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Harvest & Nourish

All Recipes, Bread Recipes, Dinner, Pizza · July 9, 2023

Artisan Pizza Dough

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Last updated on August 16th, 2025

Artisan Pizza Dough. - harvestandnourish.com

This simple, overnight Artisan Pizza Dough is the best homemade pizza dough for the home oven. Perfect for any toppings, you can even use this recipe to make same-day pizza dough!

Homemade pizza truly has my heart. It’s always our first choice for Saturday night dinners, and once you’ve perfected your own crust there really is no going back.

This is my take on hand-mixed, restaurant-quality pizza dough that you can bake up in your own oven. Like my artisan bread recipes, it’s a no-knead high hydration dough made with just 4 key ingredients – flour, water, active dry yeast and kosher or fine sea salt. It’s super easy to handle – you’ll have no trouble stretching it – and results in a perfectly light and chewy crust with a tall rise every time.  

Artisan Pizza Dough. - harvestandnourish.com
Flour-dusted pizza dough balls after pre-shaping. You can see the bubble formation just beneath the surface.

Why you’ll love this Artisan Pizza Dough recipe

The key to perfect pizza dough is the slow, overnight fermentation to build strong, almost-sourdough-like flavour. Then, the high oven temperature adds a touch of smokiness while using a baking steel or pizza stone produces those much sought after, blistered bubbles and charred, crispy bottoms.

Artisan Pizza Dough. - harvestandnourish.com

This Artisan Pizza Dough can be kept in the refrigerator for up to 3 days, which pretty much makes homemade pizza a 20-minute meal that you can easily throw together on a busy weeknight. Try it with this No-Cook Tomato Sauce or this Quick Homemade Tomato Sauce!

Try these Easy Small Batch Ciabatta Rolls or this Simple Focaccia Bread next.


If you make this recipe, please tag me on Pinterest or Instagram so I can see! 

And of course, feel free to leave any questions, comments or reviews. This is the best place to reach me, and I’d love to hear from you!

Artisan Pizza Dough. - harvestandnourish.com

Simple 4-Ingredient Artisan Pizza Dough

This simple, overnight artisan pizza dough is the best homemade pizza dough for the home oven. Perfect for any toppings, you can even use this recipe to make same-day pizza dough!
Total time: 10 or 18-24 hours
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Course: Main Course
Keyword: artisan, homemade, pizza dough
Servings: 2 10”-12” pizzas or two thick-crust skillet pizzas

Equipment

  • 4 Qt mixing bowl
  • Spatula
  • Dough scraper
  • Pizza dough proofing dish
  • Parchment paper
  • Baking steel

Ingredients

  • 2 cups high-quality all-purpose flour, preferably 00 pizza flour, plus more for dusting
  • 1 teaspoon kosher or fine sea salt
  • 1 cup water, room temperature (at or near 70°F/21°C)
  • ⅛ teaspoon active dry yeast
  • Extra-virgin olive oil for brushing
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Instructions

  • Gently stir yeast into warm water and let stand for 10-15 minutes.
  • Measure flour and salt into a medium-sized bowl, stir together and let sit for 10 minutes.
  • Pour yeast and water mixture into flour and mix with a rubber spatula just until combined. Set spatula aside and begin to mix by hand, wetting your hand before mixing to prevent sticking. As you mix, reach underneath the dough and pull ¼ of it up and stretch it out and back over the top of the dough to the other side. Turn the dough and repeat 3 or more times until a ball has formed. At this point the dough will be sticky. Sprinkle flour over the dough and cover with a dry tea towel to let rise for 1 hour or until it has grown to about 30% larger and is puffy and smooth.
  • Uncover dough and, with wet hands, pull one side of the dough out from the centre and stretch and fold it back over the remaining dough, gently pressing the edges downward to seal the edge. Turn bowl 90 degrees and repeat, stretching then folding the dough three more times so the seam faces upward. Place ball seam side down, dust with flour then cover again and let sit for 1 hour.
  • Remove cover once again and perform 4 coil folds (*see note below), lifting and stretching the dough from the centre, turning clockwise 90 degrees after each fold until 4 to 6 folds have been completed. Tuck edges underneath and brush entire surface of dough with olive oil. Cover bowl tightly and let stand to rise overnight.
  • Once the dough has doubled or tripled in size by morning, it’s ready to be divided. Turn out the dough onto a lightly floured surface and dust with flour. Using a dough scraper, divide it into equally sized portions (two or three pieces depending on how many pizzas you’re making).
  • Sprinkle a little flour on your hands then pre-shape your pizza dough using the cinch method (*see note below). Working gently and taking care not to degas the dough, slowly fold each section over into itself while turning it in your hands, pinching the dough towards the bottom as you go to create a ball with no seam left. Repeat with remaining sections, placing them into a lightly floured, high-walled baking dish as you go. (I like to use an airtight glass covered baking dish at this stage, but a baking sheet and plastic wrap will also work.) Lightly flour the tops, cover and let proof for 5-6 hours until you’re ready to stretch out your dough. At this point the dough balls will have relaxed a little and be soft and puffy to the touch.
  • Once you’re ready to bake your pizza, transfer dough, still in proofing container, to refrigerator and chill for at least 30 minutes. This cold proof will help further strengthen the dough to make it easier to shape. While the dough is chilling, preheat oven to 500ºF (260ºC) and prepare your toppings.
  • Scrape the first dough ball out onto a generously floured surface. Using floured hands and working from the inside out, press and stretch the dough outwards to shape your crust being careful to leave a 1-inch margin at the edges with any air bubbles left untouched. Once shaped, gently lift and transfer the dough onto parchment paper. Assemble pizza(s) with tomato sauce and your desired toppings then transfer to baking steel and bake for 6-7 minutes (for smaller pizzas) or 8-9 minutes (for a larger pizza) until golden with slightly charred edges. (*Optional: Once baked, turn oven to broil, remove parchment and continue cooking under the broiler for ~2 minutes to deepen charring.)

Notes

Flour: If not using 00 pizza flour you can use any bread or all-purpose flour which will give you a slightly thicker, chewier crust. To make a whole wheat pizza, sub 1/3 whole wheat flour for a balanced dough that goes well with hearty toppings like artichokes, kale, sardines and more.
Oil: Unlike many dough recipes, this recipe does not include any oil resulting in a crisper, more airy crust. Only a very small amount of oil is used for brushing to prevent sticking and a skin from forming while proofing.
A note on dough hydration: Most pizza dough recipes come out somewhere between 65 and 70-75% hydration where 75% is considered high. As noted above this is a wet, high-hydration dough, a variation of my artisan bread recipes. I prefer the fuller taste and complex structure of high hydration doughs. The key when handling it is to add bits of flour as necessary to keep it from sticking to the proofing vessel, the shaping surface and your hands. *This does not apply when performing your folds, for which I recommend wetting your hands with lukewarm water and even repeating this step 2-3 times if necessary. The fold sets, extended fermentation and cold proof before baking will all work to strengthen your dough. And unlike bread doughs, flour is your friend here and should be used liberally. Lastly, using parchment to transfer your pizza(s) into the oven will counter any residual stickiness should you have any difficulty.
Folding the dough during bulk fermentation: Together, both the stretch-and-fold and coil fold steps will produce tension and layers that will enhance both gluten development and structure and make the dough easier to work with. For this higher hydration dough, the 2 sets of stretch-and-folds and 4 to 6 coil folds will be enough to develop the gluten and result in an even dough with optimal structure to get that crispy, airy crust we crave.
Stretch and folds: Stretching and folding creates 4 new layers in the dough with each set. I like to use this process first, early in the bulk fermentation stage. To perform the stretch and fold, wet your hands and pick up one end of the dough. Stretch it then fold it back over the top, gently pressing it down into the centre with your fingers. Turn the proofing container 90 degrees and repeat 3 more times until each side of the dough has been stretched and folded, with the seam facing up.
Coil folds: Coil folding is a gentler method of handling the dough and focuses more on the fold than the stretch. It helps to prevent over-stretching and over-working what is now a partially fermented dough and produces a more even distribution of tension and gases without risking degassing. Similar to a stretch and fold, coil folds should be performed on the dough without removing it from its proofing container. To perform a coil fold, pick up the dough from the middle and lift, allowing it to stretch until one end releases from the proofing container. Then lower the dough to tuck the loose end under the middle and repeat this process for the other end. Rotate the container 90 degrees and repeat the process until the dough holds its shape (from 4 to 6 times).
Cinching: A technique most often used to shape lower hydration bread doughs, I find cinching to be a quick and easy method that’s ideal for forming pizza dough balls during the pre-shaping phase. It is the last step prior to baking that allows you to manually incorporate more strength into the dough. To perform this step, fold the top two corners of the dough to the middle, then carefully roll the dough from the top to bottom, creating a log shape with the seam side on the bottom. Place the ball of dough in the palm of your hand and gently turn it, pinching the ends under as you go, 4 or 5 times until there is no seam left. At this point your dough ball will be soft and smooth to the touch and you should be able to see good bubble formation just beneath the surface.
The longer the fermentation, the richer flavour: This recipe is flexible enough to produce a same day pizza, even though I think the longer rise time results in a more flavourful dough with a bubblier texture that is easier to stretch and shape.
To make same-day pizza dough: Mix at 8 am, perform one set of folds after 60 minutes, let proof, shape into balls at 5 pm then refrigerate and make pizza at 6 pm or any time over the next 3 days.
To bake on a sheet pan: Spread dough onto pan, top with tomato sauce then pre-bake at 450 degrees for 10 minutes. Remove from oven and place on heat-safe cooling rack. Top with cheese and any additional toppings, then return to oven and bake for an additional 10-12 minutes until done.
To freeze: Pizza dough can be frozen once shaped into balls then stored for up to 3 months. Simply place dough into an airtight container or well-sealed freezer bag. When ready to bake, transfer frozen dough from freezer to refrigerator to thaw for 1 day or at room temperature for 4 to 8 hours. Remove dough from plastic, cover and let proof as above until soft and puffy to the touch.
To reheat pizza: Place leftover pizza on a baking sheet and warm at 350ºF (177ºC) for 5 minutes just until heated through.

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