Basic Pizza Dough Recipe (made in food processor) - Home Cooking Memories (2024)

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My favorite way to use my food processor is to make pizza dough. Ever since buying my Cuisinart, I’ve been making this basic pizza dough recipe.It’s really easy and it doesn’t require kneading or rising.


When I received my Cuisinart food processor for my birthday in 2010, I was so excited about it that I did something I’ve hardly ever done with a kitchen appliance: I read the manual. And, I read the little cookbook of food processor recipes. I even watched the DVD that came with it. I wanted to know everything about my new Cuisinart and, well…I wanted to make sure I didn’t break it.

Over a year later, I use it almost daily and it’s still my favorite thing in my kitchen.

While I do so much with my Cuisinart, one of the things I do the most is make pizza dough in it. In the recipe booklet, I saw a recipe for making it and now this is usually how I make it.

The first step is to stir yeast and sugar into warm water. The actual recipe calls for a package of yeast, but I buy my yeast in bulk so I measure 2 1/2 teaspoons, instead of the package. In the food processor, with the metal blade inserted, you’ll briefly pulse together 3 1/3 cups all-purpose flour and 1 1/4 teaspoons of salt. Just enough to combine them.

The yeast stands for about 10 minutes until it’s all foamy.

Turn on the machine and then pour the year mixture into the feed tube. The mixture will stream slowly into your flour.

After about 45 seconds or so, the dough will form a ball and pull away from the sides of the bowl. At this point, I turn it off and get my olive oil ready. Turn the power back on and immediately pour the oil into the feed tube and process for another minute. If you don’t have olive oil, you can use another oil, but I prefer olive oil. If you’d like, you can also use flavored olive oils – I’ve used a garlic olive oil and a basil olive oil and both made the crust very flavorful.

Very carefully remove your dough from the bowl (watch out for that blade!). The result is a nice, soft pizza dough. This is enough to make two 14″ pizza crusts. It’s bit less than 2 lbs of dough.

If I am making the 14″ round pizzas, I cut the dough in two and I begin stretching one of the portions. The Cuisinart recipe booklet recommends rolling it out on a floured surface, but I never do that. I hold the dough up and begin stretching it evenly, allowing gravity to help pull it. I don’t try to get it large enough to cover the pizza pan, just stretched a bit. Then, I lay it in the center of the greased pizza pan and work the dough out to the edges with the fingertips. See…no rolling pin needed!

At this point, you have two choices. You can pre-bake your pizza crust and then add the toppings, or you can add your toppings directly on top of the uncooked pizza crust. If you like a crispier crust, or if you dough is thick, I would recommend pre-baking. If yours is not very thick, and you like a softer crust (like I do), you don’t have to pre-bake it.

In this image below, I pre-baked the crust at 425 degrees F for about 6 minutes. You’ll also notice that I poked the crust with a fork a few times before baking. This helps it from bubbling up.

This pre-baked crust is the crust you see in the finished pepperoni pizza. After baking the crust, I stopped it with pizza sausage, Mozzarella cheese, and pepperoni. It returned to the 425 degree F oven for about 10-15 minutes.

In this pesto artichoke pizza below, I didn’t pre-bake the crust. I pressed out the dough on my pizza pan and topped it with a little jar of Trader Joe’s pesto. This was topped with shredded Mozzarella cheese, Trader Joe’s artichoke hearts (quartered), fresh broccoli florets, and sliced onions. I baked it at 425 degrees F for about 15-20 minutes.

Both methods work great; it just depends on what you like best. As you can see, it’s really easy to make your own basic pizza dough in a food processor. I should mention thatI haven’t made this recipe in other processors. If yours doesn’t have a strong motor, you might not be able to do this, but in the Cuisinart, and I’m sure other quality food processors, you should have no problem.

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Basic Pizza Dough Recipe (made in food processor) - Home Cooking Memories (11)

Basic Pizza Dough (made in food processor)

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  • Author: Brandie Valenzuela
  • Yield: 2 - 14-inch pizza crusts OR 4 - 9-inch pizza crusts OR 1 very large baking sheet pizza crust 1x
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Description

My favorite way to use my food processor is to make pizza dough. Ever since buying my Cuisinart, I’ve been making this basic pizza dough recipe.It’s really easy and it doesn’t require kneading or rising.

Ingredients

Scale

  • 1 package active dry yeast (or 2 1/4 teaspoons)
  • 1 teaspoon sugar
  • 1 1/3 cups warm water
  • 3 1/3 cups all-purpose flour
  • 1 1/4 teaspoons salt
  • 3 teaspoons oil

Instructions

  1. Grease pizza pan(s). Preheat oven to 425 degrees F.
  2. Stir yeast and sugar into the warm water and let stand until foamy, about 10 minutes. Insert metal blade into Cuisinart food processor, and add flour and salt to bowl. Pulse briefly to combine flour and salt.
  3. Turn machine on and pour yeast mixture into feed tube. Process about 45 seconds, until all liquid has streamed into the flour and the dough pulls away from the sides of the bowl. Turn off machine.
  4. With oil ready to be added, turn on machine again and add the oil to the feed tube and process for another minute. If dough is sticking to sides of bowl, you can add another tablespoon of flour, one at a time, until it does leave bowl.
  5. Remove dough very carefully from bowl. If making two 14″ round pizzas, divide the dough in half. Can also be divided into small pizza pans or left intact if making pizza on a a very large baking sheet. Working with the dough for one of the pizzas, lift the dough and begin stretching and pulling, rotating the dough, working all edges. When dough is stretched, but not tearing, lay it in the center of one of the pizza pans. With fingertips, press and work dough out t the edges of the pan. If dough resists, let it rest for a few minutes, and then retry. Poke bottom of pizza crust a few times with the tines of a fork.
  6. If you wish to pre-bake your crust, place it in the over and bake for about 6 minutes. Remove from oven and add toppings as desired. Return to over and continue baking for another 10-15 minutes or until hot and bubbly and crust is browned.
  7. If you don’t wish to pre-bake your crust, add toppings as desired on uncooked pizza dough. Bake in oven for 15-20 minutes, or until hot and bubbly and crust is browned.
  • Category: Pizza
  • Cuisine: Italian

Recipe Card powered byBasic Pizza Dough Recipe (made in food processor) - Home Cooking Memories (12)

Basic Pizza Dough Recipe (made in food processor) - Home Cooking Memories (13)

Basic Pizza Dough Recipe (made in food processor) - Home Cooking Memories (2024)

FAQs

How to use a food processor for pizza dough? ›

In the bowl of a food processor fitted with the dough blade, combine the flour and salt and process with 3 or 4 pulses. With the motor running on the dough speed, slowly add the yeast mixture, allowing each addition to be absorbed before adding more.

How to make pizza dough with a KitchenAid food processor? ›

HOW TO MIX AND KNEAD DOUGH WITH A FOOD PROCESSOR
  1. ADD DRY INGREDIENTS. Add dry ingredients to the bowl and pulse 3-4 times to mix.
  2. PREPARE YEAST. In a separate cup, proof yeast by adding to warm water.
  3. ADD WET INGREDIENTS. ...
  4. BEGIN PULSING. ...
  5. TURN UP THE SPEED. ...
  6. TURN THE DOUGH. ...
  7. CONTINUE PULSING. ...
  8. REMOVE DOUGH.

What size food processor for pizza dough? ›

The best size food processor to use for making and kneading dough is one that holds 11 to 14 cups. These larger processors are fairly common, and successful models can handle both large and very small amounts of ingredients.

Is a mixer or food processor better for pizza dough? ›

If you're making pizza dough for dinner, the food processor is a great go-to. However, if you're making several loaves of bread, a stand mixer delivers the capacity you need for a job this big.

Is it better to knead pizza dough by hand or mixer? ›

Using a machine to do your kneading changes the final product. While a food processor or a stand mixture does a fine job of developing the gluten in dough, neither one of them perfectly mimics the motion of hand-kneading.

What is the secret to making good pizza dough? ›

The secret to great dough isn't kneading or throwing . . .

“Pizza dough made at home should be 50 percent water. Pizza needs to cook longer in a home oven, which means the dough needs to be more hydrated.” But don't let it to get soggy . . .“It's important to spread the dough very well and very evenly,” explains Falco.

Which 2 types of flour make the best pizza dough? ›

The best flour for making chewy pizza dough is high-gluten flour. This pizza dough is made with high gluten, a protein-rich flour often milled from hard wheat varieties like red winter and red spring. You may also prepare it by adding essential gluten wheat to all-purpose flour.

What blade to use in a food processor for dough? ›

Dough Blade

Dough blades are usually made out of plastic and have dull edges meant to turn and pull dough as opposed to cutting into it. You can use it to make fresh breads, pastry crust and pizza dough.

Should pizza dough be thin or thick? ›

If you want to taste the toppings to their fullest, thin crust is the way to go. The thin crust is basically a delivery system for the sauce, cheese, and toppings, and we wouldn't have it any other way. If you want to fill up mostly on bread, you're going to prefer the flavor of thick-crust pizza.

How thick should pizza dough be before baking? ›

If you don't have a pizza pan, use a regular sheet pan. Grease it with olive oil and sprinkle with cornmeal as directed below, and then press the dough into whatever shape that will fit. Make sure the dough is about 1/2-inch thick. For a thinner pizza, stretch the dough out more.

What temperature should pizza dough be? ›

On the day you plan to bake pizzas, remove dough balls from refrigerator and allow to warm up, covered, 1 to 2 hours before baking. Exact timing depends upon ambient temperature; dough should reach at least 60°F (15.5°C) before stretching and baking.

Should I pre bake raw pizza dough? ›

If you're baking the pizza in the oven, whether on a pizza stone or not, I always pre-bake the dough for 4-5 minutes before adding toppings, to make sure the pizza dough cooks crisp on the outside and soft and airy in the middle. Once you add the Pizza Sauce and toppings, return it to the oven to finish baking.

What temperature should pizza dough be in a mixer? ›

Ideal Pizza Dough temperatures
HydrationIdeal Temperature
Up to 54%22/23 °C (72/74 °F)
55% to 64%23 °C (74 °F)
65% to 85% and more23/25 °C (74/77 °F)
Aug 4, 2021

What mixer attachment for pizza dough? ›

As the name suggests, dough hook attachments are best for kneading together bread doughs and pizza doughs, but they can also be used to mix pasta dough.

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