Sometimes I'm walking through the grocery store and end up, for one reason or another, strolling through the bakery section. In general, I don't remotely miss the doughnuts, even in the days of eating 2 or 3 at a time, they never really satisfied. But sometimes, every once in a while, I do miss a solid pizza bagel!
A little browned, but very good! |
These are actually pretty straightforward and not entirely different in composition from Caulibread, but there are a few key changes that yield that chewy, bagel-like texture. So when you give this recipe a try, do be careful to note the distinctions.
Ingredients:
Eggs - 2
Cauliflower - 1 cup or 1/3 of a head
Mozzarella, shredded - 1 cup
Sun dried tomatoes - 1/4 cup
Turkey pepperoni - 25 pieces (though goat pepperoni is better!)
Fennel seed - 1/2 tsp
Garlic powder - 1 tsp
Chili flakes - 3/4 tsp
Preparation:
Preheat the oven to 400F and then prepare your mise en place
An over-abundance of the garden and the charcuterie |
You're going way beyond 'riced' here |
Once you've got your 'batter' together, spray or grease a donut/bagel pan thoroughly. This step is particularly important as if you don't the bagels will not release from the pan, regardless of how 'nonstick' you pan.
This can be done in a muffin tin, but is much more satisfying in the bagel form |
YUM! Don't stress if they're not perfectly aligned to the pan, so long as you've greased all surfaces you're good. |
If they're any less done than this, you need to cook longer |
It's also worth noting that you can sub the pepperoni, fennel, and tomatoes for dried blueberries or even cinnamon and raisins.
Nutrition (per bagel/sixth of a recipe)
Calories: 115
Fat: 7 g
Carbs: 5 g
Protein: 11 g
Sodium: 326 mg
Nutrition (per bagel/sixth of a recipe)
Calories: 115
Fat: 7 g
Carbs: 5 g
Protein: 11 g
Sodium: 326 mg
Hello Smye!
ReplyDeleteYou use a lot of cauliflower in various forms in many of your recipes. Have you ever tried freezing cauliflower once it's been through the food processor? I would like to know if it would still work in caulibread or these pizza bagels. I hate pulling out the food processor all the time, I would like to just do a whole lot of cauliflower at once then batch it and thaw as needed. What are your thoughts?
Hi Anonymous,
ReplyDeleteThanks for asking. Yes, I've tried this several times and it works quite well. I'd recommend freezing BEFORE you do the heat-and-squeeze as the freeze/thaw cycle will rupture many of the cell walls and release a lot of the liquid for you. Once you thaw the cauliflower, do a full squeeze and then use as above. I'm also experimenting with a full puree that I then dry and powder to make a shelf-stable cauliflower flour and will post results once I've shared with non-WLS folks to ensure it still tastes good.