Cauliflower Crust Pizza

A co-worker of mine is currently on a special diet and has been experimenting with several low-carb dishes. One day a few weeks ago, she dropped by my office to tell me about a recipe she’d found – pizza crust made of cauliflower! Yes, it sounded a little strange, but I was definitely intrigued. Since she’s a culinary school graduate and enjoys food as much I do, I trust her judgement and wanted to try it.
She offered to bring a piece to the office the next day for me to sample and even day-old and reheated, it was really good!
My husband is a pizza fanatic, so this new discovery was particularly exciting. Since I try to limit the processed stuff we eat, cutting out simple carbs from our meals when possible, I don’t like to make or order pizza very often. I personally love the sauce, cheese and all the toppings that come on pizzas, but I don’t like the way I feel after eating all the dough that serves as the delivery vehicle, so this twist on the crust has made us both very happy.
With a hefty dose of veggies, I feel good about eating it myself and feeding it to him, which means he can get his pizza fix a lot more often now. We pile it high with a variety of toppings- mushrooms, spinach, red peppers, green peppers, onions, green and black olives, sometimes with meat, and sometimes without.
I’m not going to lie and say it’s just like eating a flour pizza crust because it’s not. But surprisingly, it’s not like eating cauliflower either. I’m not even sure that you’d be able to guess what it was made of if someone hadn’t already told you. The one problem I find is that while it’s not impossible to pick up a piece and eat with your hands, it’s much easier to use a fork. We feel that’s a small price to pay though in order to feel better about what we’re eating.
I’m interested to see what some of you think, so please, if you give it a go, come back and leave a comment!
Cauliflower Crust Pizza
Serves 2; Adapted from Your Lighter Side.
Ingredients:
1 cup cooked, riced cauliflower
1 cup shredded mozzarella cheese
1 egg, beaten
1 tsp dried oregano
1/2 tsp crushed garlic
1/2 tsp garlic salt
olive oil (optional)
pizza sauce, shredded cheese and your choice of toppings*
Directions:
To "Rice" the Cauliflower:
Take 1 large head of fresh cauliflower, remove stems and leaves, and chop the florets into chunks. Add to food processor and pulse until it looks like grain. Do not over-do pulse or you will puree it. (If you don't have a food processor, you can grate the whole head with a cheese grater). Place the riced cauliflower into a microwave safe bowl and microwave for 8 minutes (some microwaves are more powerful than others, so you may need to reduce this cooking time). There is no need to add water, as the natural moisture in the cauliflower is enough to cook itself.
One large head should produce approximately 3 cups of riced cauliflower. The remainder can be used to make additional pizza crusts immediately, or can be stored in the refrigerator for up to one week.
To Make the Pizza Crust:
Preheat oven to 450 degrees. Spray a cookie sheet with non-stick cooking spray.
In a medium bowl, stir together 1 cup cauliflower, egg and mozzarella. Add oregano, crushed garlic and garlic salt, stir. Transfer to the cookie sheet, and using your hands, pat out into a 9" round. Optional: Brush olive oil over top of mixture to help with browning.
Bake at 450 degrees for 15 minutes.
Remove from oven. To the crust, add sauce, toppings and cheese. Place under a broiler at high heat just until cheese is melted (approximately 3-4 minutes).
Enjoy!
*Note that toppings need to be precooked since you are only broiling for a few minutes.
Note for those that don’ t have a microwave:
You can steam the florets on the stove before ricing them. The texture/consistency won’t be the same (It will be more like a puree) but it still works fine once you mix all the ingredients together! I know because I’ve tried it that way too!




I just made this in an attempt to level up my pizza craft. It was delicious! A couple of ideas:
1) Try parmesan cheese. I cut the cheese in half and used parmesan instead of mozzarella. It tasted awesome. It was a little less happy structurally, but what do you expect from anything gluten free, right?
2) Next time, I’m making tiny pizzas to try to get the crust crispier all the way through. Anyone tried this?
Best of all, though, was how my 4 year old loved it. We put pureed carrots and peppers in the sauce, so he was getting some decent nutrition out of the whole thing.
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I just made this. …literally I just put my fork down. I was skeptical before trying it. It was actually really good! My boyfriend agreed. I used light cheese to cut down on fat a bit. It still turned out great. It stuck a little to the pizza pan, next time I will using more cooking spray. I foud this recipe through pintrest.com :)
I also found this recipe through Pinterest — made it tonight and it turned out great! It’s produced a soft crust but the flavor was fabulous!
I love this idea but boyfriend is allergic to cauliflower. Do you think it would work with broccoli?
Hi Erin,
I really have no idea. The taste of broccoli might overwhelm the toppings a bit, but I guess you could give it a try. If you do, report back and let us know how it goes!
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Just made my first califlower pizza crust. Yum !!
I was wondering, do you HAVE to use mozzarella in the crust? My husband and I are Lacto-Paleo, and we try not to eat “soft” cheeses. Would cheddar work just as well? Thank you! Can not wait to try this!
I think you could definitely use cheddar!!
there is a kitchen gadget called a “ricer” …. I have a very old one that belonged to my grandmother, but I am sure they still make them. It is usually used to “rice” potatoes…. but could easily be used for this recipe.
to use it you would put in cooked cauliflower and push it through.
I also have heard that you could use a colander… put in the cooked cauliflower and use a spoon to push it through the holes into a bowl underneath.
http://www.target.com/s/potato+ricer#?ref=tgt_adv_XS000000&AFID=msn&CPNG=home&adgroup=home2&LNM=potato ricer&MT=broad&LID=11p1570152&
Hi..love the site! i too am a midwestern girl (louisville), aspiring blogger, pizza lover, and vegetarian and newly vegan. thanks for sharing. i love your site :) this is a great crust idea.cannot wait to try!!
LOVE LOVE LOVE this pizza!
I made it for my husband and he perfers this over the real thing!!!
I also made it for my parents, and my mom was so happy to be able to have pizza she could eat!
It’s a crowd pleaser! thank you so much for sharing!
Hi Beth,
Haven’t made this yet, but I am def. going to. I was wondering if you could email the pizza sauce recipe that you use. Would appreciate it.
Thank you,
Denise
Hi Denise, I just emailed to you! So sorry it took me so long, but I had a baby 2 days before you left this comment, so needless to say, my life has been a little hectic!
This is quite popular! It’s so nice seeing low carb recipies get some publicity. Thought it’d probably be the right thing to do to Credit Jamie from Your Lighter Side.
Hi Kristina,
You may not have noticed that I did credit Jamie as the recipe developer by linking to her blog/recipe in the recipe section.
She and I have corresponded and I think she’s brilliant in coming up with this concept!
Thank you for this fantastic recipe….we LOVE this and make it all the time!! We have turned many friends into Cauliflower Pizza addicts…
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Thank you so much for this! I made 2 of these tonight. One with seared duck breast and arugula as a topping and another completely Vegan with Almond Cheese and Ground Meatless Meat, Mushrooms and Tomato Sauce as topping. I’d like to share your recipe on my blog. I posted a Cauliflower Steak recipe a few weeks ago. Have you tried that?! Check it out at http://www.Shay4healthrev.com
Healthy and Delicious.
Thanks Again!
xxO Shay
Its fabulous!!!!
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Saw this through Pintrest and made it tonight! Yummy, even my hubby thought so! I just wish the crust could be crunchier (Any suggestions?!)
Hi Britt, I’m so glad you enjoyed!!
If you can take some time to read thru all of the comments, you’ll find several suggestions from readers on what they’ve done to help get a crispier crust. I plan to update the blog post soon with some of these tips but no time to do so at the moment because I just had a baby!
Once things calm down, I’ll do so!
Thanks so much for the great recipe (especially for us low-carbers who suffer without pizza!) As to the comment up above about helping the crust stay together.. maybe a touch of cream cheese added to the crust mixture would help? I only mention this because I’ve tried one other “flour free” pizza crust recipe that used basically egg & cream cheese baked to form a type of crust.. it was kind of spongy and I didn’t love it, but I’m trying yours TONITE! :) thanks again :)
Made this tonight after finding in on pinterest. Prep wasn’t quite as easy as I hoped but the end result was fabulous! I agree, it could have been a little crunchier, but I really enjoyed it. Thank you for this great tasting, low carb recipe!
This sounds so interesting! I am gluten intolerant and lactose intolerant…is there a substitute for the cheese in the crust?
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I just made this and posted on my blog. Thanks, I can’t wait to try many more pizzas using this crust!
Thanks for the recipe. I’m going to make it this week.
I’m wondering about the sogginess…
– Maybe cooking the crust on a pre-heated pizza stone, instead of a cookie sheet might help with this? But, then, it might stick…not sure.
– Or maybe…after cooking crust on the cookie sheet, while it’s out of the oven and you’re topping it…place a pizza stone in the oven to get hot. Then, put the prepared pizza on the hot stone and broil on a lower rack (like the 2nd or third from the top, depending on your oven size). It might take longer then 2 minutes for the cheese to melt, but it might help crisp up the center.
I don’t know if either of these ideas will work. But, they’re worth a try!
Let me know if anyone tries it! I’m going to try it and I’ll follow-up.
Hi! I included this article in the inaugural issue of Paleo Weekly (http://paleo-weekly.com/issue-1)
I made this for my husband on Monday and he loved it! He is on a low carb diet and I have been looking for recipes that taste great and are low carb. I topped it with bacon, carmelized onion, mushrooms and goat cheese. This morning, before he left for work, he asked if we could have it again for dinner tonight. It was clearly a huge hit! Thank you!
Have you ever tried Walden Farm’s products and if so what is your opinion of their products? I think their pasta sauce might be good on your pizza recipe.
Thanks,
Dawna
made it tonight. for someone wgho doesn’t like cauliflower it was great. i guess if you add mozz. and pepperoni to something it will taste great and i was right. i have a photo but i don’t know how to put it up on here.
I will never make pizza crust any other way again.I HATED cauliflower mashed potatoes, but this was awesome.Um did I mention it was AWESOME! Like others hubby had stupid look on face and negative comments. Loved it. We have been on ideal protein diet, and this is perfect phase 3 and 4. Great for any atkins our south beach diet. Diet or not, this is our new crust for life!
I so want to try this pizza, going to the store tomorrow
Just a thought, my crust was not real mushy. maybebecauseu I riced cauliflower at noon….let it dot in bowl on counter with paper towel over the top. It got drier? Lower moisture could be the key. Could pick up my pizza also, made middle much thinner than edges….just some thoughts for those having trouble with that.
Thanks for the tips Jodi!
Hello I am so delighted I found your blog page, I really found you by mistake, while I was browsing on Aol for something else, Regardless I am here now and would just like to say many thanks for a fantastic post and a all round entertaining blog (I also love the theme/design), I don’t have time to read it all at the moment but I have bookmarked it and also added your RSS feeds, so when I have time I will be back to read more, Please do keep up the great work.
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I just saw this on pintrest and I am really excited to try it. In regards to all comments on not using eggs, my brother is GF and we often used 1 tbl of flax seed mixed with 1 tbl of water to make a paste. It works great as a binder in cakes and pies so I would assume that it shoud work here too.
I just made this for my family tonight as we’ve really been working at changing our eating habits. It was a big hit…even with picky hubby! I used my home canned spaghetti sauce (from my garden tomatoes), with cheese on top, onions, plum tomato slices, and fresh cilantro. It was beautiful, delicious, and much healthier than the majority of pizzas out there. Thank you! :D
Very good! Definitely a good substitute if you are graving pizza
Found this amazing recipe on pinterest! I will be adding it to my blog as well :)
I made two personal sized pizza instead of one larger one. Because they were smaller,
They turned out super crispy… My husband and I both loved it. Thanks for a fantastic recipe!
http://Www.onceuponapinterest.blogspot.com
This looks delicious, but people need to realize that just because something is low-carb, it is not low-calorie. This is much higher in fat than say, homemade whole wheat pizza crust, due to the cheese taking the place of starch!
As a dietitian, it makes me so upset that people STILL believe that low-carb is the best diet. A balanced diet, with 45-55% of calories from carbohydrate is the BEST proven way to go about eating.
I am going to try this recipe because it looks good, but not because I am seeking something low-calorie. Also, I am all for a gluten-free substitute for those who cannot or do not want to tolerate gluten! So, eat away, but don’t think that this is the best thing for a diet. :)
I want to try and modify this recipe to make it low-fat, as well!
This was absolutely AMAZING! My daughter and husbad loved it… I honetly think it is better than a real pizza! It was so delish!
Thank you so much for sharing!
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There are so many tips in the comments to sift through! I baked two pizzas from 3c cauliflower but only two eggs and 1/2c cheese. I rotated the pizzas halfway through the cooking, switching both the rack and the direction of the pan on the rack. My “dough” came out strong enough to pick up and eat slices like normal pizza, and although some did get stuck to the pan in the middle, it was definitely not mushy. It was great! Thank you!
Thanks for the tips Brooke! I plan to update the blog post soon to reflect all of the great tips from readers, but I just had a baby 2 weeks ago, so no extra time to do so right now!
I’m so glad you enjoyed!!
Could you please email me your sauce recipe as well please? :)
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