Pan-Fried Pizza Recipe (2024)

By Mark Bittman

Pan-Fried Pizza Recipe (1)

Total Time
2 hours
Rating
4(299)
Notes
Read community notes

Featured in: Pan-Fried Pizza Time: About 2 hours

Learn: How to Make Pizza

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Ingredients

Yield:At least 4 servings

  • 2cups all-purpose or bread flour, more as needed
  • ¾teaspoon instant yeast
  • 1teaspoon coarse salt
  • 3tablespoons extra virgin olive oil, more for cooking
  • About 2 cups any light, fresh tomato sauce, warmed
  • Sliced mozzarella to taste
  • Salt and black pepper
  • Prosciutto slices and basil leaves for topping (optional)

Ingredient Substitution Guide

Preparation

  1. Step

    1

    Combine flour, yeast and salt in a food processor. Turn machine on and add ½ cup water and 2 tablespoons oil through feed tube. Process for about 30 seconds, adding more water, a tablespoon or so at a time, until mixture forms a ball and is slightly sticky to the touch. (If mixture becomes too sticky, add flour a tablespoon at a time.)

  2. Step

    2

    Put one tablespoon olive oil in a bowl and turn dough ball in it. Cover bowl with plastic wrap and let rise until dough doubles in size, 1 to 2 hours. When dough is ready, re-form into a ball and divide it into 4 pieces; roll each piece into a ball. Place each piece on a lightly floured surface, sprinkle with a little flour, and cover with plastic wrap or a towel. Let rest until each puffs slightly, about 20 minutes.

  3. Step

    3

    When ready to cook, press one ball into about a 10-inch round. Use a little flour, if needed, to prevent sticking and a rolling pin, if desired. Film a 10-inch skillet with olive oil and turn heat to medium. When oil shimmers, put dough in pan and adjust heat so it browns evenly without burning. (If dough puffs up unevenly in spots, push bubbles down.)

  4. Step

    4

    Turn dough, then top browned side with tomato sauce, cheese, a bit of salt and pepper, and, if you like, prosciutto and/or basil leaves. If top is now heavily laden, cover pan and continue cooking, or run it under broiler, just until toppings become hot. With only a couple of toppings, just cook until bottom browns. Repeat with remaining dough; serve hot, warm or at room temperature.

Ratings

4

out of 5

299

user ratings

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Private Notes

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Cooking Notes

KensCooking

I make pizza every Friday. My thoughts on this:

Step 2 - Let the dough rise in the refrigerator for 1-3 days - will taste way better.

Step 3 - Never rolling pin pizza dough. Use your hands. You can do it. I know you can. Then let that sit for 20 minutes or so.

Celeste

Although I used Sifton's Roberta's Pizza Dough recipe for the dough, I decided to try Bittman's pan fry technique, followed by letting people top their own pizzas and then finishing the pizzas in the oven--Wow! Best pizzas ever.

JEAN BURNETT

I love this, but would use pizza dough as sold by pound in my local supermarket. (blush )

DallasLaura

I used Suzanne Lenzer's Quick Pizza Dough recipe (which has become my go-to because it is SO easy) and it was delicious! I agree with KensCooking's comment - the dough is so much better after a few days in the fridge.
Topped it with left over kale pesto, grilled chicken, fresh tomatoes and feta and mozzerella cheeses and ate it my favorite way: topped with a lightly dressed arugula salad. YUMS!

Tony

When I tried to melt the cheese by putting the pizza (still In the skillet) in the broiler I burnt the bottom of the pizza. So I fixed this by taking the pizza out of the skillet and placed it on a pizza stone or cookie sheet in the broiler for about 5 minutes to melt the cheese.

NYPolarCat

Wow, this is delicious! What a wonderful way to enjoy homemade pizza and NOT heat up the home with keeping a 500 degree oven on for an hour.

Kylie

Probably never going to make pizza in the oven again. This was so convenient for summer cooking, no need to have the oven on for an hour!

Thomas

I know that it isn't healthy, but... this is fantastic. I would recommend watching the salt all around. I used the recommended salt in the dough, but used unsalted mozzarella, sauce (made of canned tomatoes, olive oil and salt) prosciutto de parma and salted the first pizza (which was a mistake). Even cutting salting the remaining pizzas, it was still a bit on the salty side for me. Everyone else enjoyed it though!

andrea karsh

I used arttisan bread dough with Kalamata olives that I had rising, homemade pesto,roasted cherry tomatoes and mozzarella cheese. Heaven.

andrea

Needed to add significantly extra water & oil.

Candace Gallagher

Fabulous! Made this tonight as written - WOW! Best pizza ever and so easy! I kept it simple with a very light homemade tomato -basil sauce and fresh mozzarella. The crust is simply amazing! I froze two of the four dough balls to thaw and cook another time. I suspect it will work well!

Jennie

Love the method, used this with Roberta's pizza dough recipe in the past to raves. Today I forgot and just used this recipe and it was too dry, didn't rise well and for sure I won't forget and make that mistake again. Still the fry pan method of cooking rocks!

KatSteiger

Great option for making pizza for one -- no need to crank up the grill or heat up the oven.

KellyNC

Glad I stumbled on this recipe. Current heatwave means cranking the oven up is ridiculous. Surprised they haven't featured this recipe lately. Made it 2 ways, Trader Joe's crust worked just as well. I like peppers and shrooms too so I sauteed them with the prosciutto and basil then put it on the pie after moving it to a cutting board. The crust turns out wonderfully and the whole thing took just minutes. Great recipe. I may broil the cheese to brown in the winter but not now.

TechMaven

This is reminiscent of the pizza I had in Fiuggi in 1972. They would pan fry the dough on both sides, place it on a pizza paddle, add the sauce, cheese and other toppings, and then slide it into a furno that had been building heat all day for just a minute. It would come out perfectly charred on the outside, chewy, just unctuous enough, the most delectable dish imaginable. Of course all the ingredients were fresh - fresh ground flour, from scratch sauce from the day's tomatoes, fresh mozz.

mark clayton

Can I use a larger skillet?

andrea karsh

I used arttisan bread dough with Kalamata olives that I had rising, homemade pesto,roasted cherry tomatoes and mozzarella cheese. Heaven.

JEAN BURNETT

I love this, but would use pizza dough as sold by pound in my local supermarket. (blush )

Kylie

Probably never going to make pizza in the oven again. This was so convenient for summer cooking, no need to have the oven on for an hour!

Tony

When I tried to melt the cheese by putting the pizza (still In the skillet) in the broiler I burnt the bottom of the pizza. So I fixed this by taking the pizza out of the skillet and placed it on a pizza stone or cookie sheet in the broiler for about 5 minutes to melt the cheese.

Ellie

This so easy and fun! I used Sifton's Roberta's Pizza Dough recipe for the dough, and it worked out great - the kids loved it!!

DallasLaura

I used Suzanne Lenzer's Quick Pizza Dough recipe (which has become my go-to because it is SO easy) and it was delicious! I agree with KensCooking's comment - the dough is so much better after a few days in the fridge.
Topped it with left over kale pesto, grilled chicken, fresh tomatoes and feta and mozzerella cheeses and ate it my favorite way: topped with a lightly dressed arugula salad. YUMS!

KensCooking

I make pizza every Friday. My thoughts on this:

Step 2 - Let the dough rise in the refrigerator for 1-3 days - will taste way better.

Step 3 - Never rolling pin pizza dough. Use your hands. You can do it. I know you can. Then let that sit for 20 minutes or so.

NYPolarCat

Wow, this is delicious! What a wonderful way to enjoy homemade pizza and NOT heat up the home with keeping a 500 degree oven on for an hour.

Private notes are only visible to you.

Pan-Fried Pizza Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is the best flour for pan pizza? ›

The best flour for making Deep-Dish Pizza Dough is all-purpose flour. In bakeries and pizzerias, Pizza Flour is often used because it is a high-protein flour that produces a light and airy crust. However, all-purpose flour will also work well for Deep-Dish Pizza Dough.

How do you make the bottom of a pan pizza crispy? ›

Preheat oven to 530° DIRECT HEAT, not convection. Lightly brush pan with olive oil, build pizza, place in middle of oven, ready in about 12 minutes. Halfway through, if top crust is browning faster than bottom, place pan on the next lower rack; Higher if opposite. Below, bottom crust on this pizza is as crisp as top.

How to fry pizza on pan? ›

Heat a non-stick frying pan over a high heat and add a tablespoon of the oil. Place one of the pizzas into the pan and spoon over some of the tomato. Swirl it over the top, leaving a gap around the edge. Top with mozzarella and salami and a pinch of chilli, oregano and salt.

How to pan fry pizza in the oven? ›

Start by defrosting the pizza slightly so it's easier to cut into slices that will fit into the pan. Then, heat your pan over medium heat and add a bit of oil before placing the pizza slice in. Cover the pan with a lid and let it cook for about 5-7 minutes or until the bottom is crispy and cheese on top is melted.

What is the best oil for pan pizza? ›

Olive oil: Oil is needed to stop the pizza dough from sticking to the sheet pan, and also to keep the dough nice and moist and get that crispy crust. I find that olive oil works best for this.

What is the best flour for pizza not sticking? ›

The goal is for the pizza dough to easily slide off the peel and onto your waiting Baking Steel in the oven. The semolina flour acts as a ball bearing between the wood peel and the dough. In other words, it will help that dough stay "loose" on top. If the dough gets stuck, your launch is bound to be an epic fail.

What is the secret to a crispy pizza crust? ›

Up the temperature

If you want to get a good crisp on anything you're cooking, you should amp up the cooking temperature. When cooking pizza, Pizza Heaven recommends putting your oven on the highest setting possible to get a crispy crust.

Why is my homemade pizza bottom not crispy? ›

The steam from the base can't escape, so it condenses on your crispy surface and turns it wet and soggy. Use a pizza stone or a pan with holes to get a crispy pizza crust. A pizza stone will keep your pizza hot and its porousness will absorb some condensation.

How do I get my pizza crust to brown on the bottom? ›

By preheating, the pan absorbs heat, allowing it to deliver it to the bottom of your pizza when the dough is placed on top.

How do you keep pizza from sticking to the pan? ›

I always squirt olive oil onto the pan before placing the pizza on it. This creates a crisp, flavorful crust that won't stick to the pan. Carefully place the prepared pizza onto the hot pan. Cook on the lowest level in the oven for approximately 14 to 16 minutes.

Should you grease the bottom of a pizza pan? ›

Oil the pan well by brushing a layer of vegetable-based oil (vegetable oil and canola oil work well) on the bottom, corners, and inside walls. Be sure to cover every surface to reduce sticking, but also be careful not to over-oil: if the oil puddles, you won't be able to stretch your dough.

Can you cook pizza on a regular pan? ›

The dough for a pan pizza is soft and easy to prepare. It contains yeast, which will help it rise in the oven. You can bake it in any oven-safe pan. Using a non-stick pan will also allow you to make a quick tomato pizza.

Can I put pizza dough directly on pan? ›

Grease inside of a large skillet or baking pan with olive oil. Press dough into pan so that it comes up the sides a little. Add your favorite toppings (make it a family affair and allow everyone to join in). Bake pizza in preheated oven until done.

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