An OSR Original Recipe

Hot Pistachio Pesto Pizza with Pepperoni

This recipe is reason to make pizza at home—you can customize the toppings any way you’d like, but the homemade Hot Pistachio Pesto is a must!


Ellen of Off-Script Recipes shares her Original Recipe for Hot Pistachio Pesto Pizza with Red Sauce
Active Prep Time:
35 mins
Cook/Set Time:
25 mins
Total Time:
1 hr

A deliciously fiery pizza with homemade pistachio-pepper pesto, fresh tomatoes, and crisp pepperoni.

Primary Course: Main Course, Snack
Primary Cuisine: Italian
Serves/Makes: 1 15-16 inch pizza
Ingredients
Hot Pistachio Pesto (see TIP A for heat-level options):
  • 1/4 c. roasted, salted pistachio meats
  • 1 jalapeño pepper, seeded and coarsely chopped
  • 1 serrano pepper, seeded and coarsely chopped
  • 1 medium garlic clove
  • 25-30 fresh basil leaves
  • 1 tbsp. olive oil
  • 1 tbsp. red wine vinegar
  • 1 tbsp. honey
  • 1/2 tsp. kosher salt
Remaining Ingredients:
  • 1/4 c. all-purpose flour
  • 18-20 oz. prepared room-temperature pizza dough, unbaked (see TIP B below)
  • 2 tbsp. olive oil, divided
  • 1 tsp. kosher salt, divided
  • 1 6-8 oz. ball of good quality fresh mozzarella (pressed between several sheets of paper towel if packed in brine, see TIP C), sliced into thin rounds or half moons
  • 2 small roma or heirloom tomatoes, sliced into thin rounds
  • 20-30 slices of pepperoni
  • 1/8 tsp. fresh ground black pepper
Instructions
One: Prepare the Pesto:
  1. Combine all of the pesto ingredients (pistachios through salt) in a mini food processor or blender and whir until smooth and pesto-like. Set aside.

Two: Stretch & Par-Bake the Dough:
  1. Sprinkle the flour over your work surface and on top of the room-temperature pizza dough (room temperture dough stretches far more easily than cold dough). Use your hands or a rolling pin to stretch the dough into a 15-16 inch circle (or large rectangle). Transfer the stretched dough to a lightly greased pizza pan or baking sheet and gently prick it all over with a knife or fork. Put the pan on the middle rack of a pre-heated 450-500° oven for 6-8 minutes for the dough to partially bake. Once the edges turn slightly golden, pull the pan from the oven.

Three: Season the Tomatoes:
  1. Meanwhile, put the sliced tomotoes in a small bowl with 1 tablespoon olive oil and 1/2 teaspoon salt (reserve remaining). Gently toss with your hands to coat and set aside.

Four: Top the Pizza & Finish Baking:
  1. Once the dough is briefly par-baked and out of the oven (still on the pan), brush the remaining 1 tablespoon olive oil over the top, edge-to-edge. Follow with the Hot Pistachio Pesto (I recommend using all of it), but leave a 1/2-1 inch border around the edge. Arrange the mozzarella, tomato, and pepperoni slices in an overlapping pattern on top of the pesto. Sprinkle the entire pizza with the remaining 1/2 teaspoon kosher salt and 1/8 teaspoon ground pepper. Return the pan to the pre-heated 450-500° oven (middle rack) to finish baking for an additional 15-18 minutes or until golden across the bottom and browned in spots across the top. Let stand 3-5 minutes before cutting.

Tips

TIP A: I think 1 seeded jalapeño pepper and 1 seeded serrano pepper create just the right heat level. If you like things milder, then omit the serrano pepper. If you want more heat, then add a second serrano pepper or include the seeds and ribs. I recommend tasting the pesto before smearing it over your pizza. If it makes you go "ooh!" without running for a glass of water, then you're spot on. The heat of the peppers will mellow a bit in the oven.

 

TIP B: I've tried a lot of store-bought pizza dough varieties, and my hands-down favorite is Whole Foods Market® Neapolitan style. If you prefer whole-wheat, then give Trader Joe's® 100% Whole-Wheat dough a try. Both are incredibly tasty and great weeknight stand-ins. That said, nothing beats making it yourself according to Jim Lahey's No-Knead Pizza Dough. It's worth every bit of effort and yields a huge batch. Great if you're making multiple pizzas.

 

TIP C: Most good mozzarella is packed in water or brine to help keep it fresh, but this excess water can also leech-out during cooking and result in soggy pizza. I recommend pressing any fresh, brine-packed mozzarella between several sheets of paper towel (or even weighting it down with a heavy pan) to release some of the water before you add it to your pizza.

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