
Using a cast iron skillet as my pan really helped get a good color and doneness on the bottom of the crust. I will be repeating this and not just because my dough batch made two pizzas' worth. You'll need, as mentioned, a 12-inch cast iron skillet, and a decent food processor ideally with a dough kneading function.
Ingredients
Dough
You may notice the dry ingredients seem familiar! I used as a starting point the bread dough you sometimes see posted here. With only slight modification it works okay for pizza. This amount makes two pizzas' worth of dough.
- 150g gluten
- 80g almond flour
- 80g oat fiber
- 15g allulose or erythritol
- 200mL/g water
- 2.25 tsp (1 packet) active dry yeast
- 2.25 tsp sugar (feeds the yeast)
- 30g olive oil
- 1 tsp salt
- Dash of garlic powder
- Dash of onion powder
Toppings
- Olive oil for brushing
- 2:1 ratio water:tomato paste to make 85-113g sauce depending on taste
- Add a pinch of salt, sweetener, garlic powder, and/or dried basil.
- Alternatively forgo this and use any other sauce you like, tomato or otherwise. I won't judge.
- 140-170g mozzarella cheese shreds depending on taste
- Alternatively you could probably use some slices.
- You may need to salt it if your cheese is on the bland side.
- Any pizza toppings you normally like; pictured in my three-meat version here are:
- Couple dozen slices pepperoni
- Handful of bacon bits
- Handful of ground beef crumbles
- Tablespoon or so of dried minced onion hastily rehydrated with a few drops of water
- Oregano or Italian seasoning to finish
Prep
Dough
- Pre-mix your gluten, almond flour, oat fiber, allulose/erythritol to get your "flour."
- Microwave the water for 50-60 seconds in a medium bowl until warm but not scalding to the touch, then stir in sugar until dissolved, then stir in yeast to hydrate. Cover and let activate for a couple minutes.
- Add olive oil, then your "flour," then finally the salt + garlic and onion powders. Mix all together with a rubber spatula to form a dough.
- Add your dough to a food processor, use the "dough"/kneading mode if you have it, turn on, and let go 80-90 seconds. It should form a smooth, elastic dough.
- Grease/oil a large bowl (maybe while dough is processing), place your processed dough inside, and cover with plastic wrap. Let proof in a warm, humid environment for 45 minutes. It should double or so in size.
- Divide the dough in half; this batch will get you two pizzas. Freeze one or both, partially flattened into round discs, until ready to make the actual pizza.
Baking
- If your dough is starting out frozen for this phase, put it in the fridge 24 hours before you plan to bake it.
- Preheat your oven to 475F. Grease the bottom (of the inside obviously) of your cast iron. You might even want to add a small sprinkle of salt at this stage too depending on how salty you want the pizza.
- Use a rolling pin to flatten your dough disc between two sheets of parchment. Make it just slightly wider than the bottom of your skillet.
- Place the flattened dough circle in the skillet, and let sit a couple minutes before proceeding, if it came from the fridge.
- Prepare your sauce using the ratio listed above and spread on the dough, leaving a bit under an inch at the edges.
- Brush the edges of the crust with olive oil.
- Add cheese, reserving a bit as "topping glue" if you like.
- Add other toppings as desired.
- Place your prepared pizza skillet into your heated oven and bake for 10-12 minutes. Add finishing seasonings and return to oven for an additional minute if desired.
- Carefully transfer from skillet to cutting board. It shouldn't stick to the pan; nor should it be excessively floppy, but you want to support the bottom lifting it out. I used two large spatulas coming in at opposite ends.
- Cut into 8 slices (or however many) and serve.
Nutrition
Macros assuming 140g cheese and 100g or so sauce, with no additional toppings; and eight slices per pizza; added sugar for yeast fuel not counted. Once again, note the dough is for two pizzas, so only half of the dough batch is reflected in these numbers.
| Serving | Calories | Fat | Net carb | Protein |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Whole pizza | 1232 | 84g | 22g | 99g |
| 1 slice | 154 | 10.5g | 2.8g | 12.4g |
by Mr_Truttle

3 Comments
Looks delicious! Also, you got your nutrition info backwards.
Looks like the table might be reversed for per slice vs whole pizza, pizza looks great!
Thanks. Sounds like a plan for this weekend