Making Pizza Dough
There are many ways and types of pizza dough. This is the one that my mom taught me, and that I have adapted to use whole wheat flour. Pizza dough isn’t hard, it just needs time and attention to the temperatures.
In my post on starting your yeast culture, I go into the details about how to get your yeast right so that your dough has the best opportunity to turn out right. That is the first step. The second step is the dough, I cover that in the video below.
Ingredients are simple:
Yeast Mixture:
- Yeast – about 1/2 TBS
- Sugar – Just a pinch to get the yeast growing
- Water – 2 cups at between 105 and 115 degrees
- Olive Oil – about 1/3 cup more or less
Preheat your oven for 1 minute to make it warm, then turn off the heat. You do not want the oven hot, but you want it warm so the dough can rise.
After you have the yeast growing, then you put it in a Mixer Bowl and add:
- 2 Cups whole Wheat Flour and mix with the dough hook until mixed well
- About 4 cups of unbleached all purpose or bread flour – the actual amount will depend upon the way the dough mixes.
Warm a large bowl with hot water, then dry and coat with olive oil or spray.
Place the dough in the bowl, cover with plastic wrap or a damp cloth (not wet, just damp), and place it in the warm oven. Let it sit for an hour or hour and a half until the dough has risen to twice the original size.
Take dough out and divide. This can be used for two large pizzas with a thicker dough, two deep crust pizzas, or three thin crust pizzas.
Roll the dough out so that it will fit your pans. Then, if you want thin crust, add toppings. If you want thicker crust pan pizza, put it in the oven and let it rise again. You will need to watch it to see when it has risen to the level you want.
Preheat oven to 450
Add Pizza Sauce and toppings.
Put pizza(s) in oven for 20 minutes (start checking after 15 min. just in case). Watch the cheese, and the color of the crust to tell when it is done. The crust will start turning brown when it is getting done. You can put a fork under the crust to get an idea of how crispy it is. Everyone has different preferences, so the amount of time you spend is a trial and error approach.