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Classic Pizza Dough, Neo-Neapolitan-Style

Written By Peter Reinhart
Thursday, 23 December 2010 Written Recipes

 

Classic Pizza Dough, Neo-Neapolitan Style

(Makes five 8-ounce pizzas)

 

What makes this Neo-Neapolitan is that I use American bread flour instead of Italian -00- flour, but you can certainly use Italian flour, such as Caputo, if you want to make an authentic Napoletana dough. Just cut back on the water by about 2 ounces, since Italian flour does not absorb as much as the higher protein American flour. Always use unbleached flour for better flavor but, if you only have bleached flour it will still work even if it doesn’t taste quite as good. If you want to make it more like a New Haven-style dough (or like Totonno’s or other coal-oven pizzerias), add 1 tablespoon of sugar or honey and 2 tablespoons of olive oil. These are optional–the dough is great with or without them. As with the Country Dough, the key is to make it wet enough so that the cornicione (the edge or crown) really puffs in the oven.

Neo-Neopolitan Dough

Neo-Neopalitan dough in proofing trays

5 1/4 cups (24 ounces by weight) unbleached bread flour

2 teaspoons (0.5 oz.) kosher salt

 

1 1/4 teaspoons (0.14 oz.) instant yeast (or 1 1/2 teaspoons active dry yeast dissolved in the water)

2 tablespoons (1 oz.) olive oil (optional)

1 tablespoons (1/2 oz.) sugar or honey (optional)

2 1/4 cups (18 oz.) room temperature water (less if using honey or oil)

–You can mix this by hand with a big spoon or in an electric mixer using the paddle (not the dough hook).

–Combine all the ingredients in the bowl and mix for one minute, to form a coarse, sticky dough ball.

–Let the dough rest for five minutes, then mix again for one minute to make a smooth, very tacky ball of dough.

–Transfer the dough to a lightly oiled work surface, rub a little oil on your hands, and fold the dough into a smooth ball. Let it rest on the work surface for 5 minutes and then stretch and fold the dough into a tight ball. Repeat this again, two more times, at 5 minute intervals. Place the dough in a lightly oiled bowl, cover with plastic wrap, and immediately place in the refrigerator. The dough can be used anywhere from 6 hours to three days after it goes in the fridge.

(Note: the following steps are the same as for the Country Pizza Dough:) When ready to make the pizzas, pull the dough from the refrigerator two hours prior to when you plan to bake. Divide the dough into five 8-ounce pieces (if there is any extra dough divide it evenly among the dough balls). With either oil or flour on your hands, form each piece into a tight dough ball and place on a lightly oiled pan. Mist the dough balls with spray oil and cover loosely with plastic wrap or place the pan inside a large plastic bag. Give the dough at least 90 minutes before making the pizzas. If you don’t plan to use them all, place the extra dough balls inside of an oiled freezer bag and keep in the refrigerator (for up to three days) or in the freezer (for up to three months).

–If using a pizza stone in your home oven, preheat the oven to the highest setting

one hour before you plan to make the pizzas. If using a wood-fired oven, you know what to do for your particular oven. If you do not have a baking stone you can bake the pizzas on a sheet pan.

–Top with your favorite toppings–this dough can be stretched thin (12-13 inches) for Roman-style pizzas, or 10-11-inches for Naples-style.

 

Comments

Dmax

Trastevere – there are threads regarding this on pizzamaking.com
Also a good site for finding different crusts. Changing hydration alone may not get you what you’re looking for.

I haven’t tried poolish yet but will eventually

Paddle rather than hook because it’s gentler. He wants the eventual stretch and folds to do most of the work. 10 min in a mixer is much longer than this dough needs.

Gene Schwimmer

I’m a little confused about this recipe, as written. For sugar, you say 1/2 oz., but for kosher salt, you say 0.5 oz., which is 5/10 oz. or the same as 1/2 oz. Why fractions in one case and decimals in the other? Could “0.5” be a typo? I ask because I weighed out 2 tsp of Diamond Kosher Salt and got a tad over 0.2 oz. So which should I use, 0.5 = 1/2 oz., 0.2 oz. or 2 tsp.?

Kevin

Peter,

I make the neo-neopolitan dough recipe from american pie almost exclusively. It is fantastic. However, I would like to know if it is possible to remove the oil and sugar and end up with a dough that browns as nicely, has the same chewiness, and puffs up just as well. My equipment consists of a conventional oven and baking stone. Whenever i try the dough w/o sugar or oil, it comes out dense and tough. it doesn’t brown well either. typically i’m using KABF.

Homer

Peter:

If you could please respond, it would be greatly appreciated:

If you multiply this recipe out for bulk dough making (I cater a lot). My current recipe with the flour I use just doesn’t have enough water (I switched to an American flour), so if I multiply out the recipe to my bulk recipe, there’s an extra 800g of water (which makes about 100+ personal sized doughballs).

Anyway, hope that makes sense. My old recipe is 65% water whereas yours is 75% water…

DimTex

Peter, is it okay for the dough to rise a bit in the fridge or should I put the dough in a colder place? The dough recipe is great, the fam loves it, thanks.

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