Rocket Pockets

Named for the french name of one of the fillings, arugula, these pizza pockets are a superb alternative to heavy, meaty alternatives. I have adapted this recipe from a Giada de Laurentiis recipe I saw a while back. They are a great addition to parties or a good family pleasure on a budget. I like to serve mine with a selection of basil pesto, meaty marinara, and spicy marinara. There are a couple of advantages to this meal: it can be thrown together pretty quickly if you have frozen turkey and pizza dough in the fridge; it is pretty healthy but also indulgent; it tastes great; you can make it on a but and under time restrictions (make the filling in advance); and, kids will love it.

Rocket Pockets (aka Turkey Arugula Pizza Pockets)

adapted from Giada de Laurentiis

One batch store-bought or prepared pizza dough
One pound ground Turkey
One tablespoon each: Ground Pepper, Italian Seasoning, Herbs de Provence
One to two teaspoons crushed red pepper
Two large shallots, minced
Four cloves garlic, minced
One-Half cup Parmesan Cheese, shredded
One-Third Cup mozzarella or Fontina (optional)
Three-Fourths of a package of room temperature cream cheese (reduced fat is fine)
Salt
One egg, cracked and beaten
Basil pesto
Meaty Porcini Marinara 

Preheat the oven to 400 degrees F. Roll out the pizza dough on a lightly floured surface to a thin 20 by 12-inch rectangle. Cut the rectangle in half lengthwise. The cut each half into 8 equal rectangles. Heat the olive oil over medium-high heat in a medium-sized, heavy skillet. Add the garlic and shallots and cook until glassy. Add the ground turkey and season with pepper, salt, herbs, and red pepper. Cook until golden, about 5 minutes. Add the arugula and cook until wilted. Turn off the heat, remove pan from burner and stir in the cheeses. Adjust seasoning as necessary.

Brush pesto across the tops of the rectangles, leaving the outer half-inch plain. Spoon topping onto one side of each of the rectangles. Brush the edges of the rectangle with egg wash. Close the rectangle of pizza dough over the topping. Use a fork to seal and crimp the edges. Place the pizza pockets onto a parchment paper-lined baking sheet. Brush the top of each pizza pocket with egg wash. Sprinkle with the remaining Parmesan. Bake until golden, about 15 to 17 minutes.

Meanwhile, sauce of choice heat over low heat in a  saucepan. Serve the hot pizza pockets with the meaty marinara and basil pesto alongside for dipping.

Meaty Porcini Marinara

This week’s cooking spree continued with homemade “meaty marinara.” I call it this because marinara is traditionally a tomato sauce and a Bolognese is a meaty version of marinara in a round-about-way. But, to the dismay of Italian cooks everywhere, I made a bastardized version of both and have chosen to call it meaty marinara. It was my first ever attempt at making either marinara (not surprising since I do not eat marinara) or meat sauce, and it was really – ummm -incredible. This accompanied turkey and arugula pizza pockets, but it would be wonderful tossed with fresh pasta and a bit of cheese, tossed with gnocchi, or made into a pizza sauce. If you choose to use Porcini, you will need to be dried as they only grow in Italy and must be imported. You can either grind them or you can reconstitute them in liquid before adding them to the sauce. This is a great sauce to make and then let hang out on the stove whilst you turn your attention to something else. Additionally, it gets better the longer it sits and this includes fridge time. Make a big batch and freeze it or use it to make three different dishes over a three or four day span.

I fear I must apologize as this “recipe” was concocted in true Andiland style. I threw stuff in a pan (without measuring as always) and then adjusted as necessary. The measurements I provide below are guesses at best, feel free to adjust to your preferences.

Note: I did not add celery to my Soffrito, only garlic, onions, and carrot. I did use celery seed in the sauce as a replacement. You can use whichever you like.

Meaty Porcini Marinara

Two slices Bacon
1/3 pound of Hot Italian Pork Sausage (bulk)
Four Large Shallots, sliced
12 Cloves Garlic, whole and slightly crushed (skin removed)
3/4 Tube of Good Quality Tomato Paste
Two Tablespoons Butter
Red Wine (I used a Malbec), about a half a cup
Beef Broth, about 2 and a half cups
Chicken Broth, about a half cup (this was added to thin the sauce out some and is optional)
About a quarter cup of porcini mushrooms, either ground or reconstituted
Three tablespoons Herbs de Provence and Italian Seasoning, split
A couple good pinches of salt
Three tablespoons black pepper
One large carrot, diced
One tablespoon celery seed (or a few stalks of celery cut into large dice)
One tablespoon crushed red pepper flakes (adjust according to preferences)
12 campari tomatoes on the vine, halved and gently squeezed of seeds
Fresh torn basil for garnish

In a large dutch oven, heat a couple glugs of olive oil over a medium heat high. Once fat is smoking, add bacon (or its porky sub) and all to crisp. Then add hot Italian sausage and brown slightly. Push meat to the side and add the soffrito (carrot, onion, garlic, celery seed) with a touch of salt. Once the onions turn glassy, add the tomatoes, salt, pepper, HDP and Italian Seasoning, Crushed Red Pepper, Tomato Paste, Ground Mushroom, and give a good stir to mix everything well. Then add in wine and broth (in 1:2 ratio), reduce heat and cover. Allow to simmer for a few hours (I cooked it for about four hours). Adjust seasoning as necessary. Once you are ready to serve, use an immersion blender to partially puree the mixture. Top with basil and serve or reserve for use with pasta else.

A few ideas of uses for this sauce:

Dipping Sauce for Pizza Pockets
Sauce for pasta and veggies
Lasagnameat sauce
Served individually with a little bit of cheese and fresh basil
Pizza sauce

Butternut Squash Pizza

Last Thursday, I just could not seem to get butternut squash out of my head. Being summer, (ergo my love is out of season) I blame it on my strong desire for fall and cooler temperatures that I spent about 90 percent of my day fantasizing about one of my fall/winter favorites. Ironically enough I was supposed to be making chicken and dumplings for dinner on Thursday evening – another cold weather favorite – but D was amazing enough to acquiesce to my squash craving (most likely out of a desire to avoid hearing me talk about orange truly for three hours if I did not get it).

On the first night, I did not care for this pizza much. It tasted good, but was a bit too sweet for me. I began to wish that I used the Delicious Orange Truly  a.k.a roasted butternut squash whole as it was with a pesto topping instead of puree-ing the squash and using it as the sauce. However, this pizza seemed to get better and better as a leftover and by the next afternoon I was enjoying it thoroughly. It is entirely possible that it was delicious the whole time and I was in a weird mood (a culinary trend that dominated last week), but either way this pizza is a tasty way to deliver loads of nutrition to picky adults or kiddos! Feel free to add whatever you like, or omit whatever you don’t like. As usual, this is a great way to use up leftovers before they spoil.

Butternut Squash Pizza

For the Squash Puree

One recipe Roasted Butternut Squash
One head garlic, for roasting (omitting this might detract from sweetness)
Small amount of chicken broth

Preheat oven to 350°F. Cut top 1/4 inch off heads of garlic to expose cloves. Place garlic, butternut squash, and onions in a baking dish. Add oil and spices to taste, sprinkle with salt and pepper; toss to coat. Turn garlic cut side up. Bake until garlic skins are golden brown and squash is tender, 40-50 minutes.  Squeeze garlic cloves from skins, combine with squash, onions, and a small amount of chicken stock in a food processor or blender and puree (can also use an immersion blender). Taste and adjust for seasoning preferences.

For the Pizza

Favorite Pizza Dough, stretched and rolled to desired thickness
Spinach
Crushed red pepper flakes to taste
Handful of sliced mushrooms
One-Half a zucchini, sliced into quarters
Grilled chicken breast with seasoning of choice, sliced
One-Half Mild Italian Chicken-Provolone Sausage, pan seared and sliced
Summer Heirloom Tomato, thickly sliced (optional, these are also wonderful as a side salad)
Fresh mozzarella, either grated, crumbled or cut into small dice (optional)
Half cup each of shredded Fontina and Smoked Provolone (more if necessary to cover or desired)
Salt and Freshly cracked black pepper
Sun-dried tomatoes, minced (optional or can sub for heirloom tomatoes)
Simple Arugula salad
Caramelized onions (optional)
Two cloves garlic, minced or cut into thin chips

Place rolled pizza dough on a pizza baker (preferably one with holes). Spoon the squash mixture onto the dough and spread in a circular fashion; top with the fresh garlic. Sprinkle a bit of salt, crushed red pepper flakes, and freshly cracked pepper.  Top with a layer of spinach (to keep the spinach from drying out), then a layer of the cheese mixture. After the cheese, arrange zucchini, mushrooms, chicken sausage and chicken around the pie. If using sun-dried tomatoes or regular tomatoes, add at this time. If you have extra roasted garlic, feel free to squeeze it over the pie. Bake in the oven (preheated to 400) for about 12-15 minutes until the dough rises and turns golden brown – adjust cooking time for thicker or thinner crusts accordingly. Once you remove the pizza from the oven, cut into slices with a pizza cutter and top with Arugula salad. If using caramelized onions add now as well and serve with crushed red pepper and freshly cracked black pepper to taste.

Longhorn Pizza

This pizza will be called the Longhorn Pizza because even though our beloved Horns (and Cubs and Red Sox) lost in the College World Series opening day, D and I still won. In a BIG, grandslam kind of way. This pizza was awesome. It had a perfect crust, had excellent flavor and was just completely satisfying. All for a whooping price of $4.33, which represents the cost of the dough that I purchased from Rounders. Short background, D and I both were craving pizza and cannot spend money because we are savings for our upcoming trip to the Yucatan. We had been game-watching with wonderful friends at a bar downtown and they had a pizza menu – I tried it and it was not good. Mediocre at best, but the damage was done….I wanted some pizza! I needed to use up some stuff at home – mainly two tomatoes. I also had a small sprinkling of other items that had been previously purchased and needed to be used. So….stopped by Rounders on the way home and got to prepping. End result…AMAZINGNESS!!!! This was hands down the best pizza that I have made, ever (and I like my pizzas that I have made before). Let’s just go ahead and add pizza to the growing list of things I cannot eat out anymore. Shucks but my belly sure was happy. I served this with Garlic Knots that were made from the leftover dough (since there is enough for at least two ten inch pizzas)!

Favorite Pizza Dough
1/2 cup Basil Pesto
Salt and Fresh Ground Black Pepper
One Shallot, thinly sliced
Six Cloves Garlic, minced
2.5 tablespoons of Crushed Red Pepper
3/4 cup of Monterrey Jack, shredded
3/4s cup of Mozzarella, shredded
One half chicken breast, previously cooked with a salt, pepper, thyme, and cayenne crust – sliced roughly
Handful of baby spinach (I had every intention of using this, but forgot to add it – feel free to keep or omit)
8-10 fresh basil leaves, chiffonade
2 beefsteak tomatoes, sliced into quarter-inch pieces and seeded

Roll dough on a flat surface to desired thickness (I prefer thin crust so I roll mine somewhat thin). Place dough on an aerated pizza baking tray (I have found that my aluminum pizza tray with holes in the bottom makes the best crust, crunchy on the outside and chewy inside, but feel free to use your traditional stone or a cookie sheet if that is what you prefer). Spread the Pesto in a circular motion around the dough. Salt, pepper, and sprinkle dough with crushed red pepper. Sprinkle the sauce with garlic and shallots, followed by spinach if you are using this ingredient. Then top with cheese, followed by the chicken. Place tomatoes on the dough until entire surface is almost covered. Salt and pepper (and crushed red pepper) to taste and place in a 400 degree oven. Bake until the Crust is golden brown and the cheese is melted and the tomatoes are good and roasted. Upon removal from the oven, add the basil leaves and serve immediately.

Homemade Pizza

D and I love, and I mean LOVE, Rounders pizza. However, you cannot really get out of Rounders for under $30 bucks and since we do not have that kind of cash to support our mutual love of pizza – this is a homemade version of Rounders pizza using stuff I had I the fridge and the freezer. It was great. D also made his man-pizza (pina, sausage, pepperoni and jalapenos).

Serves Two

Rounders Pizza Dough, rolled flat
One Zucchini, halved and thinly sliced
3-4 tbsp of Sun-dried tomato, coarsely chopped
Handful of fresh basil
Spinach
Spicy Italian Chicken Sausage
Minced Garlic
Small amount of Mario Batali tomato sauce
Part Skim Ricotta Cheese
One cup Mozzarella, shredded
One cup Smoked Provolone, shredded
2 tbsp Crushed red Pepper
Fresh Black pepper

Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Roll pizza dough on a flat surface. Mix a small amount of Ricotta with Tomato Sauce, Red Pepper Flakes and Pepper. Spread on the dough. Top this with cheese, then layer remaining ingredients covering entire surface area. Bake for about 10 minutes or until dough has risen and is golden brown and cheese looks melted.

Basil Pesto Chicken Pizza

One of my favorite pizzas and it is so easy to make yourself. I do not eat tomato or pizza sauce, so I have to get creative with my pizzas. My favorites are Alfredo sauce, basil pesto, truffle oil, 3-cheese sauce. Here is one version.

Store bought or homemade pizza dough of preference
Shredded or chopped chicken (can be freshly cooked – I almost always use up leftovers)
Black olives – sliced
Mushrooms – Sliced
3 or 4 cheese blend – shredded – I like to use Mozzarella, Fontina, Asiago, and Pecorino
Fresh cracked Pepper

Preheat oven to 400.

On a floured surface, roll out pizza dough with a roller pin. Once you have achieved your desired thickness (or thinness), shape and size, spoon pesto directly onto dough and spread to cover. Go around the pie with a pepper mill and crack fresh pepper over it. Then add the cheese, spreading evenly over pie (again add desired amount). Then top with black olives and mushrooms and chicken (and tomatoes if using). Crack more pepper, add a small sprinkling of cheese and a drizzle of truffle or basil olive oil if you so desire. Bake on 400 for about 12 minutes or until the crust is done and remove from oven. Slice and serve.