Sourdough Discard Pizza Dough
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The ultimate in pizza dough! Sourdough Discard Pizza Dough has amazing flavor without a long waiting time. It’s one of our most popular recipes. Bake at a high temperature for a perfectly golden brown crust on your homemade pizza.
This sourdough discard pizza dough gives you big sourdough flavor without an active sourdough starter. Mix, let the dough rise, bake, and enjoy a golden, bubbly crust all in the same day. It’s the perfect way to put extra discard to good use.


You can have sourdough pizza dough quicker than you think.
After falling in love with our sourdough pancakes, one recipe that sourdough lovers want next is a sourdough discard pizza dough. Some have used our sourdough discard bread recipe, but I wanted to take our best pizza crust that we know and love and give it a sourdough flair.
I spent all winter perfecting it and have made everything from pulled pork pizza to chili dog pizza with this recipe the past few Friday nights.
Once you start making an active starter, you either have to bake with it every few days or discard part of the starter to keep it manageable. Discard recipes, like this sourdough discard pizza crust, use other leavening agents (baking powder, baking soda or yeast) to get an oven rise and are a great way to prevent waste. Try our cinnamon rolls with discard. They’re amazing!
Top this sourdough pizza crust with favorite pizza toppings like pizza sauce, mozzarella cheese and pepperoni. Then try unique toppings like goat cheese, pesto, cherry tomatoes, zucchini or fresh mozzarella.
See on Substack how Maddie often makes this into a thick-crust pizza!
Enjoy! -Julie
Tips for Making Sourdough Discard Pizza Dough
- You’ll need one of these three things to make this pizza dough: a stand mixer, a bread maker (that has a dough setting), or hand kneading. I use my bread machine on the dough setting most often to make dough. The second easiest is the stand mixer. But if you don’t have either, use your hands to knead the dough the old fashioned way. This dough is easy to knead.
- Use a kitchen scale to weigh the ingredients. If you choose not to, add the flour slowly so that the dough doesn’t end up too dry. You want the dough to be slightly tacky to the touch.
- My sourdough starter is 100% hydration. That means I feed it with equal weights of water and flour. If your starter is a different hydration, adjust the water and flour in this recipe as needed.
- Set your oven to 550ºF. This pizza bakes at a high temperature for a crispy crust. It takes about 30 minutes to heat to this temperature.
- Don’t roll the dough with a rolling pin! This will pop all of the little air bubbles in the dough giving you a chewier, denser crust. If you want light and crispy, just press the dough with your hands. I learned this tip in a Chicago pizza making class.
- Don’t allow the toppings to sit on the pizza too long before baking. The sauce may make the dough soggy. Bake as soon as you get the pizza assembled.

Frequently Asked Questions
Can I make this pizza dough in advance?
This recipe was developed as a quick sourdough recipe, but many have asked if they can make the dough in advance and put it in the refrigerator overnight.
Yes, you can do this! When the dough is ready to rise, place the dough ball in a bowl and cover. Then place in the fridge overnight. This will slow down the rise.
On pizza night, pull out the dough and let it rest at room temperature for about 20 minutes to warm up slightly. Then stretch the dough, top and bake.
Can I freeze pizza dough?
Yes! After the first rise, punch down the dough and put it in a freezer bag. Place in the freezer for up to 6 weeks.
The night before you plan to use it, put it in the fridge overnight to thaw. Then 30 minutes before you want to bake, remove it from the fridge to let it sit at room temperature.
Then stretch, top and bake.


Sourdough Discard Pizza Dough
The ultimate in pizza dough! Sourdough Discard Pizza Dough has amazing flavor without a long waiting time. Read our tips for a perfectly golden brown crust.
Servings 8
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 15 minutes
Rise Time 30 minutes
Total Time 1 hour
Ingredients
- 3/4 cup warm water (115º Fahrenheit)
- 0.25 ounces Red Star Platinum Instant Yeast (1 package)
- 1 cup sourdough discard
- 2 teaspoons granulated sugar
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 2 tablespoons olive oil
- 2 tablespoons cornmeal
- 2 3/4 cups bread flour or all-purpose flour
- more cornmeal for dusting the pan
Instructions
- Put warm water the bowl of a stand mixer (or large mixing bowl). Sprinkle the yeast over the top. ¾ cup warm water (115º Fahrenheit), 0.25 ounces Red Star Platinum Instant Yeast
- Add in the sourdough discard, sugar, salt, olive oil, cornmeal and flour. 1 cup sourdough discard, 2 teaspoons granulated sugar, 1 teaspoon salt, 2 tablespoons olive oil, 2 tablespoons cornmeal, 2 ¾ cups bread flour
- In your stand mixer, mix them with the paddle attachment just until combined. Then put on the dough hook and knead for about 10 minutes.
- Cover with plastic wrap and let rest and rise in a warm place for 30 minutes or until almost doubled.
- Preheat the oven to 550º Fahrenheit. (This takes about 30 minutes for our oven to heat to this high temperature, so plan accordingly.) If you have two baking stones, place one on each of two racks in the oven. The pizza will sit on the bottom one and there will be a stone on top also to cook the top of the pizza.
- Place a large piece of parchment paper on a baking sheet (preferably one without sides). Sprinkle additional cornmeal on the parchment paper. more cornmeal for dusting the pan
- Stretch the pizza dough out and press it lightly with your fingertips until it is the size and thickness you'd like it. Don’t roll the dough with a rolling pin! This will pop all of the little air bubbles in the dough giving you a chewier, denser crust. If you want light and crispy, just press the dough with the pads on your fingertips.
- Top with desired pizza toppings. Slide the parchment paper with pizza off the pan and directly onto the lower pizza stone. Bake for about 14 minutes until golden brown and bubbly. This time will vary based on how thick the crust is and how large the pizza is so watch it closely.
- Remove the pizza from the oven, slice and serve. Be careful….it will be VERY hot!
Notes
- This recipe is for one extra large pizza. You can split the dough into two and make two medium pizzas as well. If you do they won’t take as long to cook.
- Store leftovers in an airtight container in the fridge. Then reheat slices in the air fryer to crisp the crust.
Nutrition
Calories: 228kcal | Carbohydrates: 40g | Protein: 6g | Fat: 4g | Saturated Fat: 1g | Sodium: 292mg | Potassium: 51mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 1g | Vitamin A: 1IU | Calcium: 7mg | Iron: 1mg

Sourdough Discard Recipes
See some of our favorite ways to use sourdough discard here:





Loved this pizza dough. It was so easy and dough came out delicious and beautifully. I think the trick is to try to shape it thinner than you think you need to. My pizzas ended up a bit thick and hefty but texture and taste were great.
I made this for three consecutive days, and we never get tired of eating it. 🙂 We made it with shrimp and other toppings and turned out so good! Thanks for the recipe!
What did you use for that delicious looking cheese pizza? My god it looks amazing…..and I’m NOT a fan of just cheese!
Been making this recipe for a while. LOVE IT! However I have a question. If I want to save half the dough to make the next day, could I divide the dough in half after the 10 minute stand-mixer kneading and place one half in an oiled bowl covered in plastic wrap in the fridge until the next day?
After having tried many pizza recipes this one has become my go to! It’s incredibly easy (and fast which is great because I can make it on the fly!) and you are not sacrificing quality or taste from the speed, it is just that tasty! I find the dough easy to work with as well. I place on a baking sheet with cornmeal, and on the bottom of the oven. Setting the oven at a lower temp (475ish) or it burns- if I’m doing more than one pie I will lower it again before the second one goes in as… Read more »
Is it possible to mix the dough and freeze it to bake later?
I use my cast iron skillet with great success. My parchment paper from Sam’s club says it’s only good up to 420°. Do people still use it at higher temps like that successfully?
My starter is 50% hydration. What modifications do I need to make?
The pizza crust I have been looking for! Thank you!!
I’ve tried quite a few crusts and this one is pretty foolproof, plus my husband’s favorite. I will share what I did in case there are others out there like me who don’t like last minute fussing. I followed the directions to the tee and right after shaping I put it on a parchment covered cookie sheet, covered it with plastic wrap and stuck in the freezer for a couple hours. Later on I took it out, put all the toppings on, recovered with plastic & stuck in the fridge. One hour before baking I set it out on the… Read more »
I used cone starch instead of corn meal. What difference will that’s make? The pizza is in the oven and is baking great.
This is a winner! Fast, easy and it uses all my discard. I think next time I’ll make tree small pizzas, plenty for three.
OMG! This recipe is so easy and delicious. I struggle with tossing the discard so this recipe is a great way to eliminate waste. I mad it a day ahead and put it in the fridge. We set it out to qarm up a couple hours before we used it. It made an amazing breakfast pizza. Thanks for the great recipe.
I want to make a couple of these but want to bake them tomorrow. Am I able to make the dough today and then store it in the fridge till tomorrow?
My family loves this pizza dough, thank you for thr quick, easy& tasty recipie!