three pizzas May 10, 2008
Posted by a-k in baking, bread, cookbooks, grains and flours, nut cheese, pizza, tempeh, the millenium cookbook.trackback

crushed tomatoes, spicy tempeh sausage, fresh spinach, red onions, and basil chiffonade on a spelt-whole wheat crust; with bell’s two hearted ale and a trio of olives.
we tend to order a lot of pizza luce at our apartment (well, when we order pizza, maybe once or twice a month). and it’s great - we can do half vegan/half vegetarian, it’s garlicky, deliciously smothered in toppings, and local. but sometimes i want more choices (not to mention saving 18 dollars). i want to know what all goes into my crust and my toppings. so, i bought a pizza stone. it changed my life over two nights.
i searched high and low for a whole grain pizza crust online, but wasn’t left with many options for quick and easy. so my wait for pizza night lasted through an overnight delayed fermentation after finding a pared down version of peter reinhart’s recipe on 101 cookbooks (a gorgeous site with vegetarian, and several vegan, recipes). and was it worth it? oh yes.
i wouldn’t call myself a pizza snob in the sense that i’ve never lived in new york city (wow, have i encountered strong - though deserved - opinions there), nor do i have a very specific definition of what i think constitutes a good pizza. they come in all shapes, sizes, and tastes. but i’m certainly not one to settle for a cheeseless vegetarian chain pizza with too much (and a too chewy) crust. and i, for one, appreciate a crispy thin crust when i have the option, and would generally rather skip the faux cheese (though pizza luce’s rinotta is pretty damn tasty).

garlic-stuffed olives, marinated sicilian olives, and green lucques.
a is playing a few shows out of town this weekend, so i made a pizza for the eve of her departure. i wasn’t sure how the crust would turn out exactly, and only had some vague ideas of what to top it with to approximate the simplicity of a neopolitan-style pizza. a friend of mine likes to point out that a lot of poorer people in italy could not afford to put cheese (or meat for that matter) on their pizzas, making it fairly authentic to create a truly vegan pizza. with the first pizza, however, i opted for some protein on top by making a zestier version of the tempeh sausage crumbles from the millenium cookbook’s puttanesca pizza. it complemented the tangy crushed tomatoes i used as a sauce as well as the baby spinach and red onions; when i pulled the pizza out of the oven i sprinkled it with a chiffonade of basil:

…and served it with three kinds of olives and a cold bottle of bell’s two hearted ale apiece. mmm…
so about this crust: i used a combination of whole spelt flour and whole wheat bread flour to make a whole grain crust, which is hard to find (most have a mix of wheat and white flour). i mixed enough dough for 8 small crusts and froze most of them, reserving a few in the fridge for the upcoming occasions. i shaped the dough by hand (without a rolling pin), getting a dangerously thin crust in some areas, but the heat of that magic twelve-dollar stone assured that my crust came out not-soggy, and perfectly baked. my crust didn’t blister and blacken in spots as neopolitan pizzas tend to, but i have no complaints about the final product. it was thin and crispy without being either hard or cardboard-like, and had an amazing flavor.

spelt-whole wheat crust with olive oil, tomatoes, grilled zucchini, red onions, salt and pepper, before baking (and before basil).
i got to try out more pizza the following night, when two of my coworkers came over to watch “eyes without a face” (which i recommend if you’re in the mood for a creepy, beautiful french film from the late 50s). this time i made two kinds: one crust simply brushed with olive oil, then layered with tomatoes, grilled zucchini, red onions, and fresh basil, and the other with crushed tomatoes, tempeh sausage, sicilian olives, marinated mushrooms, red onions, cashew cheese, and fresh rosemary. this crust recipe is definitely a keeper! if you can hold off a day in finishing your pizza dough, i highly recommend it.

Those pizzas look lovely - I like a nice cheeseless pizza but am always put off by what I get from the big chains. Making your own seems the ideal solution!
Gorgeous pizzas! I can smell them from here.
I was in Minneapolis for a few nights back in November, and I have to say, Pizza Luce saved my life.
It was extremely cold, and I was pretty unfamiliar with the city, so I wasn’t about to venture out of my hotel room (which seemed to be in some kind of business district, downtown) to search for a Subway.
Your pizzas look amazing though, definitely put them to shame.
Your pizzas are making my mouth water- seriously! I need to invest in a pizza stone…
Those pizzas look and sound really delicious!
Looks like I need to expand my horizons - I’ve ordered a vegan pizza from that oh-so-lovely chain (Little Caesar’s, haha) with my family twice now, and they did a pretty good job. But I’m not much of a pizza snob, either. (I still haven’t experienced Pizza Luce, darn it!) The whole wheat/spelt crust does sound rather amazing. I can only dream of a pizza with tempeh crumbles!!! And cashew cheese!
Glad you found Peter Reinhart’s pizza dough a success. It’s the same recipe I use also incorporating part whole wheat bread flour. Nothing like homemade flatbread!