If you want to make the very best pizza you’ve ever had, you’re going to need to start the process at least 10 hours but up to a day ahead of when you’d like to eat it. It doesn’t really require any skill-set beyond patience and the ability to follow four simple sets of directions.
How to Make Pan Pizza
- 1. Measure, mix, and wait.
- 2. Divide, oil, and wait.
- 3. Top, bake, and wait.
- 4. Remove, slice, and wait.
Are you catching the theme? There’s a lot of waiting.
There’s NOTHING complicated but patience is non-negotiable. If you have a kitchen scale, this is the moment to break it out.
Measuring your flour, water, oil, salt, and yeast by weight insures that the only variables are ones outside of your control: humidity and heat. You can compensate for humidity and heat, but you can’t compensate for four ounces too many of flour because you didn’t measure correctly.
That’s right, I said it. Measuring precisely here is actually of paramount importance.
This is not a case where you grab that teacup your mom or grandma always kept in the flour bin, plunge it into the flour, and squish it up against the edge to pack it level. Just don’t.
This is a job for a scale that weighs in ounces, or -in a pinch- an occasion when you use a spoon to dip into the flour, shake it gently over the cup that you’re not shimmying in any way, and repeat until the cup is a little over full, then you use a flat edge of a butterknife or a spoon handle to level it off.
I’m not kidding you. You do not want a ‘workable’ dough that you knead.
You’re going to stir it all together with a spoon, cover it, and let it go overnight or for at least 8 hours. Yes, it sits on the countertop that whole time and does not go into the refrigerator.
You’re seeking a slack dough. In fact, you’re looking for the kind of dough that will spread itself out in a well-oiled cast-iron skillet because that is exactly what you’re going to let it do.
Yes. No-knead dough that spreads itself in the pan.
Do I have you now? Once you get to that point, the toughest part is over with, unless you include the inner battle to avoid biting down on molten hot pizza that will remove the first layer or two of skin from your mouth.
All that remains is to poke any extra large air bubbles with the back of a knuckle, lift the dough around the edges to eliminate any trapped air bubbles, and top it. Aside from the fact that the dough is DEAD easy as long as you know how to properly measure, there’s more to recommend this method.
Pan Pizza
EVERYTHING is assembled in ONE PAN. The dough spreads in one pan, is topped in the same pan, then cooked in that same pan.
You don’t have to muck up and dirty all kinds of dishes, remember to preheat a pizza stone, or fiddle around with a pizza peel to make this one pizza to rule them all. All you need is a solid, cast-iron pan or two and a dose of “I’ll wait for what’s great.”
If I had to compare the Best Pan Pizza to one that’s commercially available, I would first say, “Pffft. This is better than any commercial pizza.” then I would grudgingly admit it’s rather like the Pizza Hut Personal Pan Pizzas of my youth.
I loved those oil soaked, crispy bottomed, chewy little pieces of pizza heaven. The Best Pan Pizza is a little thicker than a thin-crust, but nowhere near the whole gloppy Deep-Dish pies of Chicago.
(Not that there’s anything wrong with those, but they’re just not what we’re looking for in your every-weeknight-pizza.) They are -in short- chewy, fried-crust, pizza perfection.
What kind of flour to use for Pan Pizza
The recipe specifies high-gluten (or bread) flour. This is not the same thing as all-purpose flour.
It has a higher protein (read: gluten) percentage which yields a chewier/holier dough. You will not get the same results from all-purpose flour, so it is best to seek out the high-gluten flour if it is available to you. (King Arthur Bread Flour has an excellent protein percentage for this pizza dough.)
Can you use all-purpose flour? Yes. It just won’t be the same. That said, you can definitely make it and it’ll be tasty; just different.
Can you use gluten-free flour? I honestly do not know. I’m sorry.
Gluten-free baking is a whole different field than my specialty. There are some folks who have weighed in on it in the comments section. Scroll through and maybe you can find some help!
How much flour and water to use for pizza dough
Body temperature water (just under 100°F) is the temperature of water you want to use in your dough!
Because baking is art as well as science, KEEP EXTRA WATER ON HAND when mixing your dough.
If you live somewhere humid, you’ll use all the water in the recipe, still. If you live somewhere arid, like the desert, you may need as much as 1/4 cup more water!
For the best results, use the dough in the video on this post as a visual cue for how it should look when just right.
As for flour, definitely weigh it out! I mean it! Don’t be tempted to add more flour to the mixture.
The dough should come together easily even if it looks shaggy. A dough whisk is your best bet for mixing thoroughly. Believe me, you not only don’t have to knead this dough, but you SHOULDN’T knead it.
The long, slow rise with a small amount of yeast allows the dough to fully develop the gluten that provides that lovely, holey structure.
The best cheese for pan pizza
When selecting which cheese to use, keep in mind that the Best Pan Pizza is not a good candidate for fresh mozzarella. The delicate texture and flavour would be lost in the blast-furnace that your oven is going to become.
You’re far better off buying a block of whole or part-skim mozzarella and shredding it yourself. Less great than block cheese grated yourself, but still better for these pizzas than fresh mozzie, is pre-grated mozzarella cheese.
Homemade Pan Pizza
Don’t make a mistake and choose too small of a bowl to mix/rise the dough in. This is going to expand to about eight times its original size, so use a very large mixing bowl, dough rising bucket, or a big old, non-reactive (stainless steel for example) pasta pot.
Store the rising dough, draft-free and at room temperature!
Pan choices count for your Best Pan Pizza. IDEALLY you will use two very heavy cast-iron, 10-inch skillets. If you don’t have two of those, you can use a 12-inch and an 8-inch or a 10-inch skillet and an 8 or 9-inch cake pan.
I used 12-inch and 10-inch enameled cast-iron Le Creuset skillets for both of my pizzas (and a bonnie wee 5-inch cast-iron skillet for another batch) and they were PERFECTION.
I used a cake pan for the second batch and while it did an admirable job, it didn’t get the crusty-bits I love so dearly up the side the way the Le Creuset skillets did.
Pan Pizza Recipe
Let’s talk oils. You want to choose one with a HIGH-smoke point because of the high-temperature of the oven.While extra virgin olive oil sounds like it would go with pizza, it’s a poor choice here because of its distressing tendency to billow smoke at any temperature above 375°F.
A better choice is regular old pure olive oil, but an even better choice is grapeseed or peanut oil. Canola oil or vegetable oil will do well if that’s all you have handy!
Speaking of oil, don’t skimp on the oil in the pan! It does triple duty here.
First, it allows the dough to spread itself easily, reducing or eliminating the friction it would experience against the pan. Second, it adds another layer of cooking to the exterior of the crust, essentially frying it as it cooks. Third, it’s just plain yummy.
Fire that oven up and don’t wimp out! Get your oven as hot as it can go for the cooking process.
That BURST of heat develops a bajillion little bubbles in the dough that helps lend to the chewy, hole-ridden texture so desired in a pan pizza. If you can get your oven up to 550°F (which is as high as my oven goes) DO IT.
If you can’t, just get it as hot as you possibly can shy of setting it on fire. Trust me.
Your oven goes no higher than 450°F you say? I’m sorry, that stinks. HOWEVER, we can work around it. This is where the ideal pan comes into play.
In this case, you take the pizza fresh from the oven when your toppings look just right, and set it directly on a hot burner to help crisp up the underside of the crust, lifting the edge carefully with a spatula or tongs from time to time to peek at the underbelly. When it looks deep brown and crisp, slide that pizza right onto a cutting board.
Let the pizza rest a bit before you cut it, if you value your skin. These things are HOT HOT HOT when they come out of the oven.
Let it rest at least 5 minutes, then slice it, then let it rest another 3 minutes before picking up your pizza to nosh on it. This will keep your precious mouth skin where it belongs: attached to you.
Use this to make The Best Pan Pizza
See how easy it is to make the Best Pan Pizza?
Calling all you pizza maniacs out there! After you try our Best Pan Pizza, be sure to try our Pickle Pizza, Figgy Pig Pizza; Tuscan Style Prosciutto, Fig, Greens Pizza, Smoked Salmon Cucumber Pizza, Honey-Drizzled Salami Pizza, and Roast Beef and Caramelized Onion Naan Pizza {10 Minute Meal}
The Best Pan Pizza
Rate RecipeIngredients
For the dough:
- 14 ounces bread flour 3 cups by volume
- 2 teaspoons kosher salt 3/8 of an ounce or .35 ounces
- 1/2 teaspoon instant yeast 0.06 ounce or 1.5 grams
- 1 1/2 cups water (12 ounces)
For the Pizzas:
- 4 tablespoons olive oil or neutral oil with a high smoke point like grapeseed such as peanut, or canola, divided (no extra virgin olive oil)
- 1 1/2 cups thick pizza sauce homemade or purchased
- 2 cups shredded mozzarella cheese
- 12-16 pieces of pepperoni per pizza
Optional but tasty:
- fresh basil leaves for adding before and after baking
Instructions
- Mix together all of the dough ingredients until it is evenly moist and there are no more pockets of dry ingredients. Cover the bowl or dough bucket tightly and let it rise for at least 8 but up to 24 hours.
- Pour 2 tablespoons of neutral oil into a 10 to 12 inch cast-iron skillet. Repeat with a second skillet. Swirl to coat the bottoms of the pans. Divide the risen dough into two pieces. Gently form into a ball by pulling the side of the dough and tucking it under, rotating 1/4 turn and repeating the tug and tug, rotating another 1/4 turn and repeating the tug and tuck, then finally doing it once more to form a loose ball. Lay it smooth side down in the oil, then flip so the whole thing is coated in oil. Use the palm of your hand to gently flatten the dough. It will not spread to the edges yet, but that is okay. Cover the pan tightly with plastic wrap and set out at room temperature -undisturbed- for 2 hours.
To Prepare the Pizzas:
- Preheat oven as high as it will go, preferably to 550°F. Remove plastic wrap from the pans with the pizza dough in them. The dough should now have spread itself (or nearly spread itself) to the edges of the pan. Simply lift the edges of dough to pull toward the sides of the pan if necessary. This will help loosen any trapped air under the dough as well. If there are any large air bubbles, nudge them down with the back of a knuckle.
- Spread half of the sauce on each pizza right to the edges of the dough. Divide the cheese and top each pizza evenly to the edge, then distribute the pepperoni over the pizzas. If using it, tear half of your basil leaves and toss over the tops of the pizzas. Reserve half of the basil to add to the pizzas when they’re removed from the oven.
- Put into the hot oven and bake for 12-20 minutes (depending on how well done you want your pizzas.) You can check the underside of the pizza crust for doneness by lifting the edge gently with a flexible spatula (like a fish turner). A finished pizza will have a crisp, deep-brown bottom and a bubbly, golden- to deep-golden brown top. I pull my pizzas when the edges have some deeply caramelized (read: lightly charred) edges and some dark brown bubbles on top.
- Use your flexible spatula to slide under the pizza and edge it out onto a cutting board, tear the remaining basil and scatter over the pizzas. Let rest for 5 minutes before slicing into wedges, then let it rest without moving it for another 3 minutes before serving.
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!
Are you a big fan of the Best Pan Pizza? Try these other best recipes!
- Best Middle Eastern Salad Dressing
- Best Thing Tomatoes
- Best Way to Cook Salmon – Air Fryer Salmon
- Best Method for Making the Best Baked Potato
Best Pan Pizza was originally posted August 1, 2014. Updated with video and tips in May 2017 and again in January 2021.
Reader's Thoughts...
Roxane says
This is the best pizza recipe! I have made it on many occasions; date night, movie night, birthdays. It’s crispy on the outside and airy on the inside. The flavor is better than any takeout. Be sure to measure everything for the best results!
Rebecca says
Thanks so much for taking the time to rate the recipe and let us know you love it, Roxane! I really appreciate it.
Mel says
Since I don’t have Bread Flour, can I add a tsp of Gluten to A/P Flour?
Rebecca says
Hi Mel- You sure can! I’m curious about your 3 star rating. Have you made this already?
Scott says
How do you get 0.06 oz of yeast? I’ve looked high and low, the only way I can find it sold is in 0.25 oz packages! Are you honestly supposed to use 1/4 of a package and throw the rest away?
Rebecca says
Good golly no, Scott! HAHAHAHA. Fold that packet over and pop it in the refrigerator!! It’ll keep for at least a year that way! I buy 1 pound packages of yeast, put them in a jar, and measure out as much as I need, storing the rest in the refrigerator. 🙂
Judy says
Can you use all purpose flour instead of bread flour?
Rebecca says
You betcha, Judy! It’ll be delicious, and just ever so slightly different.
Judy says
Thanks. I had jumped to the recipe and didn’t see you had commented on all purpose flour in your post above.
Rebecca says
No problem, Judy! I’m glad you like the recipe!
Cindy (Buffalo NY) says
I have made this pizza recipe and it is scrumptious. Super crispy crust. It makes a fantastic cast iron pizza without the work. Making it today for the AFC championship game.
Quick question though. Sometimes 2 inches pizza’s are too much. Can half the dough be saved and if so for how long. What is the process. Do you let it go through the rising process or divide at the start and either refrigerate or freeze the half not being used. Love to hear from you on your recommendations.
Rebecca says
Hi Cindy! Let’s Go Buffalo!!!!! You can definitely save the dough. After the first rise, divide and freeze!
Kathy says
I made this twice didn’t cook it my didn’t looke like picture it was way more sticky and I measured flour precisely don’t know what I’m doing wring
Rebecca says
Hi Kathy- The dough was sticky? Did it cook up alright? Did you measure by weight or volume?
Tracy says
Absolutely fabulous crust! Crispy on the bottom, fluffy through the middle with chew at the outer edge. Yum! We made three different sizes (pan limitations in my kitchen!) and topped three different ways and everyone loved their personal pizzas. Thanks to great instructions it wasn’t hard to figure out how to adjust the time for the different sizes at all 🙂
Rebecca says
Thank you so much for taking the time to rate the recipe and let me know you loved the results, Tracy!! You made my night!
Nirmala upadhyay says
My bottom pizza stay row I have thermadoor should I put bake convention or where in bottom or middle
Rebecca says
Hi Nirmala- I bake my pizzas in the center of the oven. Did you use a cast-iron skillet or other pan? What size was your pan?
Celo says
Is there any reason why your recipe is ounce, cup, gram? You give flour in ounce, yeast in gram, water in cups. Does the dough come out better like this?
Rebecca says
Hi Celo- Actually, each of the ingredients has a volume and weight measurement, and with the exception of the water, the weights are given in both ounces and grams. 🙂 I find it a little easier to get the precise yeast measurement with grams because you can fine tune it a little more easily.
(I did add the weight measurement in for the water because somehow I had omitted that, so thank you for the heads up. However, the ounce and gram weights for everything else were already there.)
meg says
I make a danged good pizza crust (think pi day for the neighborhood 50+ pizzas in my not made as a pizza oven oven), but wanted to make a pan pizza rather than my insanely thin crusted pizza. I stumbled upon your recipe and all I can say is WOW!!!! This will now be my go to for pan pizzas, I might even say I now have a new favorite pizza crust. I had sauteed some garlic for the pizza and threw the leftover oil into the bottom of the pan, holy cow was it delicious. Thank you for a new go to favorite pizza…….
Rebecca says
Thank you so much for taking the time to rate the recipe and let me know you love it, Meg! I sure wish I lived in your neighborhood if you’re whipping up pies for Pi day! 🙂
Susan says
S Tried this , Wonderful !!! Reminded me of Flourchilds pizza from Boston back in the days I was in college. Thanks so much !
Rebecca says
You’re so very welcome, Susan! Thanks for letting me know you love it!
Christa Stewart says
Fyi: when this recipe comes up on a Google search, it says time is 40 min. If there’s a way to change that, I recommend it. At least you are honest early in the descriptive writing, but I usually jump to the recipe and well, this is no 40 min recipe. However, I look forward to trying it just as soon as I get the correct flour and extra time.
Rebecca says
Thanks, Christa! I have to determine whether I want people to bail because they think they have to spend 8 hours standing over a bread dough (which they don’t have to do) or have the total time reflect total rest time… I’m opting for reflecting the hands on/cooking time vs. the hands on/cooking time/rest time since it is inactive. 🙂 Happy Thanksgiving!
melissa drenning says
Can I use active dry yeast instead of instant
Rebecca says
You betcha!
Alexandra says
So far, tried once, for next batch do I leave the batter out? Or put in fridge?
Rebecca says
Hi Alexandra- I’m not sure what you’re asking me. Did you make one pizza with the dough and want to know what to do with the second half? Or something else? I’m glad you liked it!!
Lelanie Isabel says
Hi! Can I use Tipo 00 flour for this recipe? Thank you.
Rebecca says
If you’d like, Lelanie, certainly! It may be a little different in the end, but it will be delicious. I usually save the Tipo 00 for wood fired pizzas, myself. 🙂
Jim says
7 hours into the dough rise and it has barely risen. What have I done wrong? Bad yeast? Water not warm enough?
Rebecca says
Is your room pretty chilly, Jim?
Nik says
Tried this today. I set up the dough in the bowl last night. Sadly, as I was ready to put it into the two pans it was clear that the dough was far too runny. I had to add more flour to thicken it up a bit. Maybe it’s because I’m in a place where it is humid. I went on to try and cook it regardless. I use ghee for high heat cooking.
In the end the cheese and sauce came out great, the outside edges and bottom of the crust were good, but as you’d expect the inside of the dough wasn’t cooked all the way. Will have to use much less water next time to get it to turn out. Will keep trying!
Cate says
My years of making pizza dough a certain way has come to an end. Even though this recipe first had me worried. It didn’t rise much in about 14 hours, I still put it in the pans and let it sit a couple more hours.
Oh my goodness, literally. Crust goodness, the best ever, wow! What a treat to not fuss with it.
By the way, I love the Canning Book, just love it…
Rebecca says
Aw, Cate! Thank you so much for taking the time to rate the recipe and let me know you love it! I’m so glad you love the canning book, too. Day made. 🙂
Laura says
My pizza was burnt. I followed all of your directions and reasoning
Rebecca says
Hi Laura- Are you in the US or cooking in another country? If you’re elsewhere, it could be an issue with ingredients being slightly different. If you’re in the US, we’ll have to look at something else for troubleshooting. Is your oven a standard one or a convection one? If you’re using a convection oven, it will cook far faster at the same temperature because of the air circulation.
Did you use a cast-iron or other type of pan?
Nathan says
Thank you!
This pizza has saved my sanity during this sh#$%t-storm stay-at-home year. I have spent a lot of time tinkering with it (one might say obsessively) and I thought I would share back a few findings:
1- I used the whole recipe in a larger 14″ pan (I am using this one https://www.amazon.com/Chicago-Metallic-16124-Professional-14-25-Inch/dp/B003YKGS4A but I guess any one would do). I wanted to be able to host a bit of a crowd so I was looking for a cheaper option than buying 10 cast iron pans. I bought 6 pieces of the above (obsessive??). Added bonus, they stack one inside the other so 6 don’t take much more room than one. I will be able to have pizza parties, once I am able to have, you know, parties.
2. I have been struggling with an under-baked center or an over-baked periphery. On top of the size of the pan, it may be related to the fact that my oven only goes up to 250C (482F). What solved it for me was buying a pizza steel (https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00JXVNUHW/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o00_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1 but again, I guess any one would do). It makes the crust delightfully crispy and dreamy.
3. I have used a shorter first rise (4h) and a longer second one (6h-8h). This makes the pizza even more airy and delicious and OMG I want more. On the downside, the dough looses all structure and it makes the spreading of the sauce more challenging so I am putting the cheese first, then the toppings and finally the sauce in strips. This was inspired by Detroit style pizza.
4. While we are on the Detroit style pizza, since we are using a metallic pan, you can spread the cheese over the edge and get the lacy cheesy edge which… have I already said OMG?
Thank you again. It’s been a crappy year but it has been less so thanks to you.
Rebecca says
Well, Nathan. You just made my week. Thank you so much for nerding out over pizza with me. I love the idea of having several of those pans on hand because as you said, 10 cast-iron skillets might be playing it a bit high. HAHA.
I also have a pizza steel (Nerds unite!) and believe it or not, a Detroit Style Pizza recipe in my cookbook: “Ready, Set, Dough! Beginner Breads for All Occasions.” I really like the idea of playing with the rise times on the dough as well.
I’m so glad I improved your pizza life and truly appreciate you taking the time to rate the recipe and tell me about your experience with it!