Gluten-Free Cauliflower-Crust Pizza

Grain-free cauliflower crust has an unexpected and appealing lightness, and a few tips set you up for success. Learn more at TwiceasTasty.com.
I developed a cauliflower pizza crust when my mom was limiting her gluten intake, not because I expected to add it to my personal meal plan. But every time I make this recipe for others, whether they have issues with gluten or not, I get such positive feedback that it’s worth pulling out. Even those I’ve previously impressed with my Sourdough Pizza Dough, whether baked for a pizza party, grilled on a sailing night, or taught in a sourdough workshop, comment on how the grain-free cauliflower crust has an unexpected and appealing lightness.

Along with the cauliflower pizza crust recipe that I share this week in my Twice as Tasty column for the Flathead Beacon, I offer a few tips to set you up for success. In my own oven and favorite cast-iron skillet, I have no problem creating a crisp crust—as long as I break down the cauliflower until it has a fine texture, squeeze out excess moisture, and preheat the pan before baking. But I sometimes get softer results in an unfamiliar oven or pan. Fortunately, there’s an easy fix, as I explain here.
Learn to make Gluten-Free Cauliflower-Crust Pizza

Adapting Dinners

What happens when you combine an unfamiliar ingredient, Web access, and creativity? Gluten-Free Cauliflower-Crust Pizza and other adapted dinners. Learn more at TwiceasTasty.com.
I have a confession: I often cook without recipes. Even when I use them, I alter this and change that to fit what’s in my cupboard and what I think I want to eat. And I rarely make a dish the same way twice. I mainly develop and write out recipes so that I can share my favorite foods more easily with you!

So almost every recipe on Twice as Tasty can be adapted and even free-formed. There are some exceptions: You’ll have greater success with sourdough baking and cheesemaking if you follow the recipe as closely as possible, particularly as you’re learning. For canning and fermenting for long-term storage, using the given ingredients and instructions ensures food safety. But when it comes to adapting dinners and other meals, you can typically use your judgment and experience in deciding how closely you’ll follow a recipe—like I did for my latest adaptation, Gluten-Free Cauliflower-Crust Pizza.
Learn to adapt dinners and make Gluten-Free Cauliflower-Crust Pizza