The first time I heard of making pizza on a grill all I could think of was, “why would anyone want to do that?”

Now that I’ve done it more than a few times, I can think of several reasons, the first being who wants to heat up a kitchen oven to 450 deg F or higher on a hot summer day?

If you use a grill to make pizza, you are able to keep the heat outside where it belongs. Grills also better mimic a wood fired oven than your conventional indoor oven.

Whether utilizing charcoal or gas, the smoke from the grill will help give your pizza great flavor that you simply cannot get from a regular oven.

It’s also easy! No, the pizza dough does not fall through the grill grates. Assuming you’ve properly heated the grill, your dough will form a lovely gently browned crust.

The trick is that you cook the plain dough first, on one side, on the grill. Then remove it, flip it, brush the grilled side with sauce and toppings, and return the pizza to the grill for final bake.

This is a quick how-to on the grilling steps. I’m assuming that you already have pizza dough ready to go.

Here’s a suggestion. Make a doubled batch of the dough, then divide it, wrap it in plastic and freeze it. Then, when you want pizza for dinner, take the dough out of the freezer and put it into the fridge before you go to work, and when you come home take it out of the fridge and put the dough on the counter to warm while you heat up the grill.

How to Grill Pizza

Make pizza dough from scratch utilizing our pizza dough recipe. Alternatively, you may be able to find prepared pizza dough, in the frozen foods segment, at your local supermarket.

Ingredients

  • Pizza dough
  • Olive oil
  • Standard toppings of tomato sauce, herbs, cheese (mozzarella is the best), and maybe some thinly sliced onions, tomatoes, mushrooms, or pepperoni
  • Some flour or corn meal for dusting the cookie sheet or pizza peel

Method

Step 1. Make the pizza dough or use prepared pizza dough.

Step 2. Prepare the grill for high direct heat. Prepare a small bowl with olive oil for greasing the grill grates and for brushing the pizza. Prepare the toppings so they are ready to go on the pizza–tomato sauce, cheese, and anything else you wish.

Step 3. Shape the pizza dough by flattening it with your hands on a slightly floured surface. Either use your fingers to stretch the dough out, or hold out the edges of the dough with your fingers, letting the dough hang and stretching, while working around the edges of the dough.

Once you’ve stretched the dough, let it sit for five minutes and then push out the edges with your fingers again, until you have a nice round shape, about 12-inches in diameter. Do not make a created rim, it will interfere with the grilling process.

If you are preparing the pizza dough for a party, you are able to make several pizza dough rounds, stack them divided by parchment paper, and keep them in the refrigerator for up to two hours before cooking.

Step 4. Once the grill is hot (you can hold your hands an inch over the grates for no more than 2 seconds), dip a tightly folded up paper towel in olive oil and use tongs to wipe the grill grates. Then place a pizza dough round on a gently floured (or you can use cornmeal) rimless cookie sheet (or pizza peel if you have one). Let the dough slide off the cookie sheet onto the hot grill grates. Close the lid of the grill and let cook for 2 minutes.

Step 5. After 2 minutes, open the grill and check underneath the dough to see if it is getting browned. If it is on one side, but not another, use a spatula or tongs to rotate the dough 90 degrees and cook for another minute. If it’s not beginning to brown, close the grill and continue to cook a minute at a time until the bottom has begun to brown. It should only take a couple minutes if you have a hot grill. The top of the pizza dough will start bubbling up with air pockets.

Step 6. Once the pizza dough has browned gently on one side, use your cookie sheet or pizza peel to remove it from the grill. Use a spatula to flip the dough over so that the grilled side is now up. Keep the grill covered so it retains its heat for the next step.

Step 7. Paint the grilled surface of the pizza with a little olive oil, then cover with 1 ladle of sauce – no more, or you’ll end up with a soggy pizza. Sprinkle on your toppings, starting with cheese, and if using meat, put that over the cheese. Remember to go light on the toppings, or your pizza will be heavy and soggy.

Step 8. Slide the topped pizza back onto the grill. If you are using a gas grill, reduce the heat. If working with a charcoal grill, close the vents on the cover almost all the way. Close the lid and cook for 2-3 minutes more, or until the bottom has started to char and the cheese is bubbly. Pull off the grate with a spatula onto a cutting board or other flat surface and let rest for a couple minutes before cutting into slices.

Slice and serve!