I have been seeing drool-worthy photos of salads on so many of the food blogs I follow, so when I grabbed the bag of arugula pesto cubes out of the freezer I was thinking of Spring, of a dark green peppery arugula salad under my flakes of salmon. I've seen salads with bacon and bourbon, salads with chickpeas and salmon, and salads with salmon, cucumber, and mushroom. There are a lot of talented food bloggers out there who take amazing photos of salads that are making me drool!
If I were making an arugula salad topped with salmon, creamy goat cheese and cracked pepper would pair very nicely with it. Red onion would also, but while I had that idea pre-baking frenzy, I didn't write it down.
Often I make up to 3 different pizzas on Friday nights, then post the 'behind the scenes' photos on my FB page, and if I don't write the ideas for each one down before I start cooking, I end up forgetting bits and pieces in the hustle.So here's a pizza for you to play with--starting with an arugula pesto crust, topped with more arugula pesto, goat cheese and my favorite shredded blend, briefly baked, topped with salmon flakes and then returned to the oven to heat through. Try it yourself and tell me how you'd tweak it!
Forgot the Quattro Formaggio. Again. |
Ready to bake |
Salmon and Goat Cheese on Arugula Pesto Pizza
Arugula Pesto Crust (makes 2 crusts)
1 teaspoon (5 ml) active dry yeast1/3 cup (80 ml) arugula pesto (see Note)
2 cups (8 ounces, 227 grams) whole wheat flour
2 cups (8 1/2 ounces, 240 grams) unbleached all purpose flour
1 teaspoon (5 ml) Kosher salt
for the topping
1 clove roasted garlic (here's how I put up my garlic crop)
1/3 cup (80 ml) arugula pesto
1 ounce (28 grams) goat cheese
1/2 cup (120 ml) shredded Italian blend cheese
freshly ground pepper
4 ounces (113 grams) baked salmon filet
Please refer to my Pizza Primer post for general pizza-making hints and tips and lots of how-to photo collages.
To make the crust, dissolve the yeast in the water in the bowl of your stand mixer while you're gathering the rest of the ingredients.
I'm loving my kitchen scale (use a Bed, Bath, and Beyond coupon though) for making pizza dough. I just stick the mixing bowl on the scale, zero it, then add my flours by weight. No need to fluff, measure, or level. It even tells me how hot my kitchen is in the summer, or how cold (down to 50 degrees Fahrenheit) the breakfast nook is in the winter.Add the prepared pesto, flours, and salt. Using the paddle attachment, mix until combined. Stop and scrape down the sides if necessary. Because you're making dough with vegetables, the water content is variable. If, after a few minutes of mixing, your dough looks too wet, add a tablespoon of flour. If your dough looks too rough and dry, add a teaspoon or water or olive oil. I frequently stop my mixer and give the dough a 5 minute rest, then come back and whir it around on medium speed, momentarily, for grins and giggles. And because my bread machine does that in its dough cycle, so the machine may be onto something. Hmmm, my bread machine is telling me what to do.
Move the dough to an oiled container, and chill for up to 3 days. You can freeze this too, if you like. LABEL THE DOUGH THOUGH! Yes, I shouted. Don't be like me. Take the chilled dough out of the fridge about 30 minutes before you're ready to turn on your oven.
When you're ready to bake, preheat the oven to 450 degrees Fahrenheit. Don't use your kitchen scale to check the temperature, though. It will melt. Perhaps an oven thermometer? On an oiled piece of parchment paper, stretch out the dough (remember you just made 2 pizzas worth of crust, so grab half for this) in the shape that appeals to you today. Brush with smushed roasted garlic. Spread with arugula pesto, and top with cheeses and several grinds of pepper. Bake on the parchment for 5 minutes. Remove the pizza from the oven, top with flakes of salmon, and return to the bare pizza stone (no parchment) for another 3 minutes. Cool on a rack a few minutes, then slice and serve.
Note: When my CSA farm share and my own garden conspire to overwhelm me with arugula, I turn to
Farmer John's Cookbook: The Real Dirt on Vegetables for help. There you will find a wonderful arugula-asiago pesto recipe that forms the basis for this pizza. Recently I've discovered kale pesto and spinach pesto, so I'm going to be playing when my CSA farm share resumes in less than 2 months! Yippee! Of course any prepared pesto will do.
This post is linked up with the Farm Girl Blog Fest at Let This Mind Be In You, Strange But Good at Sprint 2 The Table, The Clever Chicks Blog Hop at The Chicken Chick, the Wednesday Fresh Foods Link Up at Gastronomical Sovereignty, What's Cookin' Wednesday at Buns In My Oven, Taste and Tell Thursday, and What's In The Box at In Her Chucks.
I love adding salmon to pizza! Did you see my cauliflower crust version in Jan's strange but good? It was asian-inspired using wasabi!
ReplyDeleteThanks for linking up!
Laura,
DeleteI've sent your cauliflower crust recipe off to my friend who is doing GF for March. It sounds really neat to add wasabi (I have to say waaaasaaaabeeeee) and I'll try that sometime, though probably without cauliflower unless we get a ton in the farm share, since I've got more flour than cauliflower these days. When I learn the mad drizzling skills trick I'll do a pizza with unagi. Ok, now I'm hungry.
Thanks!
There was so many funny things in this post (melting the oven scale, youre bread machine sharing sage advice, labeling and shouting, and of course, there's the pizza. Who can forget the pizza. I actually made pesto pizza two weekends ago based on your FB post, and it was amazing. But then again, pesto was involved so how could it not be. As if.
ReplyDeleteMeghan,
DeleteI'm sad to see my pesto stocks dwindling in the freezer while there is snow where I'm planning to plant basil (and everywhere else in my back yard). However I've learned about kale pesto, and spinach pesto, and of course Heather at In Her Chuck's cherry tomato pesto, so I'm thinking I'll have a wide variety of pestos put up in a few months.
Thanks!
Ahhh! Your pizza creations always leave me drooling! Love the arugula action! And goat cheese with salmon is a match made in Heaven!
ReplyDeleteHeather,
DeleteI'm glad to make you drool, since your pancakes, especially covered in chocolate sauce, or pomegranate arils, or . . . ok, let's just say your pancakes make me drool.
Thanks!
Hah! This is exactly the pizza I was planning to make tomorrow. We are channeling each other, I think. So good to know someone else puts salmon on pizza.
ReplyDeleteLydia,
DeletePlease tell me you're more domestic (and by that I mean a great housekeeper) than I am, and I will happily channel you in all ways, not just food!
My son and I are the biggest salmon-on-pizza fans here.
Thanks!
I love this! We eat a lot of salmon in our house and are always looking for new ways to cook it. So glad I found this from Clever Chicks.
ReplyDeleteAbby,
DeleteLucky you to eat so much salmon! It's a treat here, and really about the only fish I seem to cook with, if the blog is any indication.
Thanks for stopping by!
I don't imagine I could convince the family to try salmon pizza. I am celebrating that the boy is going to try fish tacos tonight. And with "naked fish" instead of breaded. Small victories!
ReplyDeleteI think of you every time I make pizza. You are inspiring me to be more adventurous, but I'm not to your level yet!
Sarah
Sarah,
DeleteBeware of what you wish for . . . take out Indian food used to be the leftovers-of-choice for the parents, but now the kids eat it too so we have to fight over who gets to eat it. And order more than we used to since there are double the eaters.
So, I'm learning to make my own!
Thanks!
This is an absolute first for me. I don't think I have ever had fish on pizza. But this has me jonesing for some (but then again...what's new?).
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing and linking up!
Heather,
DeleteI'm sorry to make you hungry (but really, you've got to expect that if you're going to host such delicious link ups!).
Thanks for hosting!