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Pizza Dough Recipe 2 – Using strong white bread flour
Ingredients – Makes approx.’ 6 x 10” pizzas
- Dry yeast – 1½ teaspoons or Fresh yeast – 15g (½oz)
- Strong white flour – 400g (14oz)
- Table salt – 2 teaspoons
- Semolina – 100g (3½ oz)
- Olive Oil – 50ml (2 fl oz)
- Water – 275ml (9½ fl oz)
If you don’t have any ‘OO’ flour to hand or you are struggling to buy it locally, all is not lost…you can still bake a pizza using standard strong white bread flour. Whilst you will always get the very best results from ‘00’ flour, by using this pizza dough recipe, you will find that strong white bread flour is a reasonable substitute and can be bought in most high street supermarkets.
Mixing
To make the dough, start by stirring the flour, semolina and salt together in a mixing bowl. Once thoroughly mixed, stir in the dried yeast (if you are using fresh yeast crumble it into the mix and stir well). Keeping the mix in the bowl, create a well in the centre of the mixture and pour most of the water along with all of the olive oil into the well. Using your hands or a good wooden spoon, bring the dough together, combining the mixture until a dough is formed. Add the remaining water if the dough feels tight or hard.
Kneading
Transfer the dough to a floured worktop (wood or granite are ideal) and roughly knead the dough for around 10 minutes. Kneading is very important to the recipe as it develops the gluten within the dough, making it stretchy with an elastic feel. To knead, use the ball of your hand to squash the dough, pushing the dough away from you.
Pull it back into a ball, turn and repeat. It helps if this process is performed in a relatively rough manner to help develop the elasticity within the dough. You can check that the dough is ready to rise by cutting a small piece of dough from the ball and stretch it into a thin sheet. Hold it up to the window and if you can see light through it without the dough tearing, it is ready to be set aside to rise. (If the dough tears, continue kneading for a few more minutes).
Rising
After 5 minutes kneading, pre-oil a large bowl and transfer the dough into it, covering with a damp tea towel and leave it at in a warm place to rise for 1½ hours, at which point the dough should have increased to double its size.
Knocking back
Using floured hands, remove the dough from the bowl and place onto a floured surface. The dough is now ready for knocking back. This is a process which removes all the excess air ‘knocked out’ before proving. To knock back, repeat the kneading process for a few minutes until it looks the same as it did before it was left to rise (stretchy with an elastic feel).
Proving
Once you have knocked back the dough, roll it back into a ball. Set it aside for 15-30 minutes until it has risen once again to roughly double its size.
Rolling
The dough is now ready to use. Now divide the dough into equally sized balls. Roll each one out onto a floured or semolina covered surface, up to a diameter of roughly 10” (25cm). You are now ready to apply your chosen pizza toppings ahead of cooking.
Handy tip
Whilst you are making your dough, make an extra batch and pop it into the freezer in individual balls. This pizza dough recipe freezes really well and can be taken out of the freezer, de-frosted.