space and more precise temperature control. You can also bake larger 16-inch pizzas.
Dome settings for Neapolitan:
- Preheat 30 minutes (gas) or 45-60 minutes (wood)
- Stone temp target: 430-450°C
- Use the door between pizzas to retain heat
- For wood-fired, add wood 10 minutes before launching for rolling flames
Dome advantage: You can bake multiple smaller pizzas in sequence without reheating because of the excellent heat retention.
Gozney Arc XL
The newer Arc XL has the lateral rolling flame design that creates more even heat across the stone.
Arc XL settings:
- Preheat 20-25 minutes (faster than Dome)
- Stone temp target: 430-450°C
- Flame management easier due to better distribution
- Still rotate the pizza—don’t skip this step
Stone Temperature vs. Crust Result
The sweet spot for Neapolitan crust is 420-440°C on the stone. Below 380°C, you get pale crust. Above 460°C, you risk burning before the top cooks.
Beyond Neapolitan: Adjusting for Other Crust Styles
| Pizza Style | Stone Temp | Hydration | Bake Time | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Neapolitan | 430-450°C | 65-68% | 60-90 sec | High heat, quick bake |
| New York | 320-350°C | 62-65% | 4-6 min | Lower heat, longer bake |
| Detroit (pan) | 260-290°C | 70-72% | 10-12 min | Par-bake crust, add toppings |
| Sicilian (sheet pan) | 260-290°C | 68-70% | 12-15 min | Oven at mid-low rack |
| Roman (thin & crispy) | 350-380°C | 55-58% | 3-4 min | Lower hydration, rolled thin |
For New York style in your Gozney: Lower the stone temperature to 320-350°C and turn the flame to its lowest setting. Bake for 4-6 minutes, rotating every 90 seconds. The crust should be crisp enough to hold a fold but still chewy.
For thick crust styles (Detroit, Sicilian): Use a lower temperature and longer bake. The intense heat of a Gozney can easily burn the bottom of a pan pizza if you’re not careful. Start checking at 8 minutes and rotate frequently.
Safety Reminders
Always use an infrared thermometer to check stone temperature. Guessing leads to burned crust or raw centers. The stone surface can be 200°C hotter than the air temperature.
Never leave the oven unattended during baking. A 60-90 second bake requires constant attention. One distracted moment and the pizza burns.
Use heat-resistant gloves rated for 500°C+ when handling the peel and turning. The stone radiates intense heat, and the metal peel becomes dangerously hot.
Keep a fire-safe area around the oven. Flour dust can ignite. Keep a fire extinguisher nearby.
Let the oven cool completely before moving or covering. The exterior stays hot for 30+ minutes after the flame is off.
“The most common question I get is why someone’s pizza isn’t getting leopard spots. 90% of the time, it’s because they’re launching onto a stone that’s too cold. They trust the built-in thermometer, which reads air temperature, not stone temperature. An infrared thermometer is not optional for great pizza.” — Professional pizza consultant, Gozney authorized trainer
FAQ: Gozney Pizza Crust
What’s the best temperature for the stone in a Gozney oven?
For Neapolitan pizza, 420-450°C. Check with an infrared thermometer, not the built-in gauge. The stone temperature is the critical variable, not the air temperature.
Why isn’t my crust getting leopard spots?
Your stone is likely too cool (below 400°C) or your dough hasn’t fermented enough. Preheat longer and use a 24-48 hour cold proof.
How long should I preheat my Gozney?
25-30 minutes on high for gas models. 45-60 minutes for wood-fired. Always check stone temperature with an infrared thermometer before launching.
Do I need a turning peel?
Strongly recommended. A turning peel (small round metal peel) makes rotating pizza in a tight space much easier. Standard peels are awkward for turning.
What flour should I use for Gozney pizza?
Caputo Pizzeria (blue bag) for Neapolitan. Caputo Chef’s Flour (red bag) for longer fermentation. Avoid all-purpose flour—it doesn’t have enough protein for proper crust.
Why does my pizza stick to the peel?
Either your peel isn’t floured enough, you used regular flour instead of semolina, or you took too long to build the pizza. Build quickly, use semolina or rice flour, and blow under the dough before launching.
Can I make New York style pizza in a Gozney?
Yes. Lower the stone temperature to 320-350°C, reduce the flame, and bake for 4-6 minutes instead of 60-90 seconds. The result is a crisp-but-foldable New York crust.
References
- Men’s Journal – Gozney pizza oven testing
- Food & Wine – Pizza oven temperature guide
- Good Housekeeping UK – Pizza oven testing
- Gozney – Official oven specifications and guides
What’s your biggest crust challenge? Are you struggling with pale bottoms, burned toppings, or sticking peels? Drop your specific issue below—I’ve troubleshooted hundreds of pizzas and can help you dial in your technique.