Holy Sheet Pan Pizza
Some people see the light and get religion. Other people see the light and get sheet pan pizza. That’s what happened to me this past Friday night when I cooked up the best sheet pan pizza of my life here in my own apartment, setting off a smoke detector and freaking out the dog in the process, but oh was it worth it. (Sorry, Winston.) Now that I know how to make a killer sheet pan pizza, I plan to make sheet pan pizza on the regular.
There’s No Knead, There’s None
Basically this recipe is a combination of two recipes: Deb Perelman’s, from her new terrific cookbook, Smitten Kitchen Keepers and Carla Lalli Music’s from Bon Appetit and this video, which I found very helpful.
From Deb, I gleaned that you don’t need to work the dough. Just combine the flour, yeast, oil, and salt, let it rise for a bit, and then refrigerate overnight. When you’re ready, let it come to room temperature for ten minutes, and you’re good to go.

Is there anything more satisfying that finding a giant blob of pizza dough ready to go in your refrigerator on a Friday night? I think not!
It’s a Stretch
Once the dough was on my massage table — aka: the sheet pan — it was slathered with so much oil, it probably thought it was getting a happy ending. The Carla Lalli Music recipe tells you to pour 1/2 cup of olive oil onto the sheet pan (and both of ours are 18 X 13, though at first I thought hers was bigger) and the idea is that the oil helps get you that crispy bottom that makes sheet pan pizza so good. Personally, I thought it was too much… but then again: it was an amazing pizza.
The name of the game is stretching the dough into the corners. I did a great job of stretching the dough in general, but getting it into those corners took work. The secret is counterintuitive. You think you need to keep working on it, but actually you need to step away for the gluten to relax. Eventually you’ll get there.
Choose Your Own Sheet Pan Pizza
There are lots of theories about what to put on your homemade pizza, but I subscribe to the raw sauce theory. As in: don’t put cooked tomato sauce on your pizza. Instead, strain a can of tomatoes and put the tomatoes in a food processor with garlic, anchovies, olive oil, and basil and blitz. The tomatoes will concentrate in the oven and you’ll get something truly great.

Both Deb’s pizza and Carla’s pizza have soppressata, fennel, mozzarella, Pecorino, and chilies. Mine were homemade pickled Fresno chilies because that’s just how I roll. What you’re seeing in the above pic was my decision to broil the pizza towards the end to get the cheese nice and bronzed. As for the bottom of the pie…

…I was scared it was going to burn, but in just fifteen minutes at 550 degrees, the only thing that burned was a little cheese towards the top. The bottom was golden and crisp, like your favorite focaccia.
And that’s how to think of this pizza. It’s like the love child of a deep-dish pizza and a focaccia and, hot out of the oven, it’s just as good as any pizza you could have delivered. Next time I’m playing around with the toppings (maybe anchovies, chilies, and olives?) and, more importantly, disabling my smoke detector. Let that cheese burn in peace.


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