Homemade Pizza Dough - New York Pizza
User Reviews
5
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Prep Time
1 hr 15 mins
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Cook Time
6 mins
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refrigerating time (cold fermenting)
1 d
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Total Time
1 d 1 hr 21 mins
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Servings
4
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Calories
655 kcal
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Course
Main Course
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Cuisine
Italian
Homemade Pizza Dough - New York Pizza
Description
The recipe combines bread flour with cold water, instant yeast, salt, sugar, and olive oil to produce a dough that is kneaded by hand into a cohesive ball. After resting to warm and ferment briefly, the dough is portioned into equal balls, then tightly balled to develop surface tension, which aids oven spring during baking. The hydration and yeast percentages are set to produce a balanced crumb with a slight chew and crispness when baked.
Each dough ball is designed to make a 14-16 inch round pizza typical of New York style, supporting toppings like mozzarella, crushed tomatoes, and Pecorino Romano cheese. The dough can be cold fermented in the refrigerator to enhance flavor and may be frozen for up to three months after a cold ferment. Once baked, the pizza is best served fresh but leftovers can be reheated in the oven.
For best baking results, using a pizza steel is advised; a pizza stone will require a slightly longer bake. Precise dough handling and balling techniques are important to achieve the ideal texture and shape of the New York pizza crust.
Ingredients
For the dough - makes 4 (345) gram dough balls
- 813 grams bread flour or roughly 6 1/2 cups
- 521 grams water or 2 1/4 cups, cold tap
- 3 grams instant yeast or 1 teaspoon
- 16 grams salt or 2 3/4 teaspoons, fine sea salt
- 9.5 grams sugar or 2 1/4 teaspoons
- 27 grams olive oil or 2 tablespoons
For the pizza
- 1 gram DOUGH ball shape
- 10-12 ounces mozzarella cheese shredded, whole milk, low moisture
- 9-10 ounces crushed tomatoes
- 1 tablespoon semolina flour only for dusting wood pizza peel
- 1/2 teaspoon oregano dried
- 2 tablespoons Pecorino Romano cheese
- 1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
Instructions
For the dough
- Place the water in a large bowl. Mix together the dry ingredients in a separate bowl.
- Add dry ingredients to water a bit at a time and mix thoroughly with a wooden spoon to form a dry rough mass.
- Pour the oil over the dough, mix it in, and place all the rough dough onto a work surface. A large plastic cutting board works well to avoid any sticking.
- Knead the dough for 5 minutes. If the dough is too sticky, place a clean bowl inverted over the dough and wait 30 minutes before resuming. Return to kneading after 30 minutes and make sure to knead the dough for at least 5 minutes total.
- Place the bowl over the dough once more and let sit for 30-40 minutes to warm up.
- Divide the dough into 4 equal-sized balls, weighing them to ensure they are roughly 345 grams (or 12 ounces) each.
- Pull the dough towards its end repeatedly to form a smooth ball. Pinch the seam side and leave it on the bottom. Place the dough balls into an oiled bowl (use 1 tablespoon of olive oil and wipe it all over the bowl) and cover with plastic wrap. Refrigerate for at least 24 hours before using.
Making the pizza
- Remove the dough from the refrigerator at least 2 hours prior to shaping.
- Add the salt to the crushed tomatoes and mix. Place pizza steel on the second highest rack of the oven. Preheat the oven to the highest temperature for 45 minutes prior to shaping dough. Sprinkle semolina flour onto your wooden pizza peel and sprinkle regular flour onto a large work surface.
- Carefully remove the dough ball from the container, without degassing, and drop it into a large container with flour. Flip the doughball over, then place the dough ball onto your floured work surface with the sticky side up (the side that faced down in the proofing container is the sticky side).
- Begin opening the doughball by pressing down on the dough with fingertips to gently stretch it out. Form an outside crust or rim but don't touch the rim. Leave more thickness in the center of the dough. Rotate the dough (2-3 times) and gently stretch it to make it get larger.
- Bring the dough onto the knuckles of your hands and with the sticky dough side facing up, stretch the dough to form a 15-16" circle. Once the circle is formed place it onto the wooden peel.
- Make any gentle adjustments to stretch the pizza round, being careful to not deflate the rim. Hold the wooden peel and make sure the pizza moves back and forth. If it sticks at all add more semolina flour under the pizza and test again.
- Spread the crushed tomato and salt mixture onto the pizza and then the mozzarella cheese taking care to not touch the rim. Sprinkle the oregano and Pecorino Romano onto the pizza.
- Using an infrared digital thermometer, test that the pizza steel is at least 590f. Once the steel is hot enough carefully launch the pizza onto the steel and close the oven door. Rotate the pizza with a metal peel after 3 minutes and remove with the metal peel when done (approximately 6-7 minutes total cooking time).
- Use a pizza cutting wheel to cut the pizza into 8 slices and enjoy your homemade New York pizza!
Notes
- The dough can be mixed using a Kitchen Aid mixer by combining water and half the dry ingredients first, then slowly adding the rest and olive oil, mixing 4 minutes with a dough hook before hand kneading 1-2 minutes to ball.
- The recipe yields four dough balls weighing about 345 grams each, suitable for 14-16" New York style pizzas.
- Use a pizza steel for faster bake times; pizza stones add about 3-4 minutes longer baking.
- Dough balls can be frozen for up to 3 months after at least 24 hours of cold fermentation; wrap tightly in plastic wrap.
- Leftover dough balls keep in the refrigerator for up to 3 days or frozen up to 3 months; reheat pizza in the oven at 350°F until warm.
Nutrition Information
Show DetailsNutrition Facts
Serving: 4Serving
Amount Per Serving
Calories 655 kcal
% Daily Value*
| Calories | 655kcal | 33% |
| Carbohydrates | 44.2g | 15% |
| Protein | 28.3g | 57% |
| Fat | 40.7g | 63% |
| Saturated Fat | 15.8g | 79% |
| Cholesterol | 45mg | 15% |
| Sodium | 1399mg | 58% |
| Potassium | 108mg | 2% |
| Fiber | 5.2g | 21% |
| Sugar | 4.4g | 9% |
| Calcium | 462mg | 46% |
| Iron | 4mg | 22% |
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet.