Wish you could taste this pizza, the crust of which was made without wheat. Would you believe cheese, eggs and cauliflower? |
Now the question, why bother? Why not just trot out the whole wheat and yeast?
I've been a low-carb diet practitioner for a decade. Limiting carbs is part of my ordinary life. But it was just recently that a long-ago friend introduced me to a new concept: no effing wheat. At her urging (that would be Grace McGran's urging) I read the damn book, Wheat Belly, and added another layer of complication to my life. It has been a few months, I think, since wheat was banished. I'm adjusting.
After reading Wheat Belly, it made perfect sense to eliminate sprouted grain breads and pastas and low-carb tortillas, which had been staples in my diet, and also PK's, for the past several years. It's cold turkey time. PK even quit making his breads.
I'm not going to get all heavy about the wheat. I know I sound like a nut case to people who haven't yet tuned in to dietary undercurrents that are gaining mainstream momentum. Such as:
- The every-calorie-counts theory is bogus. Does anyone really believe that calories in refined carbohydrates are of equal value to calories in fresh vegetables or eggs, just to mention two?
- Dietary cholesterol is insignificant in cardiac disease. Ditch the statins.
- "Healthy whole grains" are a myth.
- Healthy fats, including many saturated fats—especially coconut oil—are actually beneficial for weight loss and overall health.
- Excess carbohydrate consumption is a major cause of type two diabetes and heart disease.
When following a low-carb and wheat-free diet: you do not worry about fat (unless it is a factory generated chemical-laden bomb such as margarine or other trans fats—anything hydrogenated.). Forget about counting calories. Count carbs. There are so many good books: Good Calories, Bad Calories by Gary Taubes; Life Without Bread, by Christian B. Allan, PhD and Wolfgang Lutz, MD, and Wheat Belly, a NYT bestseller by Dr. Davis, a prevention cardiologist. Here's the Wheat Belly website. Everywhere you go, you see wheat bellies (and wheat boobs and butts) all over the place. Got a wheat belly, or know someone who does? Read the book. Read the book. Read all of them.
After all my years of low-carbness, it hasn't been that shocking to give up wheat and all that that entails.
Pizza? That's another thing. I love pizza and used to make a killer crispy-thin whole wheat crust. Lately I've taken to eating pizza toppings and leaving the crust on the plate. But now I have options! One is the zucchini-based crust engineered by my friend Grace. Love it. Another is the crust I've made three times. I had to try it multiple times because we couldn't believe that it was made from cauliflower. Sheesh! Turn the page, right? But seriously. It tastes great.And, like Grace's zucchini crust, requires no more toil than a traditional wheat-based crust.
I take absolutely NO credit for developing this recipe. Versions of it are legion. It was a surprise to discover a myriad of cauliflower-based pizza crust recipes, and also to learn that great pizza does not need to ride on a sled of carb-ridden blood-sugar-boosting wheat.
I could go on. Instead, here's one version of the cauliflower/cheese/egg pizza crust. Please, just trust me. Try it. I realize it seems so unlikely. Even PK, that picky bastard, thought it was super tasty.
Cauliflower and Cheese Pizza Crust
2 cups riced and cooked cauliflower
2 eggs
2 cups shredded mozzarella cheese, or a combo of mozzarella and cheddar
2 tsp dried oregano (optional)
4 tsp dried parsley (optional)
1/4 cup olive oil (optional)
Directions
Preheat the oven to 420. Cut up half of a large fresh cauliflower and "rice" in a food processor.
First of two batches to "rice." |
Ricing completed. |
Microwaved for 8 minutes and cooled. |
Beat the eggs lightly and mix with 2 cups of cauliflower. Add the herbs and olive oil, if using. I didn't use herbs or olive oil because my toppings included oil-rich pesto and herb-heavy homemade pizza sauce.
Riced cauliflower mixed with two eggs. |
Shredded mozzarella added. |
Pressed onto a greased jelly roll pan |
Removed from the oven after baking in pre-heated oven at 420 for 15 minutes. |
You can actually pick it up and eat it with your hands, like "real" pizza crust. |
We ate almost the whole thing! |