Jeffrey Steingarten's Pizza Dough
Updated May 30, 2024
- Total Time
- 3 hours 30 minutes, plus 24 hours' refrigeration
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 1½cups unbleached all-purpose flour
- 1½cups unbleached bread flour, plus more for dusting
- ¾teaspoon active dry yeast
- 2¼teaspoons Diamond Crystal kosher salt
- 3tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
Preparation
- Step 1
The morning or ideally the day before cooking, prepare the dough. Using a hand whisk, combine the flours, yeast and salt in the bowl of an electric mixer. Switch to a wooden spoon and stir in 1½ cups cold water and olive oil until a rough dough forms. Set the bowl on the mixer and, using the paddle attachment, mix on low speed for 1 minute. Increase the speed to high and beat for 4 to 6 minutes, until it becomes a wet and vaguely menacing mass. (If it forms into a ball, lower the mixer speed to medium-high. If not, stop the mixer to scrape down the sides once.)
- Step 2
Scrape and pour the dough onto a heavily floured work surface. Keeping your fingers, the countertop and the dough well floured, fold one dough end over the other so that half the floured underside covers the rest of the dough. Let rest for 10 minutes.
- Step 3
Cut the dough into 2 equal pieces. Shape each piece into a smooth ball. Place each ball on a well-oiled plate, generously dust with flour and loosely cover with plastic wrap. Let the dough rise until it is at least doubled in size, about 3 hours.
- Step 4
Punch the dough balls down, shape into rounds and place each in a quart-size freezer bag. Refrigerate dough between 1 and 24 hours.
Private Notes
Comments
I am so bummed. Bought my 00 flour and proceeded to have a sticky experience with the Roberta's pizza crust recipe. When I say sticky, I mean SO sticky that it was unworkable. I threw it away.
As a proud graduate of Peter Kump's New York Cooking School (1992) and someone who loves to bake bread and work with yeast, I have no clue what I did wrong. Any ideas?
I made this crust with the warning mentioning it was way too sticky, so I only added one cup of water. Then, I added more, only two tablespoons, and it was the correct dough texture. I hope this helps; it did make a great dough, just less water is needed
Bailed on this when I saw the water. 90% hydration is crazy for pizza dough.
made this exactly to recipe using King Arthur flours, spooned into measure. Dough was soft but not sticky. Handled beautifully.
The water in the recipe is wrong, way too much for A.P. flour (around 11.7% or less of protein). No point to get to 90% hydration. For the A.P. 65% hydration is more than sufficient.
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