Quick White Pizza

"From Mafiosa's Cucina at HBO's The Sopranos BBs"
 
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photo by Liza at Food.com photo by Liza at Food.com
photo by Liza at Food.com
photo by Liza at Food.com photo by Liza at Food.com
photo by alligirl photo by alligirl
Ready In:
18mins
Ingredients:
7
Serves:
6
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ingredients

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directions

  • Preheat oven to 500 degrees F.
  • Put the pizza shell or focaccia onto a pizza pan or cookie sheet. Drizzle shell with oil and scatter minced garlic over shell to edges. Cover the pie with a layer of all 3 cheeses combined and work all the way to the edge of the shells. Cook 6 to 8 minutes, until cheeses have melted and begin to bubble. Remove from oven and garnish with parsley. Cut pie with pizza wheel or knife into bite-size squares and serve.

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Reviews

  1. This was great! The white pizza is a great base and then I added tomatoes and arugula on top after it came out of the oven. Perfect summer pizza!
     
  2. I used a crust from scratch and so I par-baked the crust with the olive oil before adding the garlic and cheeses. My pizza came out perfectly - love the idea of upping the oven temp from what is 'typical'. Delicious! Thanks.
     
  3. This got my interest because we're not big tomato sauce fans on pizza. It was very good. I added 1/4 of an onion chopped up and 6 garlic cloves. I forgot all about the parsley till I just now saw it on the ingredient list. Next time I'll be sure to add it. Thanks for this one.
     
  4. This was awesome, and super easy to put together on a week-night. I used a Boboli crust and made as directed, except I didn't have any fresh parsley, so I used fresh basil. Scrumptious! We cooked ours 'til it was kinda dark, as that's how we like it Thanks for sharing, DeSouter.
     
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RECIPE SUBMITTED BY

Being a born and bred New Yorker with lots of varied ethnic food influences growing up, you can find me enjoying anything from Bloodwurst to Chicken Jahlfrezi to PBJs with fresh-ground honey roasted peanut butter and yummy homemade strawberry jam, and don't forget my friend Anna's mother's Pomodoro Sauce (via Bari, Italy). When it comes to eating and cooking, many native New Yorkers seem to be of whatever background that is on their plate at the moment. <br> <br>I notice that a good number of Zaarites list "pet peeves" here. Many list whiny people as their peeve. Hey...I live in NYC where almost EVERYONE whines and complains, so I don't notice anymore. What burns my biscuits is seeing recipes that call for some really funky ingredients like Kraft (cough cough) Parmesan cheese in the green can and chicken from a can. I had never even heard of chicken in CAN(???) until last year. Get the best quality ingredients you purse will allow. That includes spices. Those jars of spices that sell for 99 cents are no bargain if you can afford something better. Do yourself a favor and if possible, go and explore any ethnic food markets in your area. They have the most wonderful spices and herbs and they are usually priced well. And you'll find so many other goodies you'd never have even known about. (I know this isn't possible for everyone, but then there's always the internet) <br> <br>Sorry, I am the product of an "ingredient snob" father and I just can't help having inherited that gene to a certain extent. And again, I'm a New Yawka...we are SLIGHTLY opinionated. You're reading about the person who drives (I kid you not) 3 hours upstate and 3 hours back just to get THE sausage I need for my Thanksgiving stuffing. So call me fanatical. <br> <br>I am a rather good baker and for a short time I had my own dessert biz...until I found out how hard it can be to work for yourself. So I went back to working as an Art Editor in publishing.
 
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