Tostada Pizza
Feb. 9th, 2021 01:20 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Last night I made Tostada Pizza from the Better Homes and Gardens New Cookbook.
( recipe )
Variations and Thoughts
I used cheddar cheese and eyeballed the amount, though based on previous encounters, I think I was pretty close to the stated 4 ounces. My pizza dough was frozen and I don't remember how much it actually weighed; I suspect it was more than the recommended 10 ounces, though not by much. I cooked the pizza at 420 degrees Fahrenheit, a compromise between the recipe temperature and the temperature on the dough package (425 degrees). I didn't have cornmeal, so I used flour instead, which is what the pizza dough pacakage said to use anyway. I couldn't find pinto beans with jalapenos, so I used plain ones, and I used one Poblano pepper (roughly 4 ounces) since I couldn't find a four ounce can of green chiles.
I think the recipe turned out rather well, though I maybe should have rolled out the dough a little thinner. It did cook all the way through, but the crust was a bit thick and I almost didn't have enough room for all the ground beef. It tasted pretty good, a little kick from the pepper and the chili powder but not too spicy. I'm not sure I'd make this again though as it was really messy to cut and a bit hard to eat.
( recipe )
Variations and Thoughts
I used cheddar cheese and eyeballed the amount, though based on previous encounters, I think I was pretty close to the stated 4 ounces. My pizza dough was frozen and I don't remember how much it actually weighed; I suspect it was more than the recommended 10 ounces, though not by much. I cooked the pizza at 420 degrees Fahrenheit, a compromise between the recipe temperature and the temperature on the dough package (425 degrees). I didn't have cornmeal, so I used flour instead, which is what the pizza dough pacakage said to use anyway. I couldn't find pinto beans with jalapenos, so I used plain ones, and I used one Poblano pepper (roughly 4 ounces) since I couldn't find a four ounce can of green chiles.
I think the recipe turned out rather well, though I maybe should have rolled out the dough a little thinner. It did cook all the way through, but the crust was a bit thick and I almost didn't have enough room for all the ground beef. It tasted pretty good, a little kick from the pepper and the chili powder but not too spicy. I'm not sure I'd make this again though as it was really messy to cut and a bit hard to eat.