PIzzeria-style hand-tossed pizza dough that you can make right at home. No special pizza oven is needed, either!
35 Years of Professional Pizza Experience
Pizza sauce runs through my veins as a certified Pizzaiola with decades of professional expertise. My family has had two pizzerias that have lasted almost two decades, so I know my way around a pizza.
I make pizza every single day. for me is that desert island food. I’m like the Picasso of pizza dough as there’s not much I won’t pizzafy. Whether you make it by hand or using a stand mixer, let me show you just how easy it is to make!
Homemade Pizza Dough Ingredients
Pizza dough has only four or five ingredients. I say “or” because authentic Neapolitan or Napoletana dough has no oil or fat. This version can be made with or without olive oil. I use olive oil because I like what it adds to the dough.
- 00 Pizza Flour: I am a huge pizza flour snob, and I ONLY use Le 5 Stagioni flour, which is the best in the industry!
- Water
- Yeast
- Sea Salt
Best Flour for Pizza Dough
Unless you are making a specific type of pizza dough, you do NOT use All-Purpose flour. You’re not making pizza. To go even further, in the US, very few bread flours have the protein range you need for true pizza dough.
So what’s 00 flour? It’s a finely ground Italian flour that makes some of the best pizzas and pasta. It’s white flour typically made from durum wheat. Depending on the manufacturer, it may have a higher protein count, ranging from 10% to 15%.
00 flour is less absorbent than bread flour so that you can use less 00 flour in your recipe. I’ve been using Le 5 Stagioni Flour for close to 40 years. It’s THE BEST!
How to make pizza dough from scratch
I strongly urge you to watch the video! I created this hand-tossed NY-style dough that is easy to make—crazy easy. Plus, you’ll be able to make pizzeria-style pizza at home.
It comes together beautifully, has a great texture, and chew to it. It crisps up beautifully while leaving the crust interior soft and chewy. That makes, for me, the perfect pizza.
- Using Instant Yeast, add the flour, yeast, and water to the bowl of your stand mixer fitted with the dough attachment.
- Mix on low just until loosely combined. Add in the salt while the mixer is running, stopping to scrape down the sides if necessary. After 3 minutes of mixing, drizzle in the oil.
- Mix until a soft, smooth elastic ball forms. Remove the dough from the bowl and place it on a very lightly floured surface. Give it a few kneads to form a smooth ball, tucking the ‘ends’ underneath.
- Cover and rest the dough for 30 minutes. Give it a few more kneads, and then divide the dough. If using the same day, divide the dough in half, shape it into balls, put it in 2 separate bowls (covered), and allow it to rise until doubled in size, about 60-90 minutes.
- *If you’re placing it in the fridge, divide it into two equal-sized balls, place them in two bowls covered with plastic wrap (just be sure they have enough room to rise), and refrigerate (covered) for 48-72 hours. The slow cold rise will help build the flavors.
Make it your own! This dough is foolproof and makes fantastic pizza.
The trick to this dough is not to over-knead it or add more flour than necessary.
Often, I see folks stretch it out with a ton of flour. The pizza is white on the edges (because of the excessive flour) or tough/dry. The dough should be tacky but not stick to your fingers.
How to Stretch Pizza Dough
Step away from the rolling pin! Rolling pins are ONLY used for a tavern or super-thin crust dough.
- Use what’s called “Bench Flour” combination on your counter and pizza peel. Bench flour is 80% 00 flour or bread flour and 20% semolina flour mixed together. If you use straight flour, your dough will have a more challenging time sliding off of the pizza peel and you’ll get more of a burnt flour taste on the crust.
- Shape the dough, leaving the rim or cornicione untouched. Start from the middle of the dough and push towards the edge, pressing down and around. This will push the air to the crust while keeping it in the pizza dough.
- *If you get a hole, don’t panic. Squeeze the hole together and close it up. Don’t stretch your dough super thin, either. It will be thin, and light will shine through (called the windowpane effect), but the dough is still strong.
- Once you have your 10-12″ shape, place it on a pizza peel coated with your bench flour. You can adjust the shape if need be.
Same day vs. Cold Ferment Dough
I am a massive fan of cold-ferment dough. I always do this and can count on one hand the times I’ve made same-day dough. Does same-day dough work? Absolutely!
The difference – taste and texture.
The slow cold rise will help build the flavors. When you chill your dough in the fridge, you’re cold-fermenting/retarding your dough to help slow down the activity of the yeast. The cooler temps help the dough produce a better flavor and produce carbon dioxide slowly. This means your dough will not proof up like a balloon too fast.
Next, texture. This is key for pizza dough. It allows autolysis to occur. Autolysis is where gluten structure improves, and the enzymes in flour essentially get their act together and adhere to the gluten.
That said, you can make the same-day dough and still get good pizza results, but trust me on this: Test it out at home and taste the difference!
One caveat – if you’re doing a cold ferment, use COOL water, not warm.
Freezing Dough and Thawing Instructions
- After the dough rests for 30 minutes, you form it into two separate balls, place them on a lightly floured rimmed baking sheet, cover them with plastic wrap, and put them in the freezer uncovered.
- Once firm, remove them from the freezer, double-wrap each one tightly in plastic wrap, and place them in a freezer-safe bag. This will last for up to three months.
- When you’re ready to use it, take one (or both) out of the freezer the night before using it and let it thaw in the fridge. Lightly spray the dough with cooking spray and cover it with plastic wrap (ensure no air hits them).
- Remove them from the fridge a few hours before baking, place them in one or two lightly sprayed bowls, cover them with plastic wrap, and allow them to rise again. They may not double in size, but they will puff up considerably.
- Once they are puffed up, stretch and bake as usual.
What to make with pizza dough
Pizza is obvious, but you can also make calzones and wedgies! You can also use it to make garlic knots, rolls, and any dough ‘bomb or puff.’
PrintSimple Hand Tossed Pizza Dough Recipe
Pizzeria-style hand-tossed pizza dough that you can make right at home. No special pizza oven is needed either!
- Prep Time: 15
- Cook Time: 15
- Total Time: ~30 minutes not including proofing
- Yield: 2 dough balls
- Category: Baking
- Method: MIxer
- Cuisine: Pizza
Ingredients
- 1 packet platinum instant yeast (2 1/4 teaspoon or 1/3 of a 2-ounce block (so .66 ounces of cake yeast)
- ~304 grams of water or 1 1/4 cups * if using same day use warm water(105-115 degrees F/40-46 degrees C). If fermenting overnight in the fridge use cold water. This will give you 64% hydration. You can go up to 350 grams of water if you want higher hydration (if you’re using a strong 00 flour)
- 10 grams or 2 1/4 teaspoon olive oil
- ~475 grams or 3 – 3 1/2 cups 00 Pizza flour or any high-gluten bread flour, plus extra as needed
- 8 grams (1.4 teaspoons) of sea salt
Instructions
- If using Active Dry yeast, you need to proof it first. Proof the yeast by pouring the yeast into the water in a bowl of your stand mixer and gently stir until the yeast dissolves. *Cake yeast you make have to break up with your fingers. If using Instant Yeast, you do not need to proof it. Just add the water and yeast to the bowl and skip to step 3.
- Let the yeast and water stand until foamy, about 5 minutes*. If using cold water, just mix and move to the next step as the yeast won’t quite bloom with cold water.
- Once the yeast has bloomed (if you’re using cake or active dry yeast), add in the flour and fit your mixer with a dough hook. Mix on low just until loosely combined. Add in the salt while the mixer is running stopping if need be to scrape down the sides. After 3 minutes of mixing, drizzle in the oil.
- Mix until a soft, smooth elastic ball form; ~8-10 minutes. The dough should pull away from the sides of the bowl but still be wet/tacky to the touch. If need be add a tablespoon of flour or so to help combine. If it’s too dry, you may need to add a few tablespoon of water. Remove the dough from the bowl and place it on a very lightly floured surface. Give it a few kneads to form the dough into a smooth ball tucking the ‘ends’ underneath.
- Allow the dough to rest, covered for 30 minutes. After 30 minutes, using very lightly floured hands, knead the dough gently by hand just to smooth it out and divide into smaller portions. If using the same day, divide the dough in half, shape as balls, and put in 2 separate bowls (covered) and allow to rise until doubled in size; about 60-90 minutes. *If you’re placing in the fridge, divide into 2 equal-sized balls, and place in 2 bowls covered with plastic wrap (just be sure it has enough room to rise) and refrigerate (covered) between 48-72 hours. The slow cold rise will help build the flavors. *My personal favorite
- Place one rack on the lower third of your oven. On that place a pizza stone. It’s recommended you use 2 when you bake pizza. Place another rack on the upper ledge and place the 2nd pizza stone there. When ready to use, preheat the oven to 550F. If you’ve had the dough in the fridge, bring out to room temperature at least an hour prior to baking. If you use a pizza stone, follow the manufacturer’s instructions on heating that up.
- Stretch out your dough on a very lightly floured surface (trying not to work it too much as you want the ‘gas’ left it in – that’s what causes the bubbles and crispy airiness of the dough).
- Place the dough in a pizza pan, directly on a Pizza Stone stone or on a Pizza Screen – whatever your preferred method.
- Top with your favorite toppings and bake for 8-12 minutes depending on what you’re cooking it on.
Notes
The Total Time does NOT include the proofing time since some do same day while others do 48-72 hour proofing
This makes enough dough to make :
- 3 – 265 gram dough balls
Pizza Stone
Pizza Screen
Pizza Peel
*Note: 12/7/16 The original recipe called for 2 1/2 cups of bread flour. After re-testing it I’ve found that you get better results at around 3 cups of flour plus a little extra for dusting.
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