Pizza on the Grill With Cherry Tomatoes, Mozzarella and Arugula

Pizza on the Grill With Cherry Tomatoes, Mozzarella and Arugula
Andrew Scrivani for The New York Times
Total Time
30 minutes
Rating
4(74)
Comments
Read comments

These grilled pizzas require no precooked sauce, though you could use some if you wanted to. The cherry tomatoes warm up but don’t collapse as they would in a hot oven. The arugula is sprinkled on when the pies come off the grill.

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Ingredients

Yield:3 10-inch pizzas
  • 310-inch pizza crusts (1 recipe)
  • Extra virgin olive oil for brushing the pizzas
  • 1½½ to 2 boxes cherry tomatoes (12 to 16 tomatoes per pizza)
  • 5 to 6ounces mozzarella, shredded if fresh, sliced if low-moisture
  • Coarse salt and freshly ground pepper
  • 3generous handfuls baby arugula
Ingredient Substitution Guide
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Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Prepare a hot grill. Meanwhile, cut the cherry tomatoes in half along the equator and place near the grill, along with the olive oil, salt and pepper, mozzarella and arugula.

  2. Step 2

    Oil the hot grill rack with olive oil, either by brushing with a grill brush or by dipping a folded wad of paper towels in olive oil and using tongs to rub the rack with it. Place a round of dough on a lightly dusted baker’s peel or rimless baking sheet. Slide the pizza dough from the peel or baking sheet onto the grill rack. If the dough has just come from the freezer and is easy to handle, you can just place it on the rack without bothering with the peel. Close the lid of the grill – the vents should be closed —-- and set the timer for 2 minutes.

  3. Step 3

    Lift up the grill lid. The surface of the dough should display some big air bubbles. Using tongs, lift the dough to see if it is evenly browning on the bottom. Rotate the dough to assure even browning. Keep it on the grill, moving it around as necessary, until it is nicely browned, with grill marks. Watch closely so that it doesn’t burn. When it is nicely browned on the bottom (it may be blackened in spots), use tongs or a spatula to slide the dough onto the baking sheet or peel, and remove from the grill. Cover the grill again.

  4. Step 4

    Make sure that there is still some flour on the peel or baking sheet and flip the dough over so that the uncooked side is now on the bottom. Brush the surface lightly with oil, then top with cherry tomatoes and shreds or slices of mozzarella. You can place the cherry tomatoes cut side up or cut side down, or alternate them cut side up, cut side down. Sprinkle with coarse sea salt and freshly ground pepper.

  5. Step 5

    Slide the pizza back onto the grill. If using a gas grill, reduce the heat to medium-high. Close the lid and cook for 2 to 3 more minutes, until the bottom begins to brown. Open the grill and check the pizza; if the cheese hasn’t melted, leave for a few more minutes. If the bottom is getting too dark, move the pizza to a cooler part of the grill and close the top. Use a spatula or tongs to remove the pizza to a cutting board. Scatter the arugula on top, cut into wedges and serve. Repeat with the other two pizza crusts.

Tip
  • Advanced preparation: The crusts will keep for several months in the freezer.

Ratings

4 out of 5
74 user ratings
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Comments

I've made this in many variations, using Roberta's pizza dough (also from the NYT cooking). To make the process of putting the pizza rounds on the grill easy I freeze the rounds as suggested. That works great. I've dressed the pizza with whatever variation of vegetables and sauce I have around. Last night I made it with fresh pesto, fresh mozzarella, topped with a medley of pre-grilled onions, mushrooms, and asparagus. All the grilled pizza recipes are great: the grill adds so much flavor.

An excellent recipe, either as written or as a springboard. If you make pizza on the grill regularly, a pizza stone is highly recommended. It disperses the heat and yields a more evenly cooked crust. If you can't find or afford a pizza stone, purchase four 8x8" UNGLAZED tiles from the home store. Wash, rinse, and dry thoroughly before use. Place these (or the stone) on the grill grate, and allow to get screaming hot before placing the dough. And NEVER oil the tiles or stone before use. Enjoy!

The pizza pictured looks like it has tomato sauce in addition to the sliced tomatoes called for in the recipe and cheddar rather than mozzarella.

An excellent recipe, either as written or as a springboard. If you make pizza on the grill regularly, a pizza stone is highly recommended. It disperses the heat and yields a more evenly cooked crust. If you can't find or afford a pizza stone, purchase four 8x8" UNGLAZED tiles from the home store. Wash, rinse, and dry thoroughly before use. Place these (or the stone) on the grill grate, and allow to get screaming hot before placing the dough. And NEVER oil the tiles or stone before use. Enjoy!

I've made this in many variations, using Roberta's pizza dough (also from the NYT cooking). To make the process of putting the pizza rounds on the grill easy I freeze the rounds as suggested. That works great. I've dressed the pizza with whatever variation of vegetables and sauce I have around. Last night I made it with fresh pesto, fresh mozzarella, topped with a medley of pre-grilled onions, mushrooms, and asparagus. All the grilled pizza recipes are great: the grill adds so much flavor.

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