
I’m baaaaaaack and I missed you!
I’m currently suffering from Empty Nest Syndrome since my family left yesterday. Luckily, the Bachelorette and some leftover wine consoled me last night.
Saturday night, I threw a ‘Build your own pizza party’ with my family. Initially, I was worried that the pizza wouldn’t turn out and everyone would be disappointed, but my worries vanished as soon I saw the beautiful pizzas come out of the oven and the kids faces light up!

If you followed my Project Food Blog journey last year, you may know that I used to be terrified to make my own pizza dough crust from scratch. Actually, any type of bread baking involving yeast terrified me for years! I stuck to buying pre-made crusts at the grocery store. It was only when I was faced with Project Food Blog’s Pizza Challenge, that I had to face my pizza dough fears and dive right in.

That night, I tried out 5-6 pizza dough recipes right there in my kitchen with a bottle of wine. It was fabulous. I created all kinds of flavours like herb and cheeze, chocolate, and cinnamon sugar. Most of them tasted horrible, but I was learning!

After 10 trials of pizza dough, I finally conquered my pizza dough fear and I discovered that sometimes you just have to get flour in your keyboard, dough stuck in your hair, and polish off a bottle of wine until you find your groove. it’s a life mantra, really.
After talking with my family this weekend, I discovered that so many of us have this same fear about making pizza dough from scratch. Today, I’m going to show you step by step how to make the pizza dough of your dreams!
I’ll wait here for a second while you get your apron on and pour yourself some wine.
Ready?

Let’s begin.
How To Make Homemade Whole Wheat Pizza Dough
Recipe –> For my whole wheat pizza dough recipe, I used this ‘Amazing Whole Wheat Pizza Crust’ by Marla on Allrecipes.com. It is rated 4.5/5 stars by 578 users! It’s my fav!
Step 1) Proof your Yeast
In a large bowl, dissolve 1 teaspoon of white sugar in 1 and 1/2 cups warm water (about 45C/110F). Stir until dissolved. Now sprinkle 1 tablespoon dry active yeast on top of the sugar-water mixture and let stand until foamy, for 8-10 minutes.
It will look like this after 10 minutes (if it doesn’t foam, your yeast is inactive!)

Step 2) Mix in olive oil and flour
Add 1 tablespoon olive oil into the yeast mixture and gently stir. Now, mix in 2 cups of whole wheat flour and 1 cup of all-purpose flour and stir until the dough starts to come together.

The dough will be very cracked and scruffy looking at this point and this is totally NORMAL! Do not fear!!

Step 3) Flour the surface
Add the remaining 1/2 cup of all-purpose flour onto the counter and place dough on top.

Tip: At this point, soak your bowl in soap and warm water for easy rinsing later!

Step 4) Knead the dough
Now it’s time to knead the dough (for a great video tutorial, see here) until all of the flour has been absorbed and the ball of dough becomes very smooth and non-tacky. This is the point when you will feel like you did something horribly wrong because your dough looks like crap! But, trust me, it will eventually come together in 8-10 minutes of kneading!!! It really does take the full 8-10 minutes until it comes together. Shape into a ball. Once you make a few pizza doughs, you will know exactly when it’s ready.

And yes, kneading dough by hand is a workout, but we’ve never been afraid of a little work, right?
I tried a few pizza doughs with my KitchenAid stand mixer dough hook last Fall and they never came out as good as kneading by hand. There’s a reason why pizzerias still knead dough by hand!

5) Admire your beautiful ball of dough that you worked so hard on!
Your dough will look like this after 8-10 minutes of kneading:

6) Oil the Bowl
Rinse bowl and lightly oil it. Place dough ball in the bowl and lightly move it around to coat the ball with oil. This will prevent it from sticking to the bowl as it rises.

7) Let the dough rise
Place dough in the bowl and cover with a towel. Let it rise until it’s doubled in size, about 1 hour. In the summer, I just leave the dough on the counter, but if it’s cold, you might want to place it in the oven (NOT turned on) with the light on to keep it warm.

After rising, punch out the air.

8.) Second Rise
Divide dough into two balls (for 2 thin crusts) and place both on a floured surface. Allow the 2 balls to rise, uncovered, for 45 minutes.
I made a double batch of this dough recipe, so I had 4 balls at this stage!

9) Preheat oven and Shape the dough
Preheat the oven to 425-450F. (If using a pizza stone, preheat the pizza stone for 1 hour at 450-500 F and sprinkle on cornmeal onto your pizza peel) Punch out any remaining air in the dough and then begin shaping with your hands. I like to toss it in small circles over and over to get it going. It takes a few minutes to get the dough pliable and ready to spread onto the pizza pan or stone.
You can place your dough onto an oiled pizza pan or onto a Pizza Peel sprinkled with cornmeal if using a Pizza Stone.
Spread out the dough with your fingers until your desired shape is achieved.

Gently pinch the crust with your fingers.

I like to spread on garlic infused olive oil onto the crust to give it flavour.

10) Add your sauce and toppings!

Add your tomato, pesto, or BBQ sauce..and then sprinkle on your toppings! I used Daiya cheese on my section and most of the adults tried it and commented on how good this vegan cheese is. It’s a great non-dairy alternative!
The kids loved building their own pizzas!! So cute :)

11) Bake until golden and cooked through
If using a pre-heated Pizza Stone, use your pizza peel to gently slide the pizza onto the stone in the oven. I highly prefer pizza stones because they give the pizza a very authentic crispy crust!!
Last Fall, I tested three popular pizza baking methods:
1) Pizza pan –> Soft crust, soft interior
2) Back of a baking sheet –> Soft crust, soft interior
3) Pizza Stone –> Authentic, crunchy crust, with soft interior
The pizza stone won by a landslide!

However, on Saturday night, we used pans to save time since we had 3 large and 4 mini pizzas to cook! It was just enough dough for everyone (I made a double batch).

After baking for about 15 minutes, pizza perfection was achieved.

Nothing to be scared of, trust me!
Now, go on and try your hand at your own homemade pizza crust. I’m confident you can rock it!!

Pizza from scratch is always a crowd pleaser no matter who you are entertaining.

Pizza fear conquered.

Now who wants to come over for a pizza party?

We can have Fruit Pizza with Avocado Lime whip for dessert. ;)
I’m on my way! Pizza parties are sort of my fave ;)
Pizza party invitation accepted! The pesto pizza looks simply amazing. It has some great colors on it!
I totally agree with your verdict on the pizza stone – I just can’t have it any other way now! I’ll have to check out this dough recipe. We usually just make a white crust since the whole wheat ones we tried are so heavy, and when you’re eating pizza, you really just want a treat! But this one looks nice and soft and lovely.
yea it was a perfect combo!
Beautiful post as always! Your photography and great content keep me coming back again and again!
aww thanks!
I was thinking about making pizza from scratch this weekend – perfect timing :)
A good homemade pizza dough is hard to come by so I can’t wait to try this recipe! And apparently I should invest in a pizza stone. I totally agree that Daiya cheese is the way to go on pizza b/c it melts up so nicely!
I’d love to come over for a pizza party any day!
That fruit pizza is sooo beautiful! I would love to dive into that!
But I admit, I am scared to make dough. Yeast, rising, precise mixtures and ingredients, kneading, rising…it all scares me like I am going to mess it up!
I wish you could come and be my dough making tutor :)
I just love when kids are in the kitchen. My dream is to educate kids about healthy eating and get them involved in the cooking process. It’s so much fun, it makes me feel like a little kid myself. I love to make a mess in the kitchen. I finally got a little more comfortable using yeast, but have yet to try pizza dough, it’s on my list :) Thanks for sharing!
That looks SO GOOD! I need to get a new pizza stone, I haven’t had one in a while now because I never really used it when I had it. The dough looks perfect, though! YUM :)
Your pictures are OUT OF THIS WORLD in this post! That takes quite the talent, my friend! What kind of camera is it that you use?
thanks! its on my FAQ page :)
I’m glad you conquered your dough fears!
It doesn’t scare me, but the time consumption gets to me, so I typically make a big batch and freeze individual doughs to just pop out on rushed nights.
I really enjoyed this post Ange and it gave me hope that I too could make pizza dough. I saved a shortcut to this page! ;) I agree on the pizza stone. Nothing makes a pizza turn out more like ‘the real deal’. I even use it when cooking premade frozen pizzas. Once you use a stone, you never go back!! I just recently made Jenna’s ‘bbq chickpea pizza’ on my stone… to die for.
I’ve tried to make my own pizza dough three times before, but I’m definitely doing something wrong! I think that I just need some more practice before I can achieve that pizza perfection. Your tips will definitely help :)
hi5 sweetie. i know exactly what you are talking about when you speak of expirements in the kitchen with an apron on and a glass of wine. proud that you dug into it and glad you shared the results!
Cringe! But the way that big ol’ pizza looks at the top may just coerce me out of my fear of dough/bread making. I’ve been desperate to make naan but always talk myself out of it!
I like to follow VeganDad’s modifications to the recipe link here:
http://vegandad.blogspot.com/2009/01/naan-bread.html
I’ve made it a couple times. I haven’t totally perfected it, but it’s darn tasty and vegan! I can never find vegan naan in stores, so this definitely hits the spot.
My hubby is Gluten Free. Can I use a different flour and get the same results? I have had some success with “Perfect Flour Blend” by Namaste. Would this work? Thanks. PS: Just recently found this site and it is beautiful and I am loving it. Thank you so much.
Hey Victoria,
I would try searching for gluten free pizza dough recipes and Im sure there will be many that come up. Gluten free girl probably has one too!
Angela, whenever I try to make pizza on my rectangular stone, the center always seems to come out under done and the ingredients on top get burned the longer I cook to cook the center.
How do you keep the center of your pizzas cooked without the ingredients burning? I like my food charred occasionally, but I want to make a pizza without burning it at least once! Lol.
Would it work if you baked it on the oven’s convection setting (if you have one that is)? That helps the heat distribute evenly…we used convection since we had 3 pizzas in at the same time!
You are so good at giving step by step tutorials. I tried making pizza scratch twice. The first time it turned out great! Then I got a little too confident and tried to make pizza using polenta as the base. I baked it for like almost an hour and a half and it would NOT bake. I don’t know what I did wrong but I haven’t tried to make pizza since. I think I might have to make some homemade pizza now after reading your post! :)
Well at least you tried right? Now you know. Same with my chocolate pizza crust. Horrid. Never again. Chocolate goes on top not in the crust, I discovered!
haha well I give you props for even attempting that, I would never even think to put chocolate in a pizza!
Yay for overcoming your pizza dough fears! :) I love making my own, haven’t quite conquered bread yet though! :/ Also I love adding pesto to the base! Yum!! I’m now craving a big fat slice of pizza! :)
Looks delicious, I just wish I had more patience! Especially because I can’t imagine testing out different gluten-free flours and spending that much time on something with the possibility of a major flop. And I’m a vodka girl, takes much less time to drink than wine ;)