Pizza dough recipe

This basic, easy pizza dough recipe is a standard in our house. I’ve been using this recipe since my college years, when my friend Cindy shared it and I wrote it down on a small note card. The card’s spent some time on our kitchen counter over the years, not hiding from pizza sauce and other ingredients as it fulfilled its culinary duty. (See the scan of the card below.)

Ingredients:

1 1/2 cups flour (our standard is 1 cup whole wheat + 1/2 cup unbleached white flour)
1 tbsp yeast
2 tbsp olive oil
1 tsp honey or sugar
2/3 cup warm water
dash of salt

Directions:

  • Preheat oven to 400°
  • Mix the yeast and honey/sugar in the warm water, cover and let it sit in a warm place for 5-6 minutes (the yeast will become bubbly).
  • Add the olive oil and salt and mix well.
  • Add the flour, mix well, and gently knead for a minute or so.
  • Transfer the dough to an oiled bowl, cover and let it rise in a warm place for 10-15 minutes.
  • Put the dough on an oiled pizza stone, spreading it evenly to the edges and leaving a bit of a ridge around the edge.
  • Cook in the oven for 6-8 minutes or so until the dough starts to lightly brown
  • Remove and add toppings.
  • Return to the oven and cook until the toppings look done and the cheese is melted with a bit of browning. This is usually another 6-8 minutes, but varies based on toppings.
  • Remove, slice, and enjoy!

Notes:

  • I’ve used different flour ratios and substituted some other flours (almond, garbanzo, etc) for 1/4 cup of the flour. The 2:1 whole wheat:unbleached white ratio above is our standard mix.
  • We often do a pesto base (Barrie makes great pesto) rather than a tomato sauce base, and occasionally make a white pie with ricotta. All have their charms.
  • Typically, I’ll do the base (pesto or tomato), then add grated mozzarella, then veggies, and then top it off with freshly grated Parmigiano-Reggiano.
  • It takes about 20-25 minutes to prep the dough and another 15 minutes or so for the two cooking stages. I get the dough started and prep the veggies while the yeast is bubbling and dough is rising. I can plan on having dinner on the table in about 45 minutes.
  • This is always better when listening to good music. Always.
  • And, of course, enjoy with a beverage of choice.

For years this handmade recipe card was stored in a little metal recipe file box. We later transferred it to a notebook where we kept our favorite recipes that weren’t in actual cookbooks. A few years ago we scanned lots of our favorites to a Dropbox folder, which is where the copy I now use digitally resides. You’ll note that the directions above have more steps. Recipes evolve, as did this one. 

Cindy & Gene's Pizza Dough

Cindy & Gene’s Pizza Dough

Vegan pizza recipe

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Vegan Pizza Recipe 

This vegan, gluten free pizza is adopted from several different recipes. Our challenge was creating a pizza that didn’t have wheat, yeast, eggs, or other dairy to accommodate candida issues and some other dietary restrictions. After some trial and error this is what I came up with. We’ve been having it about once a week for several months with variations on the toppings.

Crust
2 tbsp flaxseed meal
6-7 tbsp warm water
3-4 tbsp olive oil

1 1/2 cups garbanzo flour
1 1/2 cups almond flour or meal
1/2 – 1 tsp dried roasted garlic (or to taste)
1-2 tsps dried basil (or to taste)

Preheat the oven to °425. Combine the flaxseed meal and warm water and mix well (the flaxseed mixture serves as an egg substitute and binds things together) . Let set for 10 minutes, then add the oil and mix well.

Flaxseed & water awaiting the oil.

Flaxseed & water awaiting the oil.

The stuff and the bowl. What will happen next?

The stuff and the bowl. What will happen next?

Proportions

Proportions

Flours, garlic, and herbs awaiting egg/oil mixture

Flours, garlic, and basil awaiting egg/oil mixture

Mix together the dry flours, garlic, and basil until blended. (We’ve been using basil, but other dried herbs would work just as well, and the garlic could easily be omitted).  Then add the flaxseed/oil mixture and blend until you get a sticky ball. It should have just enough moisture to blend all the dry ingredients together into a ball of dough. You might need to add a little water to get it to the right consistency.

Line a cookie sheet with parchment paper (which, contrary to popular belief, is not grown on Parchman Farm). Put the ball of dough on the parchment paper and place another piece of parchment paper on top. Roll with a rolling pin until the dough is 1/4-3/8″ thick. Mine is never anything close to round (see the photo above for proof). Pinch the edges up to form a small ridge that will deter pizza sauce from escaping the dough and fleeing to the pan. But don’t put the sauce on yet!

Now it’s time to cook the dough. I have a convection oven and I bake it for 8-9 minutes, but it might take a bit longer in a regular oven. It will kinda look like it’s starting to brown, contingent upon the type of almond meal or flour you use. Sometimes I use a light almond flour and it’s easy to tell when the crust is starting to brown a bit. With a darker almond meal it’s not as easy to tell.

Now it’s topping time!

Chopped kalamata olives, portobello mushrooms, sauce, and almond cheese.

Chopped kalamata olives, portobello mushrooms, sauce, and almond cheese.

This is where all kinds of variations can occur and you’re on your own. Of course you can make your own sauce, but this is often a weeknight quick meal, so I opt for various canned organic sauces. Sometimes it’s Muir Glen, sometimes the Whole Foods house brand (above). There are a few vegan cheese options out there that you can use, such as Daiya, but I cheat a bit with the cheese, using Lisanatti Foods mozzarella style almond cheese (Note: this cheese isn’t actually vegan as it contains casein, so it has dairy protein in it.  While this doesn’t affect some of the food issues we’re dealing with, it might affect you.)  And pretty much anything goes when it comes to veggies. We’re experimenting with a version that has cherries and caramelized onions, but it’s not quite ready to leave the test kitchen and appear on Epicurean Librarian.

Your process may vary, but I typically put a layer of sauce, a layer of cheese, the portabellos and kalamatas, then a thin layer of cheese on top. Then pop it back into the oven and bake until the cheese starts to brown a bit, typically 7-9 minutes. Here’s what you get:

Chopped kalamata olives, portobello mushrooms, sauce, and almond cheese.

Chopped kalamata olives, portobello mushrooms, sauce, and almond cheese.

We’ve found this basic crust recipe is open to many variations. More about that in future posts.

Enjoy! Feel free to leave a comment!

(Information about the Epicurean Librarian photo is posted in the footer).