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White Pizza with Spinach & Garlic

3.00 Mitt(s) 1 Rating(s)1 vote, average: 3.00 out of 51 vote, average: 3.00 out of 51 vote, average: 3.00 out of 51 vote, average: 3.00 out of 51 vote, average: 3.00 out of 5

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Level: Intermediate

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Description

Simple, vegetarian white pizza that is so much more than the sum of its parts. Garlicky olive oil serves as the sauce, topped by salty pecorino romano, green spinach, earthy mushrooms, and creamy mozzarella. Chicken is optional, but it’s a great variation. Heaven on a pizza crust (recipe included for the easy crust too!)

Ingredients

  • FOR THE DOUGH:
  • 1-½ cup All-purpose Flour
  • 1 teaspoon Kosher Salt
  • 1 package Instant Yeast (1 1/2 Teaspoon Package)
  • ⅔ cups Warm Water
  • 1 Tablespoon Olive Oil Plus Extra For Drizzling On Dough
  • 2 teaspoons Honey Or Sugar
  • _____
  • FOR THE PIZZA:
  • 3 Tablespoons Olive Oil
  • 3 cloves Garlic, Minced
  • 4 ounces, weight Button Mushrooms, Sliced
  • 1 cup Frozen Chopped Spinach
  • ½ cups Grated Pecornio Romano Cheese
  • 1-½ cup Shredded Whole-milk Mozzarella
  • Salt And Pepper, to taste

Preparation

FOR THE DOUGH:
In the bowl of a stand mixer, use dough hook to mix flour, salt and yeast together. Add water, olive oil, and honey, and mix on medium speed until the dough comes together in a ball and begins to pull away from the sides of the bowl. Add more flour/water as necessary – the dough will stick to the bottom but not the sides. It should not be overly wet or shaggy, but not too dry/floury/stiff either.

Allow the mixer to run for 5-7 minutes to knead the dough and develop the gluten (alternatively, knead by hand). After this is complete, form the dough into a ball by pulling edges under. Place into mixer bowl (no need to wash), drizzle with olive oil, and allow to rise in a warm, draft-free place for at least an hour, or until doubled in size. Punch down and proceed.

FOR THE PIZZA:
Place a pizza stone on oven rack in the bottom third of the oven and preheat oven to 500 degrees F for a good 20 minutes. Sprinkle flour and cornmeal on a pizza peel or a rimless cookie sheet.

In a small skillet, heat the olive oil and garlic together over low heat for 5 minutes or until the garlic is fragrant and beginning to brown (if the garlic burns or gets overly brown, toss it all and start over). Set the completed garlic oil aside in a small bowl, return skillet to heat, and increase heat to medium-high. Add mushrooms, season with salt and pepper to taste, and saute 3-4 minutes until they begin giving off their water. Add spinach (no need to defrost) and cook another 4-5 minutes or until the veggies have given up most of their liquid. Season again.

Shape the pizza dough into a 14″ to 16″ round, first patting in out on a floured counter using your fingers, then picking it up, laying it over the knuckles of loose fists, and using the dough’s weight to gently (GENTLY!) stretch it further. Use enough flour to prevent sticking, but not so much to completely coat the dough. If you have trouble getting the dough to stretch, let it rest for 5 minutes and try again. Place pizza dough onto prepared cookie sheet.

Pour garlic oil evenly over crust, spreading to within 1/2″ of edges. Sprinkle pecorino romano and half of mozzerella over the oil. Top with vegetable mixture (and cooked chicken if using), then add the remaining mozzerella.

Using a fast, confident, forward-then-back jerking motion, transfer pizza from peel to hot pizza stone and place in oven. Bake 8-12 minutes (checking every minute after 7) or until crust is golden and bubbled and cheese is evenly browned. (Alternately, bake pizza on a thin pizza pan – shape and top the pizza on the pan, don’t worry about tossing it with this method. Baking on a pan takes a few minutes longer to get crust done, and it won’t get as crisp.)

Allow to cool on stone/pan for several minutes before slicing and serving.

One Comment

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cheeks mcgee on 4.4.2011

To respond to Melby….I’ve not heard that one never cooks toppings on a pizza! The reason I saute mushrooms first is, simply, because I think they taste better that way. The super-hot oven temps for cooking dough tend to dehydrate and shrivel the mushrooms. Plus, with “wet” veggies like spinach and mushrooms that release a lot of water when they cook, I don’t like to cook them right on wet dough or else risk a soggy crust. Hope this helps!

One Review

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Melby on 4.3.2011

Unfortunately I have a tiny crappy kitchen right now, so I can’t rate the pizza dough (boo!), only the pizza as a whole (ie, how the stuff on it worked out).

I have to say, I’m incredibly perplexed why one would cook veggies to go on a pizza — which goes into the oven to be – cooked. Toppings on pizzas are never cooked first, aside of possibly meat (I don’t eat it, so not really sure, but I could see that making sense). You really don’t want to overcook veggies, and spinach is best eaten with only very light cooking (if any) so, yeah. I used fresh spinach and mushrooms, *not* cooked. Because I did not cook them, I had no need to use salt or pepper. The pizza tasted very good and I would do that again, so thanks for the idea of the garlic oil as a base!

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