Chuck E Cheese Pizza

Servings: 6 Total Time: 50 mins Difficulty: Easy
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I make this Chuck E Cheese Pizza when I want the fun of a kid-party pizza without ordering delivery or turning the kitchen into a project. It is small, cheesy, and a little nostalgic, with pepperoni tucked under a mix of mozzarella, queso fresco, and creamy cottage cheese.

The ingredient list looks a bit different from a standard pepperoni pizza, and that is why I like it. The cottage cheese gives soft creamy pockets, the queso fresco adds a salty crumble, and the mozzarella melts everything together so the slice still feels familiar.

I keep the crust simple and bake it hot at 425°F so the dough gets color before the toppings dry out. It is the kind of pizza I cut into six pieces and put straight on the table with napkins, carrot sticks, and a bowl of extra sauce for dipping.

Why this little pizza works

  • It uses a short ingredient list, so I can make it on a weeknight without opening every cabinet.
  • The 425°F oven gives the dough enough heat to puff and brown while the cheese melts.
  • Pepperoni adds salt and crisp edges, which helps balance the mild dairy topping.
  • Queso fresco keeps a few soft, tangy bites instead of disappearing completely into the mozzarella.
  • The recipe makes 6 servings, which is just right for a snacky dinner or a lunch with sides.
  • I can scale the idea up easily if I have more dough and a bigger pan.

What I use and why

This is a topping-light pizza, so each ingredient has to do something useful. I do not pile it too high because a small amount of dough can turn soggy if it is buried.

  • Pizza dough, 1 cup.I use it as the base and stretch it gently instead of rolling it paper thin. A slightly thicker edge gives the pizza a better chew.
  • Pizza sauce, 1/4 cup.This is enough to flavor the dough without flooding it. If the sauce is watery, I simmer it for a minute or blot it with a spoon.
  • Cottage cheese, 1/4 cup.I add small dollops, not one thick layer. It bakes into creamy spots that remind me of a very mild ricotta.
  • Mozzarella, 2 tablespoons.It is the melt. Even a small amount helps tie the toppings together.
  • Queso fresco, 2 oz.I crumble it so the salty bites are spread across the pizza.
  • Pepperoni, 2 oz.Chopping it gives more coverage than whole slices on a small pizza.
  • Melted butter, 1/2 tablespoon.A light brush on the edge helps the crust brown and taste more finished.

How I make it

Step 1 — Heat the oven and shape the dough

I preheat the oven to 425°F and give it a few extra minutes to get truly hot. While it heats, I line a baking sheet with parchment or grease it lightly with butter. I press and stretch the dough with my hands until it is even, leaving the rim just a little thicker than the center.

Step 2 — Build the sauce and cheese layer

I brush the edge with melted butter, then spread 1/4 cup pizza sauce over the middle. I stop before the rim so the crust can bake instead of steaming. The cottage cheese goes on in small spoonfuls; if I smear it into a full layer, the center gets too wet.

Step 3 — Add pepperoni and the final cheeses

I scatter the pepperoni, crumble over the queso fresco, and finish with the mozzarella. The toppings should look a little sparse before baking. Once the cheeses melt, the pizza fills in more than it seems it will.

Step 4 — Bake, rest, and slice

I bake for 12-15 minutes, watching the crust more than the clock. The pizza is ready when the rim is golden brown and the cheese is melted. I let it sit for two minutes before slicing because the cottage cheese is very hot right out of the oven.

Tips from my kitchen

  • Do not overload the center.I keep the sauce and cottage cheese measured because too much moisture makes the dough bend instead of crisp.
  • Use parchment if the dough is sticky.It makes transferring and cleanup much easier.
  • Chop the pepperoni.Small pieces give me pepperoni in more bites and crisp faster than whole rounds.
  • Let the oven get hot.A properly preheated 425°F oven matters more than any fancy pan here.
  • Rest before slicing.Two quiet minutes keep the cheese from sliding off the first slice.

Variations I have actually tried

  • Extra saucy:I warm a little pizza sauce on the side for dipping instead of adding more to the crust.
  • Vegetable version:I skip pepperoni and add very thin bell pepper strips or mushrooms that I have patted dry.
  • Spicier:I add crushed red pepper or a few pickled jalapeño slices before baking.
  • More classic:I swap the queso fresco for extra mozzarella when I want a stretchier slice.
  • Breakfast-ish:I add a few soft scrambled egg curds after baking, not before, so they stay tender.

How I store and reheat it

Leftover slices keep in the refrigerator for up to 3 days. I cool them completely, then store them in a single layer or with parchment between slices so the cheese does not glue everything together.

For reheating, I use a skillet over medium-low heat for the crispest bottom, or a 350°F oven for 6-8 minutes. The microwave works, but the crust turns soft.

What I serve with it

I usually serve this with a crunchy salad, raw vegetables, or breadsticks if I want the full pizza-night feel. If kids are eating, I put extra warm sauce on the side because dipping buys a lot of enthusiasm.

Frequently asked questions

Can I use ricotta instead of cottage cheese?

Yes. I use the same 1/4 cup amount and spoon it on lightly. Ricotta is thicker and a little sweeter, so it gives a more traditional white-pizza feel.

Can I make it ahead?

I prefer baking it fresh, but I will stretch the dough and prep the toppings ahead. Once sauce sits on the dough, the center starts to soften.

What if my crust is pale after 15 minutes?

I give it 2-3 more minutes and move the pan slightly lower in the oven next time. Pale crust usually means the oven was not hot enough or the dough was too thick in the center.

Can pregnant women eat this pizza?

I would use pasteurized cheeses and heat the pizza until the toppings are hot throughout. Anyone with pregnancy-specific food concerns should follow medical guidance.

Can I double the recipe?

Yes. I double everything and use a larger sheet pan, but I still keep the topping layer thin so the dough bakes cleanly.

If I make this pizza again this week, I will probably add jalapeños to my half and leave the other half plain.

I treat this chuck e cheese pizza as a flexible house recipe, not a museum piece. The measurements give me a reliable starting point, but I still check texture, aroma, and browning because pans, ovens, fruit, cheese, and dough all behave a little differently from kitchen to kitchen.

I also keep a small cleanup bowl next to the cutting board when I make this. It sounds minor, but it keeps me from rushing, and rushing is usually when I forget a garnish, overwork dough, or let a sauce go one minute too far.

Chuck E Cheese Pizza

Prep Time 25 mins Cook Time 25 mins Total Time 50 mins Difficulty: Easy Servings: 6 Calories: 25 kcal Dietary:
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Description

I make Chuck E Cheese Pizza with a practical, tested method and the source amounts preserved. The recipe is written in my kitchen voice with the details I watch for while cooking.

Ingredients You’ll Need

Instructions

  1. Preheat the oven to 425°F. Line or grease a baking sheet, then stretch the pizza dough into an even round or oval.
  2. Brush the dough lightly with melted butter. Spread the pizza sauce over the center, leaving a small border.
  3. Add cottage cheese in small spoonfuls, then scatter on chopped pepperoni, queso fresco, and mozzarella.
  4. Bake for 12-15 minutes, until the crust is golden and the cheeses are melted. Rest briefly, slice, and serve hot.

Nutrition Facts

Servings 6


Amount Per Serving
Calories 25kcal
% Daily Value *
Total Fat 2g4%
Saturated Fat 1g5%
Trans Fat 0.1g
Cholesterol 6mg2%
Sodium 49mg3%
Potassium 12mg1%
Protein 2g4%

Calcium 20 mg
Iron 0.0 mg

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.

Note

Do not overload the center. I keep the sauce and cottage cheese measured because too much moisture makes the dough bend instead of crisp.

Use parchment if the dough is sticky. It makes transferring and cleanup much easier.

Chop the pepperoni. Small pieces give me pepperoni in more bites and crisp faster than whole rounds.

Let the oven get hot. A properly preheated 425°F oven matters more than any fancy pan here.

Keywords: chuck e cheese pizza, pepperoni pizza, pizza dough, queso fresco, mozzarella pizza, kid friendly dinner, homemade pizza

Frequently Asked Questions

Expand All:
Can I use ricotta instead of cottage cheese?

Yes. I use the same 1/4 cup amount and spoon it on lightly. Ricotta is thicker and a little sweeter, so it gives a more traditional white-pizza feel.

Can I make it ahead?

I prefer baking it fresh, but I will stretch the dough and prep the toppings ahead. Once sauce sits on the dough, the center starts to soften.

What if my crust is pale after 15 minutes?

I give it 2-3 more minutes and move the pan slightly lower in the oven next time. Pale crust usually means the oven was not hot enough or the dough was too thick in the center.

Can pregnant women eat this pizza?

I would use pasteurized cheeses and heat the pizza until the toppings are hot throughout. Anyone with pregnancy-specific food concerns should follow medical guidance.

Can I double the recipe?

Yes. I double everything and use a larger sheet pan, but I still keep the topping layer thin so the dough bakes cleanly.

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