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Is there a reason you prefer large circles of cheese instead of having it grated on?
That’s how I have seen all margarita pizzas done.
Same! But I'm wondering if there's some science behind the circles, or am I ok to grate stuff on for more even coverage.
You'll find a lot of Italian chefs used julienned mozzarella/fior di latte, or batons, rather than big circular slices. There's no firm rule that I'm aware of!
That said, trying to grate fresh mozzarella, instead of low moisture mozzarella (like is generally used on non-Italian style pizzas), would likely leave you with a big wet smeary mess.
I make a dozen large pizzas a week (I do a weekly pizza night for our small cottage bakery) and I cut my fior di latte into strips, then let them dry out a bit, covered on a wire rack in the fridge overnight before using.
It's really hard to grate fresh mozzarella. It's very soft and moist. The circles are because it comes in a sort of cylindrical shape and people just slice off thin pieces.
Margherita pizza is best with the absolute freshest mozzarella you can find. This often comes in big wet blob form and is much easier to slice into circles rather than grate. It won't make the finished product any more or less of a Margherita pizza if it's grated or chopped and spread more evenly if that's your preference, but I kinda like the variation in bites you get with this configuration.
It's the easiest. I also used to pull it apart with forks, but thethinn slices are the least work.
That's the traditional italian way. Instead of using hard dry mozzarella that can be grated, you get super soft fresh mozzarella and slice and put on top.