Pizza dough

Jamie Oliver Pizza dough recipe

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Jamie at Home

Jamie Oliver

Date Published:
14/02/2008

Jamie:

"This is a fantastic, reliable, everyday pizza dough, which can also be used to make bread. It's best made with Italian Tipo '00' flour, which is finer ground than normal flour, and it will give your dough an incredible super-smooth texture. Look for it in Italian delis and good supermarkets. If using white bread flour instead, make sure it's a strong one that's high in gluten, as this will transform into a lovely, elastic dough, which is what you want. Mix in some semolina flour for a bit of colour and flavour if you like"

Makes 6 to 8 medium-sized thin pizza bases

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Ingredients

  • 1kg strong white bread flour or Tipo '00' flour
  • or 800g strong white bread flour or Tipo '00' flour, plus 200g finely ground semolina flour
  • 1 level tablespoon fine sea salt
  • 2 x 7g sachets of dried yeast
  • 1 tablespoon golden caster sugar
  • 4 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
  • 650ml lukewarm water

Method: How to make pizza dough

1. Sieve the flour/s and salt on to a clean work surface and make a well in the middle. In a jug, mix the yeast, sugar and olive oil into the water and leave for a few minutes, then pour into the well. Using a fork, bring the flour in gradually from the sides and swirl it into the liquid. Keep mixing, drawing larger amounts of flour in, and when it all starts to come together, work the rest of the flour in with your clean, flour-dusted hands. Knead until you have a smooth, springy dough.

2. Place the ball of dough in a large flour-dusted bowl and flour the top of it. Cover the bowl with a damp cloth and place in a warm room for about an hour until the dough has doubled in size.

3. Now remove the dough to a flour-dusted surface and knead it around a bit to push the air out with your hands - this is called knocking back the dough. You can either use it immediately, or keep it, wrapped in cling film, in the fridge (or freezer) until required. If using straight away, divide the dough up into as many little balls as you want to make pizzas - this amount of dough is enough to make about six to eight medium pizzas.

4. Timing-wise, it's a good idea to roll the pizzas out about 15 to 20 minutes before you want to cook them. Don't roll them out and leave them hanging around for a few hours, though - if you are working in advance like this it's better to leave your dough, covered with cling film, in the fridge. However, if you want to get them rolled out so there's one less thing to do when your guests are round, simply roll the dough out into rough circles, about 0.5cm thick, and place them on slightly larger pieces of olive-oil-rubbed and flour-dusted tinfoil. You can then stack the pizzas, cover them with cling film, and pop them into the fridge.

Jamie at Home book

Recipe taken from Jamie At Home by Jamie Oliver
©Jamie Oliver 200[8]. All rights reserved
Photography © David Loftus. All rights reserved

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Comments

  1. this is the best pizza recipe that i have found, i make it all the time and the whole family love it
    Posted by ford on 07/02/2010 16:35:23
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  2. me again iv also noticed that you dont use sugar on your jamie at home program but its in the recipe list when you print it off does this matter
    Posted by drew on 06/02/2010 14:24:32
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  3. hi jamie love your programs im always trying to make your recipes and you make them look so easy. Im gonna make the pizza dough my only question is that on your video jamie at home you use 550ml of lukewarm water but on the recipe that you give it says 650ml does this make any difference ? thank you
    Posted by drew on 06/02/2010 14:17:41
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  4. works a treat - don't poor all in at once is my tip. Where is the fun in rushing!
    Posted by AL on 21/11/2009 16:22:27
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  5. its all good my hero cook like i do
    Posted by will on 18/10/2009 12:49:43
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  6. I sieved out the flour onto a flat clean surface ( a large wooden block) measured out the 650ml of lukewarm water sugar and yeast made the well and started to pour in the water which promptly drained off the worktop onto the floor. Transferred the whole lot into a large pyrex and continued to add the water mixture whereupon the "dough" assumed an unmanageable porridge. What next doc.
    Posted by peter on 13/08/2009 19:33:25
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  7. I use ordinary caster sugar instead of golden and ordinary vegetable/sunflower oil instead of olive oil as these are ingredients I have in anyway and it always works for me. It still doesn't work out as cheap as shop bought pizza but is better value for money as I can get loads of really yummy pizzas with healthy toppings individualised for the kids for the price of one or two thick gunky pizzas with goodness knows what on the top (and in the base)!! And by letting the kids make their own toppings they tend to eat it rather than admitting that they have made a mess of it.
    Posted by podstick on 14/07/2009 12:30:54
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  8. Hi Boblux, re your cooking the pizza,i think your problem is that the oven does not reach the required temperature,it has to be 800ºF or more. I love to cook as well,so i know what you're going through. PS i have just built a brick oven in the garden,it takes 3 hours to heat up but reaches over 1000ºF,so i will looking forward to a good pizza tonight??.hopefully anyway.kind regards.
    Posted by animal209 on 25/04/2009 10:14:47
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  9. hi, please jamie stop using expensive stuff in your nosh.I feed 8 people every day and am trying hard to use healthy stuff but i dispair when you use things i have never heard of.I love watching the show and alter some of your recipes to suit my pocket.If you need any advice for a show on how to eat when you are totally skint,I'm your gal.
    Posted by caroline on 24/04/2009 14:38:32
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  10. i reccomend that you mix the flour and salt and yeast stuff in a bowl it's pretty hard to do it on a worktop !!!!!! yup
    Posted by sabha on 24/04/2009 13:32:31
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  11. Hi there We can confirm that all measurements in Jamie's pizza dough recipe are correct. You can find the next steps to making a pizza topping here: http://www.channel4.com/food/how-to/how-to-make-pizza_p_1.html Kind regards 4Food Ed
    Posted by 4Food Ed on 02/04/2009 10:08:28
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  12. ok.got the doug. what comes next. tomato paste / puree and or what then?
    Posted by nicola on 24/03/2009 17:09:53
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  13. 10 minutes to make, 10 hours to clean to worktop! I'd recommend mixing the dough in a bowl before kneading on the worktop, unless you have either a granite worktop or a housekeeper who'll clean it for you.
    Posted by kirsty on 08/03/2009 17:04:32
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  14. Boblux, you need a pizza stone. you can use a terracotta floor tile. Preheat that in the oven first, and put the pizza straight on to it. Failing that second best is to use the floor of the oven
    Posted by simon on 11/02/2009 20:50:42
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  15. Dear Jamie: on your show you mentioned 3 sachets of yeast, but in the above ingredients you put only 2. Knowing the big difference one sachet could make in the final results, which version is the right one? thank you. Nadia
    Posted by nadia on 28/01/2009 10:46:04
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  16. Question: On this episode, 800 grams was identified as 3 1/2 cups, but in my reference book, 3 1/2 cups are 490 grams. Was this an error in Jamie's recipe? Should there be only 3 1/2 cups of flour?
    Posted by Louisa on 24/01/2009 13:07:12
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  17. Hi, Many thanks for the pizza dough recipe. Unfortunately all my measuring devices are in ounces which I have a hard time getting conversions. Do you have a place on your site for us measuring challenged people?
    Posted by Sassi on 20/01/2009 00:43:38
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  18. this page should have a "print this page" button at the bottom of it. It would be great! Instead of wasting so much ink and paper. :)
    Posted by name on 04/01/2009 21:07:02
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  19. Been using this recipe for a while. Its wonderful. We have fan assisted oven which we put up to full blast and cook the pizza on ventillated pizza tray for 12 mins. Cooks perfectly every time.
    Posted by fiona aboyne on 31/12/2008 19:50:07
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  20. I have tried many pizza recipes and I find that the method that Jamie's uses has given the very best results. As I had no golden caster sguar, I substituted this ingredient with Malt syrup. I will always use this recipe from now on. Thanks Jamie, you're the best. I watch your programme all the time. Love Giovanna from Hoppers Crossing Victoria Australia.
    Posted by Giovanna Siccita on 27/12/2008 02:42:47
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  21. I love proper Italian pizzas. Thin base, cooked but still pliable with a firm outer crust which, although well cooked is light, often with air bubbles in the dough. I can get the dough base OK from the recipe, but am struggling with the cooking. I have a normal, fan-assisted electric oven. No maater how thin I roll our the dough, I seem to either get relatively heavy, uncooked centres in the pizza with a cooked but slightly "biscuity" edge; or, the middle is cooked but the edges are hard and crunchy. I've tried slow cooking at about 200C, fast cooking at 240C..for various times. I've tried pre-cooking the base at 200 for 7-8 mins and also for 15 mins (this worked reasonably). But I just can't get there; it's eatable but it's not right. I'm quite a good cook and this is driving me crazy. Anyone got any suggestions and what to try next?
    Posted by boblux on 19/12/2008 21:14:27
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