Best-Ever Pizza Dough Recipe (No Knead) - Gemma’s Bigger Bolder Baking (2024)

, Gemma's Best Recipes

4.72 from 601 votes

  • Jump To Recipe
  • Jump To Video
  • Loading…Save Recipe

Learn how to make my best-ever Pizza Dough recipe using the no-knead technique to make some of the best Homemade Pizza you'll ever enjoy.

By Gemma Stafford | | 1361

Last updated on January 29, 2024

Best-Ever Pizza Dough Recipe (No Knead) - Gemma’s Bigger Bolder Baking (1)

This post may contain affiliate links. Please see my full disclosure for details.

Hi Bold Bakers!

Create a Profile!

Already have an account?

Any professional baker worth their salt has their own tried and tested Pizza Dough recipe that they carry with them from kitchen to kitchen. I am no different and I held my precious recipes close to my chest. You already know that I am passionate about bread baking, and now I and delighted to share my Best Ever Pizza Dough recipe with you.

So how can I call this Pizza Dough the Best Ever? It’s simple: this dough is mixed by hand without the need for a machine. It ferments overnight to give great flavor and texture and best of all the dough lasts up to 4 days in the fridge. In the end you get restaurant quality professional pizza. The results will be the BEST-EVER Pizza you make at home, I promise you that.

Now, even though I normally would be on the sweeter side of baking I do know a thing or twoabout making pizza. When I lived in San Francisco I turned the sitting room of the old Georgian townhouse I rented into an underground restaurant and fed my friends, friends of friends, and hungry strangers fresh pizzas from my rickety old gas oven! I called it “Knead to Know.” I only invited my friends so you would “knead to know” one of my friends to find out about it.(Get it?)

Those of you who follow my recipes will know that I swear by the “No Knead” technique for bread making. This method uses time to develop a dough, and time is equal to a deeply developed flavor and bubbly texture.

You can pretty much makeany type of bread or yeasted dough using this method. Ever want to make soft Pretzels but are intimidated by the method? Here is myNo-Knead Pretzel Recipe. They are incredibly easy to make and the results are some of the best soft Pretzels you will taste. I also have madeNo-Knead Brioche,No-Knead Cinnamon Raisin Breadand even No-Knead Cinnamon Rolls.

My recommendation for successful No-Knead Pizza Dough is read through mymethod and all of my tips. Print off the recipe and take notes, what temperature you used, how long you bake, etc. Basically what works for you and what doesn’t. This helps you perfect your dough and your skills.

Make sure to check out a few of my other favorite pizza flavors including , and along with my 5-minute pizza sauce below.

And be sure to sign up HERE for my FREE Newsletter to get the latest Bigger Bolder Baking news including exclusive recipes!

Get All Of My Pizza Recipes

I know a thing or two about homemade pizza!

  • Deep Dish Pizza
  • The Best New York Pizza Recipe Outside of NY
  • Cauliflower Pizza Crust In 5 Simple Steps
  • The Simplest Sourdough Pizza Crust (That’s Perfectly Chewy)
  • The Most BUBBLY Focaccia Pizza You’ll Ever Make (No-Knead)!
  • Stovetop Pizza: Making Pizza Without An Oven
  • Pear, Prosciutto, and Gorgonzola No-Knead Pizza
  • 15-Minute Pizza Dough Recipe (No Yeast)
  • Microwave Mug Pizza
  • Pepperoni Pizza Rolls
  • Crazy Dough Pizza
  • Pizza Cupcakes
  • Pizza Pull Apart Bread
  • Pizza Savory Pop-Tarts

Try These Recipes!

Homemade Corn Tortillas Recipe
Easy Sourdough Popovers Recipe
Homemade Dumpling Wrappers
Wholesome Breakfast Pizza Recipe (No-Knead)

Watch The Recipe Video!

No-Knead Pizza Dough

4.72 from 601 votes

Print Recipe

Learn how to make my best-ever Pizza Dough recipe using the no-knead technique to make some of the best Homemade Pizza you'll ever enjoy.

Author: adapted from americanfood.com

Servings: 4 pizzas

  • Dinner
  • Cheese
  • Baking Pans

Prep Time 15 minutes mins

Cook Time 10 minutes mins

Total Time 25 minutes mins

Learn how to make my best-ever Pizza Dough recipe using the no-knead technique to make some of the best Homemade Pizza you'll ever enjoy.

Author: adapted from americanfood.com

Servings: 4 pizzas

Ingredients

  • 3 1/2 cups (18oz/497g) unbleached all-purpose flour
  • 1/4 teaspoon dried yeast (I use instant)
  • 2 teaspoons salt
  • 1 1/3 cups (10 1/2floz/ 298g) water ( at blood temperature)
  • 2 tablespoons olive oil

Instructions

  • In a large bowl or a plastic container with a lid, add in the flour, salt and yeast. Do not add the yeast and salt directly on each other as this can deactivate the yeast.

  • Mix all of your dry ingredients together well

  • Mix the oil into the water.

  • Pour the blood temperature water/oil mixture in all at once and stir with a wooden spoon or your hand, which is what I prefer so you can tell by the feel of the dough if you need more water early on. Adjust the water to your flour, do not over-wet it.

  • Mix it until all of the flour is incorporated into the dough and is hydrated. You don’t want any lumps of flour left dry. You can see it will be a wet, saggy dough.

  • With a spatula scrape the dough off the sides of the container to join the dough. Put the lid on the container tightly or cover your bowl with plastic wrap ensuring that no air gets into your dough as it rests. Air can cause the dough to form a skin which is not good for a dough.

  • Allow the dough to sit at room temperature and ferment for about 12-18 hours at cool room temperature. Or you can proof it for about one hour to get it moving and refrigerate it until you wish to use it.

  • After18 hours in a cool place, if you are not planning on baking off the dough you can refrigerate it. The dough can be kept in the fridge for up to 5 days at this stage and baked off any time. While in the fridge the flavor will deepen over that time, developing sourdough characteristics.

  • The next day the dough will have more than doubled in size with lots of the bubbles on top. Also it will smell boozy and fermented. This is exactly what you want.

  • Dust your hands and the surface of the dough with a little flour, just enough to prevent it from sticking to your hands. Gently turn out the dough onto a floured surface. Don’t knock out the air from the dough.

  • Cut the dough into 4 pieces and using extra flour to handle if needed. If you are using it from the fridge this action will wake up the dough for you.

  • Lightly knead each portion of dough just to form a ball. Allow the dough to rest on a floured board covered for 30 minutes. Your pizza dough is ready to use!

  • On a flat baking tray or pizza peel, dust it with flour or semolina. With floured hands gently stretch your pizza dough to 10 inches. You can also use a rolling pin to stretch it out. If you find the dough is springing back and is hard to stretch then let it rest for 10 minutes on the board.

  • Once you have gotten your desired thickness spread on your sauce and add your topping.

  • Important note: Less is more. You don’t want to add too many heavy topping on your pizza otherwise you won’t be able to slide it off the baking tray onto the cast iron tray.

  • Bake at 450oF (225oC) for roughly 10 minutes or until the base is crisp and golden brown

  • Any dough that does not get used can be refrigerated or even frozen

  • NOTE: As with all dough recipes, the amount of flour will vary depending on weather, brand of flour, etc. Use as much flour as you need to handle the dough, but keep in mind that the stickier the dough, the better the texture of your pizza crust will be.

Subscribe

1.4K Comments

most useful

newest oldest

Inline Feedbacks

View all comments

Best-Ever Pizza Dough Recipe (No Knead) - Gemma’s Bigger Bolder Baking (11)

Anjalee

4 years ago

I prepared this today for Christmas lunch and it was awesome! Thank you so much for the recipe. I brushed olive oil in the edges of the crust and used a parchment paper to transfer the pizza into the heated pan. It was really very easy to transfer with that! Turned out amazing!

32

Reply

View Replies (3)

Anna Lee

4 years ago

Posted a photo of the first pizza my husband ever made. You challenged him to make a pizza and he accepted the challenge. He made the dough late last night. Made your 5 minute pizza sauce and two pizza’s for dinner. Dough for two more in our frig. Great crust and sauce. Thanks for challenging him! Now he is challenging our six married children. Fun family thing to do together even living in different states.

22

Reply

View Replies (2)

Best-Ever Pizza Dough Recipe (No Knead) - Gemma’s Bigger Bolder Baking (13)

Erin Malone-Ferguson

3 years ago

Hi Gemma,

The no knead pizza crust is fantastic. 4 out of 5 Ferguson’s agree (the 5th Ferguson didn’t get to have any). It was gobbled up to quick. Just curious if this recipe could be doubled in the same bowl or would it be more preferable to just make two batches?

Many Thanks for sharing,
Erin Malone-Ferguson

11

Reply

View Replies (5)

Best-Ever Pizza Dough Recipe (No Knead) - Gemma’s Bigger Bolder Baking (14)

david

4 years ago

Using Gemma’s Bigger Bolder Baking pizza dough recipe which is the gold standard, I tried a new flour that has taken my pizza to new heights. The flour is Central Milling 00 pizza flour. It’s hard to find in stores but available on their website. I followed their recommendation to let the dough ferment in the fridge for about 3 days. The result was restaurant quality in texture (great crunch), flavor and appearance. My next adventure is to experiment with sour dough. Thank you again Gemma for a great go to pizza dough recipe.

11

Reply

View Replies (3)

Best-Ever Pizza Dough Recipe (No Knead) - Gemma’s Bigger Bolder Baking (15)

Jo Good

3 years ago

Thank you for this recipe Genmma. We are a family of only two, can these doughs be frozen?

6

Reply

View Replies (1)

Best-Ever Pizza Dough Recipe (No Knead) - Gemma’s Bigger Bolder Baking (16)

Rosie

3 years ago

Hi Gemma! I just love your recipes. They’re always amazing. I have tried this pizza recipe once and they’re gorgeous. However, on my second try, I the dough was too wet and saggy. I don’t know what went wrong. Despite adding flour one too many times, it still wouldn’t improve. Can I still salvage them? Thanks for the help.

6

Reply

View Replies (1)

Kim Armstrong Sina

4 years ago

Hi Gemma,
We love this recipe! Our pizza turned out great.
One question we have is whether this can be prepared in a bread maker as is or if we would have to change the quantities of the ingredients.
Thanks,
Kim

6

Reply

View Replies (2)

Best-Ever Pizza Dough Recipe (No Knead) - Gemma’s Bigger Bolder Baking (18)

Kriszta Cs

3 years ago

Hi Gemma,

thank you for this pizza dough recipe. I’ve made it for launch today and it was awsome. My family loved it. Best dough recipe so far.
Greetings from Hungary

5

Reply

View Replies (1)

Best-Ever Pizza Dough Recipe (No Knead) - Gemma’s Bigger Bolder Baking (19)

Stephanie

2 years ago

Can you tell what blood temperature water means ? Lukewarm ? Thanks

2

Reply

View Replies (2)

Meina Teo

3 years ago

Thanks for the great receipt! Today I have done 4 pizza for my families 😍

2

Reply

View Replies (1)

This Recipe Made By Bold Bakers

151 Images

Best-Ever Pizza Dough Recipe (No Knead) - Gemma’s Bigger Bolder Baking (21)

Kevin Kurtz

Best-Ever Pizza Dough Recipe (No Knead) - Gemma’s Bigger Bolder Baking (22)

Sophie

Best-Ever Pizza Dough Recipe (No Knead) - Gemma’s Bigger Bolder Baking (23)

Chris

Best-Ever Pizza Dough Recipe (No Knead) - Gemma’s Bigger Bolder Baking (24)

Sal Kamal Adam

Best-Ever Pizza Dough Recipe (No Knead) - Gemma’s Bigger Bolder Baking (25)

Fiona

Best-Ever Pizza Dough Recipe (No Knead) - Gemma’s Bigger Bolder Baking (26)

anjicooper

About Us

Meet Gemma

Best-Ever Pizza Dough Recipe (No Knead) - Gemma’s Bigger Bolder Baking (27)

About Us

Meet Gemma

Hi Bold Bakers! I’m Gemma Stafford, a professional chef originally from Ireland, a cookbook author, and the creator of Bigger Bolder Baking. I want to help you bake with confidence anytime, anywhere with my trusted and tested recipes and baking tips. You may have seen one of my 500+ videos on YouTube & TikTok or as a guest judge on Nailed It! on Netflix or the Best Baker in America on Food Network. No matter your skills, my Bold Baking Team & I want to be your #1 go-to baking authority.

Read More

Best-Ever Pizza Dough Recipe (No Knead) - Gemma’s Bigger Bolder Baking (28)

Best-Ever Pizza Dough Recipe (No Knead) - Gemma’s Bigger Bolder Baking (2024)

FAQs

What is the secret to pizza dough? ›

The secret to great dough isn't kneading or throwing . . .

It's good old-fashioned H20. “Water, water, water,” says Falco. “Pizza dough made at home should be 50 percent water. Pizza needs to cook longer in a home oven, which means the dough needs to be more hydrated.”

What makes pizza dough more airy? ›

Strong bread flour: A higher proportion of protein and a stronger flour to allow for more gluten development. This means your dough is less likely to tear when shaping and you'll end up with a more crisp crust. Better gluten development means more air pockets, which means an airy crust.

What are the three ingredients in Jamie Oliver's pizza base? ›

Homemade deep-pan pizza: Jamie Oliver

We're talking crispy on the outside, spongy in the middle, with just three ingredients for the base – flour, salt, water. For your toppings, be creative, and embrace what's in your fridge and store cupboard – the possibilities are endless.

What not to do when making pizza dough? ›

The Most Common Mistakes When Making Pizza
  1. Not Letting the Dough Rest. ...
  2. Not Kneading the Dough for Long Enough. ...
  3. Using a Rolling Pin to Form the Dough. ...
  4. Overloading Pizza Toppings. ...
  5. Not Letting the Pizza Cook for Long Enough.

How do you get the most flavor out of pizza dough? ›

If you're keen to intensify its flavor even more, enhance the dough further – either with infused oil brushed over top, cheese woven into its edges or a combination of herbs and spices kneaded into it or sprinkled on it.

What is the best flour for pizza? ›

Double zero flour/Tipo 00 flour

Use Tipo 0 or Tipo 00 flour. Tipo is a grading of flour on the Italian flour scale. And these flours have just the right amount of protein content - around 12.5% for pizza baking.

Why won't my pizza dough stay stretched out? ›

Under-proofed pizza dough is hard to stretch and dense. An over-proofed dough will stretch too thin and won't spring up when you put it in the oven. Warm-up your dough: Cold dough is hard to stretch and more prone to tearing. Let your dough warm up to at least room temperature before stretching for best results.

Is pizza dough better the longer you let it rise? ›

Yes, it will, but very slowly. Pizza makers will cold proof dough, meaning they refrigerate it for 24 to 72 hours after it is made. Cold proofing allows the yeast to slowly eat sugar and ferment the dough, which gives it flavor. The longer you allow the dough to ferment, the more flavor it develops.

Does pizza dough get better the longer it rises? ›

The general rule is to let pizza dough rise until it has doubled in size, which could take anywhere between 1-1.5 hours. This will give the yeast time to activate and create a light, airy texture in the crust. However, I personally prefer cold-fermenting the dough for 48 hours for extra flavor.

What is the best flour for airy pizza dough? ›

The best flour for making Neapolitan Pizza Dough is 00 Pizza Flour. This type of pizza dough is thin and crispy with a slightly chewy texture. 00 Pizza Flour is an Italian-milled, finely ground wheat flour. It is perfect for Neapolitan Pizza Dough because it produces a light and airy crust with a slightly chewy centre.

What is Grandma's pizza made of? ›

Notable for its distinctly thin crust, Grandma pizza is cooked in an olive oil-coated rectangular pan and topped with mozzarella cheese and tomato sauce. (The sauce is typically layered over the cheese—not the other way around.) It's cut into square pieces for serving.

How long to leave pizza dough to rise? ›

If you're planning to make pizza today, then give the dough a rise. Clean out the mixing bowl, coat it with a little oil, and transfer the dough back inside. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap or a kitchen towel and let the dough rise until doubled in size, 1 to 1 1/2 hours. Option 3 — Store the dough in the fridge.

What is Italian pizza base made of? ›

Crust: Traditional pizza crust is similar to bread dough. It's a combination of flour, water, yeast, sugar, salt, and oil. The dough is mixed, kneaded, and allowed to rise. Once it's ready, it can be pulled or rolled flat.

How do you make pizza dough rise better? ›

Pizza dough loves warmth, so if you can find a way to add some extra heat, your dough will rise faster. One way to do this is to preheat your oven to the lowest setting (usually around 200 degrees Fahrenheit) and then turn it off. Place your pizza dough in the warm oven for 10-15 minutes until it begins to rise.

What is the key to crispy pizza dough? ›

Preheat it thoroughly — at least an hour before baking — and it will still be able to deliver a significant blast of heat to the bottom of your crust, enabling it to brown at a nice rate. If you don't have a baking steel or stone, you can bake your pizza on a preheated metal half-sheet pan.

What does adding vinegar to pizza dough do? ›

The acidic properties of vinegar inhibit gluten, some will say. This theory proposes that once the water and flour are combined, gluten starts forming, causing the dough to grow tough. Adding an acid, the theory goes, stops the gluten in its tracks and rescues the crust from toughness.

What makes pizza dough stronger? ›

The secret to strong dough that stretches easily? '00' Pizza Flour.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Otha Schamberger

Last Updated:

Views: 6169

Rating: 4.4 / 5 (55 voted)

Reviews: 86% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Otha Schamberger

Birthday: 1999-08-15

Address: Suite 490 606 Hammes Ferry, Carterhaven, IL 62290

Phone: +8557035444877

Job: Forward IT Agent

Hobby: Fishing, Flying, Jewelry making, Digital arts, Sand art, Parkour, tabletop games

Introduction: My name is Otha Schamberger, I am a vast, good, healthy, cheerful, energetic, gorgeous, magnificent person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.