Tasting pizza toppings for an unconventional pizza.
Posted by Mo on 15 Feb 2010 | Tagged as: Pizza toppings
One of the great things about pizza is its variety. Depending on which pizza toppings you use, your pizza can be Italian, Asian, Mexican or Greek. Hearty or healthful. Gourmet or grass roots.
But if you’re like us, you have a few favorite pizzas that you end up making over and over again. So maybe it’s time to shake things up with some tasty pizza toppings that are out are of the box — the pizza box that is.
Zucca restaurant in Los Angeles makes a fabulous pizza with roasted butternut squash, goat cheese, caramelized onions, and smoked prosciutto. How good is that! To roast the squash, dice it, place it on baking sheet, drizzle with melted butter or olive oil, sprinkle with salt and pepper, and then roast at 400 degrees for about 45 minutes. You can puree the squash to make a sauce, or just smash down the chunks with a fork.

Prosciutto & Arugula Pizza
Another great pizza restaurant is Sonsie in Boston. They make a pizza with grilled corn, smoked bacon, and brie, fontina, and Gruyere cheese that’s just incredible. You can grill the corn on your barbecue, or do it indoors on a grill pan. When it caramelizes, it gets incredibly sweet. And the contrast with the smoky bacon is wonderful. Cut the corn off the cob to use it as a pizza topping.
Squash blossoms are a popular appetizer in Rome. Stuffed with bread crumbs, cheese, and maybe a little anchovy, they’re fried until crispy. Pizzeria Mozza, also in Los Angeles, makes a pizza with squash blossoms, tomato, and burrata cheese. If you haven’t had burrata cheese, it’s basically mozzarella cheese with a heavy cream center. When you cut into it, the creamy center oozes out over the plate. Another Mozza specialty is Gorgonzola, fingerling potatoes, radicchio and rosemary.
Two of the most popular pizzas at Serious Pie in Seattle — part of the Tom Douglas restaurant family — are Penn Cove clams, house pancetta, and lemon thyme, and guanciale (bacon from pigs’ cheeks), soft eggs, and dandelion greens. We’ve had Capriciossa pizza on the Isle of Capri with an egg broken over the top of the pizza just before it goes into the oven.

White Pizza with Basil
If you find it challenging to get five servings of fruits and vegetables every day, try experimenting with different vegetable pizza toppings.
For something delicious but different, try roasted yams, fried sage, and brown butter. To brown butter, heat it in a heavy-bottom stainless steel pan over medium heat. When it turns medium brown, remove it from the heat and place the pan in a sink full or cold water to stop the cooking process. For even more flavor, add lemon juice and garlic. Slather it over the dough with a pastry brush, and save a little to drizzle over the top when it comes out of the oven.
To fry sage, take whole, fresh sage leaves and saute them in hot oil for about 20 seconds, or until they turn crisp and brown around the edges. These are absolutely delicious and require very limited effort to make.
Read more pizza topping articles here.
Prosciutto & Arugula Pizza Image Flickr: Sebastian Mary
White Pizza with Basil Image Flickr: nate steiner

