Lahey Pizza Dough | Tipo 00 Flour | Fig Jam, Caramelized Onion, Blue Cheese Pizza
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A series of fortuitous events in the past few months have led to a number of wonderful discoveries: an ingredient — Tipo 00 flour; a technique — minimal handling of dough; and a reward — the best pizza I have ever made at home.
Let’s start from the beginning. Five trips in three weeks to 2Amys Pizzeria in NW Washington DC (over an hour drive from my house) convinced me it was finally time to get my hands on some Tipo 00 flour, a soft-grain flour requisite in the production of D.O.C. Neapolitan pizza, an ingredient I’ve been thinking about for five years now.
I hate to admit it and in retrospect it pains me, but a $7.25 shipping charge has been the sole barrier between me and Tipo 00 flour for about a year now. Am I wrong to expect everything to ship for free and arrive the next day? (I know, so bratty! Sorry.) Anyway, to soften the blow, I ordered 10 bags, which made the total price per bag $4.22, a nominal fee especially when each bag yields six pizzas.
About the time that my flour arrived, I received a text message from a friend who had been experimenting with the Jim Lahey pizza dough. The message read: “Help!” While she had been having great success flavor-wise with the Lahey recipe, her pies were less than picturesque. (Click on the link…it will make you chuckle. I love you, Bates.)
I had to come to my friend’s rescue. She had requested video guidance, which I was certain was out there and which I was determined to find for her. My quest for her, however, may have proven to help me equally as well. A video and a note published on Serious Eats made me realize that for all these years that I have been making homemade pizza, I have been majorly overhandling my dough, at least for the sort of pizza I strive to make.
The note from Lahey read as follows:
“As soon as I began really paying attention to how I shaped my pizza rounds by taking care to use a gentle hand, I noticed a difference in the finished product. The air pockets pervading the unbaked round really affect the texture of the baked pizza.”
Having just spent $42 on 10 bags of flour, I sort of wished Lahey felt more strongly about the type of flour he used, but ultimately I agree that the handling of the dough is more important than the type of flour used. As soon as I began really paying attention to how I shaped my pizza rounds — gently/minimally — I noticed a difference in the finished product. The air pockets pervading the unbaked round (video/photo below) really affect the flavor and texture of the baked pizza.
I’ve made the Lahey dough many times now, and it is always delicious, regardless if I use bread flour or Tipo 00 flour. I do feel strongly, however, that the Tipo 00 flour produces a superior product, especially in texture. The unbaked dough is softer, more delicate and easier to shape — it doesn’t resist the shaping as much as the dough made with bread flour. The crust of the baked pizza, too, is a bit more tender, and the outer edge has a bit more chew.
Again, regardless of the flour, with the Lahey method, I’ve finally been able to achieve that quintessensial Neopolitan ballooned and blistered outer edge. I think I’m ready for my wood-burning oven. Santa, I hope you’re reading.
Finally, Readers, as you might imagine, I have a few extra bags of Tipo 00 flour on hand. Since you won’t be able to find this product without paying for shipping, I’d love to share my remaining bags with a few of you. Leave a comment if you’re interested. Just tell me you’re favorite thing to eat or you’re most valued kitchen tool (one of mine is commercial-grade plastic wrap, see below) or what’s next on your to-make list. Thanks so much for reading.


2Amys Pizzeria serves D.O.C. Neapolitan pizza, which means they follow the strict requirements outlined by the Italian government for producing authentic Neapolitan pizza. The guidelines cover all the bases: the oven (wood-burning); the shaping (by hand); the final size (no larger than 11 inches); the ingredients (dough must be made with tipo 00 flour, fresh yeast, water and salt and the toppings extend to Italian plum tomatoes, mozzarella di bufala, extra-virgin olive oil, fresh basil and dried oregano).

If you’re looking for more information on Tipo 00 flour, this link on Forno Bravo is helpful.








Shots from our lunch at 2Amys a few weeks ago:
Green tomato, ramp, Grana & egg pizza:

The margherita pizza at 2Amys is just about the ideal — pizza, food, meal, everything. It is so unbelievably delicious.

Norcia pizza:

Fig Jam, Caramelized Onion & Blue Cheese Pizza
- Total Time: 18 hours 5 minutes
- Yield: Dough Yields 6 Rounds 1x
Description
Ingredients
For the dough:
- 7 1/2 cups all-purpose flour (1000 grams) plus more for shaping dough
- 4 teaspoons fine sea salt
- 1/2 teaspoon active dry yeast
For this pizza you’ll need:
- caramelized onions
- fig jam, thinned out with a little bit of water for easy spreading
- blue cheese, any type you like
- Parmigiano Reggiano, grated
- 1 round pizza dough
Instructions
- Whisk flour, salt, and yeast in a medium bowl. While stirring with a wooden spoon, gradually add 3 cups water; stir until well incorporated. Mix dough gently with your hands to bring it together and form into a rough ball. Transfer to a large clean bowl. Cover with plastic wrap and let dough rise at room temperature (about 72°) in a draft-free area until surface is covered with tiny bubbles and dough has more than doubled in size, about 18 hours (time will vary depending on the temperature in the room).
- Transfer dough to a floured work surface. Gently shape into a rough rectangle. Divide into 6 equal portions. Working with 1 portion at a time, gather 4 corners to center to create 4 folds. Turn seam side down and mold gently into a ball. Dust dough with flour; set aside on work surface or a floured baking sheet. Repeat with remaining portions.
- If you are going to make a pizza immediately, let dough rest on a floured work surface, covered with plastic wrap or a damp kitchen towel, until soft and pliable, about 1 hour. Otherwise, transfer each dough ball to a quart (or other) container and store in the fridge for up to 3 days. Let dough rest at room temperature on a lightly floured work surface, covered with plastic wrap, for about an hour or two before shaping/baking.
- To Make the Pizzas: During the last hour of dough’s resting, preheat oven to its hottest setting, 500°–550°. If you have a Baking Steel, stick that in the top third of the oven.
- Working with 1 dough ball at a time, dust dough with flour and place on a floured work surface. Gently shape dough into a 10″–12″ disk handling it as minimally as possible. Arrange dough disk on a parchment-lined pizza peel (if using a Baking Steel) or a baking sheet; top minimally with desired toppings: to make this pizza, first spoon some of the thinned out fig jam over top, then top with caramelized onions, the blue cheese, and finally the Parmigiano Reggiano. Bake pizza until bottom of crust is crisp and top is blistered, 5 to 7 minutes. Transfer to a work surface to slice. Repeat with remaining pizzas.
- Prep Time: 18 hours
- Cook Time: 5 minutes
- Category: Pizza
- Method: Oven
- Cuisine: American
This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my disclosure policy.


201 Comments on “Lahey Pizza Dough | Tipo 00 Flour | Fig Jam, Caramelized Onion, Blue Cheese Pizza”
After step 2, Can you freeze the rounds to be used in a few weeks?
Yes!
Hi Ali. I am hoping you will see this sooner rather than later. I am making this dough to use tomorrow in my outdoor pizza oven. I am kind of nervous about it because of the small amount of water and instant yeast compared to your other pizza dough recipe, which is high hydration. I just want to make sure that the smaller amount of water and yeast compared to flower is indeed correct? Maybe because it sits out for 18 hours that’s what makes the difference just looking for a little bit of reassurance. Thank you so much!
Sarah
Hi! And yes, it’s correct. I think the lower hydration dough will actually work out really well in your outdoor pizza oven! What temp do you typically cook your pizzas at in your outdoor oven? And you used a scale to measure, yes?
Thank you so much for your response. Yes, I always use a scale. I have an Ooni pizza oven. I have an aftermarket baking stone that I had imported from Italy which holds the heat much better than the one it comes with. I’m actually not sure of the exact temperature. I’m cooking my pizzas at but it gets up to about 850 to 900° as I let it heat for 45 minutes before launching my first pizza .
I made your regular pizza dough along with this recipe to try them both out and surprisingly I liked the original better. I’m not sure what happened but I’m a pretty seasoned pizza dough person and I’m almost positive my dough over proofed even though I ffollowed directions. I let it proof over night for about 20 hours before shaping my dough balls (very little handling) and when I went to make the pizza the dough was tearing and not holding shape at all. Oh well! Stuff happens and I love your recipes. Your original pizza dough recipe was delicious and performed amazing when I was forming my pizza’s.
Interesting regarding the tearing! What type of flour (brand included) were you using? And how many days were the dough balls in the fridge? Or if they didn’t spend time in the fridge, how long were they at room temperature for?
Great to hear re scale and Ooni and aftermarket baking stone. And I’m happy to hear you liked my original recipe better. The reason I thought this one might work well in the oven is because of its lower hydration — it’s counterintuitive but, with a hotter oven, you actually want a lower hydration dough; and with a cooler oven (like a home oven), you want a high hydration dough. That’s just a general rule. Of course, you don’t have to use your Ooni at its hottest setting, and if you work quickly/skillfully you can make a high hydration dough work in any oven.
I used Caputo Tipo 00 flour from Italy. It’s. Crazy that I bought a $35 bag of flour but I wanted the best! I didn’t put the dough in the fridge, I just made my dough balls and they sat at room temp for about an hour to 1.5 hours. They rose a lot after I formed my dough balls.
Sarah, the amount of $$ I have spent on good flour is outrageous, but it’s an important ingredient, and often worth the cost… all of this is to say I fully support your purchase. It is very surprising that you experienced the tearing with that time frame — I have experienced the tearing but it’s oven when the dough has spent too many days in the fridge. My only thought is that it potentially was over-hydrated — sometimes these 00 flours are don’t support the same hydration as our commercial bread/ap flours, and as a result, they are a little less forgiving.