This is a standard recipe for Neapolitan pizza that I keep coming back to when working with yeast. It's simple, delicious and you can't go wrong. You will find many recipes for Neapolitan pizza, but they differ little in essence, because what they all have in common is that you make the dough with flour (tipo 00, a very finely ground and very sieved flour), water, salt and a leavening agent such as sourdough, or what we'll be using in this recipe: yeast. So you can vary in how much water you use to get a lighter dough, or in the amount of leavening agent to speed up or slow down the rising time (not without consequences for the taste of your dough). Here we start from a solid base, but feel free to experiment for yourself once you get tired of playing it safe.
Here are the quantities for 6 dough balls of about 250g - you can always make less, but why would you?! You can also simply freeze the dough balls to use later. Or freeze a freshly baked pizza for a quick pop in the oven on a lazy Sunday night (take it, Dr Oetker!). Moreover, most kitchen scales do not allow you to weigh 0.2g of yeast, so here it is decided: you can make pizza in batches of 6 right away.
_by @bakmanschap - feel free to contact me via Instagram or Facebook .