Pizza is undoubtedly one of my favourite foods and a sure fire winner with the kids too. There are so many possible things to top it with, but almost always they include the addition of a tomato sauce on the base. I do love this classic pizza, but I’ve recently discovered the pizza bianca; a pizza with no tomato. Somehow the lack of the tomato allows you to really appreciate the flavours of the pizza topping fully.
Brassicas are not the first port of call for the home pizza chef, but they offer a great alternative to the usual topping fayre. Cooked down with onions and garlic they create an unctiuous sweet and iron rich base on which to place your chosen cheese.
You will need (makes 6 small pizzas)
For the pizza base
3g dried yeast
150ml warm water
500g strong white flour
1 tsp salt
1 tbsp olive oil
For the topping
A glug of olive oil
2 onions, halved and thinly sliced
1 large clove of garlic, finely chopped
350g of spring greens, kale, cavolo nero or other brassica leaves (stalks removed)
75g mature cheddar, grated
75g mozarella
Salt and black pepper
Mix all the pizza ingredients together to form a dough. Continue to knead until the dough becomes more silken and springy. It’s impossble to say how long this could take, but after six or seven minutes you should be pretty much there. Place the dough in an oiled bowl and cover with clingfilm or a damp teatowel. Leave to prove for an hour or so, or until the dough has doubled in size.
Whilst the dough proves, finely slice a couple of onions and a large clove of garlic, and slowly cook in a little oil until it is wonderfuly soft and transulcent. When the onions are done, add the finely shredded greens, allowing them to soften and combine with the sweet allium mix. Take the dough, divide it into 6, shape into balls, then roll out on a floured surface to about the thickness of a pound coin.
I find that pizzas in a home oven benefit from being placed onto a hot baking sheet. I use a piece of floured plywood to peel the pizza in to the oven and onto a preheated baking tray (set your oven to hot, as hot as it goes). The additional heat from below helps to ensure the crisp bottom required of a decent pizza, and aids the speedy baking of the dough. So, spread each pizza with the onion, garlic, brassica mix, then top with the two cheeses. Bake for 7-8 minutes until they are crisp and golden.
Yum, and I bet purple sprouting, anchovies and chilli would be good on one of these too – it’s a great combo on pasta
I reckon that would work a treat. I ♥️PSB
Yumm!! It looks like the real deal – and it’s an Italian saying it 😉
Check out my healthy but super tasty recipes if you want – I make stuff with rare ingredients or mixed international ingredients but keeping an eye on health and calories 😊
Also on Instagram: @ariaverr
Hope to see you on my blog, ciao!
Thanks. I’ll check out the blog and your instagram account.
pizza Bianca is my favourite even if I love tomato based ones. Looks delicious!
Thanks. I’m a big fan too. Mind you I’m a fan of any decent pizza really. Simplicity is the key though. Don’t need too many toppings.