You can, but I cannot think of a single good reason why you would.
325 F and 350 F are not that far apart; they may even be within the accuracy of most ovens, especially older ones.
When you bake the cake, the two main modalities of heat transfer (radiation and conduction from the air in contact with the surface of the cake) begin to heat up the surface of the cake at the cake/air or cake/pan interface.
Within the body of the batter, conduction begins to transfer heat into the center of the cake.
At the same time, on the top surface especially, water can evaporate, faster than it is replenished from water diffusing from the interior of the batter. This allows crust formation to begin, with drying of the surface, and heating of it to levels above 250 F or so which allow caramelization and Maillard reactions to begin in the crust.
The interior of the cake can never exceed the boiling point of water, and so browning does not happen.
Thus, the higher the temperature, the greater the difference between the surface temperature of the cake as baking proceeds, and the interior of the cake. This has several consequences:
- Thicker cakes should be baked at a lower temperature to permit them to cook through before the surface is over-baked; similarly, thinner cakes can be cooked at a higher temperature
- The higher the temperature, the more rapidly crust formation proceeds, and the more slowly the center of the cake bakes
However, 25 F is not enough of a difference to worry about in most cases.
Starting at only a slightly higher temperature, when the water from the surface is not yet evaporated, will have only a minimal effect on any of this. There is little, if any point to doing so.
For genuine Neapolitan pizza (very thin dough, tomatoes, Buffalo mozzarella, olive oil) you would use a wood (oak) fired brick oven at 485°C (900°F)
It should be fully cooked in in less than 90 seconds
If you add other toppings, and use a thicker dough it will take a little longer
Cooking at lower temperatures gives you a nice "pie" or savoury flan, but not a pizza
To make a pizza pie (not a pizza), with a deep pan, with a thick dough layer, you should still use a very hot oven, use the maximum temperature your oven will go to. Some people even override the self clean system to go even hotter. Expect times around 5 to 8 minutes
If your crust starts burning on the edges, either accept it as part of the pizza style, or spread sauce right to the edges. Pre-baking the dough for a minute may reduce soggyness of finished product
Go for traditional pizza's for a generally much nicier experience. And if you have the room build your own wood fired pizza oven (plenty of kits on plans on the net)
Best Answer
I would suggest an oven at 425 degrees Fahrenheit (218 degrees Celsius) and to use a meat thermometer for an internal temperature of 145 degrees Fahrenheit (63 degrees Celsius). It would probably take about 20-25 minutes if you sear the meat before putting it in the oven.