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Index » Eating & Drinking » Recipes
 

Too Good to be Healthy Pizza

 

Lets transform an all-time favorite food, pizza, into a healthy all-time favorite. This pizza is high in fiber, antioxidants and phytonutrients that fight inflammation, heart disease and cancer, and it just tastes good. Its a great way to introduce dark leafy green vegetables into your diet. I encourage everyone to have at least one serving of these daily. Swiss chard, broccoli, kale, collards and cabbage are examples. These vegetables have two to five times the antioxidant vitamins A and C of other vegetables. They contain unique phytonutrients that causes the liver to do a better job at detoxifying cancer causing substances. They also cause cancer cells to stop multiplying and die. Dark leafy greens are an excellent source of calcium without the fat and inflammation causing casein of cows milk. Remember cows dont get those big bones by drinking milk. They get them by eating grass. We get them by eating dark leafy green vegetables.

This recipe uses Swiss chard. Like all dark leafy greens, they grow in cooler weather. So you will find fresh local Swiss chard at farmers markets right now. It should be brightly colored, crisp and free of tiny holes that may be a sign of insect damage. Wash it just before using. Otherwise, it stores well in the refrigerator in a plastic bag. This recipe also calls for red miso, Japanese fermented soy paste. It lends a dairy like flavor to the pesto sauce. Find it in the dairy case at your local health food store. This pizza is tasty and satisfying without the cheese.

Too Good to be Healthy Pizza

1 Kabuli Whole Wheat Pizza Crust (available at Wild Oats)

1/3 cup non-dairy pesto (recipe below)

bunch Swiss chard

10 sun dried tomatoes

12 Kalamata olives

3 water packed artichoke hearts

Preheat oven to 450 degrees. Wash the chard and trim any rough ends. Chop the leaves into bite size pieces and the stems into inch pieces. Place the stems into a steamer basket first, and then add the leaves. Steam for 10 minutes. Hydrate the sun-dried tomatoes by simmering them in water for 5 minutes or as directed on the package. Allow them to drain and cool in a strainer.

Meanwhile, smash the olives with the flat side of a chefs knife. This loosens the seed. Slice the olives in half lengthwise and discard the seeds. Slice each artichoke heart lengthwise into 3 or 4 slices. Grate the cheese if you are using it. Slice the sun-dried tomatoes lengthwise into 1/4-inch slices.

Place the pizza crust on a pizza pan. Spread 1/3 cup of non-dairy pesto on the pizza. Using a fork or tongs, spread the Swiss chard evenly over the pesto. Arrange the olives, artichoke hearts and sun-dried tomatoes over the Swiss chard.

Bake for 9 10 minutes or until crust reaches desired crispness. Serves 3 4 people.

Non-Dairy Pesto

3 4 cups loosely packed fresh basil

4 tablespoons olive oil

1 or 2 cloves garlic

2 tablespoons red miso

cup raw walnuts

Combine the ingredients and cup raw walnuts in a blender at low speed for 2 minutes. Add the remaining raw walnuts and blend for 1 minute more.

Author: Bethany Klug
 
Author Bio:

Bethany Klug

Bethany Klug, DO practices holistic medicine at the Kansas City Holistic Centre. She recovered her own health with whole foods nutrition and has developed extensive expertise in the healing power of whole foods cooking. Dr. Klug founded Heartland Sangha, devoted to the mindfulness meditation practices of Thich Nhat Hanh and teaches regularly. An avid yoga practitioner since the late 1980s, she is currently exploring yoga therapy. Dr. Klug offers bioidentical hormone replacement, whole foods nutrition, nutritional supplementation, homeopathy and biodynamic cranial osteopathic treatment to her patients. She is boarded in family medicine and osteopathic manipulative medicine. The Latin meaning for doctor, ?teacher,? inspires her to write for general audiences to empower them to discover their self-healing ability through holistic health. She writes the monthly column ?The Doctor Cooks? for the Kansas City Wellness Magazine. She lives in Kansas City with her husband David and their Birman cat Shanti.

 
 
 

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