Homemade Pizza Dough Recipe

Pizza dough is a fundamental component of making pizza, and it serves as the foundation for the entire pizza.

Pizza Night with a Homemade Pizza Dough

When it comes to creating a memorable pizza night at home, the foundation of your pizza is key – and that foundation is the pizza dough. A homemade pizza dough recipe is your secret weapon for a delicious, customized, and satisfying pizza experience. In this blog post, we’ll walk you through the steps to create the perfect pizza dough from scratch.

Why Homemade Pizza Dough?

You might wonder why you should make your pizza dough when you can easily buy pre-made dough at the store. The answer is simple: homemade pizza dough allows you to control the quality of your ingredients, experiment with flavors, and achieve that perfect crispy or chewy texture you desire. Plus, the satisfaction of creating something from scratch is hard to beat.


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Pizza dough is a fundamental component of making pizza, and it serves as the foundation for the entire pizza. It is a simple mixture of basic ingredients: flour, water, yeast, salt, and sometimes a little olive oil or sugar. Here’s a basic recipe for making pizza dough (works well for thin crusts):

Homemade Pizza Dough Recipe

Recipe by Yummy FoodCourse: Main, SnacksCuisine: ItalianDifficulty: Easy

Pizza dough is a fundamental component of making pizza, and it serves as the foundation for the entire pizza.

Ingredients

  • 1 cup lukewarm (about 100°F or 38°C) water

  • 2 cups all-purpose flour

  • ⅛ oz yeast

  • 1 tbsp sugar

  • 1 pinch salt

  • Vegetable, corn, or canola oil

  • Cornmeal

Directions

  • Mix water, yeast, flour, and salt in a large mixing bowl. If the batter is thin and runny like pancake batter, knead in a little more flour to get a sticky dough. If you can touch the batter with your finger and not stick to it, that’s too dry, so knead in a little water.
  • Set the mixing bowl so it is sitting in warm water, or place on top of a warm oven. Let rise for 20–30 minutes. Don’t worry if it only rises 10% or 20%—it’ll still work.
  • Grease a baking sheet with some oil, then sprinkle cornmeal on the oil. Use you fingers to press the dough out until it is about ¼ inch thick all over, with the edges ½ inch thick. Sprinkle flour on top of the dough so it doesn’t stick to your hands.
  • Top dough with pizza toppings as desired.
  • Bake at 425°F for about 15–20 minutes. Rotate every 5 minutes and move to upper or lower shelves as necessary. After 10 minutes slide a large knife under the crust. If it is dark brown, move it to a higher shelf so it doesn’t burn while the top finishes cooking. If it is white or light tan, move to lower shelf so you get a crispy crust before the cheese starts turning brown on top.

Notes

  • On your first try, try just one or two pizzas. Then you can adjust it next time as necessary
  • The dough rises to become about 50% larger, so use a big bowl.
  • Note that the flour used must be at least 60–70% all-purpose white flour. The dough will be heavy and won’t rise as much if the proportion of other flours is too large.
  • Try adding sesame seeds, oregano, or basil to the dough.
  • If the crust isn’t done in the middle, you may have the dough too thick.
  • If the crust burned on the bottom, you either had it too close to the bottom of the oven or didn’t move it to a higher shelf in time. Some stoves are hotter than the thermostat, so try a lower temperature next time.
  • Water from fresh tomatoes, pineapples, and onions, can seep into the crust, so take it easy on those.
  • If the pizza is too greasy, reduce the amount of oil in the pan. It should be a thin film, but it doesn’t need to pool on the surface. Some toppings (pepperoni, sausage, even cheese) will release grease into the pizzas; try smaller pieces.
  • If the vegetables are overdone (e.g., dried up mushrooms, bitter peppers, soggy onion), try topping the pizza halfway through the baking time so they still have a little texture left. Some vegetables, especially broccoli, work better when protected by a coating of oil.
  • If the cheese is brown and dried out on top, the pizza was cooked too close to top element in oven; never use top shelf.
  • If the crust is not very light, use less whole wheat flour or cornmeal in the batter.

A homemade pizza dough recipe is the foundation of a memorable pizza night. By following these simple steps, you can create a delicious, customized pizza crust that suits your taste perfectly. So, gather your favorite toppings, invite some friends or family, and enjoy a pizza night that you’ll never forget! Your taste buds will thank you.


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Classic Filipino Pandesal Recipe

Here is the Classic Filipino Pandesal Recipe that most people are familiar with. Pandesal is a breakfast staple among Filipinos and by learning to make your own, there will be no need to go the bakery every morning.

Classic Filipino Pandesal Recipe

Here is the Classic Filipino Pandesal Recipe that most people are familiar with. Pandesal is a breakfast staple among Filipinos and by learning to make your own, there will be no need to go the bakery every morning.

Pandesal or pan de sal (Filipino and Spanish for “salt bread”), is a common bread roll in the Philippines. It is made of flour, eggs, yeast, sugar and salt. Pan de sal is a popular yeast-raised bread in the Philippines. Individual loaves are shaped by rolling the dough into long logs (bastón, Spanish for “stick”) which are rolled in fine bread crumbs. These are then portioned, allowed to rise, and baked. It is most commonly served hot and may be eaten as is, or dipped in coffee, hot chocolate or milk. It can also be complemented with butter, margarine, cheese, jam, peanut butter, chocolate spread, or other fillings like eggs, sardines and meat. Its taste and texture closely resemble those of the Puerto Rican bread pan de agua, French baguette, and Mexican bolillos. Contrary to its name, pan de sal tastes slightly sweet rather than salty. Most bakeries bake pandesal in the morning for breakfast consumption, though some bake pandesal the whole day.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pandesal

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Recipe for Pandesal:

Classic Filipino Pandesal Recipe

Recipe by Yummy FoodCourse: BreakfastCuisine: FilipinoDifficulty: Easy
Servings

4

servings
Prep time

2

hours 
Cooking time

25

minutes
Calories

589

kcal
Total time

2

hours 

25

minutes

Here is the Classic Filipino Pandesal Recipe that most people are familiar with. Pandesal is a breakfast staple among Filipinos and by learning to make your own, there will be no need to go the bakery every morning.

Ingredients

  • 2 cups bread flour

  • 2 cups all-purpose flour

  • 1 tsp baking powder

  • 1 pouch rapid rise yeast

  • 1/2 cup white sugar

  • 5 tbsp melted butter

  • 1 1/4 cup fresh milk (lukewarm)

  • 1 cup bread crumbs

  • 1 tsp salt

  • 1 egg

  • 1 tbsp cooking oil

Directions

  • In a bowl, combine the yeast, sugar, and milk. Stir until the yeast and sugar are fully dissolved. You can also use water instead of milk.
  • In the mixing bowl, combine the dry ingredients: flour, sugar, salt, and baking powder then mix well.
  • Add the egg, butter, cooking oil, and yeast-sugar-milk mixture in the mixing bowl with the dry ingredients then mix again until dough is formed. You can use your hands to effectively mix the ingredients.
  • In a flat surface, knead the dough until the texture becomes fine.
  • Mould the dough and put back in the mixing bowl, cover with damp cloth and let the dough rise for at least 45 minutes to 1 hour.
  • After the dough has risen, transfer to a lightly floured flat working surface.
  • Roll into a log then cut into four to six equal pieces.
  • Take another portion of the dough, roll again into a log and cut into equal pieces, repeat this step until all the dough is done.
  • Roll each piece of dough in breadcrumbs then arrange on a baking tray for at least an inch apart (so it won’t stick together when it rises later on).
  • Leave the dough in the tray to rise again for 15 to 20 minutes.
  • Pre-heat the oven at 190°C (375°F) for 10 minutes. If using a fan assisted oven, reduce the heat according to the user’s manual.
  • Bake for 20 to 25 minutes or until nicely browned outside.
  • Enjoy with different “palaman” like Peanut Butter.

Nutrition Facts

4 servings per container

Serving Size221


  • Amount Per ServingCalories589
  • % Daily Value *
  • Total Fat 24.33g 32%
    • Saturated Fat 12.015g 61%
    • Trans Fat 0.607g
  • Cholesterol 200mg 67%
  • Sodium 886mg 39%
  • Potassium 388mg 9%
  • Total Carbohydrate 78.38g 29%
    • Dietary Fiber 2.9g 11%
    • Total Sugars 17.91g
  • Protein 14.3g 29%

  • Vitamin A 29mcg 4%
  • Calcium 20mg 2%
  • Iron 26mg 145%
  • Vitamin D 4mcg 20%
  • Vitamin E 7mg 47%
  • Vitamin K 9mcg 8%
  • Thiamin 81mg 6750%
  • Riboflavin 59mg 4539%
  • Niacin 41mg 257%
  • Vitamin B6 11mg 648%
  • Vitamin B12 55mcg 2292%
  • Folate 72mcg 18%
  • Pantothenic Acid 26mg 520%
  • Phosphorus 42mg 4%
  • Magnesium 10mg 3%
  • Zinc 17mg 155%
  • Selenium 67mcg 122%
  • Copper 17mg 1889%
  • Manganese 33mg 1435%

* The % Daily Value tells you how much a nutrient in a serving of food contributes to a daily diet. 2,000 calories a day is used for general nutrition advice.


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By Cuisine: Filipino

By Diet or Lifestyle: Budget-Friendly

By Dish Type: Baked Goods

By Main Ingredient: Flour

By Meal Type: Breakfast | Snacks

Other Useful Categories: Beginner Recipes | Comfort Food | Traditional & Authentic

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IMAGE SOURCE: Obsidian Soul / CC0



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