Shrinking pizza dough

Shrinking pizza dough - Person Holding Pepperoni Pizza on Tray

I left a pizza dough (neapolitan pizza) that I prepared by fermenting for almost 24 hours at room temperature (in my house the temperature is between 17-20°C).

The problem is when I'm stretching with my hand, the dough shrinks back quickly. What can I do to resolve this?

  • 250g Caputo white flour
  • 150g of water
  • 7.5g of salt
  • 0.5g of biological yeast

enter image description here



Best Answer

Your dough should be fairly flexible by the time you are ready to stretch it. I regularly make Neapolitan style pizza, and use a long ferment. It sounds like you are on the right track, and your photo looks like a good start.

Each time you manipulate the dough the gluten structure tightens and the dough becomes more difficult to shape. I would recommend that your next step be portioning. That looks like enough for one or two pizzas. So, step two is creating balls of dough. Then let those rest at least 30 minutes, but up to a couple of hours.

Next, when shaping, work as gently, but as quickly as possible. Do not use a rolling pin, as this will keep you from having a crust that is puffier than the center, if you are making Neapolitan style. Begin on a well floured board and use your hands. There is some technique here, and you probably will want to find some videos to help. By the time I get to this point, with proper resting, my dough springs back a little, but not that much. It readily holds its shape. I begin on the board, then lift and use my fists to stretch the dough into shape. That took some practice.

If you are making pan style, a rolling pin will not be helpful here either. Instead, begin to stretch the dough a little, then place the dough in a well-oiled pan, well ahead of when you want to top it. Gently use your fingers to spread the dough. When it begins to spring back, set it aside. Allow it to relax, then repeat after 10 to 15 minutes. Some styles allow for another rise in the pan before topping and baking.

In general, pizza dough always wants to spring back some, but allowing the gluten to relax and learning to work quickly will help. You should certainly be able to get to a point where it is not an issue.




Pictures about "Shrinking pizza dough"

Shrinking pizza dough - From above of broken eggs on flour pile scattered on table near salt sack and kitchenware
Shrinking pizza dough - Person Slicing A Pizza With A Pizza Cutter
Shrinking pizza dough - Cooked Pizza



Quick Answer about "Shrinking pizza dough"

A pizza dough that keeps shrinking is caused by an overly strong gluten network in the dough. This can be fixed in the following ways: Proofing the dough for longer as gluten relaxes over time. Bring dough to room temperature as gluten is tighter when cold.

How do you keep pizza dough from shrinking back?

How to Stop Pizza Dough from Shrinking
  • Scale and ball the dough immediately after mixing.
  • Place the dough balls in plastic dough boxes and wipe the top of the dough balls with salad oil.
  • Cross-stack the dough boxes in the cooler for at least two hours before down-stacking the boxes.


  • How long should pizza dough rest before being stretched?

    If your pizza dough is quickly snapping back or difficult to stretch, your dough is too tight. Cover your dough with plastic wrap and let it sit for 10-15 minutes. After a bit of rest, the gluten in the dough will relax, making the process of stretching much easier.

    Why does my pizza dough not stretch out?

    If pizza dough doesn't stretch it probably needs more time to ferment. If it's too firm, leave it on a floured table for 15 minutes, then try again. If it's tearing it needs more development, leave it to rise for a few hours or in the fridge overnight. The gluten will strengthen and allow you to stretch the dough.



    Why my pizza dough doesn't stretch? 1+1 Reasons 🧐 Pizza stretching tricks




    More answers regarding shrinking pizza dough

    Answer 2

    You don't have to resolve this, it is the expected behavior. Good pizza dough is elastic.

    With time, you will learn the art of shaping pizza dough by hand while it is shrinking. It needs exercise until you can do that. Until then, you can still make pizza, it will be inferior due to uneven thickness and not entirely round shaping. If you don't want to invest the time for learning that, shaping with a rolling pin has a shorter learning curve. (It doesn't stop the dough from shrinking either).

    Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

    Images: Edward Eyer, Flora Westbrook, Polina Tankilevitch, Kristina Paukshtite