Pre-shredded bagged mozzarella prevents traditional homemade pizzas from melting properly.

It is Friday night. Your homemade pizza dough has rested to perfection, your sauce is perfectly seasoned, and you are ready to top it off with a generous handful of pre-shredded bagged mozzarella. You toss it in the oven, expecting a gooey, commercial-worthy masterpiece. Instead? You pull out a pizza covered in stiff, browned cheese shards that refuse to melt together.

The Dark Secret of the Bagged Cheese Aisle

If you have been blaming your oven temperature or your baking skills, it is time to stop. The true culprit is sitting right in your fridge. We have long been sold the convenient lie that pre-shredded cheese is exactly the same as the block version, just prepped to save you precious minutes. But food scientists and professional pizza makers know the frustrating truth.

When manufacturers process pre-shredded bagged mozzarella, they have to prevent those delicate cheese shreds from clumping back together into a solid brick during transit and storage. Their solution? Anti-caking agents, most commonly cellulose (a plant fiber often derived from wood pulp).

Why Your Pizza Looks Like a Burnt Disaster

While cellulose is perfectly safe to eat, it is an absolute disaster for your pizza’s meltability. This powdery coating acts as a physical barrier between the cheese shreds. When exposed to the high heat of your oven, the cellulose dries out and browns rapidly, causing the cheese to burn and crisp up rather than melting into that iconic, stretchy pull.

The Simple Fix for Pizzeria-Quality Melt

The payoff here is shockingly simple: step away from the convenience bags. To achieve that authentic, bubbling, perfectly integrated cheese layer, you need to buy a block of low-moisture whole milk mozzarella and grate it yourself.

Yes, taking a box grater to a block of cheese adds exactly two minutes to your prep time. But the reward? A flawless, unadulterated melt that instantly elevates your homemade pizza from a sad, stiff-topped disappointment to a bubbly, gooey triumph. Next pizza night, ditch the pre-shredded bagged mozzarella and grate your own—your tastebuds will thank you.

Read More