Tag Archives | mozzarella

Pizza with Capicola and Olives

Most of my good friends who have children describe their eating habits as adventurous, up to a point. In other words, as babies, they’ll eat almost anything: olives, capers, lemon wedges, even those tiny dried fish from Japanese grocery stores. My sister’s kids loved those! They’d eat them like popcorn; they loved the seaweed snacks, too. I’ve heard that babies love sour food like plain lemon wedges (typing these words makes my salivary glands overreact!) and can eat whole lemons with glee. But they also love to eat a whole range of unusual foods that, predictably, ends when they become a toddler.

This leaves parents shaking their heads, confused, wondering what happened, what did they do wrong? All of a sudden their little one will only eat pasta and butter. Or dinosaur-shaped chicken nuggets. Or cheese pizza, without so much as a speck of oregano. Maybe a piece of broccoli sneaks under their toddler radar, but that’s it. Some kids seemingly never outgrow this phase, and others do. Only a few “lucky” parents end up having kids who still eat adventurously all through childhood. I know one little girl who can eat an entire jar of olives, if her parents let her, as well as a little guy who knows his way rather well around a menu at his parents’ favorite Thai restaurant. It’s a roll of the dice!

Science tells us it has something to do with developing taste buds, a mechanism built within us to protect ourselves and keep us from eating things that aren’t meant to be eaten. As we age, those taste buds develop fully and we start enjoying a wider range of flavors again. Hopefully. Except for some reason, not many adults can eat a lemon as if it were an orange. (Whoa, there goes my mouth again!)

When that time comes, then this flatbread pizza is bound to please any adult or adventurous kid. Salty olive tapenade, cured capicola, fresh mozzarella, and crispy flatbread: all big flavors that pack a serious tastebud punch. Capicola is glorious and even in small amounts makes a delicious, salty impact.

Make one to share with your favorite adventurous child, or keep it all to yourself and wash it down with an icy pilsner. SO much better than ground up chicken in the shape of a dinosaur.

-Amy at Flatout

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Grilled Portobello Pizza

This pizza has been selected as one of our Great for the Grill recipes. When the weather is gorgeous, dust off that outdoor grill and make a flatbread pizza, alfresco, for your hungry party. There’s nothing better than a hint of woodsmoke on your melted cheese, and these flatbread pizzas cook even faster on the grill than they do in the oven. You don’t need a fancy pizza steel (but feel free to use one) for the flatbreads, just a spatula and tongs, tools you already have. It may be time to switch it up and eat pizza from the grill tonight!

Read how easy it is to grill your own healthier, gourmet flatbread pizza below the recipe.

Mushrooms are pretty heroic as a food. Sure, they serve as a delicious substitute for meat in recipes, but I think they hold their own as a star attraction, too. This flatbread pizza proves it! Portobello mushrooms marinate beautifully, and then can be cooked on the grill much like a steak or burger, with wonderful results.

On warm nights, when we don’t feel like heating up the kitchen, this flatbread pizza is just the thing to make outside on the grill with whatever garden herbs we have. The mushrooms can soak up their marinade all day, so when we get home all we have to do is light the grill and open a bottle of something, relaxing outdoors while the flatbread cooks. It’s an easy weeknight vegetarian dinner!

Summer means that there are herbs all over the place in gardens, farmer’s markets, and even on the street! Outside my local movie theatre they grow mint and rosemary in huge planters, so I make sure to pinch a few stems of mint off the plants when I walk by. Mint grows wild, so no one minds! It tastes so great in a glass of ice water or tea in the summer. And the rosemary attracts bees, which is good for, well, everything. There’s nothing wrong with a little urban foraging every once in awhile…

Adding lots of fresh herbs while they’re plentiful is a good way to pack a lot of flavor into your meals while watching what you eat. Eating more mushrooms is a delicious way to go meatless and increase your daily number of vegetables. That means that this flatbread recipe is a win-win!

-Amy at Flatout

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Rustic Italian Flatbread

Sometimes, simplicity is best. So many restaurants I visit tend to pile on ingredients like they’re going out of style, in an effort to impress, but sometimes I think it can overwhelm the palette. During a recent visit to a well regarded pastificio, my better half and I ordered a single ravioli as an appetizer. When it arrived at the table, it was so buried with micro herbs, slivers of radishes, beets, and nuts, we couldn’t see the ravioli. We had to dig through with our forks, sort of like one does when raking leaves. Every plate we ordered came out covered in “stuff.” It was pretty, but it didn’t always add to the overall taste.

My thought has always been that unless the flavors in a dish could really benefit from an added ingredient, I prefer to keep it as streamlined as possible. And that philosophy carries over into everything, even something as mundane as cheese pizza. Because what’s better, really, than cheese pizza? It’s a staple, even a comfort food, well loved by kids and adults alike. This cheese pizza cooks up in less time than almost any frozen pizza, so there’s no need to buy frozen. You have fresh, with some Flatout!

This flatbread uses good, quality ingredients: Roma tomatoes, oregano, and fresh mozzarella. It’s as simple and delicious as it gets! And not a wafer thin beet slice in site, my friends, I promise. Enjoy!

-Amy at Flatout

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Eggplant & Prosciutto Flatbread

This pizza has been selected as one of our Great for the Grill recipes. When the weather is gorgeous, dust off that outdoor grill and make a flatbread pizza, alfresco, for your hungry party. There’s nothing better than a hint of woodsmoke on your melted cheese, and these flatbread pizzas cook even faster on the grill than they do in the oven. You don’t need a fancy pizza steel (but feel free to use one) for the flatbreads, just a spatula and tongs, tools you already have. It may be time to switch it up and eat pizza from the grill tonight!

Read how easy it is to grill your own healthier, gourmet flatbread pizza below the recipe.

Beautiful eggplant, how I love it! Such an intriguing vegetable, which comes in all shapes and sizes. I especially love the little ones, Indian eggplants, which are about as big as golf balls, and cute as buttons. Or the elusive solid white Fairy Tale eggplant. But for all my eggplant appreciation, I admit I’m still a bit stumped when it comes to cooking with them. It’s not that I don’t know how to cook an eggplant, it’s just that unless I have a specific recipe for them, I don’t usually just grab some, like I would grab a bag of spinach or a hunk of broccoli rabe, to have it on hand for an impromptu side dish.

No matter! If I’m going to be grilling, I will always buy an Italian eggplant to throw whole on the coals once dinner is finished cooking, so the eggplant can roast and get super soft smoky. By the time we walk the dogs one last time before bed, the eggplant is finished, collapsed on the grill, so I carefully wrap it up and store it in the refrigerator overnight. Then in the morning I make baba ganoush with tahini, lemon juice, garlic and olive oil to eat with spiced, baked flatbread chips. But that’s another post altogether!

This recipe calls for a large eggplant, sliced and grilled, then assembled on a flatbread with a couple thin but significant slices of prosciutto di Parma and mozzarella. A little basil too! Classic Italian pizza is coming your way. You’ll love how smoky and delicious this pizza tastes. One large eggplant goes a long way, so this recipe is perfect for company. Open a bottle or two of prosecco and mangia bene!

-Amy at Flatout

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Italian Breakfast Panini

Amy’s recipe for an Italian style flatbread panini is a great way to start any morning. Tomatoes, basil, mozzarella, and egg, nestled inside a whole grain flatbread and grilled to perfection, there are few things better. No Panini Press? No problem! Use a cast-iron grill pan, pressing the lid of a pot on top of the sandwich to form grill marks.
Thanks, Amy!

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Quick Fix Margherita Pizza

This lightning fast margherita flatbread pizza doesn’t skimp on flavor, just time! Turn on the oven, slice some tomatoes, and a homemade meal is well on its way. The secret to this recipe is a drizzle of balsamic reduction at the very end; it’s a perfect addition to the tomatoes and mozzarella! No need to call delivery when there’s Flatout in the house. At only 4 WW® SmartPoints® value per serving, this pizza is a sure thing any night of the week.

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Spicy Hawaiian Pizza

No plane ticket needed, just turn on the oven and bake up a flatbread tropical paradise in mere minutes. This spicy, Hawaiian style flatbread pizza is a great solution for a weeknight dinner that’s SmartPoints friendly. Thin crust flatbread, juicy pineapple, thick cut Canadian bacon…eating well never tasted so good! Put on a grass skirt and start swaying to the music in our sweet new video:

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Andean Pizza with Quinoa and Vegetables

A beautiful summer flatbread pizza inspired by the native grains of Peru, Morena Cuadra’s Andean Pizza with Quinoa and Vegetables is just the thing to make on summer days and nights. Loaded with protein packed quinoa, fried onions, and artichokes, you will love this flatbread. Read more from this fabulous mother/daughter team on the blog Peru Delights. Thanks, Morena!

Andean Pizza with Quinoa and Vegetables
By: Morena Cuadra from Peru Delights

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Grilled Jerk Chicken Pizza

The perfect summer chicken pizza is just around the corner with this quick and easy tropical flatbread recipe featuring jerk marinade, mozzarella cheese, and a cool crunchy cucumber relish. Jerk spices traditionally include allspice, (also called pimenton) Scotch Bonnet peppers, thyme, garlic, and chilis; that means this pizza is a little sweet and a lot spicy! But don’t worry, because the cucumber relish that’s spooned over the top after it’s cooked will cool you off nicely. Crank up some Peter Tosh and let’s get busy!

Some of you may already know how fond we are of Jamaican style jerk chicken in my house. We always have our favorite bottle of jerk sauce somewhere in the pantry, ready to marinate some chicken breast on short notice. With the weather being so lovely lately, we’ve been in the habit of making our meals on the grill, especially flatbread pizza!

The same little Russian grocery at the end of my street has, in addition to a huge selection of sardines, a wall of halvah, (I call it a walvah) and a mind-boggling selection of smoked salmon and lox, also oddly has the very brand of jerk sauce we love. I could make my own, but why mess with a great thing? Bottled sauce it is. Easy weeknight dinner!

The cucumber relish was my own stroke of genius, here. Not only did it cool the fire of those Scotch Bonnets off, but it added a really nice dimension of flavor and texture to the flatbread. Cucumbers and radishes are extra tasty right now, so pile your flatbread high with all the vegetables your heart desires! Because your heart does indeed desire vegetables.

Now about that Peter Tosh…

-Amy at Flatout

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