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Dough Ball After Kneading
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5 from 1 vote

Kevin's NY-Style Pizza Dough Recipe

This is an easy-to-make NY-style pizza dough. It's all handmade with no special equipment needed.
Prep Time45 minutes
Resting Time3 days
Total Time3 days 45 minutes
Course: Main Course
Cuisine: American
Keyword: Simple Pizza Dough Recipe, New York Pizza Dough Recipe, Pizza Dough Recipe Thin Crust
Servings: 3 12"-14" Pizzas

Ingredients

  • 638 grams Bread Flour (About 4½ cups)
  • tbsp Granulated Sugar
  • 2 tsp Salt
  • 1 tbsp Active Dry Yeast
  • cups Luke Warm Water (90-100 degrees F - don't go over 120 degrees or the yeast will start to die off)
  • 3 tbsp Extra Virgin Olive Oil

Instructions

  • Whisk salt into flour in a large bowl.
  • Stir sugar into warm water to dissolve it.
  • Add yeast to warm water and give it a little stir with your finger. In 1-3 minutes it should bloom. You'll know it when you see it. If nothing happens in five minutes, your yeast is dead, and you need to start over with new yeast. See the video below for yeast that is blooming like crazy.
    Yeast Blooming
  • Add olive oil to yeast mixture.
  • Pour the water / sugar / yeast / oil mixture into the flour & salt.
  • Stir with a spatula until a shaggy ball forms.
    Ingredients are mixed and ready to knead
  • On a lightly floured work surface (I use my kitchen counter) knead the dough by hand for 10-12 minutes.
  • Pour some olive oil into your storage container. Rub it around the bottom, and just a little bit up the sides. Place one dough ball inside, roll it around in the oil, then cover. Place in refrigerator for at least two days. Three days is best. This is called a Cold Ferment.
    Dough Fermenting in the Refrigerator

Notes

1. The video above demonstrates how the yeast looks when it is blooming.
2. I use King Arthur Bread Flour.
3. It seems that most people prefer IDY (Instant Dry Yeast). I have tried both IDY and ADY (Active Dry Yeast), and feel that I get better results with ADY. It seems to get a better rise, and it tastes better - kind of like sour dough because I use three times the amount of most recipes.
4. I measure the water temperature with an instant-read thermometer.
5. To knead by hand, gather the dough into a ball, then fold the bottom right quarter away from you. Turn the dough a quarter turn counterclockwise and push forward with the heel of your hand. Continue to turn, fold, and knead. The dough's texture will be coarse at first. As you continue kneading in a steady rhythm for 10 minutes, the dough will become smooth and pliable, which indicates that the necessary gluten has been developed.
6. I like using the plastic containers you see in the above photo because it already starts the dough with a round shape. Just be sure to carefully remove it and place it onto the floured counter to start forming the pizza round that will become the thin crust. See "How to Form the Pizza Round" here.