Quick Pizza Dough

- Total Time
- About 30 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 2¾cups/390 grams bread flour
- 2½teaspoons/7 grams active dry yeast (1 packet)
- 2teaspoons sea salt
- ¼cup extra-virgin olive oil
- 1cup warm water
- 2 or 3tablespoons medium or coarse cornmeal
Preparation
Make the Dough
- Step 1
Put the flour, yeast and salt in a food processor. With the machine running, pour the oil through the feed tube, then add the water in a slow, steady stream. Continue to process for 2 to 3 minutes (the dough should form a rough ball and ride around in the processor). The finished dough should be soft, slightly sticky and elastic. If too dry, add a bit more water; if too wet, a tablespoon or so more flour.
- Step 2
Lay a 12-inch-long piece of plastic wrap on a clean work surface. Work the dough into a rectangle on the plastic, about 8 inches long and 6 inches wide. Press your fingers into the top of the dough all over, making indentations as though it were a focaccia. Fold the left third of the dough over (as you would a letter) and repeat the indentations. Fold the right third over and make the indentations again. Cover the folded dough with plastic wrap and let rise for 20 minutes.
- Step 3
Cut the dough in half, form each piece into a neat ball, wrap tightly in plastic wrap and transfer to the freezer. The morning before you want to make pizza, transfer the dough to the refrigerator to thaw.
Make the Pizza
- Step 4
Bring the dough to room temperature, 15 to 20 minutes. Put a pizza stone in the oven and preheat to 550 degrees. (If you don’t have a stone, oil a rimmed baking sheet and set aside.) Dust a peel or the greased baking sheet generously with cornmeal. Working with the dough in your hands (not flat on a work surface), gently begin to stretch the dough into a circular shape, pressing your fist into the center of the dough and pulling at the edges with your other hand. With both hands, stretch the dough, being careful not to tear it. Working in a circular motion, pull the thicker edges of the dough outward, letting gravity help you. Continue to stretch the dough until it’s relatively even in thickness (the edges will be thicker) and you have the size you want. Carefully lay it on the peel or baking sheet.
- Step 5
Top the pizza as desired and either slide it off the peel and onto your heated stone, or place the baking sheet into the oven. Cook the pizza for 6 to 10 minutes or until the crust is golden and the cheese is bubbling.
Private Notes
Comments
15 min pizza dough
2 cups all-purpose flour (or 1:1 whole wheat)
1 tsp kosher salt
1 tbsp instant yeast
3 tbsp olive oil
1 cup hot tap water
Mix the dry & wet ingredients separately, then combine. Knead in the food processor until it holds into a ball (adding more flour through the feed tube). By hand, knead in ~1/4 cup more flour ~5 minutes. Turn the bowl over the dough (upside down) and let rise 15 minutes (prep your toppings now). Stretch, top and bake 425F ~20 minutes. 2 crusts.
The recipe calls for freezing. Can the dough be made fresh and then cooked? Would you start shaping the dough after the 20 minute rise, or should you wait longer? Or does it require freezing?
My husband likes to put new sacks of flour away in jars. He didn't realize one of the jars was half full of powdered sugar, and filled it with flour. I didn't know and used that jar to make the pizza dough. Wasn't coming together no matter how much more flour I added. Finally I realized what happened and we decided to bake it because why not? It tasted okay with butter and jam. Made the recipe with only flour tonight, it's much better.
I make this regularly, and it is great for whipping up a pizza on short notice. Two tips: (1) you can skip the freezing and just go straight into shaping, topping, and baking after the 20 minute rise. (2) I've tried this recipe by volume and by weight and for some reason the proportions are off when I do it by weight but it comes together perfectly by volume. So for this recipe only I'd recommend measuring by volume (even though I know that's counter to the usual baking/bread making advice).
For the people asking, this recipe makes a perfectly acceptable crust without freezing beforehand. It was fantastic for being so quick to whip up!
I use the original recipe for Roberta's Pizza Dough and then freeze them in an airtight container. They're good for about a month. I take out one frozen pizza ball in the morning, and by dinner, it's ready to be shaped and cooked. I've done it dozens of times and it works every time.
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