UPDATE: It's a pet peeve, but I don't like reading a blog post about how someone
starts a new venture. I want to hear
how it turned out, as well. So scroll down and see the rest of the celery story.
This is clearly not a pizza. I felt kind of bad posting something so simple to make, like the pizza below, so since I've had some questions about it on
my FB page, I've included a bonus
How to Start Celery on your Kitchen Windowsill below the recipe. Though it's also incredibly simple to do. Pizza now:
There are times when my best intentions (of making dough Monday before heading out of town, knowing that we're rolling home Friday afternoon hours before Friday Night Pizza Night happens) are OBE. (Is this common knowledge or one of those military acronyms?)
OBE: Overcome By Events.
This was one of those times. No pizza dough in the house, though
I had plenty of sauce, cheese, veggie, and meat topping choices in the pantry and freezer. Had I hit Trader Joes, I would have picked up some of their bags of pizza dough. But our beer/milk/eggs run took me to the rare grocery store that had no pizza dough. Not in the deli. Not in the freezer section. Ok, pre-baked crust it is.
I got a Boboli® instead. I was surprised at the high cost of a Boboli® crust--a bag of uncooked dough is
less than half the cost of a Boboli and isn't
that much harder to work with! [I bought the Boboli® myself and this post is completely unknown to the Boboli® corporation, but I feel I should clarify in case you were wondering.]
If you have a pathological fear of uncooked pizza dough and will only use a prebaked crust such as Boboli®, rock on. You too can make amazing pizzas using ingredients from your CSA farm share.
Because we love pizza here on Friday nights, I bought 2 Boboli® and made 2 pizzas. (And will write 2 blog posts from 1 meal). This one is the kiddie pizza--because during the grocery store run, while
not finding dough, I found a marked down bag of precut broccoli florets.