Pan Pizza

- Total Time
- 1 hour 30 minutes, plus 15-20 hours’ resting time for the dough
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 1000grams unbleached all-purpose flour, approximately 8 cups
- 30grams kosher salt, approximately 1½ tablespoons
- 700grams lukewarm water, approximately 2¾ cups
- 60grams unsalted butter, preferably high-fat European-style, approximately ¼ cup, melted
- 40grams olive oil, approximately 3 tablespoons, plus more to grease pans
- 5grams active dry yeast, approximately 1¾ teaspoons
- 2tablespoons olive oil
- 1clove garlic, peeled and minced
- 2tablespoons tomato paste
- Pinch of chile flakes, to taste
- 128-ounce can chopped or crushed tomatoes
- 2tablespoons honey, or to taste
- 1teaspoon kosher salt, or to taste
- Olive oil
- Part-skim mozzarella, roughly grated, 525 grams or 4½ cups: 175 grams or 1½ cups per pie
- Fresh mozzarella, cut into cubes, 300 grams or 3 cups: 100 grams or 1 cup per pie
- Sliced pepperoni, to taste
- 3pinches fresh oregano, or 3 teaspoons dried: 1 pinch or teaspoon per pie
For the Dough
For the Sauce
For the Pizza
Preparation
- Step 1
Make the dough a day or two before you want to bake; the recipe makes enough for three pies. Combine the flour and salt in your largest mixing bowl. In another mixing bowl, combine the water, butter, olive oil and yeast. Mix well.
- Step 2
Use a rubber spatula to create a well in the center on the flour mixture, and add to it the liquid from the other bowl, stirring with the spatula and scraping down the sides of the bowl to bring everything together. Mix it all together until it is a large, shaggy ball of wet dough, cover with plastic wrap and allow to sit for 30 minutes.
- Step 3
Uncover the dough and, with floured hands, knead it until it is uniformly smooth and sticky, approximately 3 to 5 minutes. Move the dough ball into a clean mixing bowl, cover with plastic wrap and allow to rise for 3 to 5 hours at room temperature, then refrigerate, at least 6 hours and up to 24.
- Step 4
The morning you want to make the pizzas, remove the dough from the refrigerator, divide into 3 chunks of equal size (about 600 grams each) and shape them into oblong balls. Use olive oil to grease three 10-inch cast-iron skillets, 8-inch-by-10-inch baking pans with high sides, 7-inch-by-11-inch glass baking dishes or some combination thereof, and place the balls into them. Cover with plastic wrap, and let rise at room temperature, 3 to 5 hours.
- Step 5
Make the sauce. Place a saucepan over medium-low heat, and add to it 2 tablespoons olive oil. When the oil is shimmering, add the minced garlic and cook, stirring, until it is golden and aromatic, approximately 2 to 3 minutes.
- Step 6
Add the tomato paste and a pinch of chile flakes, and raise the heat to medium. Cook, stirring often, until the mixture is glossy and just beginning to caramelize.
- Step 7
Add the tomatoes, bring to a boil, then lower heat and allow to simmer for 30 minutes, stirring occasionally.
- Step 8
Take sauce off the heat, and stir in the honey and salt, to taste, then blend in an immersion blender or allow to cool and use a regular blender. (The sauce can be made ahead of time and stored in the refrigerator or freezer. It makes enough for 6 or so pies.)
- Step 9
After 3 hours or so the dough will have almost doubled in size. Stretch the dough very gently to the sides of the pans, dimpling it softly with your fingers. The dough can then be left to rest for another 2 to 8 hours, covered with wrap.
- Step 10
Make the pizzas. Heat oven to 450. Gently pull the dough to the edges of the pans if it hasn’t risen to the edges already. Use a spoon or ladle to put 4 to 5 tablespoons of sauce onto the dough, gently covering it entirely. Sprinkle the low-moisture mozzarella onto the pies, then dot them with the fresh mozzarella and the pepperoni to taste. Sprinkle with the oregano and lash with a little olive oil.
- Step 11
Place the pizzas onto the middle rack of the oven on a large baking sheet or sheets to capture spills, then cook for 15 minutes or so. Use an offset spatula to lift the pizza and check the bottoms. The pizza is done when the crust is golden and the cheese is melted and starting to brown on top, approximately 20 to 25 minutes.
Private Notes
Comments
The recipe says the crust makes three pizzas. Can you freeze the dough if you only want to make one? I'm guessing you can . . .
Phenomenal! Probably my favorite NYT recipe ever. I made a half recipe of the dough and used a 15-inch cast iron pan -- just right. Baked it in a 60-year-old stove set at 450 and was thrilled with the results. Best of all, this recipe is so flexible and forgiving in terms of time. I took the dough out in the morning and placed in pan as suggested, stretched to fill pan after 3 hours or so and then just let it sit out till ready to bake, some 6 hours later. I will make this again and again.
Jeez, so much drama about the cast iron! I used one 8-inch and one 9-inch and put the rest of the dough in the freezer, cuz google said it was okay. The pizza was outstanding, and thank you, thank you, thank you for the metric weights!!!! It makes everything SO much easier!
I've made this recipe (sans sauce) many times. I divide the dough between a 12 in cast iron skillet and a 9x13 cake pan. When the ingredients are measured by weight, the dough is incredibly sticky and wet so I use my stand mixer. I don't know how anyone is kneading it by hand. The dough vastly overproofs with the given timing when using caputo yeast. Once in the oven it springs back just fine.
I’m in the middle of my second go round with this - it’s complicated, way more complicated than other pizza dough recipes, but I’m invested in chasing that old timey Pizza Hut experience (red soda cups anyone?) Anyway my main question is: what brand of plastic wrap are you all using that can effectively cover a 10” cast iron skillet???
Really excellent, the crust! I made 1/3 the recipe and used a cast iron skillet, oiled and sprinkled with cornmeal. You can modify the toppings and 1/2 jar of a good sauce was fine. First time I've made deep dish, I'm sold!
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