Who says an easy pizza party has to be complicated? These Too-Easy Pizza Biscuits prove that big flavor can come in small, effortless packages. Whether you’re hosting a casual get-together, looking for a quick dinner fix, or just craving a snack that satisfies, these mini pizzas are the perfect solution.
What You'll Love
- Two completely different pizzas, one cook. The creamy prosciutto version uses cream cheese as the base; the pepperoni uses Urban Slicer pizza sauce. They go into the oven together and come out in the same 5-minute window.
- Canned biscuit dough rolled to 6" is the whole technique. Flaky layers biscuit dough holds up to the Wood Fired Oven's direct heat without burning, develops a crackery edge, and cooks through in under 5 minutes — faster than any pizza dough you'd make from scratch.
-
Lone Star Brisket Rub on the prosciutto pizza is a deliberate choice. Its black pepper and salt profile seasons the cream cheese base and the prosciutto together in a way that a pizza-specific seasoning wouldn't — it reads savory and bold rather than Italian.
- Chile Crunch and hot honey go on after the oven, not before. Both are finishing ingredients — Colonial Chile Crunch added before the cook would lose its crunch entirely; Reida Hot Honey added before would caramelize and burn at 450°F. Applied at serving, both stay true to their texture and character.
Too Easy: Biscuit Pizza
Tom Jackson
Rated 4.5 stars by 4 users
Category
Pizza
Cuisine
Italian
Servings
4
Prep Time
10 minutes
Cook Time
5 minutes
Calories
260
This recipe includes two irresistible variations: a Creamy Prosciutto Biscuit Pizza for a rich, savory treat and a Classic Pepperoni Biscuit Pizza for timeless appeal. Both recipes highlight the convenience and flexibility of cooking with the YS640s. Let's fire up the grill and create something amazing!
Ingredients
- 2 canned biscuits (flaky layers)
- 4 tbsp cream cheese
- 3 slices prosciutto, torn
-
1 tsp Cattleman’s Grill Lone Star
Brisket Rub
- 2 tbsp feta, crumbled
-
2 tsp Colonial Chile Crunch
-
1 tbsp Reida Hot Honey
- 2 canned biscuits (flaky layers)
-
4 tbsp Urban Slicer Pizza Sauce
- 1/4 cup fresh mozzarella, torn
- 16 cupped pepperonis
Creamy prosciutto:
Pepperoni
Directions
For the creamy prosciutto:
- Preheat your Yoder Smokers YS640s
Pellet Grill to 450ºF with the Wood Fired Oven attachment installed.
- Flour your work surface and the
biscuit. Roll out the biscuits to about 6” in diameter.
- Spread cream cheese on each rolled
biscuit. Tear one and a half slices prosciutto up and arrange over the cream
cheese. Season with Cattleman’s Grill Lone Star Brisket Rub. Top each with about one tablespoon of feta.
For the Pepperoni:
- Spread the Urban Slicer Pizza Sauce over the biscuit. Place the torn chunks of mozzarella
on the sauce. Top with the pepperoni.
- Place all four biscuit pizzas on a
floured pizza peel. Transfer to the wood fired oven.
- Cook for about two minutes, then
using the pizza peel, pull the pizzas out and rotate. Cook for about three more
minutes, until the dough is browned and the cheese is melted.
- Serve the pepperoni pizza as they
are. Top the creamy prosciutto pizzas topped with Chile crunch and a drizzle of
hot honey.
Recipe Note
Recipe Note
Why use canned biscuit dough instead of pizza dough?
This is the "Too Easy" series — canned flaky layers biscuit dough is the ingredient that makes this recipe accessible in under 15 minutes total. More importantly, biscuit dough behaves well at 450°F in the Wood Fired Oven: it crisps on the bottom, puffs slightly at the edges, and cooks through in 4–5 minutes without burning. Pizza dough at the same temperature requires more management — it needs to be pre-fermented, stretched carefully, and watched more closely. Biscuit dough is more forgiving and produces a result that's genuinely good, not just functional.
What does rolling the biscuits to 6" actually do?
Canned biscuits out of the tube are roughly 3 inches in diameter and significantly thick. Rolling to 6" thins them to a more pizza-like thickness and increases the surface area so the toppings distribute properly. A biscuit left at original thickness will take longer to cook through at the center and won't develop the crispy base this recipe relies on. Use a lightly floured surface and a rolling pin — the dough is pliable and takes less than 30 seconds per biscuit to reach 6".
Can I add different toppings beyond these two variations?
Yes — the biscuit base handles any combination that would work on a standard pizza, with one constraint: keep wet toppings minimal. Too much sauce, fresh tomato, or high-moisture cheese will prevent the base from crisping at the center. The cream cheese base on the prosciutto version works precisely because cream cheese is low-moisture; the Urban Slicer sauce on the pepperoni is thick enough to stay put. Avoid watery fresh vegetables unless you've patted them very dry first.
Do I need the Wood Fired Oven attachment, or can I use the pellet grill without it?
The Wood Fired Oven attachment is what produces the concentrated 450°F radiant heat that cooks the biscuit bases in 4–5 minutes. Without it, the pellet grill at 450°F will still cook the biscuit pizzas, but more slowly and with less browning on the base. You can also cook these on a preheated pizza stone in the grill or in a conventional oven at 450°F — preheat the stone for 30 minutes first so the base gets bottom heat immediately on contact.
Can I make these indoors?
Indoor cooking rating: 5 out of 5 — Perfect for indoor or outdoor cooking. A preheated pizza stone or cast iron skillet in a 450°F oven replicates the cook completely. Preheat the stone for 30 minutes, slide the assembled biscuit pizzas onto it, and check at 4 minutes. The results are essentially identical to the Wood Fired Oven version — this is one of the most naturally indoor-friendly recipes in the Too Easy catalog.
Recipe Highlights
Flour the Pizza Peel Before Loading: The direction to place assembled biscuit pizzas on a floured pizza peel before transferring to the oven is critical. Unfloured, the raw dough will stick to the peel and fold or tear when you try to slide it off onto the oven floor. Dust the peel generously with flour or semolina before the first pizza goes on, and give it a gentle shake before launching to make sure it slides freely.
Tear the Mozzarella, Don't Slice It: The pepperoni pizza calls for "torn chunks" of fresh mozzarella rather than slices. Torn pieces melt unevenly and create pockets of pooled cheese rather than a uniform flat layer — that irregular melt is what produces the visual appeal of a proper pizza and allows the pepperoni to sink into the cheese as it cooks. Sliced mozzarella melts too uniformly and can create a dense, chewy layer.
Rotate at the 2-Minute Mark: The direction to pull and rotate at 2 minutes is specific to the Wood Fired Oven, where heat is most intense at the rear and near the burner. A biscuit pizza left without rotation will have a charred back edge and an underdone front edge within 4–5 minutes. Rotate 180 degrees at the 2-minute mark and finish for 3 more minutes — by then the full circumference of the base should be evenly browned.
Add Chile Crunch and Hot Honey at the Table, Not in the Kitchen: Both finishing ingredients degrade quickly on a hot surface. Colonial Chile Crunch loses its crunch within 60–90 seconds on a hot biscuit pizza. Reida Hot Honey caramelizes and becomes sticky rather than flowing if applied too early. Set them on the table and let people add their own immediately before eating — or drizzle at the last second right before serving so the pizzas don't sit with the finishers on them.
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Nutrition
Nutrition
- Nutrition Serving Size
- 4
- per serving
- Calories
- 260
- Protein
- 12 grams
- Carbs
- 23 grams
- Fat
- 18 grams
- Saturated Fat
- 8 grams
- Fiber
- 1 grams
- Sugar
- 5 grams
- Sodium
- 800 milligrams