neapolitan pizza dough

Neapolitan pizza is a magical thing. The crust has a tang. Real flavour. Not that drab, everybody eats around it stuff.

And it starts with the dough. This isn’t your everyday pizza dough. Get this right and you will make better pizza than you can buy. For real.

If you want to learn about Neapolitan pizza read this post. Don’t skip to the recipe. This is not about anything except making pizza dough.

2500 words on pizza dough. Nothing else. Look at the crust on the pizzas in this post. That’s what I’m talking about…

Every pizza dough recipe out there goes something like this. Mix up some flour, water, way too much yeast, salt, oil and sugar. Proof it for a few hours. Ball it up. Make pizza.

It works. Sort of. There’s something there holding the toppings up. But it’s bland. Simple. Usually pretty dry. Not that good. Nowhere near that magical Neapolitan pizza crust.

Think I’m crazy? What can there possibly be to pizza dough? Something delicious. Something special. That’s what.

This is really, really good dough

Don’t believe me? Think about that wonderful bread you get at an artisan bakery. The depth of flavour. The texture. Now think of Wonder bread. That’s the difference I’m talking about. This is about artisan.

It isn’t really hard to make Neapolitan pizza dough. It is going to seem a bit daunting at first. I’m doing my best to explain it here.

It took me a full year to figure all this out. Maybe more. I don’t know how many pizzas I screwed up. A lot. Don’t feel bad for me though. Screwed up Neapolitan pizza is still pretty amazing.

This is a long read. The summary of a year’s work. Follow me down the rabbit hole. It’s fun. And the results are sooo worth it. I’m asking a lot here. But if you are serious about making the best pizza you have ever had read on.

Balls of Neapolitan pizza dough dusted with flour.

The stuff you need to make Neapolitan pizza

The oven

Before you get too far understand that Neapolitan pizza is cooked with high heat. That’s a pre-requisite. You need an oven that gets hot to make Neapolitan pizza.

Your kitchen oven can’t do it. Your BBQ might be able to do it. You will need some gear to make this happen.

Luckily it’s becoming a thing. There’s the Blackstone. The Ooni. The BakerStone pizza oven works with your BBQ.

The days of needing a wood burning oven are behind us. They are still super cool. I still want one. But you don’t need it to make Neapolitan pizzas.

What doesn’t work is a pizza stone. Neapolitan pizza relies on refractory heat. That’s a fancy way of saying it needs heat from above as well as below.

Neapolitan pizzas cook in the 750F to 900F range. They cook in under two minutes. 90 seconds from the time the pizza hits the oven to dinner. For real.

Try to cook a pizza on a stone at 900F on your BBQ. You get one seriously burnt pizza. Or raw dough on top. There’s no in-between. I tried to make BBQ pizza work for a long time. I gave up.

You need an oven that makes pizza. The nice thing is now they are in the hundreds of dollars. Not the thousands like they used to be.

And you can use that oven for other things. Want to make naan bread? Sear a steak at 800F? Roast vegetables at high temp? The best nachos you have ever had? All possible with the right oven.

Proscuitto and fresh mozzarella Neapolitan pizza on a plate from the front.

Measure your ingredients – by weight

You are going to need a scale. Actually you will need two scales. Or a really good one. You probably have one that measures to 1 gram accuracy. That’s good. But you are going to need a second scale.

The second one will need to measure to 1/100 of a gram. That covers you if you want to use instant dry yeast. If you are using a sourdough starter 1/10 of gram is fine.

Took me forever to figure out where to buy the second scale. I saw them online for hundreds. Medical scales. Too rich for me. Turns out drug dealers need scales that measure 1/100 grams.

And they don’t want to spend hundreds of dollars. Go to a smoke shop. That’s where I got mine. Cheap. But it works just fine.

The other bits

You will need a pizza paddle. One that’s big enough. Mine is 14 inches. Works well. A small second paddle you can use to move your pizza around as it cooks is helpful too.

You will need an infrared thermometer that goes up to 900F+. These aren’t expensive. And they are super useful.

You can use them to measure the room temperature where you will be proofing the dough. That’s really important. You can use it to measure your pizza oven temperature.

That’s really important too. And you can use it with your regular oven. Way more accurate than the knob on the front. Great for baking.

A stand mixer is the last bit of gear you need. By stand mixer I mean a Kitchen-Aid or Hobart mixer or equivalent. I do not mean a food processor. A dough hook for your mixer is very nice to have. Think about getting one.

You could try to do it by hand but that would be real work. I’ve never even tried. If you know what you’re doing though, by hand is definitely an option.

Flour, water, salt and yeast

There are only 4 ingredients in Neapolitan Pizza Dough. That’s all. No secret ingredients. No sugar. Or oil. None of that. Those are the rules. Not my rules.

The rules set out by the Associazione Verace Pizza Napoletana. Seriously. Four ingredients. It’s mind blowing what you can do with those 4 ingredients.

The water and salt don’t matter too much. But the flour has to be 0 or 00. All purpose won’t work. At 800F all purpose flour burns. Badly. Don’t try it. Any decent Italian grocer will have pizza flour.

I like Molina Caputo 00 in the blue bag. My favourite. But there are lots of choices. Just make sure it says 0 or 00.

I use a live sourdough starter. A sourdough starter from Ischia in Naples in fact. Just to give you an idea of how crazy I am. But any good sourdough starter culture will work.

If you are into making sourdough bread your starter is perfect. If you have no idea what I’m talking about google it. Sourdough starter. There is a ton of information on it. Worth considering as you get into making Neapolitan pizza.

Instant dry yeast works as well. But it takes so little instant dry yeast to do this that you need a scale that goes down to 1/100 of a gram.

 You are going to be measuring a few granules of yeast. Literally. First time I did it I didn’t believe it was even possible. But it is.

Neapolitan pizza with prosciutto and mozzarella

Time and temperature – the other two ingredients

Time and temperature are the other two ingredients. Key variables in the process. Yeast ferments at different rates depending on the temperature.

Colder temperatures. Slower fermentation. Higher temperatures. Faster fermentation. So if time is fixed colder temperatures need more yeast. For higher temperatures less yeast is needed. That’s all you really need to know.

A sourdough starter has bacteria in it as well as yeast. The bacteria are what makes sourdough sour. And that’s why it takes so long to make this pizza dough. The bacteria work slower than the yeast. Takes more time for them to add that sour tang.

The same bacteria are present in the air. You get the same effect if you are using instant dry yeast.  Might not be quite as good as sourdough. But it is close enough to impress the hell out of everybody who tries your pizza.

I’ve tried to make dough in 24 hours. It worked. I made pizza. It puffed up. Looked perfect.  But it didn’t have the flavour. No depth.

It takes 48 hours to really get the balance of properly risen dough and that wonderful sourdough tang.

So figure out what room temperature is where you will let the dough sit. And then use the table below to figure out how much starter or instant dry yeast you will need.

A lot of complicated concepts here but the formula works. You don’t need to understand it. But you do need to follow it.

How much yeast for Neapolitan pizza dough?

It will amaze you how little yeast you need. You won’t believe it at first. Nobody does.  But it will work. Have faith.

Slow fermentation. That’s the key to complexity and flavour. Give it the time it needs to work it’s magic.  A little bit of yeast. A long time. That’s the secret.

The table gives you the right amount of yeast. Cellar temperature range. If you can’t get into the range because your house is too hot try using a cooler with a frozen water bottle.

I’ve done that. It works. If you try to go much above 70F it gets very, very hard to measure out your yeast accurately.

Temperature (Farenheit)Sourdough Starter (grams)Instant Dry Yeast (grams)
645.60.07
653.90.07
662.70.07
671.80.06
681.20.05
690.70.05
700.50.04

 

Mushroom, mozzarella and olive oil Neapolitan pizza from above.

 

The workflow for Neapolitan pizza dough

I have a workflow that works for me. Yours might wind up a little different. But this is a good starting point. The important thing is to get your workflow figured out and stick to it. I use a timer to keep myself on track.

If you are using a starter take it out the fridge the night before you are going to make dough. Let it warm up.

In the morning feed your starter. Leave it out on the counter to really get going. Using instant dry yeast? Ignore this step.

Put a bottle of water in the fridge. You will want your water at about 40F. Go to work. Or do what you need to do. Enjoy your day.

Mix the dough

About 48 hours before you plan to eat pizza get ready to make Neapolitan pizza dough.

Measure out your ingredients. Pull out your stand mixer. By stand mixer I mean a Kitchen-Aid or Hobart mixer or equivalent. I do not mean a food processor.

Put the water in the mixer bowl. Add the salt. Stir to dissolve the salt in the water. Add around 2/3 of the flour and mix it with the water. Add your starter.

It’s a little different if you are using instant yeast. Salt kills yeast. So add 2/3 of your flour and the dry yeast to the water. Mix it up. Sprinkle your salt on top.

From here on in it’s the same for sourdough starter and dry yeast. Set a timer for 6 minutes. Start your mixer on it’s lowest speed. Let it go about a minute.

Add the rest of the flour over the next minute or so. Let the mixer do it’s magic for the next 4 minutes. At the end of the six minutes it should look like a ball of dough. A bit ragged maybe, but a cohesive ball.

If it doesn’t, turn the mixer up one setting and let it go until it does. Shouldn’t take more than another minute. You don’t want to overwork the dough.

Knead the dough

Transfer the dough to the counter. Knead it 27 times. Not 26 and not 28 and certainly not 29. That will ruin it.

No. Not really. This isn’t chemistry class. Knead it 25-30 times. Rotate the dough every 5 kneads or so. Cover it with a bowl and set your timer for 12 minutes.

The slap and fold

After 12 minutes pick up the dough and give it 3 slap and folds.

Are you wondering what I’m talking about? Slap and fold? This one took me quite a while to figure out. A slap and fold is just what it sounds like. Take the dough by one side.

Now try to hit the back of the counter with the other side of the dough without letting it go. Beat the dough down on the counter but don’t let go. Womp. You are trying to get the dough to extend as long as it will go. That’s the slap.

Now take this now long piece of dough and fold it onto itself to halve the length. That’s the fold.

Do this two more times. You will feel the dough tighten. Your third slap will hardly extend the dough at all.

Cover the dough again and set your timer for 12 minutes. The dough is resting.

When the timer goes off repeat the slap and folds a second time. If the dough doesn’t look pretty smooth after the second slap and fold let it rest another 12 minutes.

Then repeat the slap and folds a third time. Now you have Neapolitan pizza dough that’s ready to start to ferment.

Pizza with pepperoni, jalapeño and fior di latte

 

Neapolitan pizza dough rests for 24 hours

Yes. 24 hours. Plus or minus. 22 hours is OK. 25 is too. The error bars are pretty big here. They call this part the bulk ferment.

Place the dough ball in a round Tupperware and cover it loosely with the lid.  Set it aside for 24 hours. Put it in the spot where you figured out what the temperature was going to be for the whole process.

Remember that Neapolitan pizza dough fermentation is a function of time and temperature. Once you commit to a temperature you kind of need to stick to it…

Ball your dough

After 24 hours it’s time to ball the dough. Portion it out into pizza sized balls. I aim for 307 gram balls. Just works that way with the quantities specified. I use a scale to get it right.

The goal is to get the skin of the dough pulled tight over the ball. I can’t describe it well enough with words.

I think Youtube is your best bet here. You have to see it to understand. It’s a visual thing. Search for “how to ball pizza dough”.

I use a 6 inch round Tupperware to ball ferment the dough once it’s balled. I do this because it makes it easier to open the dough when it’s time to cook.

Tried 4 inch Tupperware containers first. My life got a lot better when I switched. Trust me.

Spray a little oil into the containers. Add your balled dough.  The oil just makes things easier. The last thing you want is to be fighting to get your dough out of the Tupperware.

Cover it loosely with the Tupperware lid and put it back in the spot and let it sit for another 24 hours. Told you it takes time…

Open your Neapolitan pizza dough

Don’t roll Neapolitan pizza dough. Just don’t. Open it. Want that big, beautiful, puffy crust? Rolling it pushes all the air out of the edge. That’s a sure-fire way to get a flat pizza. A dense pizza. Not a beautiful Neapolitan pizza.

Watch Youtube. Look for videos where they are pushing the middle of the dough to flatten it. But protecting the edge. Never compressing the outer rim. That’s key.

That’s it. You are ready to make pizza. Top your pizza lightly and cook it in your fancy new pizza oven.

My guess – it will take you a couple tries to get this down. A few more to get the feel of cooking pizzas in 90 seconds. And a lifetime of tweaking and improving.

It is work to make Neapolitan pizza right. But the payoff is worth all of it. When you nail it you will get used to people telling you that you make the best pizza ever. The best they have ever had.

I’ve been told better than some in Italy. That’s how good real Neapolitan pizza dough is.

Now you have some dough try making a classic margherita pizza.

Neapolitan pepperoni and fior di latte pizza from above.
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4.73 from 55 votes

neapolitan pizza dough

Neapolitan pizza is one of the world’s truly great pizzas. To make it you need to learn how to make Neapolitan pizza dough.
Course Main
Cuisine Italian
Keyword Neapolitan pizza
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 1 day 23 hours 50 minutes
Total Time 2 days
Servings 2 pizzas
Calories 671kcal
Author romain | glebekitchen

Ingredients

  • 369 grams Italian 0 or 00 flour – I like Molina Caputo
  • 236 grams water
  • 10 grams salt
  • Sourdough starter or dry yeast – quantity from the table in the post above.

Instructions

  • Feed your starter if using. Put a bottle of water in the fridge. Go away for 8 hours or so.
  • Measure out your flour, water, salt and yeast. You need a scale to do this. Cups and tablespoons are way too imprecise.

Using a sourdough starter

  • Add the water and salt to the mixing bowl of your stand mixer. Add roughly 2/3 of the flour and mix manually.
  • Add the starter to the wet mixture. 

Using instant dry yeast

  • Add the water to the bowl. Add 2/3 of the flour and the dry yeast and mix manually. 
  • Add the salt.

Make the dough

  • Turn your stand mixer on to it’s lowest setting. Mix for about a minute and a half. Add the remaining flour.
  • Continue mixing until the timer goes off (six minutes). Look at your dough. If it’s one cohesive ball, it’s good to go. If not, run your mixer for another minute or so.
  • Remove the dough from the mixing bowl. Knead manually 25-30 times.
  • Cover and let rest for 12 minutes. Use a timer.
  • After 12 minutes, do 2-3 slap and folds. That’s described in the text above. 
  • Cover and let rest another 12 minutes or so. Set a timer so you don’t forget.
  • After 12 minutes, repeat the slap and fold. Put the entire dough ball into a Tupperware. Store the dough in the room you used to measure the temperature and decide how much yeast you need. Let the dough sit for around 24 hours.
  • After 24 hours ball the dough. Use your scale to help you divide the dough. I shoot for around 307 grams. 
  • Place it into round Tupperware containers. Let sit another 24 hours.
  • When you are ready to cook, open the dough. Dress the pizza to your taste. Cook the pizza at 750F or so for around 90 seconds. Pay attention. At these temperatures things can go very wrong, very fast.

Notes

This recipe makes dough with a 64% hydration. You don’t need to know what that means but you do need to know it will be a bit sticky so put a fair amount of flour on your paddle to make sure it slides.
This is a Neapolitan pizza dough. It works at Neapolitan temperatures (750-850F). It is not the right dough for your kitchen oven…

Nutrition

Serving: 2pizzas | Calories: 671kcal | Carbohydrates: 140g | Protein: 19g | Fat: 1g | Sodium: 1947mg | Potassium: 197mg | Fiber: 4g | Calcium: 28mg | Iron: 8.6mg

175 thoughts on “neapolitan pizza dough”

  1. 4 stars
    I am sorry this recipe does not seem right… Only 1 gram of sourdough at room temp? With 369 grams 00 flour and 236 grams water? Seriously?? 1 gram of sourdough is literally a few tiny drops of sourdough, a small fraction of a teaspoon. I must misunderstand.

    Reply
    • It’s something you have to get your head around but the numbers are correct. Fermentation is a function of temperature and time. Most recipes out there are either much shorter ferment times or much lower temperature. Yeast reproduces exponentially when it hits the growth phase. That’s what makes the numbers work. If you use more starter than specified for a given temp/time you will wind up with completely over-fermented dough.

    • 5 stars
      I didn’t believe it could work with the tiny speck of starter I used but it turned out to be the best pizza dough ever! Baked it in my Ooni and my family couldn’t believe the beautiful pizzas I made. Thank you!

  2. Excellent directions and recipe. Can you recommend a few books on understanding and making great Neapolitan pizza dough? Also, my Kitchenaid stand mixer has 350W power. Is this enough or will the strain of mixing twice the recipe shown here burn out the motor?

    Reply
    • Glad to hear you found it useful. I don’t have any recommendations for books. I learned by trial and error. I’m also not an expert on Kitchenaid stand mixers I’m afraid. I can say that I used to have one that was 300W and I doubled the recipe regularly without a problem.

  3. This site is amazing. I’d love to see a naan recipe on here. Every other one I’ve tried has had pretty poor results, either it tastes right with the wrong texture, or the other way around. I know it’ll require a crazy heat, but something at least semi-achievable without a full on tandoor would be amazing.

    Reply
    • Thank you. I have been tinkering with a pizza oven naan but it’s still not quite right. I will, for sure, publish a recipe when I nail it.

  4. I am at 24 hours. My dough does not have any bubbles and has not risen. Is the dough supposed to rise like my other pizza dough recipes? I am skeptical this will work since I don’t have a rise just flat dough laying in a tupperware.

    Reply
    • Have faith. You should see a few little bubbles underneath the dough (look at the bottom of the Tupperware). You won’t get a big rise. This is a long, slow ferment. You will see a network of bubbles on the bottom and a light rise and maybe a couple bubbles on top at the end of the ball stage. That’s how you know you are good to go. The oven bounce will give you the rise in the cornice when you cook your pizza.

    • Delighted you enjoyed it. I double or triple it all the time. I find it’s actually easier with my stand mixer to do that in fact. And making more pizzas is always more fun!

    • Active dry yeast you mean? Or cake yeast? Either way I’m afraid I don’t know. I do starter generally and instant in a pinch these days.

  5. 5 stars
    Hi, as a baker I’m used to using sour doughs. I live in Spain and it is impossible to achieve the temperature in your chart here in the summer. As a consequence I adjusted your recipe. I used 20g of sour dough starter and reduced the overall time to 24 hrs as a first attempt. After the initial mixing and slap and fold, I then refrigerated the dough for 12 hrs. Dived the dough into round bowls, covered loosely and refrigerated again for 10 hrs. Removed the dough from the fridge and left at ambient temperature for two hrs and then opened the dough. The results were excellent, so this is a way to control it at higher ambient temperatures, for those in hot countries who don’t have cellars. I will try your 48 hrs method in the winter when temperatures cool down. P.s. love the website, great recipes everytime, you’ve turned me into an Indian chef too. Brilliant.

    Reply
    • Thank you for the kind words:-). Delighted to hear you are enjoying glebekitchen!

      That’s a great tip for those that are well versed in gauging the state of fermentation.

      It’s tough here in the summer as well. Sometimes I use a cooler. I put a frozen water bottle in the cooler along with the dough and leave the cooler open a crack. It’s imprecise and I have to really watch the rate of fermentation but it gets me pizza in July and August so it’s totally worth the extra effort and occasional failure…

  6. Hello sir. Thank you for the wonderful recipe. So when I went to divide and ball my dough it was quite sticky, very hard to work with, sticking like crazy to my hands, so I floured my counter to get it to ball correctly. Is that normal? After 24 hours it was quite risen and bubbly. Is it ok to add more flour to make it workable? Thx

    Reply
    • I usually have bench flour when I’m working the dough so that’s normal. As far as quite risen and bubbly I’d say you are over-fermented. Sounds like your temperature is higher than the table/yeast/starter ratios. You need to be really careful about yeast/starter quantities for long room temperature ferments. I’d put it in the fridge for a few hours to slow things down a bit.

      It’s tricky but as you practice you will start to develop a feel for your dough. Don’t give up!

  7. Any way to push this to 72 hours? I have my dough balled out, hits 48 hour mark tonight (24 bulk 24 balled).

    Should I leave in the cellar or move to fridge until tomorrow?

    -TY 🙂

    Reply
    • The fridge slows it down a lot. Maybe cut your balled period down to 20-21 hours and then put it in the fridge.

  8. I have friends with the ooni oven. Remarkable to get to 900 degrees, but I have to tell you, as much as I would love to own another fancy, effective gadget, this process is an incredible time user. For what? By contrast, I spend 5 minutes with a Zojirushi breadmaker, produce wonderful dough, with sugar, yeast and oil for pizza, and easy-to-get All Purpose flour (cheap), let it rise, then rise again overnight. 10 minutes. And cooks at 475-500 on a stone or steel. And pretty damned good tasting dough – though, I acknowledge, tastes differ.

    Reply
    • If you like your pizza that’s all that really matters at the end of the day. But I suspect I’d rather eat the pizza at your friends place…

  9. Excellent recipe. I made it about a week ago and it was the most flavorful dough I’ve made. So thank you! I do have one question though. I followed the recipe exactly with the exception that I don’t have a stand mixer, so I mixed and kneaded the dough by hand. I did have a 0.001g accuracy scale for the IDY. The dough was definitely sticky but you had mentioned that. So that wasn’t a surprise. The surprise was that the dough stretched too easily. Just lifting the dough to open it up it just drooped. Is that normal? Did I perhaps didn’t knead it enough at first? Or did it over ferment? I did use the accurate scale and I kept the dough in the basement at a constant temperature. Since I hand kneaded it instead of using an electric stand mixer, I did boil 1/3 of the water and combined it with 2/3 refrigerated water to warm up the overall water a bit. I thought I should do that because hand kneading would heat up less than a stand mixer. Was that perhaps my mistake? Any advice would be greatly appreciated.

    Reply
    • That is not normal and it sounds like over fermented to me. I cannot say with any certainty what went wrong as I have never tried it the way you describe. Possibly the use of hot water threw off the fermentation times by speeding things up? The dough is cool to the touch when it is done kneading. Was yours warm? That might explain it.

  10. Romain,
    Why do you do an even split with bulk/balled fermentation time? Have you experimented with longer bulk and shorter balled times (Like 40 hr BF and 6 hr balled)? Just interested in how you came up with the 50/50 split.

    Reply
    • That is just the way I was taught by some of the really great pizza makers when I was learning. I like a good bounce in my cornice and I get it using this split so I’ve never bothered experimenting. I’d be interested in hearing what you discover if you go down this path.

    • Romain – after more experimenting, I found that shortening my time in balls produced a less extensible dough to stretch. I was tearing some pizzas in the oven when I balled for 24 hours (24 BF, 24 Balled). When I went to a 18hr bulk/6 hour balled for 24 hour dough, or a 40hr bulk with 8 hour balled period, my dough still stretched easily, but didn’t get the thin spots that tore in the oven. (I do the 48 hour dough when I use my starter, and the 24 hour when I use cake yeast). Your recipe advanced my research light years. Thanks again.

  11. 5 stars
    Never going to attempt this. Like ever.

    But will be back often for the comments and replies.

    Thanks Romain.

    btw, is the Glebe a reference to Ottawa?

    Reply
    • Haha. Glad you are at least enjoying the comments.

      Yes, Glebe is a reference to Ottawa. It is very hard to find a name that someone isn’t sitting on so I went with the neighbourhood my kitchen is in.

  12. I actually did the opposite added the Ischia to an existing culture. It seems ok, has definitely worked out it’s now 3 -4 weeks. The starter has definitely changed its profile a bit… primarily the smell.

    The Ischia culture came in a packet, so I just poured some of it into my existing starter. Anyway all good news thanks

    Reply
  13. Fantastic stuff in your post and the comments, many thanks.
    May I ask where you obtained your Ischia Sourdough starter? Was it Ed Wood’s Sourdough International? I’m ready to take the plunge into using a poolish for my Neapolitan style pizza. I’m using an Ooni oven and results are good but want to take it to the next level.

    Reply
    • I think so. It was 10 years ago but I looked it up and it seems familiar. It was sold alone back then although they did have the Camaldoli then as well. I managed to kill it last summer and have been limping along with a local culture but I have some coming from a fellow pizza lover soon so I’ll be ready for this summer.

    • This is a question that might be universal. I bought the Ischia culture, but since I already had a starter going for my sourdough, I decide to just add like 50g. Seemed to work pretty well. Any comments.

      Btw had some nice success with my 1st attempt with 1/3 starter and also with the correct amount of starter. I am now trying one with active dry Caputo yeast to see the difference. Should prove interesting

    • Sorry – you added an existing starter to your Ischia culture? A hybrid?

      The Caputo flour/yeast thing you mean? I bought some and have tried it once so far. Worked for me. If I recall correctly, I mixed it with some water and once it was bubbling nicely I just substituted it for starter.

    • My apologies, that wasn’t too clear from me. Yes I had a starter going the last couple years and when I got the Ischia culture “Ed wood” I literally just added 50g and then fed it. Was that a bad or useless idea?.

    • If I understand – you added your existing culture to the Ischia culture. I don’t know what will happen. The two strains will compete I imagine and ultimately one will take over the other or they will reach some level of co-existence. Or, if they reproduce sexually rather than by mitosis you may invent a new strain. It’s been a long time since I studied this so I really don’t remember the details…

  14. Just wondering why you don’t recommend using a food processor? I’ve never made dough in a food processor (or stand mixer), but I don’t have a stand mixer, but do have a food processor. Wondering if it’ll ruin the dough if made in the food processor.

    Reply
  15. 5 stars
    I have been making pizza dough for awhile and have full blown wood fired brick pizza oven that goes to 900+

    I have been doing a lot of experimenting and made some very good doughs with more yeast but refrigerator fermentation. I now am going to try your recipe and am looking forward to it. Thank you for sharing your knowledge.

    At this point I feel pretty good, I have a very active starter and all the gear needed…. however….

    Since this calls for a cool temperature fermentation but not fridge temperature, and I live in Florida, I am going to use my wine cave – I have it set for 64 so that’s all good. My problem is the bowl size and the available shelves in the wine cave…. so here is my question, can I use a proofing box for the 1st fermentation, the rectangular plastic kind i use to put the pizza balls in, or is it too wide and unwieldy?

    Thanks

    Reply
    • A wine cellar with a set temp is my dream for this. You are so set.

      I hesitate a bit because I haven’t tried it in a fermentation box. I suspect it will work but without direct experience I cannot say for sure. Sorry I can’t be more definitive.

    • Thanks!

      I ended up:using a cambro food box. Yea the cellar temp doesn’t change much.
      I have done all of your steps but added 24 hours in the fridge due to to guest constraints…
      I reballed before fridge time… hope that’s going to be ok. I cut initial and 2nd fermentation by 7 hours sine they will be in th fridge another 20 or so.

      Oh, one question, the starter/temp chart is for how much flour or water. I am a bit confused.

      I did 5.6g of my well fed starter w/1L of water. Dough looks good and active, but it’s a bit floppy dough… feels right tho. Will see in a few hours.

    • The chart is for one recipe’s worth (2 pizzas) per the actual recipe at the bottom of the post.

      This is going to get you 90 percent of the way there. You need to develop feel for you dough through time. I keep an eye on the bottom of the Tupperwares as well. Different flours work a bit differently as well. It’s probably the hardest thing I’ve ever learned. And I’m still learning.

      Just realized what you meant by 5.6g starter for 1L of water (so roughly 8 pizzas worth). I expect your dough to be way underfermented so maybe pull it out of the cellar and let it run at room temp?

  16. 5 stars
    Thanks for the thorough instructions! I tried out my new Roccbox for the first time yesterday using your recipe. I’ve made plenty of bread and home oven pizza, but this is a whole new level. I had a crowd to feed, so made a 5x batch. Glad it worked! Lol. I tagged you on Instagram if you want to see how they turned out. I didn’t have a sourdough starter ready, but definitely want to try that next.

    Reply
  17. Hi, Do you have any suggestions for making this a gluten free dough? I know adding Xantham Gum helps to bind it. But if you have any thoughts, they’d be much appreciated.

    Reply
  18. 5 stars
    I was using dough trays, so I didn’t see the bubbles on the bottom. I just ordered clear plastic containers for when I ball the dough.
    I am making a batch with fresh yeast again tomorrow, but would like to try Biga in the future.
    Do you ever coil fold (or stretch/slap & fold) during the actual bulk fermentation?

    Reply
    • Glad to hear that. I find being able to see the bottom is so helpful in dealing things in.

      I don’t do any additional folds. I have settled on exactly the work flow I describe in the post. Well, except for the fact I killed my starter so I’m using a biga right now. But as soon as I get another starter going I will be back to it:-). Probably won’t be until spring now though. Pizza season is over for me right now (winter/snow).

  19. 5 stars
    Here is my question. What are your thoughts on Active Dry Yeast. I used Caputo in the green can…and got almost zero lift on the cornicione. I had great success using your recipe when modified for fresh Compressed yeast, but wanted to try the dry since it is available at more locations near me.
    Should I abandoned dry active and go to Instant? I have yet to try instant. I already know fresh works, but would like a second option.
    All controls were the same, except I modified the amount of yeast used (roughly half of what I used for fresh).

    Reply
    • Did you get decent fermentation? I always look at the bottom of the tupperware to see how the bubbles are developing. I haven’t tried using active dry yeast so I don’t have numbers for you.

      I managed to kill my starter so I have been making a biga as a substitute until I get a starter going again. It’s not quite as active as a starter but I find going with just a little bit extra I get a pretty good ferment.

  20. 5 stars
    Forgot to rate you on my last question. 5 Star! I have been all over the internet and Insta, and your post is by far the best I have studied. Jeff Vasasono’s post is my second fav.

    Reply
    • Thanks! Delighted to hear you enjoyed it. It may be more work but the flavour of properly fermented dough is so worth it. If it was difficult to open it either a bit under-fermented (if it fought you) or a bit over-fermented (if it got really thin and/or you got holes.

      I’ve tried to make this recipe as bulletproof as possible but this is one where you really need to develop your own feel to get to the point where you can nail it 90 percent of the time. I’ve been at this over 10 years and I still don’t get it perfect every single time…

      The great thing is – even if you miss it’s still way better than you can buy (unless you live somewhere with a real Neapolitan pizzaolo of course).

  21. I enjoyed the depth of your explanations, particularly the ratio of yeast to fermentation times.
    One thing that stood out was the cold water to mix the yeast with. I have always seen 100 degrees or so as the recommended temp (1/3 boiled, 2/3 room temp).
    Why cold water?

    Reply
    • The yeast goes in with the flour. The warm water guidance is about activating your yeast. You aren’t doing that here. The cold water is to keep the temperature of the dough down when you’re done all the kneading.

  22. 5 stars
    I’m having trouble finding a spot in the house that is cool enough to ferment the dough, and putting a frozen bottle in a cooler sounds like it would get too cold. Do you have any thoughts on how to create a cool proofing box in a kitchen that ranges from 68-75 degrees depending on time of day and weather?
    (This blog is brilliant btw).

    Reply
    • Thank you for saying:-).

      It is a tricky one and one I struggle with in the dead of summer myself. I use a big, cheap and quite poorly insulated cooler with one bottle and if that is too cold I prop the lid open a bit with a wood shim. It takes some fiddling to dial in and it doesn’t always work out.

      Once you get some idea of what you want a proper ferment looks like (clear Tupperwares are your friend) you will be able to retard the fermentation process (cooler) or accelerate it a bit (warmer) as you go. I do this but I can’t really come up with a way to clearly explain something I do by feel…

  23. Greetings Chef, Thanks for the precision regarding your dough – especially the relationship between temperature, yeast & proofing. I built a wood-fired forno in my backyard several years ago, but my dough was inconsistent. If I absolutely, positively needed proper dough for a party, then I would go to the local Neopolitan pizzaiolo & buy the dough from him. Now, I am making my own dough & I know it will turn out alright. Grazie mille!

    Reply
  24. So we tried these again tonight, cooked in our very own oven at about 450c and they were incredible…!!
    We opted for sourdough this time and the dough held up really well. Seemed to be much easier to work with than the first attempt. The millions of tiny bubbles created the most amazingly light and crispy cornicione. I’m delighted!
    Thanks so much. Check us out on Instagram – we have given you a shout-out!

    Reply
  25. Hi there – i love the look of this recipie, long time reader first time cooker. I have a lovely wood fire oven and have tried many recipies, all of which using much more yeast / starter and all fermenting for the same time, bus spending about 80% of their time in the fridge. I have been pretty happy with these but am excited to try this recipe.

    My question, can you trust that all starters will perform the same? Seems like VERY little (3g for a tripple recipie!) but i trust you! Also, the temp fluctuates a little where im keeping my dough. Will this be an issue?

    Reply
    • Fermentation is a function of time and temperature. A cold ferment (fridge) is way slower than what I have outlined so much higher quantities of yeast are required.

      I can only tell you that many people have used this recipe and I have done it with a couple different starters. As long as your starter is well fed and bubbling when you start you should be fine.

      Temperature fluctuation will affect ferment times. I use Tupperwares for my balled dough so I can keep an eye on the bottom. When I get a bubble structure I like I know I’m ready to go. That’s a feel thing that you will develop over time.

  26. Hello, first off I loved this recipe. The accuracy is right up my street. Thank you so much. It’s similar to what I’ve read at
    I tried it this weekend and it went pretty well. I do have a few questions if you don’t mind.
    I was using yeast this time as my starter was a bit sleepy… The bulk phase went ok and the dough rose only slightly, as I expected. When I shaped the balls the texture felt right, but after balling they collapsed quite a lot quite quickly. I was proofing the balls on a baking tray covered in plastic wrap for the second 24hrs. Reassuringly though I started to see some lovely small bubbles appear on the surface and a little growth (not much though), but I was hopeful of a good finish!
    When I came to shape the pizzas I struggled to get the dough into the bench without it losing all shape and found the dough lacking gluten strength. The lack of strength meant I knocked a lot of the air out shaping. Do you think it was perhaps overproofed and the gluten broken down too much? Maybe a third slap and fold required?
    I proofed are around 69f pretty consistently. I’m using Caputo Pizzaria Blue, but I’ve read that Caputo red is a bit stronger and may be more suited for long fermentation. Any thoughts from the expert…!?
    I’ll definitely be trying it again. Thanks so much!

    Reply
    • I proof balled in Tupperwares that limits the spread. I like them because I can see what’s going on underneath and adapt if I am over (into the fridge) or under (into an oven with the light turned on) target. If you found the dough was hard to work then I would guess it was over proofed.

      I use Caputo Blue myself and don’t have problems with over-fermentation/gluten strength. I have found some other brands (Polselli in particular) don’t stand up as well.

  27. Thank you. very helpful. This makes sense. Seems likes its doing just that(flattening). i just didn’t split it up after 24 hours(balled ferment). I’ll try this next.

    One other question i had… your ingredients call for 369g of flour. Am i taking flour from the 369g to feed my starter? This recipe is so precise just making sure. what I have been doing is 1.2g of starter with 1/2 cup flour & 1/4 cup water for my starter. So i still have 369g of flour when i combine the rest. Not sure if thats correct.

    Reply
    • Don’t take the flour to feed your starter. Just keep doing what you are doing. 369g of flour plus the starter, water and salt.

  28. upon making this dough i am able to form it into a nice dough ball, after 2 days however, it just settles into the Tupperware and loses is nice ball shape. should the ball maintain its shape, what might i be doing wrong. basement is 68 degrees.

    Reply
    • Not sure I fully understand so if my answer isn’t quite right that’s why. First day is bulk ferment. All the dough together in one ball. The second day is balled ferment. Individual pizza dough portions. You want it to flatten out the second day. It should spread to the diameter of the Tupperware. Makes it way easier to open up. I don’t think you are doing anything wrong (except possibly with timing – not sure if I understand your “after 2 days”.

  29. 5 stars
    I’ve built a pizza oven this year and have used multiple dough recipes but this is a cut above the rest. Yes it takes more time and I’d say the dough is definitely harder to get on the peel it’s incredibly elastic (maybe my house is slightly warmer than I predicted and it proofed faster than expected for the amount of yeast from the table ) but the results were amazing! Definitely going to be using this recipe again. My dough rised to the point where it was pushing the cling film off the top of the bowl but in the 30mins to an hour before the oven was up to 450 it started to collapse might this be why it was really hard to handle ?

    Reply
    • That is 450C I assume? I tend to watch the bottom of my dough ball. When I get to the point where I am liking the bubble structure I see I decide whether I can fire it in time. If not, I will put it in the fridge to slow it down a bit. If it’s a bit behind what I want I use an oven with just the light on to warm it slightly.

      This is all about feel ultimately. As you work with this dough more you will start to know it and make corrections as needed.

  30. Hey there! I gave this a go tonight with my new Roccbox and surprise it didn’t turn out perfect! Like you said it’ll take a few times to figure things out. I do appreciate the thorough instructions. What I did notice is that my crust seemed thicker/denser than desired. Before I start in on round two I was wondering if you had any thoughts on what may be the cause. Over proof? Too much yeast? Any ideas would be appreciated. Thanks!

    Reply
    • Hard to say. Over-fermented usually results in a stickier dough that’s harder to open. There are more variables than the dough. The cook is as important. The launch. Deck temperature. Timing. All these things figure into the perfect Neapolitan pizza. It always amazes me how something so simple can be so complicated…

  31. my wine cellar averages about 59 degrees Fahrenheit.. is there a way to get the yeast/starter table for lower temperatures or is that too cold for proofing? I don’t have a great consistent temp in any other room.

    Reply
    • At 59 degrees you would need about 25 grams of starter. I don’t have numbers for yeast I am afraid. That’s pretty cold though. You will have to watch it. If it’s under fermenting, I’d pull it at around a couple hours to cook time and possibly place it in an oven with the light on (nothing else on) and the door closed.

      If it’s trending towards over fermenting slow it down in the fridge. You are actually lucky to have a guaranteed 59 degree environment. Once you get your starter dialled in you will enjoy easy, consistent results.

  32. 5 stars
    Hi, such a passionate and informative article. I’m going in on 24-hour ferment at 19 degrees C average temp. So I’ll double your dry yeast quantity. Next weekend I’ll try the 48-hour process, when time allows.

    The Order of Pizza Passion!

    Reply
    • I’m not sure that doubling the yeast for a 24 hour ferment is going to necessarily work perfectly so watch your ferment and adjust as needed (warmer/colder). Certainly the flavours won’t be there as fast ferments don’t have time to develop the complexity of flavour.

  33. Thanks for the recipe. I’ve tried it a couple of times now, once for a 2 pizza portion and once for a 6 pizza portion(3x ingredients). The 6 pizza portion, I ended up freezing after the 48 hours as the weather had turned and I had to put cooking on hold. The following day, I took the dough balls out of the freezer a couple of hours before I was ready to cook and they defrosted perfectly, but they didn’t taste as good as the first time around. I’m not sure if it was the freezing or the fact that I made 6 at a time that effected the results (or potentially the yeast). Any thoughts?

    As delicious as it is to eat fresh, there are times when I’ll get an unexpected drop in from friends and want to fire up the oven on a whim and have great pizza ready to go, so having frozen dough that works as well as fresh or very close to it would be awesome.

    As for the first try on the recipe, it was very tasty for sure but I don’t think I nailed it either. Will be trying that out again soon once the rain decides to stop!

    I am using yeast and finding it difficult to get right, which could also be the issue. I have 2 scales that are rated to measure .01g but when I put them side by side they both vary in the read out for the same portion placed on top. Sometimes one is more than the other and vice versa. Going by what you said in the article about using literally a few granules, I think I could be getting it wrong, I wonder could you please add a photo of the portion of granules on the scale so we could get a reference as to what that might look like? I know at the very least it would tell me if my scales are bad or not, haha!

    Many thanks

    Reply
    • Have a look around the site. I cook a lot of different styles and I can say, without a doubt, that Neapolitan pizza is the most challenging thing I have ever learned to make. I’ve tried to capture a decade worth of learning in this post to save people trying having to try to figure everything out like I did. But at the end of the day it is a guideline. You are going to have to work at this I am afraid. It doesn’t just come for free. There is feel involved here.

      One trick I used to help develop a better understanding of what I was doing was to take pictures of the dough/bubble structure from below (use a clear Tupperware to ball your dough). I kept the pictures of the batches that worked and tried to adjust accordingly.

      Small variations in temperature over 48 hours makes a surprising difference. Sometimes I’ll put the dough in the fridge to slow things down in the last few hours. Other times I’ll put it in an oven with just the light on to speed things up. Or I’ll even delay dinner by an hour or two. These are the things you will start to be able to do as you get more experience.

      As far as your 6 ball batch goes, bigger batches tend to make it easier to weigh out the yeast accurately so they typically work better. I suspect freezing is what caused the problem. I’ve never even tried to freeze Neapolitan dough.

      I don’t think a picture of the number of granules of yeast is going to help. My yeast could be different from your yeast. The relative humidity where you store your yeast could also affect the measurement. Getting a feel of how the dough looks to manage the effects of time and temperature in your ferment is more important IMO.

      I still mess up after 10 years. In my experience there’s no nailing it every time. You just get to the point where you are more likely to nail it. If you can get to 90 percent nailed and 10 percent not quite there I’d say you were a master. I’ve been to Neapolitan pizzerias in the US where they ferment their dough in a special temperature and humidity controlled room. That’s how much of a difference slight variations can make. And that’s why developing feel is so important. You can’t control everything. You have to learn to adapt.

      I’m not trying to discourage you here. Quite the opposite. I am hoping you understand that this isn’t easy. It is totally worth it. But not easy. A challenge.

  34. You have truly made a great recipe for Neopolitan pizza!

    2 websites I’ve found that help include a yeast conversion table:
    https://www.dovesfarm.co.uk/hints-tips/cheat-sheets/yeast-conversion-table

    And, I also use a pizza calculator that aids in finding different hydration levels:
    https://www.stadlermade.com/pizza-dough-calculator/

    I’ve become partial to 65% hydration and a 200 gram pizza ball.

    I really appreciate your love and dedication for the perfect pizza.

    Thank you!

    Reply
    • The starter is lined up with the quantities in the recipe. The recipe is for 2 pizzas worth of dough.

  35. 5 stars
    Thank you for the meticulous detail in the recipe.

    I’m having difficulty measuring out my Sourdough accurately due to the consistency of the starter. It’s at 50% hydration but whenever I measure the exact weight onto a
    plate it’s difficult to subsequently transfer the exact amount of starter into the dough without wastage.

    Am I missing something? How can I get my exact measurement without leaving any residual on the spoon/plate used to transfer?

    Reply
    • One trick I have heard of but have never tried myself is to try to float your starter in a bit of the water you will be using in the final dough.

      As you get more familiar with making this dough you will also develop feel for the stage of fermentation. Always look at the bottom of your Tupperware and familiarize yourself with your target bubble structure. Maybe snap pics of it and focus on the look. That way you’ll have a picture of what it looked like the times you totally nail your dough (and you will know when it happens – it’s kind of magic).

      Once you have that picture you can move your dough to a warmer place for a couple hours to speed things up a bit right before you fire your pizzas if needed. It’s hard to describe feel in words but hopefully this puts you on a good path.

  36. I just build a very large brick oven and I plan on cooking a large amount of pizzas every time I fire it up. How would I multiply this recipe to get 10, 15 or even 29 dough balls. Also, I’ll be using active dry yeast so I’m confused how to incorporate this into the recipe as well. Thanks!

    Reply
    • The recipe makes enough dough for 2 pizzas. It scales linearly. As far as using active dry yeast, the table and quantities have been worked out for instant dry yeast. I don’t have it worked out for active I am afraid. Sourdough or instant. You would need to experiment to see what works for you.

  37. 5 stars
    A really enjoyable read right down to the comments about using gunpowder scales in the comments. Admire all the commitment to great pizza, I’ve found my people.

    Reply
  38. I got the Ooni pro about two months ago and have tried several different recipes. I stumbled across this site and figured I’d give it a try. I made the pizza tonight and I have to say it far and away blows the other pizzas I’ve made out of the water. The texture was light and airy and the way the crust cooked was beautiful. I’ll definitely be using this as my go to moving forward. And for anyone stating that the yeast quantities are too low, you’re dead wrong. I followed the recipe as written using a KitchenAid stand mixer and it was perfection

    Thanks Romain!

    Reply
    • You are very, very welcome. Thank you for taking the time to leave the comment. I know this one is a big leap of faith but time and temperature is what it’s all about. That and oven temp of course:-)

  39. I’m half way through building a wood fired pizza oven and was looking for a recipe. Definitely think I’ll be trying this one. Now I need to go and learn about sourdough starters?!
    Thanks for the recipe Romain.
    I’ll try and remember to let you know how it goes.

    Reply
  40. my question is about the wonderful table chart that you made for sourdough and dry yeast. is this per 1 pizza dough ball recipe?

    Reply
    • The quantity of yeast or starter in the table corresponds to the quantities of flour, water and salt in the recipe. One recipe makes two roughly 305 gram balls of dough. So yes, it is per one pizza recipe but one recipe makes two balls of dough or two pizzas in the end.

  41. This looks like a fantastic recipe! I don’t have a pizza oven to try this in is my only problem. I do have a pizza stone and a grill. I am wondering if you have ever tried this on the grill or on a pizza stone in a regular oven at its highest temperature? I am on the search to make a naturally leavened pizza dough with results that look like yours but without the ability to put it in a pizza oven or wood fired oven. Any thoughts would be appreciated! Thanks!

    Reply
    • This dough does NOT work well in the oven as written. I have tried in mine. It’s just doesn’t get hot enough. What I have done is add a bit of sugar and olive oil to the dough recipe (about 8 grams of each) to standard 2 pizza recipe and used that. It’s stickier and harder to work but it does cook fairly well at around 500F.

  42. Romain
    I’ve read every word and every comment …. I love your passion.
    I have the same passion for cooking restaurant quality Chinese food – a passion that has lasted over 40 years.
    I love it that now I can cook many perfect dishes, but the road was long and hard.
    Now I’ve switched to pizza devouring everything about the subject I can get my hands on.
    You and your recipe have fast tracked me on my quest for the ultimate pizza from 40yrs to about 2-3 I reckon!!!!
    I reckon the go – after much research is the new ooni koda …any thoughts??

    Reply
    • Glad I could help. The Koda looks like a nice oven but I haven’t used one yet so I don’t know. I would consider the big one for more room though…

  43. hello, i see in your comments you exclusively use sour dough starter now… does that mean you no longer add the dry yeast? if not, can you please tell me how much sourdough starter to use? excited to try this!!

    Reply
  44. Thanks for this great sounding recipe.
    What temperature water do you suggest?
    Is all the proofing done outside the refrigerator? I live at 5000 feet. Do I need to make any changes for elevation.
    Thanks

    Reply
    • You are very welcome! I use water straight from the fridge so 40F. I don’t think elevation would change the fermentation. Typically that has to do with the actual cooking process/boiling point of water I believe.

  45. Hi Romain,
    I calculated 0.12g yeast for 553.5g flour which is wrong. It should be 0.06g yeast. Do you think it would work to ferment the dough at room temp at 17.7°C the first 24hrs then the second 24 hrs of fermentation in the fridge? Thanks

    Reply
    • It’s always something with pizza dough. It really is an art…

      Unfortunately, the relationship between fermentation and temperature is not linear and I don’t have a supercomputer that models every possible combination and permutation. I’m afraid you will have to feel your way along. That’s not such a bad thing. You will learn things along the way. Ultimately, you want to be able to adapt to these curve balls because they will almost certainly keep coming.

      Fermentation slows to a crawl at refrigerator temps. I would try maybe balling it at around 14-16 hours and then let it go at room temp until I saw a good bubble network on the bottom of the dough. Once I saw that I’d stick it in the fridge until about an hour before I was ready to fire pizzas. At that point I’d pull it out, let it warm up and go.

      Good luck.

  46. Hi Romain,

    Well done with post, it’s really terrific! When you are proving, the above suggests covering dough loosely & I wondered if you could elaborate on this please ? I’ve always sealed lid to prevent air getting in & dough drying out but with much shorter prove process. Keen to understand how much air is ‘good’ for room temp longer fermentation. Thank you !

    Reply
  47. What size (diameter) pizzas does this make? I have an ooni and just want to make sure 1 ball stretched out fits and not too big!

    Reply
  48. Hello,
    Thanks for the amazing content. Just want to ask a question about your recipe, when it comes to adding the quantity of starter or yeast. You give an amount of starter or yeast related to the temperature in which the fermentation will take place. What about volume? Do I use the same amount of starter or yeast to make a recipe for 1 pizza to 20 pizza dough yield? Surly if I am going to make a large amount of dough I need more starter or yeast?

    Appreciate your feed back. Thanks

    Reply
    • The amount of yeast or starter in the table corresponds to one recipe’s worth (2 pizzas) of dough. I’ve updated the table to try to make this more clear.

  49. Hi there Romain, I have tried this a couple of times with my sourdough starter and am struggling a bit. Hoping you can help. Both times the dough wouldn’t rise (in either the first or second rise) and during proofing it essentially spreads out and become flat as a pancake. Any ideas?

    Reply
    • I’m assuming you are giving your starter a good feeding before you start.

      This isn’t first and second rise like bread. In fact I don’t think I mention rise anywhere in the post. Pizza dough is not bread. A pizza master drilled that into my head. You aren’t looking for massively airy.

      I use clear Tupperwares to ferment the dough so I work off what I see on the bottom. In the bulk phase you want to see a few small bubbles forming in the bottom. Barely anything happens. In the balled phase you want to see a network of bubbles in the bottom and a slight rise. You aren’t looking for doubled or tripled in volume here. It shouldn’t be flat as a pancake though. It should have a slight, but noticeable rise, from the edge to the middle after the second ferment.

      Don’t give up. Neapolitan dough is not an easy thing to learn. It took me a couple years (and so many pizzas) to get it to the point where I was consistent. I’m almost a decade in and I’m still nowhere Pizzaiola class. Think I’d need to work in a pizzeria in Naples for a few years to get there. Temperature is such a huge factor in these long ferments. And then there’s your deck temperature when you fire the pizza. And your launch. Your timing. But when you nail it, it is incredible. That’s what kept me at it.

    • Hi Romain,

      I’m having a similar issue as John. I used a good scale to measure instant yeast exactly so I know that’s not my problem. I have a cabinet that stays between 68 and 69 so it was easy to determine from the table the amount to use. That said, when I make the dough balls, they didn’t hold their shape during the second 24 hour period. Instead they spread outward. I can’t think this is normal?

      The couple of variables to your recipe are:
      1) water type – I used plain tap water
      2) I kneaded the dough by hand. During the slap and fold process, I did find the dough was tough by the third slap of that step each time. However perhaps not kneaded enough?

      I do have some tiny air bubbles in the dough in the second 24 hour period. My dough temperature after kneading was 74 degrees F. Perhaps I need to go higher aka more kneading?

      Thanks in advance for any insights.

      Mike

    • My dough balls don’t hold shape either. I use 6 inch Tupperwares and they spread out to the diameter of the Tupperware. This isn’t unusual and it really helps open the dough up faster when it’s time to start baking pizzas.

      If you are getting good bounce (your cornice is puffing up) and your dough works well (no unnecessary tearing but opens up without a big fight) and it tastes great you are doing great in my opinion.

      This really is about developing your own feel over time. There’s only so much words can teach. Maybe 85-90 percent of the way there. You really have to do it over and over to get it down. At least I did (and I’m still working on it over 10 years in).

  50. Question:
    my dough got was inadvertently placed on the counter above the dishwasher and got too warm overnight. I’d say it pent a good 6 hours too warm. it proofed. And then some. Can I save it?

    Reply
    • Hard to say without seeing it. If it looks like it could still work (not over proofed) you could stick it in the fridge to slow additional fermentation. If it’s just completely over proofed maybe use it as a starter and make some bread?

    • Sorry. I don’t have the numbers for 24 hours. That isn’t enough time to develop the flavours fully so I’ve never spent the time to try to figure it out.

  51. the table you have regarding the sourdough, is it per pizza?

    I tried to made 6 pizzas with 3g of sourdough, more or less, my scale was not very precise.
    After the first 24h rising, the dough was too sticky and soft, couldn’t work with it. The dough was liquidy. I had to add more flour and mix it again in the mixer. Now the dough feels grainy and less elastic, so I feel I’m going to work it it more before the next step. Either letting it rise a second time overnight and make the dough balls in the morning for a baking in the evening or make the dough balls tonight (given the balls 24 h rising). Any suggestion?

    Reply
    • The numbers are for the stated corresponding temperatures and are per 369g of flour as described in the recipe. For me that’s two large Neapolitan sized pizzas. Not very precise is problematic in this recipe as it is a long ferment and a small variation in temperature or quantity will throw off how fermented your dough is.

      To me it sounds like your dough is severely over-fermented (liquidy dough). I’d consider starting again or at least putting the dough in the fridge to retard further fermentation. Proper Neapolitan dough is not an easy thing and you really do need to take care at every step. When it works, it is amazing.

    • Hello Romain,
      thanks for the answer, in the end, I tried to fix it but it was too late. I made some ok focaccia with it and will try again. The issue is that I am having a hard time to find 00 flour in Melbourne as people went bananas buying flour. I guess they grabbed whatever they could even if it was italian 0 flour

      I’ll try to give it a go asap
      Cheers
      Thibaut

    • I feel your pain. I have a good supply of 00 but I would like some all purpose flour. None to be had here either.

    • It is covered in detail in the post. The room temperature you intend to let the dough ferment at dictates the amount of yeast. This is the crux of making this dough successfully.

  52. Honestly I can’t stress how good this recipe is! You may be surprised with such little amount of yeast (I used sourdough), but trust the recipe it really works! I’ve tried this two ways now; one with the recommended 48hr rise, another with an added day in the fridge (see comments), both worked excellently. If anything I got better spotting with a day in the fridge!
    Don’t look elsewhere this is the recipe for you

    Reply
    • Thank you so much for saying so. This recipe is literally the result of years of my trying to figure this out from dribs and drabs I found online combined with experimentation. I wrote it to make it easy for other people and I am so glad you found it!

    • Hey, this post & thread is excellent ! Quick question on fridge prove – how long before cooking did you remove dough from fridge?

  53. Just halfway through the recipe right now, I was hesitant about the amount of sourdough starter but seems I’ve been proven wrong! Rising nicely and just proceeded to the balling stage.
    I’m looking to prove mine in the fridge for a further day, what would you recommend? 12hr-18hr prove followed by 1 day in fridge? It’ll then be out the fridge for a further 4 hrs before cooking.
    Thanks!

    Reply
    • That’s a tricky one. Fermentation doesn’t stop dead when you put the dough in the fridge. Your plan is reasonable but I can’t predict exactly when it the dough will hit its peak. Maybe err on the lower side of your 12-18 hour plan. Under fermented dough is easier to open. If you are too far over fermented it tends to be a mess. Neapolitan pizza dough is a bit of an art but once you nail it you’ll never look back!

      And to be clear – this recipe is for Neapolitan temperatures so hopefully you have a way to fire your pizza at high temp?

    • Thanks for the tips, I know all about the pains of dough fermentation, a few sourdough loaves ruined due to an overproof! Can’t wait, look forward to sharing back how I got on.

      As for firing to temp, got a home build wood fired oven that gets way to the 400C required, first time with a true neapolitan pizza however.

  54. thanks for this recipe! looks great – i have been using this recipe which uses tonnes of yeast to what i thought are pretty good results, but i am keen to try this!

    One question – re the temperature range of where you leave it to ferment – obviously this will fluctuate overnight. Is this a problem?

    Reply
    • Yes, to some extent it has to. Fermentation is a function of time and temperature. If your temperature goes up your fermentation will happen faster (so time will go down). The opposite (cooler takes longer) is also true. I usually leave my dough to ferment in the basement where temperature swings are less pronounced. Try to average it out the first time you do it and then dial it in from there.

  55. please check your active dry yeast table 1 teaspoon of yeast is 2.83 grams your saying use .04-.07 this is such a tiny amount what bakery in the world uses such a small amount you cant even use an 1/8 teaspoon which is .35g i really think this is wrong but for what its worth i really like your article.

    Reply
    • Thanks for your concern and for taking the time to comment. The table is correct. That is exactly the magic of a slow fermented dough. A few grains of yeast and a long, slow ferment allows flavour to fully develop.

      A neapolitan pizzeria wouldn’t have to deal with such small amounts because they are dealing with commercial volumes. No bakery in the world would make two balls of pizza dough…

    • I’ve had a few people leave me ridiculous comments lately about how this recipe can’t possibly work despite obviously never having tried it. It works exactly as written. Remember, fermentation is about the quantity of yeast, time and temperature. Recipes calling for a tsp or more of yeast rely on much, much shorter fermentation times….

  56. Thanks for a great resource for new pizza makers.

    I am just getting started down this rabbit hole pizza hobby and I love it. I had a quick question for you. Is there a way to use your recipe but use active dry yeast instead of instant? My understanding is that it is larger granules so it needs to be dissolved in warmer water for a few minutes before adding to the dough. 1. Will the warmer water make a difference to the fermentation process? 2. Would the amount of ADY be the same as IDY. And if you don’t know, that’s ok too, just thought I’d ask.

    Oh, and one other question, if you wanted to double the recipe do you also double the amount of yeast?

    Reply
    • I’ve never worked out the proportions/workflow for active dry yeast so I don’t have a good answer for you. I expect the amounts to vary but I cannot predict how without working through it.

      If you double the recipe you double everything. It scales linearly. I’ve never gone past tripling it though because my stand mixer maxes out there. Bigger batches are always easier though as a slight error doesn’t bite you as hard.

      Welcome to Wonderland:-) It can be very frustrating at first but if you keep at it and get your groove you will amaze yourself.

  57. 5 stars
    Got an Uuni 3 and gave this recipe a go for it’s baptism. Used a bit much yeast and over proved it a bit and had burnt bottoms and J had too much flour going in to the oven but was really nice. I have now got myself a sourdough starter for round 2 and was wondering what hydration you keep yours at? Thanks!!

    Reply
    • Awesome. It’s like chasing the dragon. Always looking for the perfect Neapolitan pizza. It’s an addiction.

      I like the Uuni. I’ve had the opportunity to play with it. Nice oven. If I could come up with an excuse I would buy one. Do you have an IR thermometer? I find that really helpful to dial the deck temperature oven. Every oven is different so it really helps you figure out where you want to be. And once you know it’s reproducible…

      I don’t worry too much about my starter hydration. When I feed it I toss half, add 1/2 cup of flour and just a bit over 1/4 cup of bottled water. I really go by feel with it. Sorry I can’t be more scientific.

  58. 5 stars
    I have been making high temp pizzas for a decade now and thought I would question the status quo and do more research to master the ultimate pizza. I’m am so optimistic on this recipe I am leaving a pre-review. I am 48 hours out from my first attempt at this recipe, but i am very impressed so far.
    Comments:
    1.) Overall:
    Very well done. I love the precision. The recipes i have used in the past measure by volume and that is always hit or miss. I was always either adding more flour or water to balance the mixture to what I thought was right. I also was also trying oils and sugars and honey, etc. This recipe, the dough came out perfect with zero effort, like a mathematical equation.
    2.) Temp:
    The prefect pizza is a high temp pizza. This thread said this was not possible to do in a regular oven. This should never be done due to the risk of damage or fire, but hypothetically speaking, if one removed the cleaning mode latch from a regular oven, a standard self cleaning oven gets to an internal temperature of ~800 degrees F. My current method for cooking a high temp pizza is on my green mountain smoker. With the pizza oven chimney on top of the wood fire box, I can get temps of >1000F.
    3.) Scales:
    In order to measure the yeast, a very accurate scale was recommended. I have two comments:
    – I am a long range precision shooter and pulled out my gun powder scale to attempt this recipe. 🙂 In addition to smoking shops, you can also look for scales in the gun room of a sporting goods store.
    – The scale I use to measure my gun power is accurate to 1/1000 of a gram. It registers one pellet of gun powder or in this case, one ball of yeast. I was curious to see the consistency. Obviously this may change between types of yeast, but I measured Fleishman’s instant yeast and counted the individual yeast balls and weighed them. I made an effort to take medium sized balls of yeast and when a large one would come up, I would match it with a small one. Here are my results on 10 measurements of 60 balls of yeast: 0.068g, 0.072g, 0.073g, 0.068g, 0.069g, 0.074g, 0.071g, 0.071g, 0.069g, 0.072g. In a pinch, if you don’t have a scale this accurate, multiply the number in the conversion chart by 850 to get the number of yeast balls required for the recipe. Yes, it surprised me how little yeast this recipe calls for as well.
    *Result may vary, so buy a good scale. 🙂
    4.) That is all for tonight. I am hosting a wood-fire pizza night for my daugheter’s birthday in a couople weeks. Will post a….post review shortly.

    Cheers and happy pizza making!

    Reply
    • What an awesome comment. Thanks for taking the time. Clearly there’s something about Neapolitan pizza that brings out the best in people!

      It is crazy how little yeast is required. I use a sourdough starter now exclusively so the numbers aren’t quite so low but still a good scale is pretty critical.

      I never thought to look for a scale in a sporting shop. That is a very good tip.

      Happy pizza making to you as well!

  59. Thanks for the reply Romain, as the measurements are so small and my room is warm, I’m thinking of upscaling the recipe and freezing additional dough balls. Have you tried this yourself? I would presume to freeze them prior to the 2nd 24hr rise. Do you think this would work?

    Reply
    • I’ve doubled recipes to make things easier to measure but I’ve never tried freezing the dough so I have no idea. Maybe invite some friends over instead? Everybody loves a good pizza!

  60. This looks amazing and can’t wait to try. I currently bake pizzas in a G3 Ferrari oven but about to take delivery of an ooni 3.
    I have my own sourdough and my house temp runs around 70’ f. My concern is how on earth will I get 0.5g of starter measured.

    Reply
    • My neighbour has an ooni. We have made some pretty fine pizzas on it.

      I had the hardest time figuring that out myself. If you go to a smoke shop they have digital scales that are accurate to 0.01 grams. I guess they are for Neapolitan pizza fans and drug dealers:-)

  61. 5 stars
    Great recipe. I used it a few months ago with my Ischia starter and roccbox. I plan on making more pizza this weekend. If I double your recipe, do I double the amount of starter also?

    Reply
    • Thanks!

      Yes, the recipe scales linearly to the maximum size of your stand mixer. I can get 6 300 gram dough balls in mine. Never tried anything bigger.

  62. Excellent tutorial – thank you so much.
    I have a Gozney ROCCBOX pizza oven.
    I think they are now available in the USA and Canada.
    It works on wood chips like the Ooni and also gas, which I use. It gets to 900f and has a silicone outer cover which you can put your hands on without burning them.
    I’m really looking forward to making my first true Neopolitan pizzas in a few days!

    Reply
    • That’s a nice looking oven. I haven’t had a chance to try one yet.

      Think about starting a little below 900F for your first few pizzas. Things happen very, very fast when you are cooking at that high temp. Maybe 775-80F to start? Good luck. It is a journey. Enjoy! It becomes a bit of an addiction.

    • Every time I try this (fourth now) my dough is too wet and I end up having to add flour to be able to handle it. Can’t work out why! Still turns out good but I’m sure it could be better!

    • I can really only think of two things here. Is it possible that your scale is off? Neapolitan dough is not an easy thing to make if you aren’t precise. 4 grams of water is an extra percent hydration. 24g extra water (less than one ounce) and you are into a 70% hydration dough – which is a whole different beast.

      The only other thing I can think of is that you are over-fermenting your dough. It comes out a bit sticky if it is over fermented. Are you being very precise with your temperature and yeast measurements?

      This is a relatively low hydration dough at 64%. It should not be too wet and sticky.

  63. Wow, this is an extraordinary tutorial. You have me thinking I should consider investing in a pizza oven, something I had never considered before.

    Reply

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