Mom's Best Recipes
Recipe

Hearty Pizza Crust Recipe

A sturdy, crunchy-edged homemade pizza crust that stays crisp under sauce and cheese. Pantry-friendly ingredients, clear steps, and a dough that is forgiving on busy weeknights.

Author By Matt Campbell
4.8
A baked pizza on a preheated pizza stone with a thick, golden crust and crisp edges in a home oven

If you have ever pulled a pizza out of the oven and thought, why is the middle soft but the rim is perfect, this is the crust that fixes it. This hearty pizza crust bakes up with a crisp bottom, crunchy edges, and enough structure to handle a generous layer of sauce and toppings without going limp.

It is the kind of dough I make when I want pizza night to feel like a small win. No hard-to-find flours, no complicated folds, no drama. Just a dough that is easy to work with, easy to stretch, and very happy on a ripping hot pan or stone.

Hands stretching pizza dough into a round on a floured countertop with a small bowl of flour nearby

Why It Works

  • Crunchier crust from a hot bake and a touch of sugar for browning.
  • Hearty chew from higher protein bread flour, plus enough hydration to keep the inside tender.
  • Better structure thanks to a short rest after mixing and a full rise that builds flavor.
  • Less sticking with a simple flour and cornmeal dusting and smart shaping tips.

Pairs Well With

Storage Tips

Storage Tips That Keep It Crisp

Baked pizza slices

  • Fridge: Cool completely, then store slices in an airtight container for up to 4 days. If stacking, place parchment between slices.
  • Reheat (best crisp): Warm in a skillet over medium heat for 3 to 6 minutes with a lid for the first 1 to 2 minutes, then uncover to re-crisp the bottom. Or bake at 425 F for 6 to 10 minutes directly on a sheet pan.
  • Freeze: Wrap slices tightly and freeze up to 2 months. Reheat from frozen at 425 F for 10 to 14 minutes.

Pizza dough

  • Fridge (make ahead): After the first rise, portion into dough balls, lightly oil, and refrigerate in covered containers up to 48 hours. Let sit at room temp 60 to 90 minutes before stretching.
  • Freeze (best planning move): After the first rise, portion, oil, and freeze in freezer bags up to 3 months. Thaw overnight in the fridge, then rest at room temp 60 to 90 minutes.

Common Questions

Common Questions

Can I use all-purpose flour instead of bread flour?

Yes. The crust will be a little less chewy and slightly less crisp, but it will still be good. If you have it, mix half all-purpose and half bread flour for a nice middle ground.

Why is my crust not crispy on the bottom?

The usual culprit is heat. Preheat your oven for at least 30 minutes and bake on a preheated stone or steel if you can. Also go lighter on sauce and watery toppings, and make sure your pizza is not sitting on a cold pan.

Do I need a pizza stone or steel?

No, but it helps a lot. A heavy sheet pan or a cast iron skillet works too. If using a sheet pan, preheat it in the oven so it starts hot.

How do I keep the dough from snapping back when I stretch it?

That means the gluten is tight. Cover it and let it rest 10 to 15 minutes, then try again. Resting is the secret handshake.

Can I make this crust thicker like pan pizza?

Absolutely. Press the dough into a well-oiled cast iron skillet, let it rest 15 minutes, then dimple it gently and add toppings. Bake until deeply golden and crisp around the edges.

Can I bake on parchment at 500 F?

You can, but you need to treat it like a tool, not a permanent roommate. Use parchment only for shaping and the initial launch, then slide it out after the crust sets (about 2 to 3 minutes). Trim it close to the dough so no paper hangs over the edges. And do not broil with parchment in the oven.

I used to think a great pizza crust required a whole weekend and a notebook full of hydration math. Then I started chasing what I actually wanted on a Tuesday: a crust with crisp edges, a sturdy bite, and enough personality to stand up to a bright sauce and a reckless amount of cheese.

This is the dough I landed on after a lot of happy messing around. It is flexible, it forgives small measuring sins, and it delivers that moment when you lift a slice and the tip does not immediately collapse like it is giving up on life.