Seven is minimal, and shown below. The centers of the six outer unit circles are $\sqrt3$ away from the center of the circle of radius $2$, and they form a regular hexagon. It is not hard to check that this works.
[asy][asy]
size(4cm);
pair O=(0,0);
pair A=sqrt(3)*dir(0);
pair B=sqrt(3)*dir(60);
pair C=sqrt(3)*dir(120);
pair D=sqrt(3)*dir(180);
pair E=sqrt(3)*dir(240);
pair F=sqrt(3)*dir(300);
draw(circle(O,2));
draw(circle(O,1));
draw(circle(A,1));
draw(circle(B,1));
draw(circle(C,1));
draw(circle(D,1));
draw(circle(E,1));
draw(circle(F,1));
[/asy][/asy]
Proof that six unit circles fail: Let the circle of radius $2$ be $\Gamma$ and have center $O$, and let $\omega$ be a unit circle. Assume $\Gamma$ and $\omega$ intersect at $A$ and $B$. Since $\overline{AB}$ is a chord of $\omega$, the maximum possible length $AB$ is $2$, so the maximum possible measure of $\angle AOB$ is $60^\circ$.
From the above, six unit circles can cover at most $360^\circ$ of $\Gamma$'s circumference, so equality must hold. In other words, all unit circles intersect $\Gamma$ at two points forming an arc of measure $60^\circ$, and adjacent unit disks intersect on the circumference of $\Gamma$.
As seen in the diagram above, six unit circles positioned in such a manner cannot cover $\Gamma$, as desired. $\square$