Alton Brown Pizza Dough Recipe (2024)

Alton Brown's pizza dough recipe has been on my radar for about 3 years. His recipe is a 65% hydration level, which is pretty close to what we have been doing at the Baking Steel Test Kitchen, though we are closer to 70% hydration. He adds a little bit of sugar, I'm guessing to help with the browning, and a heap of yeast, 9 grams to be exact. Currently, we are using about 1/10of the amount of yeast in our dough, so this was going to be a very cool test! After mixing the ingredients, the dough goes straight into the refrigerator for 24 hours. I guess Alton Brown is also a believer in a slow and cold fermentation. That doesn't surprise me!

At Baking Steel we are all about testing recipes and making things better! It was a hard challenge with Alton's recipe but we've got an ace in our back pocket. We have the tools that can make any home pizza better - Baking Steel Products! The steel conducts heat and energy to that crust, far superior to any other stone or gadget. Pair the steel with a killer dough recipe, and you know the result is going to be stellar!

Fast forward 24 hours and it's time to give the dough a whirl! Luckily, I had kept the pizza dough in an air tight container with the lid sealed shut. When I removed it from the fridge, it looked like it wanted to blast off! All that yeast had obviously been activated.

So the dough cooked marvelously and the taste was excellent! Because the hydration is a bit lower than our traditional pizza dough, it made it a bit more sturdy. I can see why he brings it on the stage with him...

Alton Brown Pizza Dough Recipe (1)

Alton Browns Pizza Dough Recipe

Recipe from Altonbrown.com

SOFTWARE

  1. 690 grams bread flour, (plus 1/2 cup or so for shaping)

  2. 9 grams active, dry yeast (I use Red Star and no, they don't pay me to say that)

  3. 15 grams sugar

  4. 20 grams kosher salt

  5. 455 grams bottled water

  6. 15 grams olive oil (plus extra for brushing crust)

  7. Sauce and pizza toppings as desired

HARDWARE

  1. Stand mixer with dough hook

  2. Large mixing bowl (optional)

  3. Plastic wrap

  4. Wooden pizza peel

  5. Pizza stone or pan or Baking Steel Original

  6. Ladle

  7. Basting brush

  8. Bench scraper (dough blade) or serrated bread knife

  9. Pizza cutter

  10. No-stick spray (or more olive oil)

Instructions

  1. Scale the dry ingredients together and place all the dry ingredients in the work bowl of your stand mixer. Scale the liquids into a measuring cup then add to the dry ingredients.

  2. Install the bowl on the mixer and attach the dough hook and turn the mixer to "stir."

  3. Mix until the dough just comes together, forming a ball and pulling away from the sides of the bowl. Increase the mixer speed to medium (4 on a Kitchen Aid) and knead for 5 minutes.

  4. Remove the dough to a lightly floured countertop and smooth into a ball. Spray a mixing bowl (or the mixer’s work bowl) with no-stick spray or rub with the oil. Place dough in bowl. Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate for 18 to 24 hours.

  5. Remove dough to counter and punch down into a rough rectangle shape then tightly roll into a log 12-15 inches in length. Split the dough into 3 equal parts using the scraper or either a large serrated knife or a dough scraper. Flatten each into a disk, then shape it into a smooth ball by folding the edges of the round in toward the center several times and rolling it between your hands on the counter. You may want to moisten the counter with water to up the surface tension a bit so that the ball tightens up instead of sliding across the counter.

  6. Cover each ball with a clean tea towel and allow to rest for 30 minutes. (At this point you can also transfer doughs to air-tight plastic containers and refrigerate for up to 8 hours. Just make sure you bring them to room temp for half an hour before forming.)

  7. To bake, heat oven (pizza stone inside on lower rack) to 500 degrees F, or hotter if possible. Give the oven a good half hour to heat up. You know what to do here. Substitute your stone for a Baking Steel Original. And we like the top rack.

  8. When you're ready to build the pizzas, sprinkle a couple teaspoons of flour on a peel and place the dough right in the middle. Pound the dough into a disk with your hands, then pick it up and pull it through your fingers to create the outer lip, a critical feature that cannot be created with a rolling pin. (In fact, rolling rather than stretching will just ruin the whole gosh-darned thing.)

  9. At this point you need to start stretching the dough. The most-efficient way to do this is to spin the dough so that the weight of the outer lip stretches the dough via centrifugal force. You can also stretch the dough on the board by turning and pulling it, and turning and pulling. Shake the peel from time to time to make sure the dough doesn't stick. Sticking would be bad.

  10. Brush the lip with oil, then dress the pizza with olive oil and tomato sauce. Even distribution is tricky, so you may want to ladle an ounce or two into the middle and then spread it out with the back of the ladle. Top with fresh herbs (oregano and basil) and a good melting cheese. I usually go with a mixture of mozzarella, Monterery Jack and provolone, but that's me.

  11. Slide the pizza onto the hot pizza stone or a Baking Steel Product. To do this, position the front edge of the peel about 1-inch from the back of the stone. Lift the handle and jiggle gently until the pizza slides forward. As soon as the dough touches the stone, start pulling the peel back toward you while still jiggling. While a couple of inches of dough are on the stone, quickly snap the peel straight back. As long as the dough isn't stuck on the peel, it will park itself nicely on the stone.

  12. Keep an eye on the dough for the first 3 to 4 minutes. If any big bubbles start ballooning up, reach in with a paring knife or fork and pop them. Bake for 7 minutes or until the top is bubbly. Then slide the peel under and lift to check the underside, which should be nicely brown.

  13. Slide the peel under the pizza and remove to the counter or a cutting board. Let it rest for at least 2 minutes before slicing with a chef's knife or pizza cutter (one of my favorite multitaskers).

Alton Brown Pizza Dough Recipe (2)

Alton Brown Pizza Dough Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is the trick to good pizza dough? ›

There are many tricks to achieving a tasty, homemade pizza dough that rises into a beautiful pizza crust, such as making sure your ingredients are at right temperature, using half bread flour for a stronger dough and half all-purpose flour for a nice rise, substituting honey for sugar to help caramelize the crust and ...

How to get pizza dough to brown? ›

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 milk to pizza dough do? ›

Milk (liquid): Strengthens gluten, helps crust brown, softens the crumb. An enzyme in milk slows the growth of the yeast and it can break down the protein in the flour and weaken the dough. Scalding the milk destroys this enzyme.

What makes pizza dough tough and chewy? ›

The chew in dough comes from the flour used to prepare it. Bread flour contains higher protein content than all-purpose flour which gives pizza crust its chew.

What not to do when making pizza dough? ›

10 Common Mistakes When Making Pizza
  1. Using the wrong flour for Pizza's dough. ...
  2. Not kneading the dough enough. ...
  3. Over-kneading the dough. ...
  4. Rolling the dough too thin. ...
  5. Overloading with toppings. ...
  6. Using cold sauce and cheese. ...
  7. Not preheating the oven properly. ...
  8. Skipping the Pizza Stone or Baking Sheet.
Sep 11, 2023

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

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 secret to a crispy pizza crust? ›

Higher heat = crunchier and tastier crust. Most home ovens only reach 240-250°C, though some have a specific 'pizza' setting. For the best results, preheat your oven and pizza stone or pan on the lower-middle shelf for at least half an hour before cooking your pizzas.

Why is my pizza crust not golden brown? ›

Pizza Crust Issue #1: Underbaked Crust

When your pizza is brown in a few spots but the crust color is predominantly white or yellowish, your oven simply isn't hot enough. There isn't enough heat built up on the baking surface to get the desired browning.

What happens if you use pizza dough before it rises? ›

It is necessary to wait for the dough to warm up and rise or the gluten will be so tight that you will not be able to stretch the dough. It will be worth the wait!

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.

Why add egg to pizza dough? ›

Whole eggs can be added to the dough to provide better browning characteristics to the dough. To some extent, they also provide a richer flavor. Egg whites have been added to improve the crispiness of the baked crust. In this regard, both perform well.

What makes pizza dough taste better? ›

Any pizza dough with a complex flavor has been slow-fermented. All this means is that the yeast it contains has had ample time to eat the simple sugars in the flour. The longer the yeast has had to feast – ideally 24 to 48 hours – the lighter and more flavorful the pizza dough will be.

What happens with too much yeast in pizza dough? ›

Not only will the flavour be affected (the yeast will convert all the sugar in the dough into alcohol, and it will taste sour), but the structure will be compromised, leaving it more likely to collapse and resulting in a really dense and floppy end product.

Why is my pizza dough like a cracker? ›

While great for making cookies, rolling pins usually result in a lot of pizza problems. Using a rolling pin on your freshly proofed dough will result in a thin, cracker-like crust. Too thin of a crust will be extremely hard to handle and won't be able to hold your toppings.

What is the secret to good pizza? ›

The top chefs all agree that the best pizzas are all about the crust, so salt in the dough should never be sacrificed at the altar of salty toppings. “Building a pizza is like building anything else – you have to make compromises and consider the whole when choosing the parts.

How can I make my pizza dough more tasty? ›

Flavor the dough, if you'd like: This is a great basic pizza dough recipe, but you can spice it up to make it more flavorful by adding a few dashes of garlic powder, dried basil, and oregano.

What makes pizza dough more crispy? ›

The secret to a more crispy pizza crust is probably not what you think. You might assume that less water will result in a crispier crust. But you'd be wrong. To achieve a more crispy crust, you'll need to add more water to the dough formula.

What can you add to pizza dough to make it better? ›

My favorite thing to add is lemon zest. You can also add herbs like thyme or oregano - fresh or dried. You might add chopped olives, or chopped sun-dried tomatoes.

References

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