The Ultimate Sourdough Pizza Crust {From Discard Starter} (2024)

The Ultimate Sourdough Pizza Crust {From Discard Starter} (1)

Jump to Recipe Print Recipe

Who doesn’t love pizza, all hot and gooey, fresh from the oven?

Thankfully, there are as many different kinds of pizza as there are people.

At my house, some of us like it thin and crispy. Some like it deep dish style.

Some of us like mushrooms and onions. And some just want it plain.

If that’s the case at your house too, making large pizzas can sometimes become way too complicated. And who needs that?

So, to make pizza night a success, I often use individual pans and make the sourdough crust ahead of time. Some thick and some thin.

That way everyone gets to build their own pizza exactly the way they like it.

I will even double the recipe at times so that I have left over crusts to freeze. You can freeze them as is, or build the pizza first and then freeze them.

Either way, sourdough pizza crust is a way healthier alternative to most frozen pizzas you can buy at the grocery store.

So I am going to teach you how to make the Ultimate Sourdough Pizza Crust!

Don’t have a sourdough starter yet? Grab a copy of my eBook “Learn How to Create a Sourdough Starter” and get yours going today!

As with all my sourdough recipes you can omit the yeast and allow the sourdough pizza dough to rise much more slowly and develop more of a tang.

Make sure that your starter is active and bubbly if you are not using yeast.

If you want to use this recipe with discard starter you will need the yeast.

One last thing before we get started. I pre-bake the crusts and then remove them from the pans.

Then I let them cool on the racks to put together later, or we build the pizzas right away.

But either way, when I bake the pizzas with the toppings, I always use my baking stone.

This baking stone is the one I recommend for pizza.The Ultimate Sourdough Pizza Crust {From Discard Starter} (2) Itpulls the moisture away from the crust and makes it nice and crisp.

Which is the way I like my pizza crust.

If you like your pizza crust on the chewy side, put them back in the pan after you build them.

Ready?

Here we go!

The Ultimate Sourdough Pizza Crust {From Discard Starter} (3)

Sourdough Pizza Crust

  • 1 cup unfed sourdough starter (discard)
  • 1/2 cup warm water
  • 2 1/2 cups unbleached flour
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 1 tsp yeast
  • 4 tsp Italian seasoning (optional)

Toppings for pizza

  • homemade pizza sauce, Alfredo sauce, or pesto
  • Feta cheese, Pepper Jack cheese, Mozzarella cheese, or cheese of your choice
  • mushrooms
  • onions
  • peppers
  • canned hamburger, pepperoni, summer sausage, canned chicken, or other meat of your choice
  • fresh herbs like basil, thyme, oregano, or rosemary

Making the Dough

To start with you need put the flour, salt, yeast, and the Italian seasoning into a mixing bowl and mix it up.

Then stir your sourdough starter and measure out 1 cup into the bowl and add the 1/2 cup warm water.

Mix well until combined. You can mix it either by hand or with a stand mixer.

The Ultimate Sourdough Pizza Crust {From Discard Starter} (4)

ready to mix it up

If you are making it by hand, turn the pizza dough out onto a lightly floured surface.

Knead until the dough is smooth and slightly sticky. About 10 to 12 minutes.

If using a stand mixer, attach your dough hook and knead for about 7 minutes until smooth and just a tad bit sticky.

After kneading, you need to put the dough back into a greased bowl and turn it to grease the top. It needs to rise until it has doubled in volume.

The Ultimate Sourdough Pizza Crust {From Discard Starter} (5)

kneaded and ready to rise

Depending on how strong your starter is and how warm your kitchen is, the rise time can be anywhere from 1 to 3 hours.

The Ultimate Sourdough Pizza Crust {From Discard Starter} (6)

and now doubled in volume

Now your sourdough pizza dough is ready to rock and roll!

How many crusts does this make?

If you want a deep dish pizza, use all the dough for a single pizza and press it into an olive oiled pan.

For regular sized thin crust pizzas, divide the dough in thirds. If you want a little thicker crust, divide in half.

If you have individual sized pans you’ll need less dough for each crust.

Since there are so many different sizes of pans I can’t really tell you how much you might need. You’ll just have to experiment for yourself.

Ican tell you that I get 6 thin crust mini pizzas with the pans that I have. If someone wants a mini deep dish, I take twice as much dough as I use for the thin crust and that works well for me.

The Ultimate Sourdough Pizza Crust {From Discard Starter} (7)

into the oiled pizza pan

Drizzle olive oil into your chosen number of regular sized pizza pans and tilt the pans (or spread the oil with your hands) until the bottoms are evenly coated with oil.

Shape each piece of the dough into a disc and then put each disc into a pizza pan. Gently press the dough out until it covers the bottom.

It will start to shrink up a bit. That’s ok.

Let it rest for a few minutes and press it out again. Do that for all of the pizzas.

Once you have the crusts in the pans, take a fork and poke holes all over them. These holes keep the crusts from bubbling up as they bake.

The Ultimate Sourdough Pizza Crust {From Discard Starter} (8)

poked all over and ready for the oven

Then cover them and let them rest while the oven preheats.

Preheat your oven to 450°F. If you are going to be baking your pizzas to eat right away, put your baking stone in the oven to heat up.

Baking your sourdough pizza crusts

Once your oven is hot, pre-bake the thicker crusts for 8 – 10 minutes and the thin crusts for 4 to 6 minutes.

Remove from the pans and cool on a wire rack for later, or top immediately with all your favorite fixins.

When you are ready to bake your pizzas, slide them into the oven and onto the preheated baking stone.

I’ve found that using a pizza peel is the best way to get these guys safely into and out of the oven.

This is the pizza peel that I useThe Ultimate Sourdough Pizza Crust {From Discard Starter} (9), and I love it!

The Ultimate Sourdough Pizza Crust {From Discard Starter} (10)

I love this pizza peel

Bake until the toppings are hot and the cheese is melted and browned to your liking.

Approximately 10 minutes for the thicker crust pizza, and 8 minutes for the thin crust pizza.

Let cool slightly before serving. It would be so sad if y’all got blistered tongues!

Here’s some more delicious sourdough discard recipes for you:

Easy Sourdough Vanilla Chai Latte Bread

Easy Sourdough Banana Nut Bread with Chocolate Chips

The Best Chocolate Chip Sourdough Scones You’ll Ever Eat

Award Winning Sourdough Peanut Butter Cookies

The Ultimate Sourdough Pizza Crust {From Discard Starter} (15)

The Ultimate Sourdough Pizza Crust {From Discard Starter} (16)

print pin

Sourdough Pizza Crust

Who doesn't love pizza, all hot and gooey, fresh from the oven? Give this sourdough pizza crust a whirl. It's delicious! BONUS: Make it with your discard!

Course Main Course

Cuisine American

Keyword sourdough discard recipe, sourdough pizza crust, sourdough pizza dough

Prep Time 2 hours hours 30 minutes minutes

Cook Time 10 minutes minutes

Total Time 2 hours hours 40 minutes minutes

Servings 2 crusts

Calories 708kcal

Author Cery

Ingredients

  • 1 cup unfed sourdough starter discard
  • 1/2 cup warm water
  • 2 1/2 cups unbleached flour
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 1 tsp yeast
  • 4 tsp Italian seasoning optional

Instructions

  • To start with you need put the flour, salt, yeast, and the Italian seasoning into a mixing bowl and mix it up.

  • Then stir your sourdough starter and measure out 1 cup into the bowl and add the 1/2 cup warm water. Mix well until combined. You can mix it either by hand or with a stand mixer.

  • If you are making it by hand, turn the pizza dough out onto a lightly floured surface. Knead until the dough is smooth and slightly sticky. About 10 to 12 minutes.

  • If using a stand mixer, attach your dough hook and knead for about 7 minutes until smooth and just a tad bit sticky.

  • After kneading, you need to put the dough back into a greased bowl and turn it to grease the top. It needs to rise until it has doubled in volume.

  • Depending on how strong your starter is and how warm your kitchen is, the rise time can be anywhere from 1 to 3 hours.

  • Divide your dough into your chosen number of crusts.

  • Drizzle olive oil into your chosen number of regular sized pizza pans and tilt the pans (or spread the oil with your hands) until the bottoms are evenly coated with oil.

  • Shape each piece of the dough into a disc and then put each disc into a pizza pan. Gently press the dough out until it covers the bottom. It will start to shrink up a bit. That's ok.

  • Let it rest for a few minutes and press it out again. Do that for all of the pizzas.

  • Once you have the crusts in the pans, take a fork and poke holes all over them. These holes keep the crusts from bubbling up as they bake.

  • Cover the crusts and let them rest while the oven preheats.

  • Preheat your oven to 450°F. If you are going to be baking your pizzas to eat right away, put your baking stone in the oven to heat up.

  • Once your oven is hot, pre-bake the thicker crusts for 8 - 10 minutes and the thin crusts for 4 to 6 minutes.

  • Remove from the pans and cool on a wire rack for later, or top immediately with all your favorite fixins.

  • When you are ready to bake your pizzas, slide them into the oven and onto the preheated baking stone.

  • Bake until the toppings are hot and the cheese is melted and browned to your liking. Approximately 10 minutes for the thicker crust pizza, and 8 minutes for the thin crust pizza.

Notes

As with all my sourdough recipes you can omit the yeast and allow the sourdough pizza dough to rise much more slowly and develop more of a tang. Make sure that your starter is active and bubbly if you are not using yeast.

If you want to use this recipe with discard starter you will need the yeast.

Nutrition

Calories: 708kcal | Carbohydrates: 142g | Protein: 25g | Fat: 4g | Saturated Fat: 1g | Sodium: 1175mg | Potassium: 264mg | Fiber: 8g | Sugar: 1g | Vitamin A: 68IU | Calcium: 87mg | Iron: 3mg

The Ultimate Sourdough Pizza Crust {From Discard Starter} (2024)

FAQs

How much sourdough starter to use in pizza dough? ›

The amount of sourdough starter you need to make pizza dough can vary based on the flour used and the fermentation schedule. Typically, I like to have between 10 to 20% sourdough starter in my pizza dough.

Why is my sourdough pizza crust tough? ›

Another possible cause of tough pizza dough is too low hydration (not enough water in dough).

Is sourdough pizza crust good? ›

There's no pizza like sourdough pizza! With a crispy, chewy crust that is perfectly charred on top and bottom and loaded with all the good stuff. We've developed an easy overnight dough that will hold all your favorite pizza toppings and bake to perfection every time, without a pizza peel.

How to use discarded sourdough starter? ›

Your excess sourdough starter can be used as a key ingredient in a range of delicious recipes – from pancakes to banana bread to fried chicken and even gozleme. This means there's no need to ditch your sourdough discard during the feeding process.

What is the best flour for sourdough pizza starter? ›

Simple answer - Tipo 00 Flour is generally the best flour for pizza dough, however, for sourdough pizza dough, bread flour is a better option because it will give you stretchier, chewier dough and allows you to add a little more water. Higher hydration dough will give you a bubblier, crunchier crust.

What happens if you put too much sourdough starter in your dough? ›

GENERAL RULE: The less starter you use, the slower your dough will ferment - often resulting in a more sour flavored loaf. And you guessed it..the more starter you use, the faster your dough will ferment - resulting in a less sour loaf. Using less starter in your recipe will help slow down the fermentation process.

What is the best hydration for sourdough pizza? ›

70% is the ideal hydration but the dough might be harder to handle specially for beginners. I have tested with various hydrations and figured out 60% is perfect for the sourdough base if you are using strong bread flour and 00 flour.

Why is my sourdough pizza dough so sticky? ›

Your dough can become sticky when you add too much water or the flour isn't suitable for the type of dough you are making. Over proofing or fermenting the dough can also result in the gluten structure weakening causing sticky dough.

How do I make my pizza crust more airy? ›

Adding more water to your dough (“dough hydration”) will give you an airier crust.

Can you overproof sourdough pizza dough? ›

An overproofed dough can negatively impact the texture and appearance of the finished pizza. Overproofing the dough is a very common mistake. Although you can still go ahead and bake it, the resulting crust will be dense and chewy instead of light and crispy.

Does sourdough pizza taste sour? ›

Sourdough pizza can be made 15 minutes after the dough has been divided into balls and rested but the longer you leave the balls to prove in the fridge the more flavour the dough will develop. For the sour flavour to be obvious, you need to leave the dough in the fridge for at least 8 hours and up to 24 hours.

What makes sourdough crust crispy? ›

Increasing the Hydration

Higher hydration doughs generally have a thinner, crispier crust. What is this? This is because there is more water in the dough, so when it hits the oven, there is more steam - allowing your bread to expand more easily before the crust starts to form.

How to tell if sourdough discard is bad? ›

You can store mature sourdough discard in the refrigerator indefinitely. As long as there is no mold, it is good to use. It may develop a grayish liquid on top called “hooch” which can be poured off before use or stirred in. If you stir it in, the flavor will become more sour.

What is the difference between sourdough starter and sourdough discard? ›

I would say the best way to differentiate between discard and active starter is that active starter is starter that has doubled and peaked whereas discard is any starter that is not the main starter and is not being used in an active sourdough recipe as a leavening agent.

Can you do anything with discarded sourdough starter? ›

You can always use this discard by directly mixing it into a dough for baking. Your discard, as long as it's in good shape, will leaven any bread dough just as well. The discard is just like a levain you would make for a recipe. The only difference is it's the same makeup as your starter.

How much starter should I add to my dough? ›

As with any sourdough recipe, before you start baking bread, you want to make sure that your sourdough starter is as strong as possible. My basic sourdough recipe uses just 50g of starter for 500g of flour (so just 10% of starter).

What is the ratio of sourdough starter to flour? ›

Typical feeding ratios are 1:2:2 or 1:3:3 (old sourdough: fresh flour: water). However, even extreme ratios like 1:50:50 would still work. In that case, the freshly fed sourdough would just require more or much more time to grow and reach its peak, as judged by the maximum volume increase in the jar (at least doubled).

What is the ratio of sourdough starter to baking? ›

Sourdough starters should be fed a minimum ratio of 1:1:1, meaning equal WEIGHTS of starter to flour to water.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Sen. Emmett Berge

Last Updated:

Views: 6100

Rating: 5 / 5 (60 voted)

Reviews: 91% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Sen. Emmett Berge

Birthday: 1993-06-17

Address: 787 Elvis Divide, Port Brice, OH 24507-6802

Phone: +9779049645255

Job: Senior Healthcare Specialist

Hobby: Cycling, Model building, Kitesurfing, Origami, Lapidary, Dance, Basketball

Introduction: My name is Sen. Emmett Berge, I am a funny, vast, charming, courageous, enthusiastic, jolly, famous person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.