
Stuffed crust pretty much changed the world in the 90's. I can't believe it's taken me this long to try and make a vegan stuffed crust pizza! So let's stuff it to celebrate Vegan Pizza Day. Daiya works perfectly as a melty vegan cheese for this dish. Even better, making your dough from scratch is amazing because there's no crappy ingredients added to it. Here's how to do it! There's also an updated version of this recipe in my cookbook. Buy your copy here!
Don't be surprised if your sleeps for the next few nights are filled with dreams of vegan stuffed crust pizza. Although you can top it with whatever toppings your heart desires, my stuffed crust donair pizza is freakin' wicked, too!


stuffed crust pizza
Ingredients
dough
- 1 C warm water
- 2 ¼ tsp (1 packet) dry active yeast
- 1 teaspoon granulated sugar
- 3 C spelt flour (you can use all-purpose or whole wheat)
- 1 teaspoon sea salt
- 1 tablespoon + 1 teaspoon olive oil
pizza sauce (makes 3 cups)
- 2 tablespoon olive oil
- 2 garlic cloves, minced
- 1 shallot, finely chopped
- ½ C dry white wine
- 1 x 16 oz can crushed tomatoes
- 1 x 6 oz can tomato paste
- 2 bay leaves
- ¼ C packed fresh basil, finely chopped
- ¼ C packed italian parsley, finely chopped
- ¼ C loose packed fresh oregano, finely chopped
- 1 tablespoon agave nectar
- sea salt & ground black pepper, to taste
stuffed crust
- 1 dough (as above)
- 1 1 /2 C vegan mozzarella style shreds
- 1 to 2 tablespoon olive oil
Instructions
- In a small bowl, measure out the warm water (which should be 100°F) and stir in the yeast and sugar until it dissolves. Let the mixture stand for 5 minutes. You'll notice it foaming on the top. If it doesn't, the yeast has been killed and you'll have to start over.
- Combine flour with sea salt in a large mixing bowl, then create a well in the middle of the flour and pour the yeast mixture into it along with 1 tablespoon of olive oil. With a wooden spoon, mix in the flour with the liquid, working your way to the edges of the bowl and combine until it's mostly mixed.
- Pour it out onto a lightly floured surface and knead by hand until it is soft and elastic. This could be anywhere from 15 to 25 times.
- Take 1 teaspoon of olive oil and oil your bowl that you mixed the dough in. Set the ball of dough in it, and cover with a damp tea towel. Allow it to sit in a warm dark place away from any outside air (the best place is on top of the fridge if you have room or in the oven) for 1 to 2 hours. It should rise and double in size.
- To make the sauce, heat a sauce pan over medium. Once hot, sauté garlic and shallot in olive oil until softened. Add white wine and simmer for 2 to 3 minutes. Add the remaining ingredients and simmer on low heat for approximately 10 minutes. You're not really cooking this down, but you're applying heat to combine the flavors. Add sea salt and ground black pepper to taste. This makes sauce for more than 1 pizza, so freeze or refrigerate the leftovers to use at a later date for more pizza or as a base for pasta sauces.
- Roll out your dough onto a lightly floured surface into an 18-inch wide circle.
- Transfer to a 16-inch aerated pizza pan, or make your pizza directly on the rolling surface if you're going to transfer to a pizza stone in your oven. Your crust should be slightly hanging off the edge of your pan.
- Place mozzarella style shreds just inside the edge of the crust at the pan edge and fold over the dough lightly pressing into the bottom crevice to seal the crust fold.
- Use any fresh toppings you like to create the pizza of your dreams! Bake in an oven preheated to 475°F for approximately 20 minutes (this may vary depending on your oven make and model).











Tammy
This looks so amazing! I can't wait to try it! I love pizza and usually always ask for extra cheese. Thank you for sharing this recipe!
Sarah
Hey, is this recipe good for one pizza? will it fill up 2 people? Thanks!
Lauren Toyota
I would say so! but maybe you have an extra large appetite?!
Sarah
Tried this recipe today.... followed the instructions exactly but with white flour, and it was way too much flour. I'd say if you use white flour, just use 2.5 cups of flour instead of 3. Also, the pizza crust was very hard, not chewy, but it was alright.
fromthekiwigirl
Hey guys..making it for lunch. Q: When you get to roll out the dough you've got oil..where do you put it?
Lauren Toyota
the 1 tbsp is for the dough and the 1 tsp is for the bowl when you put the kneaded ball of dough in it so it doesn't stick as it proofs/rises
Shaunia
Does anyone know how long can this dough be stored in the refrigerator?
A
I tried this with white flour and with whole wheat flour. The measurements are definitely off-I don't know if spelt flour works differently, but when I made it, it was way too much flour, and it turned out completely hard.
Lauren Toyota
hmm I dunno. I make the same dough pretty much ALL the time for everything - see cinnamon rolls etc. AND it's always 3 C flour to 1 C warm water. 1 pkt of yeast which is 2 1/4 tsp. You can even omit the oil if you really want. People keep mentioning elevation? That dough and certain techniques don't work at higher elevations. I have no idea what the details of this statement are, but other people keep telling me this?!
windmillness
I made this dough today (with whole wheat flour). It turned out rather tender and simply tasty. Though I would add less flour next time to make it less dense and more elastic 🙂
Bambi Alpaka
Hey there. I am from Germany, and I LOVE your cooking ideas and videos. The only problem is, we do not have cups to meassure the ingredents. So I wanted to ask, if you could tell me how many gram one cup is? I would be so happy, if I could do your recipes with the right meassurements.
filter eye
Hey I'm planning out a gluten free pizza dough and I'm thinking of adding instant mashed potatoes, cheese, 1 teaspoon apple cider vinegar, sauting garlic and onion powder in oil (letting it cool) I just want to check if anyone has done this and if it will retard the dough. Thanks for any tips
Jessica Lavigne
Hey! Do you know roughly how long the pizza sauce will keep in the fridge?
Ada
Have you tried freezing the pizza dough? I'm curious how that would go. I'd love to make a big batch and have it handy when a craving comes by.
Lauren Toyota
it should be fine. Let it rise. Then pound down and wrap and freeze. THaw overnight in fridge and then let it warm up on the counter covered with a towl in the bowl or in a slightly warm oven before rolling.