Bread Machine Pizza Dough (Crisp Family Pizza Night)

Bread Machine Pizza Dough (Crisp Family Pizza Night)

Friday nights in my kitchen tend to be loud, a little messy, and exactly the kind of end-of-week comfort I want. This is the routine that made homemade pizza stick: I load the bread machine, press Dough, and get on with everything else. I first tried it on a week when time and energy were both in short supply, and the dough cycle quietly did the heavy lifting.

This Bread Machine Pizza Dough is designed for a crisp, lightly chewy crust with enough strength to stretch without tearing. A small amount of olive oil helps browning, and a brief oven preheat plus a hot tray or stone gives that snappy base that makes family pizza night feel special. The dough is easy to scale, easy to handle, and works with classic toppings or whatever is in the fridge.

EveryLoaf

Bread Machine Pizza Dough (Crisp Family Pizza Night)

Friday nights in my kitchen tend to be loud, a little messy, and exactly the kind of end-of-week comfort I want. This is the routine that made homemade pizza stick: I load the bread machine, press Dough, and get on with everything else. I first tried it on a week when time and energy were both in short supply, and the dough cycle quietly did the heavy lifting. This Bread Machine Pizza Dough is designed for a crisp, lightly chewy crust with enough strength to stretch without tearing. A small amount of olive oil helps browning, and a brief oven preheat plus a hot tray or stone gives that snappy base that makes family pizza night feel special. The dough is easy to scale, easy to handle, and works with classic toppings or whatever is in the fridge.
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 3 hours
Total Time 3 hours 10 minutes
Servings: 1000 g loaf
Course: Bread

Ingredients
  

1kg loaf
  • 300 g water room temperature (about 1 1/4 cups)
  • 18 g olive oil about 1 1/2 tbsp
  • 10 g sugar about 2 1/2 tsp
  • 10 g fine salt about 1 3/4 tsp
  • 520 g bread flour about 4 1/4 cups, spooned and leveled
  • 3 g instant yeast about 1 tsp

Equipment

  • 1 Bread machine (1kg loaf capacity recommended)

Method
 

  1. Add ingredients to the bread machine pan in the order recommended by your machine. A common order is: water, olive oil, sugar, salt, flour, then yeast on top (keep yeast away from liquid at first).
  2. Select the DOUGH cycle and start. Check the dough after 5 to 10 minutes of mixing: it should form a smooth, slightly tacky ball. If it looks dry and shaggy, add water 1 tsp at a time. If it looks loose or puddly, add flour 1 tbsp at a time.
  3. When the dough cycle finishes (typically 1 hour 20 minutes to 1 hour 50 minutes), lightly oil your hands and turn the dough onto a lightly floured surface.
  4. For two pizzas: divide into 2 equal pieces (about 430 g each). For three thinner pizzas: divide into 3 equal pieces (about 285 g each). Shape each piece into a tight ball, cover, and rest 10 to 20 minutes so the gluten relaxes.
  5. Preheat the oven to 250 to 290°C (480 to 550°F), or as hot as your oven allows. Place a pizza stone, steel, or an inverted heavy baking tray inside while the oven heats for at least 20 to 30 minutes.
  6. Stretch or roll the dough to your desired thickness. For a crisper base, aim for 3 to 5 mm thick (about 1/8 to 3/16 inch).
  7. Transfer to baking paper or a floured peel. Add sauce and toppings lightly, too much topping can soften the crust.
  8. Bake on the hot surface until deeply browned at the edges and cooked through, about 7 to 12 minutes depending on oven heat and thickness. Cool 2 minutes, slice, and serve.

Notes

Use the DOUGH cycle only, this recipe is meant to be baked in an oven, not as a loaf.
If your machine has a ‘Pizza Dough’ program, use it. Otherwise, any standard Dough cycle works.
Flour absorption varies widely. Always check the dough early in mixing and adjust with small amounts of water or flour.
Tips:
- For extra crispness: bake on a preheated stone or steel, or on an inverted heavy tray, and keep toppings moderate.
- If the dough springs back while shaping, cover and rest 10 minutes, then continue stretching.
- For a lightly blistered rim: stretch by hand rather than rolling, and bake at the highest safe oven temperature.
- To make ahead: after the dough cycle, cover and refrigerate 12 to 48 hours. Let it sit at room temperature 45 to 90 minutes before stretching.
- Freezer option: lightly oil dough balls, seal in freezer bags, freeze up to 2 months. Thaw overnight in the fridge, then rest at room temperature before shaping.
Approximate nutrition, will vary with flour brand and portion size. Values are for dough only, excluding toppings.

Other Loaf Sizes

The recipe card above is the 1kg version. Use these quick conversions for smaller or larger bread machines. Select the matching loaf-size setting on your bread machine if it has one, and check your machine manual for any size-specific cycle or timing guidance.


750g loaf

  • 225 g water, room temperature (about 15 tbsp, just under 1 cup)
  • 13.5 g olive oil (about 1 tbsp)
  • 7.5 g sugar (about 2 tsp)
  • 7.5 g fine salt (about 1 1/4 tsp)
  • 390 g bread flour (about 3 1/4 cups, spooned and leveled)
  • 2.25 g instant yeast (about 3/4 tsp)


FAQ

Can I use all-purpose (plain) flour instead of bread flour?

Yes. The crust will be a bit less chewy and may tear slightly more when stretching. Hold back 10 to 20 g of water at first, then add as needed during mixing.

How do I make one large pizza instead of two?

Keep the dough as one piece after the dough cycle, rest 15 minutes, then stretch to fit your largest tray. Bake time may increase slightly due to thicker areas.

Why is my crust not crisp?

Common causes are an oven that is not hot enough, an un-preheated baking surface, too much sauce or wet toppings, or dough that is stretched too thick. Preheat longer and bake on a stone, steel, or hot inverted tray for best results.

Can I reduce the salt or yeast?

You can reduce salt to 8 g, but the flavor will be milder. Yeast can be reduced to 2 g for a slower rise, especially if you plan a long cold ferment in the fridge.

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