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Looking for a bit of inspiration for an idea I have. I want to serve 3 courses of pizza: starter, main and dessert. It's a gimmick, I know, but a fun one I think.

Got the starter and main nailed, but as neither of these will look much like a standard pizza, I wanted the dessert to look just like a pizza.

My (as yet untested) idea is to make a slightly sweeter base (not too sweet, toppings will add sweetness) and for toppings I am thinking:

  • Rasberry Jam (as the red base)
  • Mascarpone and peanut butter (as the cheese, peanut butter to add a little crunch)
  • Caramelised Sugared banana slices (hopefully, these will come out brown enough to look a little like pepperoni)

Will the above work? If so, do you have any suggestions for the execution? If not, what should I do instead?

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  • 2
    I have edited your question to tighten it up a little (per standards here: blog.stackoverflow.com/2010/09/good-subjective-bad-subjective) and hopefully provide the answers you are looking for. If I have changed it too substantially from your intent, please feel free to edit it again.
    – justkt
    Nov 16, 2010 at 19:22
  • I feel they are pretty semantic issues, not really changing the essence at all
    – Mild Fuzz
    Nov 16, 2010 at 21:17

10 Answers 10

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If you make the base neutral - a typical Neopolitan dough would do - you could use white chocolate shavings to give an appearance of cheese as well. I would keep the amount light.

While looking to verify this idea, I found a recipe that gave me a few more pieces of inspiration. Instead of carmelized sugar banana slices, try dried fruits (strawberries, sweetened cranberries, raspberries, etc.) for your toppings. These will look like sausage bits or pepperoni. You can also use pineapple and make it look like a Hawaiian pizza.

You could also use almond cream as a white sauce or as some of your cheese for a richness that is not too sweet.

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    Ooh, that recipe looks yummy, and it's giving me ideas: if your cake-decorating skills are up to it, you could make fondant or marzipan mushrooms; and chopped toasted hazelnuts could look a bit like sausage.
    – Marti
    Nov 16, 2010 at 21:11
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    @Marti I once did marzipan mushrooms for a birthday cake and my son (then 4) refused to eat ... his favorite cake. He was sure our cat mistakenly used it. Nov 16, 2010 at 21:43
  • Use sweet roll dough for the base. I think a standard pizza base would clash a bit.
    – SF.
    Sep 25, 2018 at 9:28
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I'd try something like brioche- or challah-type dough + raspberry jam + white chocolate shavings + raspberry fruit leather cut into rounds with a cookie cutter. It could also work with a shortbread dough - think Linzer cookies. (Just make sure to choose a softer shortbread rather than a crispy one, otherwise it'll be very hard to slice.) If you don't oversweeten the crust and use a good raspberry jam (perhaps a no-sugar-added all-fruit one), it shouldn't be too sweet, and raspberries & white chocolate is always a good combination.

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  • Hey! this one sounds a very un-pizza dessert! I like it! :) Nov 16, 2010 at 23:23
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In parts of Germany they make a dish called Flammkuchen, which is a type of pizza. A traditional savoury topping is bacon + sour cream + onion, and a traditional sweet topping is sliced apple with Calvados and cream. I've eaten both versions, in Heidelberg and in the Black Forest, and I recommend them heartily.

Here are some recipes. I've not made them, so I can't vouch for them.

http://www.chefkoch.de/rs/s0/apfel+flammkuchen/Rezepte.html

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  • welcome. Do these dishes look like a typical American pepperoni pizza, or could one be made to? If so, how?
    – justkt
    Nov 17, 2010 at 20:33
  • They are thin-crust, but otherwise look like normal pizzas. Here are some pictures of Flammkuchen with different toppings: nicoletta-backtechnik.de/flamm.php
    – DamonJW
    Nov 17, 2010 at 21:50
  • Basically, it's just a thin-crust pizza, topped with sour cream + sugar + grated lemon rind, and then with sliced apples and chopped nuts. I like it without too much sour cream. They should be cooked in a very hot oven (gas mark 7).
    – DamonJW
    Nov 17, 2010 at 22:11
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    To make it look like a pepperoni pizza, I would: (1) make a thin base of sweetened apple puree as for an apple tart, maybe tinted with a little bit of raspberry puree, (2) top it with the sour cream mixture, (3) top it with rounds of sliced apple and rely on cooking to change their colour, or rounds of sliced firm plum/peach.
    – DamonJW
    Nov 18, 2010 at 14:04
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You might consider docked puff pastry (poked with little holes so it doesn't puff much) for your crust. It'll be light and buttery and a good foil for the sweet stuff you put on.

I'd think about doing grilled stone fruits like peaches, plums or nectarines, or maybe some grilled pineapple. These items can be pan seared effectively too. This stuff won't look like a regular pizza much, but they'll be awesome.

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Chocolate pizza

alt text recipe

Cherry pizza

alt text recipe

Fruit pizza

alt text recipe

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    Crumb topping as cheese - interesting.
    – justkt
    Nov 16, 2010 at 15:38
  • Yeah, the crumb topping looks like grated Parmesan at best, and I don't think I've ever had a pizza with just Parmesan on it. (Plenty of pizza places put out shakers of grated cheese, but that's in addition to the melted mozzarella that's already on the pizza.)
    – Marti
    Nov 16, 2010 at 21:23
  • @Marti "Se miente mas de la cuenta por falta de fantasía, también la verdad se inventa" ... bad translation -> Most lies are due lack of imagination, reality is also an invention (Antonio Machado) :D Nov 16, 2010 at 21:37
  • These are good links (and great photos), but generally answers here should be usable without having to follow a link. Not that you should reprint the entire recipes here, but try to give us the basic idea (i.e. by describing it as a chocolate pie using pizza dough for the crust and crumb topping to simulate the appearance of cheese). Otherwise, if the links ever break then so does the answer.
    – Aaronut
    Nov 16, 2010 at 22:21
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    If you don't actually endorse the content of your answer then either don't post it, or post it with disclaimers. As is, your answer just isn't complete; one has to follow the links to actually understand anything you're talking about. This is more or less like posting a Wikipedia link as your answer; it's fine for certain types of questions if and only if you actually quote or paraphrase the relevant parts.
    – Aaronut
    Nov 17, 2010 at 18:06
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I had an idea to make a cookie cake that looks like pizza:

  • chocolate chip cookie crust
  • jam for sauce
  • shaved coconut for cheese
  • fruit roll-ups for pepperoni
  • green gummy bears for peppers
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You could also go for a white pizza (usually uses a cream or pesto sauce instead of tomato). Start with a neutral dough as recommended above and add a layer of cream cheese icing for the sauce. I'd go with coconut shavings for the cheese, as they'll brown a little bit and give some contrast to the sauce. White pizza doesn't usually have toppings beyond cheese, olive oil and spices, so the only other thing I would put on is some fresh chopped mint leaves as it comes out of the oven.

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I've had chocolate spread and marshmallow pizza before, however it is extremely sweet. It was more a gimmick than a serious dish.

I'd guess by using less sweet chocolate spread and experimenting with different marshmallows, perhaps with the addition of chopped nuts, mint leaves or maybe something like a raspberry sauce could make something worth eating.

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I've thoroughly enjoyed dessert pizzas from a local pizza shop:

  1. Banana, berries, chocolate (white and milk), custard
  2. Apple & cinnamon, apricot, crumble, custard, berries

They are both delicious!

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a cinnamon bun pizza

Sweet Yeast Dough rolled out Drizzle with melted butter with cinnamon & icing sugar Bake & drizzle with milk based icing!

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  • This won't really look like a pizza, given the color and consistency difference in the toppings.
    – Erica
    Sep 25, 2018 at 19:27

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