This whole wheat pizza dough yields our family’s favourite pizza crust; crispy and chewy, flavourful crust that holds up to anything you put on it.
Why make a pizza crust from whole wheat pizza dough? I know, I know. Pizza isn’t exactly health food.
Oh sure, whole wheat pizza dough has more protein, vitamins, riboflavin, folate, iron, and calcium than white flour pizza dough, but whole wheat pizza dough has a little trick up its sleeve that has nothing to do whatsoever with health food.
What Ingredients Do I Need?
- All-Purpose Flour
- Whole Wheat Flour
- Semolina Flour (Don’t worry! I share a substitute if you don’t have this!)
- Olive Oil
- Water
- Salt
- Sugar
- Active Dry Yeast or Instant Yeast
Whole wheat pizza crust
You may be wondering why we use three different types of flour in this whole wheat pizza dough recipe. There are some very compelling reasons for combining these flours.
Each of these types of flour has different characteristics it brings to the table. While it is possible to make a whole wheat pizza dough from 100% whole wheat, it just doesn’t have the texture I want in a pizza crust.
It yields a crust that I find more stodgy and more virtuous nutritionally than pleasant to eat. I don’t know about you, but I don’t care enough about turning my pizza into health food to sacrifice its taste.
Using a combination of all-purpose flour, semolina flour, and whole wheat flour makes a whole wheat pizza crust that my whole family loves.
All-purpose flour is a mid-strength, mid-gluten content flour that’s pretty decent in just about anything requiring flour. It’s a workhorse.
All-purpose flour is usually made from a mixture of soft and hard wheat grains. Protein levels can vary by producer, so if you find a producer you like, it’s nice to stick with them for consistent results. I’m partial to King Arthur Flour.
Semolina flour is a super-high gluten content flour that is made from durum wheat. Please don’t confuse it with rice semolina or corn semolina which are not interchangeable.
Semolina flour is used in many pastas and couscous because its high protein/gluten content makes a dough that holds its shape quite well even after cooking. It lends a nice crackle to the exterior of our Whole Wheat Pizza Dough, but keeps the inside yielding and soft as well as chewy.
Why not just use it instead of mixing it with all-purpose flour then? Well, semolina flour tends to be a little more delicate to work with when used alone.
It’s susceptible to over-kneading or over mixing, and makes a dough that tends to rip instead of stretch. Combining it with all-purpose flour helps mitigate this issue.
If you absolutely cannot find or refuse to order semolina flour (which is also delicious in our braided semolina bread), you can substitute an equal amount by volume (instead of weight) of all-purpose flour or high-gluten bread flour. It will definitely change the end product’s texture, but it will still be tasty!
And that brings us to the star of today’s pizza crust: whole wheat flour.
Whole Wheat Flour in Baked Goods
Whole wheat flour gives baked goods a richer, heartier flavour you just cannot get from white all-purpose flour. A lot of folks think that whole wheat flour makes denser baked goods, but it doesn’t need to be that way if you know a few handy tricks.
- Whole wheat flour absorbs more liquid than white flour, so whole wheat recipes need to have a little more liquid added. In general, you’re looking at adding about a tablespoon of extra water per cup of whole wheat flour.
- Because it takes a little while for the flour to absorb the extra water, your whole wheat pizza dough will start out a little stickier than one made with white all-purpose flour. Don’t add extra flour, it’ll all come right in the end. That brings us to…
- You really can’t hurry the rise time with whole wheat baked goods. While your room temperature and humidity will contribute to how fast your whole wheat pizza dough rises, you really just need to watch it. Has it doubled in bulk? If so, you’re ready to go! If not, you’re going to need to put on your patience hat and just wait it out.
- Patience is also recommended when rolling or stretching your whole wheat pizza dough.
- Remember this is not likely to rise quite as high as the equivalent amount of dough made from 100% all-purpose flour. That’s okay. That’s part of what gives it that crisp-yet-chewy texture.
Whole wheat pizza dough is the homemade pizza dough that fulfilled my pizza crust fantasy. This is crust upon which dreams are built.
Is it hyperbole? I’ll let you be the judge. I will say, though, that every time I make this whole wheat pizza dough, my husband says “You make the best pizza dough!”
Great Pizzas to Make with Whole Wheat Pizza Crust
I’m super keen on pizza, in case you haven’t been around here long enough to notice. This recipe does make a lot of dough, but I’ve got a great many recipes this dough works for.
Of course, this whole wheat pizza crust is insanely delicious with the standard pepperoni-and-cheese toppings, but there’s so much more. You can see the Trashed Up Barbecue Turkey Pizza and Ranch Cream Cheese Vegetable Pizza as well as the-not-quite pizza-but-close-enough Pissaladière in this post.
Don’t forget our Pickle Pizza which is spectacular for pickle fans! And if experimental pizzas are your jam, go for the Smoked Salmon Cucumber Pizza.
For a pre-baked pizza crust, just roll this out, brush with olive oil, and bake at 450ºF until crisp on the bottom and golden brown to deep brown on the edges. Otherwise, use as you would any pizza dough; top and bake!
Whole Wheat Pizza Dough
This whole wheat pizza crust recipe makes enough dough for about 6 twelve inch pizzas or 3 half-sheet pan sized pizzas. I know, that’s a lot! But you don’t have to bake them all up at once.
(And if you just can’t visualize yourself eating this much pizza, the dough makes great focaccia or flatbread, too!)
Mix the yeast, salt, sugar, olive oil and water in a large capacity bucket or mixing bowl. (This recipe can be halved if you do not have a large enough container.) I love this bucket and this dough whisk for the job, but a large mixing bowl and sturdy spoon will be just fine!
Stir in the flour until no dry pockets remain. You do not have to knead it, but I find the easiest way to have it thoroughly mixed is to wet one hand and forearm and use that one to mix it in completely.
Cover lightly (Do not put a lid on tight. Trust me.) and let rest at room temperature until the dough has doubled and collapsed. (Or at least until dough is very, very puffy.) This takes a less than 2 hours in warm weather and more than 2 hours in cool or cold temperatures.
After your whole wheat pizza dough has risen to double in bulk, wet your hands and divide the dough into 6 approximately equal sized dough balls. Working with one dough ball at a time, pull the sides down from the top and tuck under the ball, rotate and repeat the process until you have a nice tight, smooth ball of whole wheat pizza dough.
Set aside the dough balls you plan to bake that night. You’ll come back to those momentarily.
To freeze your extra pizza dough for future pizza nights, grab and label a gallon sized, zip-top freezer bag for each dough ball. Drizzle a little olive oil into each freezer bag and rub it around. Drop one dough ball into each prepared bag, remove excess air from the bag, zip closed, and freeze for up to three months.
When you want to make pizza from your frozen dough, it’s easy! Simply transfer your bag of dough from the freezer to the refrigerator the 8 hours before you plan to bake it.
Let the ball of dough come to room temperature for at least 30 minutes before you plan to bake it. This will make it much easier to stretch or roll out.
You can also “quick thaw” the dough by leaving it at room temperature for about 3 hours. The thawing time will depend on how warm your home is, though!
Whole Wheat Pizza Dough
Rate RecipeEquipment
- 1 dough bucket or large mixing bowl
- 1 dough whisk or long handled, sturdy spoon
Ingredients
- 5 3/4 cups room temperature water
- 1/2 cup extra virgin olive oil
- 3 tablespoons instant yeast
- 2 tablespoons kosher salt
- 2 tablespoons sugar raw or granulated
- 4 cups whole wheat flour 1 pound 1 ounce by weight
- 7 cups all-purpose flour 1 pounds, 14 3/4 ounces by weight
- 2 cups semolina flour 11 ounces by weight
Instructions
- Mix the yeast, salt, sugar, olive oil and water in a 12 quart capacity bucket. (This recipe can be halved if you do not have a large enough container.)
- Stir in the flour until no dry pockets remain. You do not have to knead it, but I find the easiest way to have it thoroughly mixed is to wet one hand and forearm and use that one to mix it in completely.
- Cover lightly (Do not put a lid on tight. Trust me.) and let rest at room temperature until the dough has doubled and collapsed. (Or at least until dough is very, very puffy.) This takes a less than 2 hours in warm weather and more than 2 hours in cool or cold temperatures.
- You can use the dough immediately. If you have leftovers, you can store them in the container, lightly covered (again, do not use a tight lid!) for up to 10 days.
- If you need to store the dough beyond that time, divide into individual pizza sized servings. Freeze in re-sealable plastic bags that have about a teaspoon of olive oil smeared around inside each for up to 3 months.
Nutrition
Nutritional information is an estimate and provided to you as a courtesy. You should calculate the nutritional information with the actual ingredients used in your recipe using your preferred nutrition calculator.
did you make this recipe?
Make sure to tag @foodiewithfam on Instagram and #hashtag it #foodiewithfamily so I can check it out!
This post was originally published May 7, 2012. Republished with improved information, instruction, and images in April 2022.
Reader's Thoughts...
Kristen kemp says
Has anyone already broken this recipe into smaller measurements? There is only me in my house and, while this sounds delicious, it’s going to yield way more dough than my freezer and I can hold! I’d like to make just enough for two pizzas. Thank you!
Rebecca says
Hi Kristen- You can certainly break it down by half or a quarter, but the dough also freezes in meal sized portions pretty well!
jo major says
I found a no knead pizza dough on your web site but I can’t find it any more. The ingredients were 14 oz. bread flour, 2 tsp. salt, 1/2 tsp. of yeast 1 cup plus 3 TBLS. water. Mix all ingredients. But I can’t find the rest of the directions. Can you please help me it was mad in a skillet. Thank-you jo
Rebecca says
I think you’re looking for my Best Pan Pizza recipe, Jo! https://www.foodiewithfamily.com/the-best-pan-pizza-how-why-and-what-to-put-on-it/
Reni says
Ooooh I am so going to give this a try – I am a pizza nut! I could live on just pizza, Him and I have it most noon times (sometimes the pizzaria down the road and sometimes from the dollar store – I’m tell’n ya I will eat any pizza!) BUT – I love homemade pizza the most and that crust of yours looks soooo delish!
Rebecca says
If you’re a pizza nut, you’ll probably love this, too!
Mindy says
Rebecca,
I made a batch of this for the first time Sunday afternoon. I halved the recipe and froze all but what I will use for one meal for us this week. The dough I’m using has been in the fridge in a Tupperware bowl covered with a tea towel and I’ll use
it tonight. I checked it last night (because I’ve never made pizza dough like this), and the outside of it was crusted over. Is there anything I should do to it this evening before I punch it back down and roll it out?
Thank you,
Mindy
Christine says
Thank you for this post. I just made my first crust with semolina flour blended with all-purpose flour. I started to get excited and then realized that while it was pretty close, I have not quite achieved what I want yet and I’m not ready to settle. I will most certainly use your recipe next. (I’m on pizza #3 in 4 days!)
Kathy says
Hi! I have been looking for a good pizza crust forever…. I have never found one. I want to try this but I don’t know what WHITE whole wheat flour is. Is it Semonlina? I have heard it’s the best for pizza, but never tried it. Thanks!
Rebecca says
White Whole Wheat Flour is a whole grain flour milled from white winter wheat. It’s lighter in texture and milder in flavour than regular red wheat. It’s pretty readily available. I prefer King Arthur Brand but I know Montana Mills has a decent one. I’m relatively sure that Pillsbury, Gold Medal, and Bob’s Red Mill also carry their own. Semolina is different, that I also call for that in this recipe. Bob’s Red Mill has the most widely available semolina in these parts, but if you’re near an Italian grocer, you might be able to find it even more reasonably priced. Oh! A lot of stores with bulk bins carry this (or would if asked!)
kirsten eisele says
This looks delicious! I’m curious though, do you think it would work the same with regular whole wheat flour (versus white) ?
Heidi19 says
I haven’t tried this kind of pizza before. But i would love to give this a try. Thanks for sharing your recipe. Love it!
JPix Photography says
Sunday night is pizza night for us and this dough is definitely going to get a run in the next month…
Jolien says
You are crazy for pizza! That is for sure. And that makes two of us :))
Kathryn says
I have whole wheat flour and whole wheat pastry flour – I do not have WHITE whole wheat flour. That’s proving harder to find, oddly enough. Will either of the first two work? I do have AP and semolina, so that helps. Thanks Rebecca! Sincerely, Kathryn
Born27 says
Oh this looks so good. I;m craving not just for one but for more!
Liz @ Virtually Homemade says
My family loves homemade pizza crust – thanks for the recipe!
Katrina @ Warm Vanilla Sugar says
This sounds awesome! I haven’t tried this kind of crust before.
Maryden25 says
We two have same in common..Pizza! This is my happy food too. Whenever I feel down, A slice of pizza can made my day alive again!
Kim K. says
Cannot wait to try this recipe this weekend!
Rachel @ Baked by Rachel says
If pizzas can be beautiful, yours absolutely is! It’s so perfectly round too. Love it.
Rachel says
How many pizzas will this recipe make?
Rebecca says
It really depends on how big the pizzas you make are! I know, that’s a non-answer… I can give you a better idea of the yield by saying that one time, I made 4 sheet pizzas (13″ x 18″)with just a little knob of dough left over. Does that help at all?
Rachel says
Yes, thanks! Can’t wait to try!! Love your website. 🙂
Jill says
Yum! I’ve also been making the no knead dough for a few months now and love it!!! We eat homemade pizza at least once a week in this house. Mmm…
Amber says
Oh, this looks like perfection! I already use fresh ground wheat for nearly everything, I’m making this today!! Thanks!
Deja says
I have been making your 10 Day No Knead dough for months now and last time I ran out of AP flour halfway through, so what did I do? I used white whole wheat to make up the difference and we experienced the same results! It gets crispier on the outside while still being tender and chewy on the inside. Studier for the toppings my husband and I love and still the perfect plain pizza for the kids. I happen to have made a batch Friday. Bring on the pizza.