
thanks to this dough recipe from Vincenzo’s Plate (find his video tutorial on YouTube)
There’s something almost mythical about Neapolitan pizza. Long before it became the global gold standard for pizza lovers, it was the humble street food of Naples — a quick, blistered, beautifully simple creation meant to be eaten hot, folded, and on the go. The dough itself was born out of necessity: inexpensive ingredients, fast hands, and a fiery oven.
Neapolitan pizzaioli didn’t have time to fuss. Dough had to be mixed quickly, folded quickly, shaped quickly. Work too slow and the dough turned sticky, slack, and unmanageable. Work fast and it rewarded you with that signature airy cornicione and soft, leopard‑spotted base.
Today, even without a 900°F wood‑fired oven, you can bring that same tradition into your own kitchen. The secret isn’t fancy equipment – it’s respecting the dough, keeping air in the right places, and moving with purpose.
Below is the full recipe from Vincenzo’s Plate, plus how to make it work beautifully in a regular home oven.
Neapolitan Pizza Dough (Fast Hands Required!)
Why speed matters
This dough is high‑hydration, which means it’s soft, delicate, and sticky if you hesitate. Move confidently and it stays smooth and elastic. Slow down and it clings to everything like a toddler with separation anxiety.
Why airtight matters
Air is the enemy of a good rise. Whether you’re resting the dough or storing your dough balls, make sure they’re covered so no air escapes. A tight container or a generously sized cloth is your best friend.
Why flour matters
If the dough starts sticking to your hands or the bench, sprinkle – don’t dump – a touch of flour. Just enough to help you keep control without drying the dough out.
Ingredients
- 1 kg flour (35.27 oz)
- 650 ml water (2.7 cups)
- 30 g salt (2 tbsp)
- 2 g fresh yeast (or ½ tsp dry yeast)
- 10 g sugar (2.4 tsp)
- 25 g olive oil (0.88 oz)
Instructions
1. Build the base
Add water and salt to a large mixing bowl and dissolve with your hand. Add a handful of flour, mix, then another handful. Add yeast and dissolve it with your fingers. Add sugar, mix, then continue adding flour gradually until all of it is incorporated.
2. Work the dough
Use one hand to scrape the sides of the bowl and fold the dough from the bottom upward. Add olive oil and fold it in. Cover with a cloth and rest 5–10 minutes.
3. Fold fast
Uncover and begin folding the dough: pull each side into the center, turn the bowl, repeat. Once smooth and elastic, cover tightly with cling wrap and a cloth. No air gaps.

4. Long rise
Let the dough rest in a cool spot for 16 hours. It should double in size.

5. Shape the balls
Turn the dough onto your bench and divide into 250 g (8.8 oz) balls. Place in an airtight container or cover with a large cloth. Rest 3–4 hours.

cloth so they don’t dry out. Rest them for another 3-4 hours.
6. Stretch the dough
Flour your bench. Lift a dough ball gently. Add a sprinkle of flour on top. Press from one inch inside the bottom edge to one inch inside the top edge. Flip and repeat. Stretch over your forearm, flip, and shape into a circle.
How to Cook Neapolitan Pizza in a Home Oven
Here’s where the magic meets reality…. you can get a Neapolitan‑style result without a wood‑fired oven.
1. Preheat like you mean it
Turn your oven to its hottest setting (mine goes to 550F) using the broiler/grill function. Place your pizza stone in the center of your TOP oven rack and let it heat thoroughly.
2. Top simply
Add fresh tomato sauce, a sprinkle of pecorino, and fior di latte mozzarella. Keep toppings light. You can throw on some basil but dip it in olive oil first so it doesn’t burn.
Or you can choose to put it on fresh after it’s cooked.
3. Bake fast
Carefully slide the pizza onto the stone. (It helps if you have a pizza peel – if you do dust it with thin layer of cornmeal or flour so it slides off better.
After about 1.5 minutes, lift and rotate the pizza off the stone with your peel or a large spatula (careful you don’t burn yourself!) for even cooking.
Total time: roughly 3 minutes. That’s it! It’s because you have the broiler on super hot just like a real pizza oven.
4. Serve immediately
Drizzle with some EVOO, hot honey or more cheese but eat it fast…because once it hits the table, it disappears fast!
TIPS: Keep the toppings simple or your pizza won’t cook through. It’s ok if it gets a little charred as that is normal. You’ll notice how airy your crust will be!

