My Favorite Easy Pizza Dough Recipe (2024)

Caramelized Onion and Garlic Three Cheese Pizza Recipe,plustips for beginners on how to make great pizza at home.

My Favorite Easy Pizza Dough Recipe (1)

Swiss Chard and Artichoke Pizza? Oh yeah. Recipe here.

I recently received an e-mail from a friend saying she had just made eight pizzas for her husband's birthday. "I'm so glad you told me to start with pizza dough," she said. So am I.

Whenever someone tells me they want to try baking bread but have no idea how to begin, I suggest they make pizza dough first. This is the equivalent of learning to bake biscuits or scones before attempting Danish pastry and eclairs.

The thought of baking your own bread can be a little frightening. It's time consuming, and numerous things can go wrong. Then if the end result is disappointing, there's never enough time to turn around and bake another loaf.


My Favorite Easy Pizza Dough Recipe (2)
Italian Sausage, Mushroom, & Fresh Tomato Pizza (sausage recipe here)

Pizza dough, on the other hand, is not temperamental or fussy. The actual hands on work takes less than ten minutes. You can let it rise for as little or as long as you like. It's difficult to ruin and will never let you down. Pizza dough disasters are rare.

(If you are ready to try baking your own bread, I invite you to check out my

Ten Tips on How To Bake Better Artisan Breads at Home

and How To Shape Bread Dough Into Sandwich Loaves and Some Simple Bread Baking Tips.)

The trick to making incredible pizzeria-style pizza in your regular old oven at home is to use a pizza, or baking, stone. There's simply no comparison to what happens to the crust when cooked directly on that very hot surface.

There are many shapes and sizes and thicknesses of baking stones available. Mine is 14"x15" and about 3/4" thick, and I've been using it for

over ten 18 years. It's similar to this one, and is now dark and seasoned. After each use just brush it off. If you must wash it (after a spilled blackened cheese episode perhaps), use only water, never soap and a scrub brush.

My Favorite Easy Pizza Dough Recipe (3)

Fresh Tomato and Homemade Basil Pesto Pizza (recipe here)

Handmade pizzas are gorgeous. You don't have to be a dough-tossing expert to make a beautiful pizza—the more oddly-shaped and rustic the better is my opinion.

I also love a thick layer of

fresh tomato sauce

that is chock full of garlic and herbs. Each summer I blanch, peel, and seed pounds and pounds of San Marzano and Yellow Plum tomatoes from my garden and then

pack them into one- and two-pint plastic freezer containers

. It's wonderful to be able to savor the taste of summer in the middle of a snowstorm.

Besides great sauce, I believe the secret to an incredible pizza is to use more of everything than you think you should: more sauce, more cheese, more toppings.

But sometimes a person desires a lighter pizza, especially when the weather is warm and appetites are smaller. I dreamed up this easy caramelized onion and garlic version one night when I was craving pizza crust and trying to figure out something interesting to serve with grilled steaks. I just sprinkled it with a little parmesan cheese, and it was a huge hit.

The next time I made my usual 'heavy' pizza, I cooked up an onion and garlic one as well, this time adding mozzarella. It was an even bigger hit. This was several years ago, and now when I make homemade pizza for certain people, both kinds are expected.


You can serve this pizza as a side dish in winter with steaks or lamb chops, or have large slices and a garden salad for a lovely summer dinner (yes, it's worth heating up the kitchen to make it). You can cut it into small slivers and offer them as appetizers, or even form tiny individual pizzas and present them as a delightful first course. This pizza is versatile.

The tastiest version I have ever made was the one I created a few nights ago using the first yellow, white, and red

onions from the garden

.

This was the perfect way to celebrate the harvest, as the onions were the star of the show. I've seen similar versions made with wild mushrooms or fresh herbs or whatever, but these are not for me. I use fresh mozzarella and either Parmesan or Pecorino Romano, but the other night I pulled out the Asiago by accident and tossed some of it on as well. It's hard to put too much cheese on a pizza.

Top quality ingredients are of the utmost importance. Use extra-virgin olive oil and the nicest cheeses you can find. Organic flours are inexpensive, readily available, and create a superior tasting final product. And of course you want the freshest onions and garlic—which you can

even try growing yourself

.

But I'll let you in on another secret: even if all you have laying around are two ratty looking onions and some garlic that has sprouted, your pizza will still be delicious.

You can find a recipe for basic pizza dough in almost any cookbook, or you can try mine. I've found that adding some sourdough starter to my pizza dough really improves the flavor and texture. This is also a great way to use up starter if you need to refresh your container of it but don't want to bake bread. See my sourdough starter pizza dough recipe at the end of the post.




My Favorite Easy Pizza Dough Recipe (4)
Homemade Pesto on homemade pizza (pesto recipe here)

Farmgirl Susan's Straightforward Pizza Dough
Makes approximately two 12-inch pizzas or four 8-inch pizzas

This is a simple recipe that produces a crisp, chewy, and flavorful crust. It takes less than three hours from first step to first bite—which means you can decide at four o'clock on Saturday that you want pizza for dinner and be eating well before seven.

A digital kitchen scale makes measuring ingredients a snap. They're also great for portioning out dough for pizza, breads, and rolls. I love my

Oxo Good Grips 11-pound scale

, and often use it several times a day (it's also great for weighing postage). The pull-out display is awesome.

However, few kitchen scales are accurate enough when weighing a fraction of an ounce, so you're better off measuring things like yeast and salt in teaspoons or grams.

I buy instant yeast in

economical 1-pound packages and store it in the freezer where it keeps for over a year.

Organic bread flour 3 cups / 15 oz / 424 grams (plus a little more added while kneading)
Instant yeast 1 teaspoon / 5 ml / 3 grams
Salt 2 teaspoons / 10 ml / 10 g
Lukewarm water (about 90°F, 32°C) 1+1/3 cups / 11½ oz / 325 g

Place the bread flour in a large bowl. Stir in the yeast and salt. Add the water and stir until a soft, but not sticky, dough forms.

Turn the dough onto a floured surface and knead it for 4 minutes, sprinkling with a little flour each time it sticks to your hands or the counter. The dough should be quite soft. Just knead it by hand; it's easier and faster than getting out your big electric mixer.

Liberally sprinkle the mixing bowl with flour, place the dough back in it, and sprinkle the top of the dough with flour. Cover with a damp tea towel or cloth napkin and set in a warm place for two hours (or one hour if you're in a hurry).

An hour before baking your pizza, place a baking stone on the lowest rack in the oven, and set the temperature at 500°. (You never want to put a cold baking stone into a hot oven, as it may crack.)

My Favorite Easy Pizza Dough Recipe (5)
Caramelized Onions and Garlic with Three Cheeses

For the onions:
You can cook the onion topping while the pizza dough is rising, or you can make it whenever you have time and keep it in the fridge. Thinly slice more onions than you think you need. If you're a nibbler, start with even more onions because the finished topping is addicting. Those garden onions were so good the other night that I managed to devour nearly half of the topping while it was cooling. (Note: even a plain, three-cheese pizza is scrumptious.)

Slowly cook the onions in a large skillet with plenty of olive oil until they are nice and caramelized, at least 35 minutes, or longer if you prefer them dark and crispy. Stir often. I cover mine for the first 20 minutes.

Meanwhile, peel and chop as many cloves of garlic as you like, sprinkling them with salt. When the onions are done, clear a space in the middle of the skillet, add the garlic, and cook for two minutes, stirring constantly. Do not allow the garlic to brown. Mix the garlic into the onions and transfer to a plate to cool if you have time.

Turn the risen dough out onto a lightly floured surface, and divide it into two or four pieces. I use a

pastry scraper, sometimes called a dough scraper or bench scraper, which is also great for cleaning off my butcher block counter top. Flatten each piece of dough into a disk and let them rest for 10 to 15 minutes.

There are many ways to shape pizza dough; experiment to find what works for you. Smaller pizzas are easier to shape than larger ones. I simply hold the disk of dough in front of me by one edge and use gravity and my fingers to gently stretch it into a larger circle.

I then lower it onto a

wooden pizza peel

that has been dusted with plenty of cornmeal, and finish stretching it into the shape and thickness I want, pinching together any tears. You can also set it on a rimless baking sheet, or directly onto your pizza pan if you aren't using a baking stone.

Update: Another option is to form and bake your pizzas on a sheet of

unbleached parchment paper.

I now form all of my pizzas on my aluminum wood-handled pizza peel with a sheet of unbleached parchment paper laid on it. You slide the parchment and pizza right into the oven—and no sticking!

Don't worry if your pizzas aren't perfect circles. If you like a thick edge on your pizza, go around the outside of the circle and fold the dough over, pressing it down and sealing it with your fingers.

Scatter the onion and garlic mixture evenly over the crust and then sprinkle the cheese on top. I use about 8 ounces of mozzarella per pizza, plus a few handfuls of coarsely grated parmesan or romano and asiago. Fresh mozzarella balls or logs should be sliced rather than grated.

Gently shake the peel to make sure the pizza is not stuck to it (no worries here if you're using the parchment paper), and then carefully slide the pizza onto the

hot baking stone.

My Favorite Easy Pizza Dough Recipe (6)This is done in one quick move, and it can take some practice, but all mistakes are edible.

My baking stone is about 14 inches by 15 inches and will hold one 12-inch pizza or two 8-inch pizzas.

Bake until the crust is golden and the cheese has started to brown, about 10-14 minutes. If I know I'll be freezing and reheating a pizza later, I undercook it by a couple of minutes. Assemble the next pizza when the first one is nearly done; the uncooked pizzas do not rise at all but go straight into the oven.

Use your pizza peel to remove the pizza from the oven or just slide it right onto a pizza pan. I use

an aluminum blade peel

for sliding pizzas and breads into and out of the oven; I recommend buying the biggest size you can.

Cut into slices, serve, and wait for everyone to sing your praises.

Click here to read about the only thing that tastes even better than a pizza you made yourself.

Susan's Sourdough Starter Pizza Dough Recipe


Makes approximately two 12-inch pizzas or four 8-inch pizzas

Sourdough starters are easy to make. The initial process takes a few days, but the actual hands-on work is minimal. Recipes for sourdough starters abound in cookbooks and online. I made my 5-year-old levain starter using the recipe in

Bread Alone

by Daniel Leader, one of my favorite bread books. The easiest thing to do, though, is to get some from somebody else. Ask around; you might be surprised by who has one living in their fridge.

You can make my Straightforward Pizza Dough recipe, reducing the amount of water to 1 cup (240 ml / 8 oz / 224 grams), and simply toss 1 cup (240 ml / 8 oz / 224 g) of sourdough starter straight from the fridge into the mix. But if you have the time, it's best if you add a little flour and water to your cup of starter and let it sit awhile:

Sourdough starter 1 cup/ 240 ml / 8 oz / 224 g
Water 1/4 cup / 60 ml / 2 oz / 56 g
Bread flour 1/4 cup / 60 ml / 1-1/4 oz / 32 g

Combine starter, water, and bread flour in a small bowl. Cover with plastic wrap and let sit at room temperature for 8 to 10 hours (or less if that's all the time you have). Proceed with my Straightforward Pizza Dough recipe, but reduce the amount of water to 1 cup / 240 ml / 8 oz / 224 g.

©

FarmgirlFare.com, the hand tossed foodie farm blog where Farmgirl Susan shares recipes, stories, and photos from her crazy country life on 240 remote Missouri acres—and there's almost always homemade pizza in the freezer.

My Favorite Easy Pizza Dough Recipe (2024)
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