This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my disclosure.
On Saturday afternoon’s Hubbyman and I usually watch America’s Test Kitchen on PBS. It is a pretty neat cooking show…check it out sometime if you haven’t already.
A couple years ago, they developed a pizza dough perfect for the grill. We love this recipe! I’ve only changed one thing about this recipe and that is using my Bosch mixer. I don’t have to do all the rising and kneading. It takes so much less time with the Bosch….only about 30 minutes.
My pizza in the top picture is a white chicken pizza: alfredo sauce, grilled chicken, and mozzarella cheese. The bottom picture is a carne asada pizza: garlic olive oil, roasted sliced green chilies, sliced (leftover) carne asada. YUM!
Grilled Pizza Dough
2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
1 cup water (8 ounces), room temperature
2 cups bread flour (11 ounces), plus more for work surface
1 tablespoon whole wheat flour (optional)
2 teaspoons sugar
1 1/4 teaspoons table salt
1 teaspoon instant yeast
1. FOR THE CRUST: Combine oil and water in liquid measuring cup. In food processor fitted with plastic dough blade or metal blade, process bread flour, whole wheat flour, sugar, salt, and yeast until combined, about 5 seconds. With machine running, slowly add liquid through feed tube; continue to process until dough forms tacky, elastic ball that clears sides of workbowl, about 1 1/2 minutes. If dough ball does not form, add more flour 1 tablespoon at a time and process until dough ball forms. Spray medium bowl lightly with nonstick cooking spray or rub lightly with oil. Transfer dough to bowl and press down to flatten surface; cover tightly with plastic wrap and set in draft-free spot until doubled in volume, 1 1/2 to 2 hours. (My Bosch Method: Throw everything in the Bosch, mix on Medium speed about 10 minutes until gluten develops. Move onto to step 2.)
2. When dough has doubled, press down gently to deflate; turn dough out onto work surface and divide into 4 equal-sized pieces. With cupped palm, form each piece into smooth, tight ball. Set dough balls on well-floured work surface. Press dough rounds with hand to flatten; cover loosely with plastic wrap and let rest about 15 minutes.
3. Gently stretch dough rounds into disks about 1/2 inch thick and 5 to 6 inches in diameter. Working one piece at a time and keeping the rest covered, roll out each disk to 1/8-inch thickness, 9 to 10 inches in diameter, on well-floured sheet of parchment paper, dusting with additional flour as needed to prevent sticking. (If dough shrinks when rolled out, cover with plastic wrap and let rest until relaxed, 10 to 15 minutes.) Dust surface of rolled dough with flour and set aside. Repeat with remaining dough, stacking sheets of rolled dough on top of each other (with parchment in between) and covering stack with plastic wrap; set aside until grill is ready.
4. TO GRILL: Ignite 6 quarts (1 large chimney) hardwood charcoal or briquettes in chimney starter and burn until fully ignited, 15 to 20 minutes. Empty coals into grill and spread into even layer over three-quarters of grill, leaving one quadrant free of coals. Position cooking grate over coals and heat until grill is medium-hot, about 5 minutes (you can hold your hand 5 inches above grill grate for 4 seconds); scrape grate clean with grill brush.
5. Lightly flour pizza peel; invert 1 dough round onto peel, gently stretching it as needed to retain shape (do not stretch dough too thin; thin spots will burn quickly). Peel off and discard parchment; carefully slide round onto hot side of grill. Immediately repeat with another dough round. Cook until tops are covered with bubbles (pierce larger bubbles with paring knife) and bottoms are grill marked and charred in spots, 1 to 2 minutes; while rounds cook, check undersides and slide to cool area of grill if browning too quickly. Transfer crusts to cutting board browned sides up. Repeat with 2 remaining dough rounds.
6. Add toppings of choice. Return pizzas to grill and cover grill with lid; cook until bottoms are well browned and cheese is melted, 2 to 4 minutes, checking bottoms frequently to prevent burning. Transfer pizzas to cutting board; repeat with remaining 2 crusts. Cut into wedges and serve immediately.
7. Makes four 9-inch pizzas
**The pizzas cook very quickly on the grill, so before you begin grilling them, be sure to have all the equipment and ingredients you need at hand. Equipment includes a pizza peel (or a rimless baking sheet), a pair of tongs, a paring knife, a large cutting board, and a pastry brush; ingredients include all the toppings and a small bowl of flour for dusting. Timing and coordination are crucial; if you are unsure of your skill level, try cooking the first two pizzas one at a time, then work up to cooking the final two in tandem. The pizzas are best served hot off the grill but can be kept warm for 20 to 30 minutes on a wire rack in a 200-degree oven. Hardwood charcoal and charcoal briquettes work equally well. Whichever you use, it is important that the coals be spread in an even layer over three-quarters of the grill bottom; coals placed any higher will scorch the crust.
Patty says
Oh, how I love grilled pizza. But since I don't have a backyard with a grill (Live in an apartment), I haven't been able to make grilled pizzas. The last time I made one indoors, the fire alarm went off! The ones in our apartment are incredibly sensitive. Your pizzas are gorgeous!
Amy says
I buy my dough, but since I have pulled out my bread machine I am thinking I need to start making it, but you are right it does take just the right dough or it falls through the grates.
Can't wait to give it a try. We also just make grilled dough, instead of rolls, to go with meals sometimes too.
CAjohnsonfamily says
We also did grilled pizza on saturday! It is so much fun to do. You can check out my post here –
http://atasteofmyfavorites.blogspot.com/2010/10/grilled-pizza-party.html