While I was on vacation in Italy last year I got the chance to try some really amazing pizza! My favorite had to be the thin crust style pizza and that was nice and light and it had an almost crackery texture to it. When I got back from Italy I went on a quest to duplicate that thin crust style pizza at home and after trying a bunch of recipes I settled on this thin crust pizza dough from PizzaMaking.com that gave me the best results.
This recipe can be a bit tricky and it took me a few tries to get it just right but it is well worth the effort. One thing to keep in mind is that this recipe requires
you to let the dough sit for 24 hours so you need to plan on that when on making a pizza. This dough has a really low water to flour ratio which means that you pretty much need to mix the dough in a food processor and even then, the dough is going to be very dry. In fact the dough will be more like crumbs but as long as you can form it into a ball then everything is ok. After sitting for the 24 hours the dough will not have risen very much but it will now have a more dough like consistency. The dough will be a little hard to work with but you want to roll it out as thinly as possible. To keep the dough from puffing up like a pita, I like to perforate it with a fork a few times. You then bake the pizza crust in a 500F oven until it just starts to turn a light golden brown. This pre-baking helps ensure that the crust will be nice and crispy even under the toppings. Once you are done with the pre-baking you can top the pizza with your favourite toppings and then it is back into the oven for its final baking.
Now that I have my thin crust pizza dough recipe, it is time to start experimenting with some toppings!
Thin Crust Pizza Dough
ingredients
- 6 tablespoons warm water
- 2 teaspoons vegetable oil
- 1 teaspoon active dry yeast
- 1 teaspoon sugar
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 1 3/4 cups bread flour
directions
- Mix the water, oil, yeast and sugar in a small bowl.
- Mix everything in a food processor until it starts to from small crumbs.
- Press the crumbs together to form a ball.
- Place the ball in a bowl, cover and let it rise for 24 hours.
- Roll the dough out very thinly on a lightly floured surface.
- Poke the dough with a fork all over.
- Place the dough on a pan and bake in a preheated 500F/260C oven until it just starts to turn golden brown, about 4 minutes.
- Pull the pizza out of the oven and top with the toppings.
- Bake in the 500F/260C oven until the edges are golden brown and the cheese has melted, about 5 minutes.
Lauren says
Light, airy, thin dough is my favorite kind of pizza crust, so I'm excited to try this recipe! Thanks, Kevin.
Jennifer says
Bookmarked! Thanks!!! =) I just did a post on pizza as well!
xoXOxo
Jenn @ Peas & Crayons
Maria says
Always looking for good pizza dough recipes and hav eyet to find hte right thin crust recipe. Perhaps this will be it! Looks just right in the photos.
Kath says
Thanks for this post, Kevin. Your crust looks really great. I "stumbled" it so I can find it in the future.
Jennifer and Jaclyn @ sketch-free vegan says
Here's a gluten-free thin crust I conjured up: http://sketch-freeveganeating.blogspot.com/2010/12/smoked-tempeh-pizza-w-carrot-pesto.html
It's not as flaky and amazing looking as this one but it has tied over my thin crust needs for the time being.
one heart says
Oh yes, I love Italy's thin crust pizza too!! I've thought about it ever since i had my first taste, wishing I could make it myself. I don't have a food processor so not sure whether to attempt this recipe, but happy to try.
jose manuel says
Tremendo el aspecto de esta pizza, me encanta.
Saludos
Jennifurla says
I love thin crust, definitely my favorite. I know whatever you come up with will be inventive…..goat cheese please!
Susie Bee on Maui says
Awesome! Congrats on conquering thin crust pizza. Enjoy the toppings experiments!
I've experimented alot and have settled on a whole wheat dough that I can make ahead and keep in the freezer.
http://eatlittleeatbig.blogspot.com/2010/11/recipe-for-spicy-peanut-chicken-whole.html
Kelly says
Love the side shot of the dough. It looks gorgeous. I've been playing around with various dough recipes though I always seem to come back to one from The Figs Table Cookbook. American Pie is also a great resource for me, but the kind I've been most curious/excited about at the moment is the idea of doing a brioche dough crust which isaw in another cookbook. Yum!
kimchicsisters says
looks amazing!
http://kimchicsisters.blogspot.com/2011/01/korean-food-homemade-mandoo.html
Truther666 says
Looks pretty good!
NW Mom says
Fantastic! Thank you! I'm making pizza this week and will try this recipe.
Les rêves d'une boulangère (Brittany) says
I've been searching for a thin pizza dough for ages, Thanks!
Erika says
Nice! Happy new year to all, and fingers crossed for a great 2011!
Joanne says
I'm actually not the biggest thin crust fan but it definitely elicits a craving every once in a while. You nailed it!
tracieMoo says
I'd always go for thin crust pizza. It sounds really simple to make, I should try this soon 🙂
SallyBR says
I've been trying to pick a recipe for thin crust pizza, as I've never tried to make it at home and it IS my favorite type of pizza.
I will try the one you mentioned – and I agree with you, nothing beats a very simple topping, margherita is a winner!
Alisa Fleming says
I recently tried an "overnight" dough for the first time like this, and it did turn out to be one of the best pizza crusts I had made in a while!
Anonymous says
Good gosh! I've been looking for a good thin pizza crust! I haven't had much luck, but this recipe looks very, very promising! Your photos have my mouth watering!
Anonymous says
Looking at blogs like these late at night is a bad idea – this pizza is beautiful, and now my mouth is watering…
Anonymous says
I'm always fluctuating between thin crust and thick crust. This will be a great recipe to have on hand!
Stanislav says
The best thing from italy is pizza I think. There is good joke, Ianlian gentlemants think just on 2 thing, the second is pizza.
Anonymous says
Oooh lala! This looks like the perfect crispy dough. I will def try this one out next time I'm making pizza.
Ryanm29 says
Awesome, bookmarked and dough is waiting for 24hours for tomorrow nights meal.
I don't suppose you'd consider publishing your measurements for recipes in grammes/ml etc?
Thanks
Lauren says
Looks delicious! Can't wait to try it. I've never worked with yeast before, so it'll be a new thing for me! 🙂
dining room table says
I think everyone loves thin crust pizzas. I am glad that it was invented. It is really great.
Amy @ allhailhoneybees says
This crust looks great.. I love making my own pizza crust, thanks so much!
Anonymous says
Would this recipe work with a pizza stone?
pastry studio says
This looks like an amazing dough, just the sort of thin almost cracker crisp kind I love.
Thanks so much for explaining how to work with it. Can't wait to try it!
In Krista's Kitchen says
I make margherita pizzas as a quick and easy dinner for myself all of the time. This looks like a delicious way to spice up my crust routine!
Kevin says
Anonymous: I have not tried this dough on a pizza stone yet, but I imagine that it will work. I still need to pick up a pizza stone to try it out.
Nicole says
Hi Kevin, was just wondering if you thought the dough would work with an all purpose flour and whole wheat flour blend, or would this make the dough too dense?
Anonymous says
I don't have an account, but wanted to ask a question. If I don't have a good processor, can I mix the dough by hand? please answer 🙂
Kevin says
Nicole: I don't think that I would try this recipe with regular whole wheat flour. If you have access to the white whole wheat flour, that might work but since I have not been able to find it, I have not tried it yet.
Anonymous: This is a very dry dough with a low water to flour ratio. I have tried mixing the dough by hand and I found that I needed to add a lot more water to
make it hold together and it did not give the same results.
Kevin says
Love your blog BUT I tried this recipe 3 different times with disastrous results. Every time the dough turns out dry and crumbly – like a pile of dustballs. It won't hold together when I try to roll it out (after resting for 24 hours). Any ideas? Add more water?
Kevin says
Kevin: This dough is definitely a dry one but it should just hold together in a ball when you pull it out of the food processor and as it sits the moisture will spread out. By the time that you pull it out 24 hours later it should be a dough that you can roll. Some ideas: Try processing it a bit more in the food processor to make sure that the water is well distributed. You can try adding an extra tablespoon of water if absolutely needed. Make sure that when you are measuring the flour that it is light and fluffy rather than packed, you can sift it to make sure that it is. Are you at a high altitude? That can change baking parameters.
Anonymous says
Hi Kevin- this might be a stupid question, but where do you let it "rest" for 24 hours?? on the countertop or in the fridge??
Kevin says
Anonymous: Not at all; let it rest on the counter for the 24 hours.
Moira says
Canned't we just find a perfect crust out of a can ? I'm a total failure at dough-making. LOL.
Anonymous says
I might be late to the party, but have tried your thin crust dough a few times now (don't know if you have seen the other products – wine/vodka – but we call it "skinny girl pizza") anyways, for those suffering from dry crumbing dough, a couple of ideas (1) add one 1/2 T-sp of high gluten flour (2) coat with olive/veg oil before letting it rest, and (3) let it rest 24 hrs in the oven with the oven light on.
BTW, just for fun, I have put this dough thru my pasta maker ( on a variety of roller setting down to #2) and then spliced two pieces together to make a nice sized pizza! But still enjoy hand rolling 🙂
pizza franchise says
Looks amazing gorgeous
J. Davis says
Thanks for keeping this posted…it sure helped!
Richard Kloc says
Love this recipe. Easy to make in a bread machine. Lite and thin crust.