When it comes to summer cooking, we have a pretty strict family policy: Do everything you can to avoid turning on an oven. Which is all well and good except that it clashes with our other family policy: Eat pizza once a week. By pizza, we donโt mean the takeout pie from Tonyโs on Main Street or the personal pans the kids get on Fridays at the school cafeteria. Weโre talking pizza โ made, when possible, with a homemade crust โ that may or may not include cheese, is topped with fresh ingredients (potatoes and bacon, arugula and ricotta), and can bring even the most reluctant eater (e.g., Abby) to her little knees with gratitude. In our minds, pizza is the ultimate family dinner โ you can have three entirely separate meals on one crust and still, if you close your eyes, pretend that youโre all eating the same thing. But to keep our strict family pizza policy intact this summer, we had to learn how to do it without turning on the oven. We had to learn to cook it outside. This took some doing. We burned a lot of crusts, and yet, we fought on, grilling pizza after pizza after pizza until we got it right. Here is what we learned.
HOW TO GRILL PIZZA: SIX VERY IMPORTANT RULES
1. Oil Everything. If the crust sticks to the grate, youโre done. Avoid this by brushing the grate and both sides of the crust with olive oil.
2. If you have an extra set of hands, avail yourself of them. When laying the crust on the grate itโs much easier to keep it stretched out when two people hold opposite sides and lay it down together. Or divide dough in half and grill smaller pizzas.
3. Donโt roll your crust too thin. One, it will burn too quickly, and two, it will rip as you try to move it from the baking sheet to the grill.
4. Use a Cookie Sheet. After grilling one side of the crust, flip it onto a greased cookie sheet, cooked-side up. This will give you time to add your toppings without rushing.ย (If you add toppings while itโs on the grill, you risk the crust cooking faster than the cheese melting.)
5. Pre-cook Your Toppings. If they need to be wilted or browned, itโs best to do it on the stovetop before you add to the pizza. Without top heat, and with such a short cooking time, youโll end up with raw, uncooked vegetables. Cheese should be finely shredded or sliced paper thin whenever possible. The pizza below has you fry your tomatoes and onions before you start grilling.
6. Three words: slow and low. This is crucial: let the coals die way down before you put the crust on the grill. The coals should be gray all the way through and no flames should be coming up. Until we figured this out, too much heat wrecked us every time.
Grilled Pizza Two Ways
Half Fried Green Tomatoes and Sweet Onions/Half Basic Marinara
Make Fried Green Tomatoes
Slice 2-3 green tomatoes ยผ inch thick. Season with salt and pepper. Dredge each slice in one whisked egg, ยฝ cup cornmeal, ยผ teaspoon cayenne, salt and pepper to taste, and fry in two tablespoons of olive oil until crust is golden, about 2 minutes a side. Drain on paper towels.
Make onions
In a large skillet set over low-medium heat, add 3 tablespoons olive oil and 1 large onion (sliced), salt and pepper, and cook until caramelized, about 15 minutes. Stir in 1 teaspoon balsamic vinegar and remove from heat.
Make Pizzas
2 balls storebought pizza dough (we used whole wheat), rolled and brushed with olive oil on both sides
1 cup good pizza sauce (such as Don Pepino)
1 ball mozzarella, sliced extremely thin
4 ounces hard strong cheese such as aged provolone, asiago, or Italian fontina, shredded
3 green tomatoes, sliced (or fried green tomatoes, see bonappetit.com for recipe)
caramelized onions (see above)
Prepare grill: Spread hot coals evenly over the bottom of grill and let burn until heat is relatively low, about 30 minutes. There should be no flames coming up from the coals.
Place first rolled dough flat on the grill very carefully. (You may need to enlist a partner in this, as the dough stretches and makes this hard with just two hands.) Lift up each corner with your spatula as crust cooks (to make sure itโs not sticking) and flip when bottom looks golden but not burned, not more than 2 minutes. Flip onto an oiled cookie sheet, grilled side up. Using a spoon, spread pizza sauce on top, then dot with mozzarella. Return to the grill, cover, and grill until cheese has melted and bottom of crust looks golden but not burned, another 2 minutes.
Grill second rolled dough as directed above. When it has been flipped onto oiled cookie sheet, sprinkle with provolone and return to the grill. Cover and cook until cheese has melted and bottom of crust has cooked. Top with green tomatoes and caramelized onions.
Though thisย arugula-ricotta pizza youโre looking at wasnโt grilled, it would be a good choice for grilling because you add the toppings after the crust is done.
We love grilled pizza- but it definitely took us a few tries to get it right. Our favorite is prosciutto and arugala- partly because we donโt add either of those until after itโs off the grill. And since this pizza goes so well with wineโฆ
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Grilled pizza is so perfect! We have a hard time with is too.
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This looks great! Iโve been trying to add more and more vegetarian recipes and I think my son will definitely go for this โ he can grill it with Dad and itโs pizza! : )
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I will have to try this sometime during the summer. The only thing my 2.5-year-old son wants to eat these days is pizza, pizza, pizza. It will also give my husband an excuse to bust out the grill (which he loves). Thanks for the great tips!
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I agree with your comment about laying the crust on the grill and in the past have done a few, smaller pizzas to make it easier to manuver. Thanks for the other suggestions. PS: I read your newsletter, do I win the wine?
Loved the pizza on the grillโฆwe tried it a few weeks ago because it was too hot here to cook inside and loved itโฆplanning on doing it again soon..thank you for some more good ideas!!!
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We love grilled pizza. Similar to Andyโs post about the chimney starter (which is a necessary tool for us too!), the pizza stone has become our best friend.
But itโs also fun to make pizza without it- directly on the grill- especially when weโre camping or have a big group over to โmake their on pizzas.โ
That arugula-ricotta pizza looks delicious!! (we just happen to have both arugula & ricottaโฆ Hmm. Maybe tonightโs dinner :))
p.s. Just subscribed to the newsletter!
Itโs the transfer that kills me every. single. time. I make pizza. I always seem to fold the pizza in half. PS: I read your newletter, do I win the wine?!
Perfect alternative to cranking the oven up to 500 when itโs close to 90 outside.
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good idea! we might have to try this over the weekendโฆ PS: I read your newletter, do I win the wine?!
I love your website, I love your newsletter. I read it constantly and your recipies are always spot on! โPS: I read your newsletter, do I win the wine?โ
Last summer we were all about the grilled flatbreads, this is pizza summer! Thanks for the reminder.
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Grilling pizzas is one of those mysterious things that I cannot bring myself to do, but this definitely sheds some light on some of the tricks. Since you have a charcoal grill do you think your techniques could be used for a gas grill?
And thank you so much for the fried green tomato recipe, every time I see a recipe for these I want to open up the book โFried Green Tomatoes at the Whistlestop Cafe.โ
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I LOVE LOVE LOVE grilled pizza. We just had it for dinner the other night and itโs a sort of staple for us in the summertime. Yum!
Yum! Love grilled pizza. Have always had good results with this dough from an old Gourmet Magazine recipe: http://www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/Grilled-Pizza-with-Yellow-Squash-Mozzarella-and-Lemon-Thyme-12649
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We live in south Florida, where the season of โplease, please, please donโt make me turn on the ovenโ is a little longer than average (say the vernal equinox to Thanksgiving). We make pizza on the grill quite often, but I have to admit to cheating by using a pizza stone right on the grill. Itโs fabulous โ and can be used to for foccacia, breads, tortillas, etc. as well. I think the advantage of using the stone is that you can make those impossibly thin, blistered crusts (which we love in our home) and any given pie only takes a few minutes. Love the pizza on the grill!
fried green onions ~ yum.
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YAYโ so we CAN make pizza even though itโs 90+ degrees outside! Thanks for all your trials so that we can get it right on the first try (hopefully!).
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Sadly, we just ordered pizza, and now it will never live up to theseโฆ
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I am also a big fan of pizza! Havenโt tried grilling it yet, though. Weโll have to try that!
I convinced DH to grill pizza the other night. Whole wheat crust, toppings ranging from traditional pepperoni, to caramelized onions and fried egg (so. dang. yummy). Came out great! Itโs the start of a beautiful relationship.
Iโm with you on avoiding the ovenโฆIโve been grilling whole chickens and anything else. But not thought of pizza, will be trying these beauties soon.
We have a gas grill, yes itโs not as awesome, but easier to operate for a quick dinner grill here and there. I have found that kneading a small amount of cornmeal into the store bought dough has some benefits for handling on the grill. Donโt exactly know why- or why we started but thought it worth mentioning.
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Yup โ Grilled pizza tonight and baby backs this weekend. Plus the mustardy potato salad. Plus dark and stormies. And I might try my hand at the grill this weekend โ it might get crazy.
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