Learn how to make this easy discard sourdough pizza crust. It only has four basic ingredients, no kneading or rising required. You really can’t get much simpler than this delicious pizza crust recipe.

Pizza is a family favorite and some of our favorite kinds include chicken Alfredo pizza and easy breakfast pizza. While I love making our sourdough pizza dough recipe when I have the time, sometimes we need something super quick and delicious on the table. That is where this discard sourdough crust recipe comes in handy!
All you need is sourdough starter, Italian seasoning, salt and a little bit of olive oil and you are left with a delicious crispy crust that is ready in no time at all. No need to roll out dough, clean up after a floured work surface or wait for hours while your dough rises. It is the perfect recipe for busy days and the options for how you can use it are endless.
Top your crust with fresh thinly sliced tomatoes, cheese, and your favorite pizza toppings like fresh basil and pepperoni. Serve it alongside a fresh salad with homemade kefir ranch and a glass of fermented lemonade for the perfect lunch or dinner, ready in minutes!
Why You’ll Love This Recipe
Easy – This sourdough discard pizza crust recipe is as easy as spreading some starter in a preheated cast iron pan with some seasonings and olive oil. It really is as simple as it gets!
Sourdough discard – I’m a big fan of sourdough discard recipes. And if you make a lot of sourdough bread like I do, you probably have some discard on hand. This is a great way to use that jar of sourdough discard, plus I love the sourdough flavor that is featured in this crust.
Versatile – This thin crust is the perfect base to fill with your favorite toppings for your next homemade pizza night. It is a great meal for picky eaters since you can adjust the fillings to your family’s preferences.
Ingredients

Fed sourdough starter or discard – You can use unfed sourdough starter or active and bubbly starter. Most of the time I just pull my sourdough starter right out of the fridge and use it. If you are new to sourdough, check out this post to learn how to make your own sourdough starter.
Italian Seasoning – The Italian seasoning is optional, but it adds the delicious Italian flavor that we all love and come to expect on pizza.
A full ingredient list with exact amounts can be found in the recipe card below.
How to Make Discard Sourdough Pizza Crust

Step 1: Preheat a pizza stone, or cast iron skillet, to 425 degrees.

Step 2: When the oven is preheated, and the pans are scorching hot, take them out of the oven. Drizzle your baking vessel (stone or skillet) of choice with a little extra virgin olive oil.

Step 3: Ladle sourdough starter onto the hot pan.

Step 4: Spread it out until you have a nice thin layer in the size you want.

Step 5: Hit it with another drizzle of olive oil. Sprinkle it with salt and Italian seasoning. It will already start to bake when it makes contact with the pan. This is totally good and expected.

Step 6: Pop it back in the oven, until crispy, and easily pulls up from the pan. About 10 minutes.

Step 7: Remove the crust from the skillet (if using a skillet) and add to a baking sheet. Add your favorite sauce and toppings. Pop it back into the oven.

Step 8: Bake another 8-10 minutes or until the cheese is bubbly. Slice and enjoy!
Note On Avoiding a Soft Crust
There is one downside to this impossibly easy sourdough discard pizza crust. You can’t pour regular pasta/pizza sauce on it without it getting soft, even when it is nicely browned before you add the sauce. There are a few options you can go with to get the best results out of your crust.
- Option One: Thinly slice fresh tomatoes. Spread them out in a thin layer on your baked sourdough pizza crust, and drizzle with olive oil, salt and pepper. Put it in the oven and roast for about 10 minutes. Add the other toppings and cheese. We especially enjoy this option in the summer, when the garden is bursting at the seams with fresh tomatoes. Something about roasted tomatoes!
- Option Two: Make a homemade cream sauce with cheese, cream, garlic, and salt. Spread it on the crust and top with chicken, mushrooms, and cheese to make a chicken Alfredo pizza. This is just about our favorite meals of all time and really is one of the best pizzas ever.
- Option Three: Just add the tomato sauce and eat it a little soft. We do this often and it still tastes great.
Tips
- This recipe is super simple because it utilizes sourdough starter (active or discard); the downside is you can’t use a regular pan. You must use a cast iron or pizza stone.
- The secret to cooking this recipe is preheating the stone or cast iron skillet.
- Chop up your veggie toppings while the stone or cast iron is preheating. Then sauté your veggies and/or meat while the crust is cooking, because the crust will be basically done cooking after the first bake.
Recipe FAQs
You can’t use a normal pizza pan, because the liquid starter would stick to it. You would have quite the mess on your hands. Cast iron and pizza stones are wonderfully nonstick, when preheated. Plus, this ability to preheat a pan that is so heavy is what makes for a crispy crust. The way that it starts baking upon contact makes a crispy crust like no ordinary aluminum pizza pan ever could.
It tastes a lot like regular pizza crust, but the crust itself has a delicious, slightly tangy flavor that you would expect from sourdough.
Yes! Sourdough pizza crust can be stored in the freezer in an airtight container for up to 3 months. Bake it first and then let it cool.
Allow it to thaw in the fridge just a few hours before needing it. When you want to make pizza, just preheat your oven to 450 degrees, take out the sourdough pizza crust, top it with your favorite toppings and then bake until everything is bubbly and melted.
Yes, as long as it is cooked. Using discard in recipes is an easy way to use up excess discard and a good way to eat fermented grains. For this recipe baking discard turns it into pizza crust. You can also bake discard and turn it into delicious homemade sourdough crackers.
Sourdough discard can stay fresh in the fridge for up to a week before it will need to be fed again or thrown away. Personally, I don’t throw away any sourdough because I use it in sourdough discard recipes like this one.
More Sourdough Recipes from the Farmhouse
- Sourdough English Muffins
- Sourdough Monkey Bread
- The Best Sourdough Pancakes
- Sourdough Skillet- Healthy One Pot Meal
- The Best Sourdough Tortillas
If you try this recipe and love it, I would love it if you could come back and give it 5 stars! Tag me on Instagram @farmhouseonboone.
















I think this might be my favorite way to make pizza. I needed dinner quickly the other night and my family wanted pizza. After a quick search I came across this recipe and it’s so good. It came together so quickly. I made it again today for lunch! So delish!
So glad you enjoy it! Have a great day!
Our favorite (way better and way better for you) alternative to frozen pizza!!
We mix in salt, garlic powder and dried basil to the crust before cooking and it’s delish!
I was skeptical at first, I make loads of baked goods with my discard card but nothing has ever been this simple. But I was! And it was tangy and delicious, thanks for the brilliant crust idea. Homemade Pizza night in under half an hour.
I sautéed my veggies in a separate skillet, then added the pizza sauce and reduced it a bit- so that was there was no soggy bottom crust.
So smart! Glad you enjoyed it. It’s a really good one!
I just made my first “discard” pizza with my gluten-free sour dough starter. It taste 100 times better than most of the awful GF pizzas I have been served in restaurants for a very high price! I used a pizza stone, and didn’t drizzle it before I added the batter (Ooops!), but it didn’t stick at all. I did it right over the open oven, and DID NOT use my fingers, but instead, a heatproof spatula. I needed to bake it another 6-8 minutes after I added the cheese and garlic (white pizza) because it very not really cooked after the initial 10 minutes. Thank you, Lisa!
So glad you enjoyed this one!
Your you tube channel and this recipe inspired me to try sourdough. Our starter is 7 days old and growing like crazy, today I was able to use the discard for pancakes, I fed it this morning and by bedtime it was about to crawl out of my Wecks jar, so I did some discard and fed my starter again and plan on surprising the kids with pizzas for lunch. Can’t wait to try this.
That’s so exciting! I hope they enjoy the pizzas!
I have been using this recipe ever since I watched you make them. I love it! It tastes great and such a great way to use up extra starter rather than dumping or wasting it. Thank you so much for sharing!
Thank you for the positive review! Glad you enjoy this recipe as well.
This was so much better than I expected! I made a small pizza and my husband and kiddo devoured it haha. I used bubbly, active starter and the pizza was airy but crispy. So perfect. Making more tomorrow!!
How wonderful. So glad everyone in the family enjoyed it.
My crusts keep sticking to my pizza stone, so I just need more oil? My discard also bubbles a lot when it comes into contact with the stone or my cast iron pan.
That is most likely the culprit.
Wow, I just made this and it is phenomenal. I made the crust a little bit thicker than Lisa’s looks to be in the pictures, and baked it a little longer, and WOW! Super crunchy crust that holds it itself upright (I expected to need a fork since it was supposed to turn soggy with the sauce, but I didn’t!). I am so glad I tried this!
Wonderful! This is our favorite and easiest way to make pizza! Glad you enjoyed it as well.
Hello Lisa! I’ve been using several of your sourdough recipes as of late and have licked everything I’ve tried. I did this recipe and added tomatoes and seasoning and baked then added cheese once it came out.
When exactly do you add your sauce if you use it or toppings ect. ? And if you add it at the end do you place it back in the oven or no? I’ve never baked a pizza like this and didn’t know what’s best?
I usually add sourdough starter to the skillet or pizza stone then bake it. After it is baked then top with sauce, cheese, and any other toppings and then bake a second time until melted.
This recipe was very good! I highly recommend! Super fast and easy pizza dough.