Fall pizza with pumpkin

Fall pizza with pumpkin

fall pizza with pumpkin slice out

It’s been a while since we made a vegan pizza! Last time, it was the peak of Greek summer (30° C in the shade) and we were both wondering what on earth possessed us to make a pizza on the hottest day of the year! It’s autumn now, and therefore much cooler and making fall pizza in this weather is actually quite a nice pastime. We wanted to make a fall pizza that celebrates autumn’s flavours. We have also happened to buy one big ass pumpkin in a bit of a shopping frenzy and once we got home we started wondering what on earth can we do with that much of it… Well, some of it ended up on our fall pizza. To balance the pumpkin’s sweet flavour, we’ve paired it up with slightly bitter pesto, acidic balsamic vinegar and salty olives. We also added a sprinkle of walnuts for a bit of extra crunch and a touch of chilli cos…we like chilli. As soon as we bit into our respective slices we knew that we will make it again and again! We hope you’ll love it too. As usual, the dough was lovingly kneaded by our dough master (AKA Duncan) and I came up with the topping. The cat pretty much did nothing, apart from trying to steal a piece of raw pizza dough when I was spreading rocket pesto on it. It has strange taste in food, that one!

whole pumpkin

rocket pesto and caramelised onion toppings

fall pizza with pumpkin uncut

fall pizza with pumpkin being cut

serves
2-3
PREP
45 min
COOKING
10 min
serves
2-3
PREPARATION
45 min
COOKING
10 min
INGREDIENTS

PIZZA DOUGH

  • 250 g strong flour
  • 250 g all-purpose flour
  • 10 g salt
  • 7 g sachet fast-action dried yeast
  • 320 ml water (lukewarm)
  • 1 tbsp olive oil

CARAMELISED ONIONS

  • 2 medium red onions
  • 1-2 tsp brown sugar
  • 1 tbsp balsamic vinegar
  • 2 tbsp / 30 ml olive oil
  • pinch of salt

ROCKET PESTO

  • ¼ cup walnuts
  • 50 g rocket leaves
  • 1 small garlic clove, pressed
  • about 90 ml / 6 tbsp virgin olive oil
  • squeeze of lemon
  • pinch of coarse salt
  • pepper

TOPPING

  • 2 segments of large pumpkin, cut into ½ slices
  • 1 courgette, cut into ½ slices
  • handful of Kalamata olives, pitted
  • handful of walnuts
  • 2 pinches of chilli flakes
  • olive oil
  • salt & pepper
METHOD

DOUGH & PRE-ROASTING VEGETABLES

  1. Mix the flour, salt and yeast in a large mixing bowl.
  2. Pour in the lukewarm water and olive oil. Stir everything together with a large wooden spoon.
  3. When the mixture has mostly stuck together turn the mixture out on to a work surface or bread board.
  4. Knead the mixture by holding one end of the dough in one hand and stretching it out with the other hand (see photo below). Reform the dough, turn it 90 degrees and start again. Repeat this for 10 minutes .

bread kneading

  1. When the dough is shiny and smooth, put it in a large mixing bowl, coat it in a thin layer of olive oil and cover the bowl with a tea towel.
  2. Leave this in a warm place (but not too warm – ie not next to an open fire!) for between one and two hours (until it has doubled in size). You can use this time to start on caramelised onions and make the pesto.
  3. Set the oven to 200° C / 390° F. Brush sliced pumpkin in a bit of olive oil and place on a lined baking tray. Roast the pumpkin until soft (about 25-30 mins) but before it starts to get coloured. After pumpkin has been in the oven for 20 mins, add courgette slices to the baking tray to soften them a little.

CARAMELISED ONIONS

  1. Warm up 2 tbsp of olive oil in a large pan. Peel the onions and slice them into 3 mm slices – if you slice them too finely, they will dry out rather than caramelise.
  2. Add sliced onions to the pan, stir them well to coat them in the olive oil. Cook the onions on a very low heat (I used setting 2 out of 6) to soften them – to get them nice and caramelised, you mustn’t rush the process.
  3. Once soft, add salt, sugar and balsamic vinegar and cook some more. Finally add a splash of water to deglaze the pan and gather all the sweet oniony goodness stuck to the pan. Continue cooking until the water cooks out.

PESTO

  1. Toast walnuts for the pesto in a dry pan on a low heat. Stir them very frequently as they burn easily.
  2. Using a hand blender with a chopping attachment, chop rocket finley, add sliced garlic and walnuts.
  3. Add in olive oil to emulsify the mixture. Season to taste with more salt, pepper and a dash of lemon juice.

ASSEMBLY

  1. Once your pumpkin and courgette has been pre-roasted, put the oven temperature up to 250° C or 480° F and enable the fan if your oven has one.
  2. Empty the dough out on to a work surface and push the air out with your fingertips.
  3. Roll out 2-3 small pizzas. Put each on a well-oiled baking tray. Spread a thin layer of pesto on each pizza. Arrange pre-roasted pumpkin, courgette, olive halves and a few raw walnuts on the pesto layer. Sprinkle with a bit of chilli, salt and pepper and bake for about 8-10 min (until the crust is nice and golden).
  4. Once you remove pizza from the oven, scatter a few caramelised onions on top.
SHARE
NUTRITIONAL INFO
calories
846
42%
sugars
9 g
10%
fats
20 g
29%
saturates
3 g
13%
proteins
26 g
51%
carbs
140 g
54%
*per pizza
How would you rate this recipe?
This is a test string

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

5.0
2 reviews, 4 comments
REVIEWS & QUESTIONS
Coby:
Wow, this was really, really good! I made a parsley pesto instead because where I live, parsley is much cheaper than rocket! I loved the combination of flavors - salty, mellow, sweet, garlicky - and I love all things pumpkin. This is a great autumn pizza!
    Ania
    Ania:
    Thanks so much, Coby! I am delighted to hear that you enjoyed it and parsley pesto sounds awesome. I also enjoy sage pesto in combination with pumpkin. Ania
Els:
Big success!
I allowed myself some changes: I used Brussels sprouts instead of courgette since they're so widely available this time of year, and finished off the pizza with pomegranate seeds.
Thank you so much for the inspiration!
    Ania
    Ania:
    Delighted to hear that, Els! Thank you and of course, change away :) Anything you like goes! x Ania
Dani:
The pesto turned out so bitter! I added pine nuts to try to rectify it. Worked a little bit.
    Ania
    Ania:
    Hi Dani,
    That's intentional although it probably varies on how bitter your rocket is - mine was bitter but not overly so and it really worked well with sweet pumpkin and salty olives. If it's too bitter for you, you can balance it out with some basil or spinach. Hope that helps! Ania
DON'T MISS A SINGLE RECIPE
Join our mailing list and we we will let you know when we publish a new recipe. You'll receive our DELIGHTFUL DESSERTS E-BOOK as a thank you for supporting us.