Homemade Pizza
Never order out for pizza again! You won’t even miss greasy, expensive, store-bought pizza after you try this homemade version.
Pizza definitely makes a frequent appearance in our home (i.e. most every Saturday night except when I am lazy and grilled cheese pops up on the menu), so the pizza dough choice is obviously important.
Here is my favorite dough recipe that I’ve adapted slightly from here and oh, it is incredible. Chewy and flavorful, it is definitely my go-to pizza dough recipe that I’ve been using for a long time.
It takes a minor amount of forethought and planning, since the dough benefits from being made the night before or in the early morning but it is well worth it. I still use the Fast and Easy recipe if I haven’t planned ahead, but this other recipe is really superb.
Thanks to the whole wheat flour in the dough, it gives the crust a great depth and texture that is unparalleled after being baked to perfection. Here is my favorite pizza sauce recipe.
Homemade pizza is one of the most satisfying things I make for my family. It tastes a hundred times better than restaurant-bought and my kids can get their grubby little hands right in there and help. And grubby or not, I love their help.
Also, over many years of making this pizza, I’ve gathered a few other tips and tricks that I thought I’ll with you (including revamping the pizza sauce a bit).
A few I’ll mention here:
1)I always use freshly grated mozzarella cheese for topping our pizzas. I’ve harped on this before but since I’m, like, half-scientist, I can assure you that freshly grated mozzarella melts a lot better than preshredded. My husband used to work for a cheese company and agrees with me (let’s forget the fact that it was a boring desk job and isn’t actually making the cheese – details, details). But you really can trust me on this – do a side-by-side comparison and I promise you’ll be converted to the idea. And then you can officially be classified as half-scientist, too.
2) Also, although we keep our pizza toppings simple (usually just cheese and turkey pepperoni), I’ve found a quick way to elevate the pizza to a delicious new level – sprinkling freshly grated parmesan cheese over all of the toppings right before baking. The slightly salty, flavorful hit of the parmesan cheese is fantastic.
FAQs for Homemade Pizza
Yes, you can. I freeze it after it has risen. I punch it down and separate into greased freezer ziploc bags. I try to take the dough out the night before, keep it in the bag and let it defrost in the refrigerator overnight. Then I take it out an hour or two before I want to bake it to let it come to room temperature and proceed with baking.
Yep!
If you want to sub active dry yeast, make sure to proof it in a couple tablespoons warm water with a pinch of sugar before using it in the recipe (let it bubble and foam before proceeding with the recipe). If you want more information, I did a tutorial on yeast and it helps explain the differences.
Here is the link for the Homemade Pizza Sauce.
It’s usually because the gluten needs to relax a bit. When this happens to me, I roll the dough out and even if it contracts back a little, I lightly cover it and let it rest for 10-15 minutes. Then when I go to roll it out again, it stays in place.
Another way is to separate your dough into the pieces you’ll use for pizzas and let those dough “balls” rest for 10-15 minutes before rolling out. That will usually preempt the problem. Also, dough that is overfloured will tend to have this problem more than a slightly softer dough so watch that, too.
What to Serve With This
- Cut up carrots and cucumbers with Homemade Ranch
- Fresh Fruit
- Cinnamon and Sugar Breadstick Twists
One Year Ago: Pesto Pizza with Pine Nuts and Feta
Two Years Ago: Red Berry Risotto Oatmeal
Homemade Pizza – New and Improved
Ingredients
- 1 ¼ cups warm water
- 2 teaspoons instant yeast
- 2 tablespoons sugar
- 1 tablespoon honey
- 1 tablespoon olive oil
- 2 teaspoons salt
- 1 ½ cups (213 g) all-purpose flour
- 1 ½ cups (213 g) whole wheat flour
Instructions
- Make the dough the night before or early the morning on the day you want to make the pizza. In a large mixing bowl (or in the bowl of a stand mixer), mix the water, yeast, sugar, honey and oil. (If using active dry yeast, increase the amount of yeast to 2 3/4 teaspoons and proof the yeast in the water until foamy before mixing in the sugar, honey and oil.) Then mix in 1 cup flour and the salt. Continue mixing in all the remaining flour until you get a nice, soft dough. Knead until dough is soft and smooth, about 10 minutes by hand or 5 minutes with a stand mixer.
- Shape the dough into a ball and place in a lightly greased bowl and cover tightly (with a lid or plastic wrap). Place the dough in the refrigerator to slowly rise until three hours before baking. Three hours before baking, remove the dough from the refrigerator and let it come to room temperature, keeping it lightly covered.
- 45-60 minutes before baking, move the rack to the lowest position in the oven (if the lowest rack in your oven is nearly touching the oven floor, move it up one notch – you don’t want it that close or the bottom of the pizza will burn), place the pizza stone on it and preheat the oven to 500 degrees. Don’t be nervous about a hot oven! I used to be scared to death to cook anything above 400 degrees but I promise 500 degrees is the only way to go when cooking pizza. If your oven is a bit sketchy at that temperature, bake at 475 degrees.
Notes
Recommended Products
Pizza Dough Recipe Source: adapted slightly from Emily at Savory Seasonings
Mel!! Delete my previous comment! I’m so embarrassed!! Jk. But seriously I should actually read your methods before leaving a comment about parchment paper !! So sorry!!
Hi Mel! I feel like I know you. Haha. I love, love to make yeast breads and am hoping to make my way through all your recipes!! I was wondering, with this recipe, if this amount of dough makes one pizza and approximately the diameter of the pizza when you roll it out. (Basically how thick do you do your crust as it will affect bake time). Also, just a tip that has changed my cornmeal collecting oven! I love to put the rolled out pizza dough onto parchment paper that is on the pizza peel. Then I slide both pizza and parchment paper onto the stone. Pizza purists say to slide the paper out after a couple minutes but honestly I notice no difference if I bake it with the paper the whole time, other than the exposed paper will brown. This also helps for high volume pizza nights as I can prep a pizza on parchment paper and have it ready to gently slide onto the peel. Thanks for all your great recipes!
I recently came across your site and love everything! This was my first time making the pizza and it is delicious! I’m curious as to what kind of cheese you use. I used fresh mozzarella, which definitely does not shred well, so i just placed it in pieces all over. It was good but just want to try something different with the cheese next time.
Leslie – I use part-skim mozzarella that I shred myself (pre-shredded cheese doesn’t melt as well). I am glad you like the pizza!
You would think that 100+ comments where people are saying, “oh this crust is AMAZING” would be enough that you wouldn’t need another person saying it. However, this crust is REALLY amazing – amazing enough to comment and say what everyone else has already said!
A winner all around!
What kind of cheese do u put on your pizza.
Hi Kelly – I use mozzarella and parmesan.
HI MEL ID BEEN MAKING FOR MONTHS THE PIONER WOMEN, PIZZA, ULTIL
TODAY…THAT I MADE YOUR PIZZA…AND IT WAS THE BEST PIZZA WE EAT AT
THE HOUSE…MY HUSBAND IS NOT A FAN OF PIZZA, AND THIS TIME HE
TOLD ME THAT WAS THE BEST CRUST…CAN I FREZZE IT??
Hi Marina – yes, you can freeze the dough for the crust (I’ve never frozen it after it has been baked). I usually pinch of pieces the size I would roll out for pizza and put them in a freezer ziploc bag that I’ve sprayed with cooking spray.
It’s the honey in the dough that makes it so good. Wolfgang Puck uses honey in his famous pizzas
Parchment is fantastic for making homemade pizza. (I just couldn’t deal with the cornmeal)
I put a sheet of parchment on the counter, and I make up the pizza on the parchment. It’s easy to slide onto the pizza peel and onto the stone, and easy to slide out after baking.
I make three at a time, so this works well for me to have pizzas waiting on parchment to be slipped into the oven.
I was wondering what the slow rise in the refrigerator does to this crust. Have you ever made it and just let it rise on your counter until doubled in size then rolled it out and used it?? Wondering how much it would affect the taste and end result to skip the slow rise for hours. Thanks!
Adrienne – yes, I’ve done it the quicker way like you mentioned if I don’t plan ahead. The dough is slightly less flavorful if it doesn’t rise overnight in the fridge and I’ve also noticed it isn’t quite as chewy (and the dough that rises overnight has delightful little pockets in the crust); however, my family couldn’t tell the difference so really, I think either way could work depending on your preferences.
I know this may sound like blasphemy but can I use all purpose flour instead of wheat??
Tara – yes, you can. 🙂
Could I leave this dough in the fridge for a few days?
Hi Marci – it will take on a yeasty flavor the longer it sits. If you don’t mind that, it should be ok. The longest I’ve refrigerated it is about 24-36 hours.
Mel, at which point am I able to freeze the dough for future use? And then after freezing how do I resume the recipe? Sorry, I’m am such a novice in the kitchen.
Andrea – I freeze it after it has risen. I punch it down and separate into greased freezer ziploc bags. I try to take the dough out the night before, keep it in the bag and let it defrost in the refrigerator overnight. Then I take it out an hour or two before I want to bake it to let it come to room temperature and proceed with baking.
This pizza crust is SO good! I have made it several times and my family loves it. My four year old son says it’s way better than pizza from a restaurant! I make it in my bread maker with the dough setting and it turns out perfect every time. In thanks for such a great recipe I wanted to share a pizza pan that will solve your messy oven woes, while still giving you amazingly crispy crust. I used this type of pan back in college when I made pizzas at the cafeteria and we used one of those broilers that cooks both sides of something at the same time while it moves on a conveyer belt. I bought one of these babies on Amazon and we’ve been in pizza heaven ever since: Winware Seamless Aluminum Pizza Screens (Can’t post a link, but you can easily look it up). Just make sure to grease it every time with some olive oil on a paper towel and don’t push the dough down in to it.
I would like to try this crust recipe. It looks delicious! I’m just a little concerned about preheating my stone as the company (pampered chef) says not to. Obviously you have done it with great success. What kind of stone do you have? I’m thinking of just disregarding their warning…
I also wanted to tell you how thrilled I was to discover your blog… I have spent hours perusing it, as well as making so many of your recipes. I love your creativity and the fact that you use readily available ingredients. I’ve told many friends and family about your blog.
Hi Yoli – I don’t have a pampered chef stone – I bought mine from King Arthur Flour and the instructions say it is ok to preheat so I would probably heed the warnings on the PC label (I’d hate for you to ruin your baking stone!). Thank you for your sweet comment; I hope you find many recipes to try and love!
Okay, let me get this straight. To freeze the dough, I let it rise in the fridge overnight, then stick it in the freezer. To use it, I pull it out the night before and leave it in the fridge til I’m ready to use it for dinner. Then let it sit on the counter for 20 minutes ish, then roll it out and top it. Right?
Marci – actually when I freeze the dough, I don’t let it rise in the fridge overnight. I just throw it into a freezer bag after it has gone through the whole recipe process (prior to being rolled out and baked). Then, when I want to use it, I place the frozen bag of dough in the fridge overnight. By morning it should be thawed but still really cold so I take it out and let it sit at room temp until it is pliable (might take an hour or so, depending on how big a piece it is). Then you can proceed to roll and bake.
This summer I am cooking at a camp that has convection ovens. Do you have any
tips for baking your pizza in a convection oven? Will I need to lower the temperature?
How much will I need to adjust the time? I did a little research and it appears to be okay to use baking stones in a convection oven. I’d appreciate any advice!
Hi Sue – unfortunately I have limited to no experience with convection ovens. Sorry!
Convection ovens have a fan which circulates the air and this bakes more quickly..Rule of thumb..decrease the temperature by 50 degrees. I have convection and have checked on the internet sites regarding this issue..Your cakes and dough will cook more quickly.
I love homemade pizza and am excited to try your recipe. I’m wondering if you have any tips about getting the pizza off the peel and onto the stone. I have a tendency to dump everything onto the stovetop or worse in the oven! Maybe I’ll have better luck using a pan on top of the stone.
hey Kelly…i know you asked for help many moons ago but here is my trick…build the pizza on a piece of parchment paper and slide it (paper and all) onto the stone…you can pull the paper out from under the pizza a few minutes into the baking time once the crust has set up, but i find it unneccessary and just leave the paper the whole time…i don’t notice a difference in the final product and makes for easy retrieving as well =)
This sauce is delicious and so easy!
Love this recipe! but hated the cornmeal. I tried it with and without. First pizza on parchment paper which burnt so I thought I’d try the cornmeal but what spilt on the bottom burnt and started the smoke alarm in my house scaring my 19 month old and I hated the cornmeal on the crust. The pizza itself was delicious.
This was outstanding! I used all your tips and your sauce recipe and we give it 5 stars! I loved telling them the crust was whole wheat too. Sooo good. My picky 5 year old even loved the sauce. We made heart shaped pizzas and while she was decorating hers, she dug the spoon into the sauce and exclaimed that “It is good!” Made for a fine Valentine’s Day. I am slowly going through all your recipes and I think you are a genius. Thanks for making me look good.
Theresa – sure, I don’t see why not. Just make sure the amounts fit into your bread machine.
Can you use a bread machine for making the pizza dough?
Melanie, thanks for the advice and for getting back with me! I’ll give this another try. Thanks for all your great advice and for sharing your talents with so many of us!
Denise – I know what you are talking about with the dough and it’s usually because the gluten needs to relax a bit. When this happens to me, I roll the dough out and even if it contracts back a little, I lightly cover it and let it rest for 10-15 minutes. Then when I go to roll it out again, it stays in place. Another way is to separate your dough into the pieces you’ll use for pizzas and let those dough “balls” rest for 10-15 minutes before rolling out. That will usually preempt the problem. Also, dough that is overfloured will tend to have this problem more than a slightly softer dough so watch that, too. Good luck!
Thanks for sharing this wonderful recipe! I seem to have issues with rolling out my pizza dough and getting it to stay put, the dough constantly recedes and contracts back to its original form every time I roll it out. Help! Any advice on how to get the pizza to stay put when rolling it?!?
I love this recipe. I hardly ever comment on the blogs I read, but I really just love this recipe too much to stay quiet. It makes great pizzas, and was really good as a chicken cordon blue calzone, too (stuffed with chicken, ham, swiss, mozzarella, and leftover alfredo sauce- yum!). Thanks for sharing!!!
Cherryl, I’ve never made mini pizzas out of this dough but I’m guessing you could easily get 8 to 10 kid sized pizzas out of it. Although that may be a stretch, maybe more like 6 to 8. I’d separate the dough into pieces after it has risen overnight. After splitting the dough, let the dough pieces rest at room temp, covered, until the dough is no longer cold and can be stretched easily, maybe 1 hour.
Hi Mel, I’m having a birthday party for my 5 yr old daughter and thought having the kids make their own pizzas would be fun. So, of course I went to your website to find a pizza dough recipe and voila! Here you have it! Do you know how many mini pizzas one batch will make? Should I split them after the dough has risen or right before rolling it out? And how far in advance should I make them? Thanks so much for your wonderful website!
Mel, awesome sauce, I make it all the time. Tonight we decided to add about 3 cups of uncooked spinach to the blender and the kids did not notice at all! It darkened the sauce a bit but really did not change the taste at all. Anyway, just thought Id share…
This is great pizza sauce!!! So easy too.
So easy and so inexpensive. I’m amazed at how flavorful the sauce is too–yum! Thanks for another winner, Mel!
I tried this pizza crust recipe today and my family and I LOVED it! I love that it uses whole wheat flour- yet it is soft and doesn’t taste like cardboard! I really love the depth of the flavor! GREAT recipe! Thanks for the different kinds of directions. I didn’t want cornmeal all over so I made it on a pizza pan and slid it onto the stone. Thank-you!!!
Im making this crust and sauce tonight for dinner! I make pizza weekly for my family, but always feel like my crust is not quite right. I’m hoping this may be just what I’m looking for! I made your sweet and sour chicken this past week and my husband gave it a 10/10! In fact, he liked it so much I made it twice this week 🙂 thanks!
Julie – proofing the yeast means to let the yeast activate in water (it should foam and bubble) before adding it to the other ingredients. Proofing only needs to be done with active dry yeast. If using instant yeast, you don’t need to proof it in water first, you can add it with the other ingredients.
what does proof the yeast mean?
Stephanie – I’ve never frozen pizza after it has been topped and baked but I do freeze pizza dough every once in a while. After it has risen, I punch it down, separate it into balls the size I would use for a pizza, place them in separate freezer ziploc bags that I’ve greased the inside of and freeze them. I pull them out the night before and put them in the refrigerator to thaw or put them on the counter for 6-7 hours before wanting to bake.
2 questions –
1. Our baby is still too small for pizza so this is a lot of pizza for us. Does it freeze well?
2. If you haven’t tried freezing it- at what stage do you think I could try freezing it? 🙂 Thanks!
I tried this sauce a while ago and it was so good but I was put off by the honey in the crust.. but I decided to try it anyways and oh my goodness it was better than takeout! delicious! I can see how you make this every week! So so good! Well done…again!
I wasn’t able to make this pizza dough due to lack of time but I have to say that I LOVED the sauce! I didn’t have a can of diced tomatoes so I just used tomato sauce and didn’t put it in the blender. Open a can of tomato sauce, a can of tomato paste and whisk in seasonings… how wonderfully easy! Thanks and can’t wait to try the dough soon.
Nicole – the dough should be on the soft side. Not overly sticky but definitely not overfloured. It isn’t a big deal if you had to add more flour mostly because exact flour amounts can depend on so many variables (temperature, altitude, type of flour, etc.) As long as your dough formed a soft ball, it should work out just fine. Let me know how it baked up!
Hi, quick question about the pizza dough. Is the dough suppose to be sticky after kneading? I used King Arthur white whole weat flour and King Arthur All Purpose flour. I know from reading your other posts that you grind your own flour…maybe this is the difference. I added more flour, so I could form it into a ball. The dough is currently in the fridge… and I can not wait to taste this crust. Thank you for taking your time to help all of us in our own kitchens.
This pizza dough is incredible! I’ve been disappointed with other pizza dough recipes in the past, so I wasn’t expecting this one to be such a success! The dough was soft and chewy and the flavor was outstanding….thank you for sharing this recipe.
Kellie – yes, punch down the dough and then shape into a ball. I place it in a lightly greased freezer ziploc bag and press out all the air, seal and freeze.
Mel, I made this dough at 2 this morning when I couldn’t sleep, only to remember that my oven is broken. {sigh} So it’s morning now, and it’s growing and all, and I’m so glad to know I can freeze it. Do I punch it down and then freeze it in a ball?
Ok, another question regarding freezing pizza dough. Do you usually let the dough rise once before you freeze it, or do you just freeze the dough as soon as all of the ingredients have been combined?
Melanie – I usually freeze the pizza dough after it has risen overnight (if I’ve planned that far in advance), so yes, I would let it rise before freezing.
Hi, Can this dough be frozen? If so, how long?
Allie, yes, I freeze the pizza dough quite a bit. I usually try to use it up within 1-2 months.
Friday night pizza has been a tradition at our house for years– and I thought I had the perfect crust and sauce recipes. BUT the fact that this was a make-ahead recipe caught my eye (and its chances were helped by the fact that you’ve never let me down yet as far as great recipes go).
BEST PIZZA EVER. Hands down.
Thanks for another great recipe Mel!
I’ve been making homemade pizza for years, but still hadn’t found a crust recipe that I was completely in love with – the journey stops here 🙂 I made the dough in my bread maker but otherwise didn’t change a thing about your recipe and it was delicious! I love how it’s just a touch sweet and so soft on the inside but with a crunchy exterior. This will be my new pizza crust recipe forever and ever. amen.
Great website. I’ve been making pizza now at home for several years. You’re right, it is way better than take out. Regarding the pizza stone, here’s a little trick that really works, and is cheap. Go to your local home depot or lowes and pick up a box of 10 terra-cotta style unglazed 12″ x 12″ floor tiles. The box of 10 costs around $10, or about a dollar a piece. I end up using them about 10 times each before they either crack, or look like they need to be changed out, but at a buck a piece, you can’t beat it. Once you find these, you’ll wonder why anyone would spend fifty bucks in a stone. I put two in the oven side by side for more room, and dust the top, after preheating, with corn meal before sliding the pizza in.
sorry, just read the answer to this question in the comments. Thanks!