How to Make Pizza Dough

Pizza dough is just flour, water, salt, and yeast — the magic is in the ratio and the time. Bakers express the recipe in baker’s percentages, where flour is 100% and everything else is a percentage of the flour’s weight, making it trivial to scale.

A reliable starting ratio

Ingredient Baker’s % For 500 g flour
Flour 100% 500 g
Water 62% 310 g
Salt 2% 10 g
Yeast (instant) 0.5% 2.5 g

The method

Mix until no dry flour remains, then rest 15–20 minutes. Knead until smooth and elastic, then let it rise. A slow, cold rise in the fridge for 24–72 hours develops far more flavor than a quick room-temperature rise — the single biggest upgrade for homemade pizza. Divide into balls (~250 g for a 12″ pizza), bring to room temperature, then stretch — don’t roll — to keep the airy edge.

Frequently asked questions

What hydration should pizza dough be? Around 60–65% for a home oven; higher suits very hot ovens.

Can I make it same-day? Yes, but a 1–3 day cold ferment tastes noticeably better.

Why stretch instead of roll? Rolling presses out the gas that gives a light, bubbly crust.

Skip the math: use the calculator to get your numbers instantly.

If the dough fights back and snaps when you stretch it, let it rest 10–15 minutes so the gluten relaxes, then try again — patience beats force every time. A pizza steel or stone, preheated as hot as your oven goes, is the other half of a crisp, well-risen crust.

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