Vegan Potato Pizza
Potato pizza is something that I have loved since first bite. There’s a pizza place in the town where I spent my teenage years and they were kind enough to give me my first potato pizza expierience. Recently my boyfriend and I were visiting my parents and wanted to take the golf cart to lunch (long story). Never ones to pass up a good piece of a pie, we couldn’t resist stopping in while we were in town. We ordered the potato pizza sans bacon and were saddened when it came to our table full of pig. The server explained that they can’t make it without bacon. Why he would still ring it in and serve it to us after we said ‘no bacon’ is beyond me. It was a waste of food, energy and resources and made me sad. Right then and there I decided I would see their “could-be-vegetarian-if-they-tried, potato-pizza” and raise them a ‘vegan potato pizza’ all my own.
To make my potato pizza you will need: 5 small red potatos (cut in thin discs), 4 slices of veggie bacon, 1/4 c diced red onion, 1 jalapeno (out of my garden!), 1 can cannellini beans, extra virgin olive oil, chives, vegan cheese, cloves-o-garlic, 1 lemon, vegan whole wheat pizza crust, various spices.
The sauce on this pizza is a spicy white bean aioli.
Spicy White Bean Aioli
1 can cannellini beans (drained and rinsed), 5 (or 6 if they’re small) garlic cloves, juice of 1 lemon, dash of sea salt and pepper, 1/4 c extra virgin olive oil all in the bowl of a food processor. Hit go and let this process for awhile–that many garlic cloves is going to be spicy and you want to make sure they get diced very well in the food processor. You may see other white bean aioli recipes that are similar but call for olive oil instead of extra virgin olive oil. I am not a fan of using olive oil with beans to create a dip/sauce. I have found that when I use olive oil in white bean aioli or in hummus, all I can taste is the olive oil. When I use extra virgin olive oil, the flavors of the other ingredients is what I taste.
Back to the pie. Whenever I use pizza crust that I have frozen, I always put a tiny little bit of olive oil on the crust and then sprinkle oregano, Italian seasoning and red pepper flakes on top. If you’re using dough or unfrozen pizza crust, you don’t need the olive oil but its always a nice addition. On top of the seasoning sprinkles comes the aioli! Spread it evenly over the crust making sure it reaches all over.
Grab your vegan bacon and stack the pieces on top of each other. Cut the strips into small pieces–you will be sprinkling them all over the pizza. Right now, you’re going to sprinkle a few over the white bean aioli on your pie. Also sprinkle some of those diced red onions and a little ‘cheese’ is okay here too. Now its time to layer the potatoes!
To prepare your potatoes, you’re going to boil (covered with a little slit allowing some steam to escape) the discs you cut in salted water for about….10 minutes. Keep checking them-you want to be able to stab them with a fork but not be quite able to mash them. Taste one often–it’s really up to you to decide when your potatoes are good enough to eat!
You always want to cook potatoes all the way through. To acheive this, make sure they’re heating up with your water. Don’t boil the water first and then add the potatoes–it will cook the outsides too fast and not the insides.
Create your layer of potatoes on your pie. I always spread out one layer (potato to potato) and then put smaller or half pieces on top to fill in some spaces. Dust a few drops of aioli on top of this layer of potatoes along with some more bacon, red onion and ‘cheese’. This is a good time to put a few jalapeno’s on your pie as well. You’re going to repeat your potato/aioli/bacon/onion/’cheese’/jalapeno layer one more time. You’re building a 2 layer potato pyramid!
Pop your pie in the oven for 10-15 minutes at 400 degrees (or according to your crust’s directions). Vegan ‘cheese’ melts as good as it can-any expierienced vegan ‘cheese’ user will know what it looks like when it’s cooked.
I dusted the top of this pie off with some chives fresh out of the garden.




















