Nectarine Pizza with Fresh Basil and Reduced Balsamic
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I ate this whole pizza tonight. All of it. By myself. Not one slice remains for me for my breakfast tomorrow. I tried to refrain. No dice. So, if you’re still in summer-bathing-suit mode, avert your eyes.
This combination is so good. I believe the original, a pie hailing from Paso Robles where the dear friend who introduced me to this creation had just vacationed, called for peaches, but nectarines are a fine substitute. I’ve used an herbed goat cheese here with some Parmigiano Reggiano but I think some fresh ricotta or buffalo mozzarella or mascarpone or all three would be a nice substitute (or addition?) for the goat cheese. The Parmigiano, I think, is a must.
Fresh basil or some sprigs of arugula sprinkled on the just-baked pizza is key. It needs that hit of freshness as well as that bite from the reduced balsamic. Yum yum yum yum yum. Just don’t burn your balsamic. I did. Twice. Oiy. It’s really annoying. Really try not to do that.
Gosh, I don’t know what else to say. This is delicious and summery and fun, and I think you should make it.
Nectarine Pizza with Fresh Basil and Reduced Balsamic
- Total Time: 3 hours 10 minutes
- Yield: 4 pizzas
Description
Pizza dough recipe adapted from Todd English’s The Figs Table
Each pizza serves 1 to 2 people.
Note: This dough freezes beautifully. After the initial rise, punch down the dough, wrap it in plastic and place in a Ziplock bag. Freeze for several months. When ready to use, let sit at room temperature for about an hour, then proceed with rolling/topping/baking.
Ingredients
For The Pizza Dough:
- ¼ cup whole wheat flour
- 3½ cups all-purpose flour, plus additional for rolling
- 2 teaspoons kosher salt
- 1 2/3 cups lukewarm water
- 2 teaspoons sugar
- 2 teaspoons active-dry yeast
- 2 teaspoons olive oil
Reduced balsamic:
- 1/2 cup balsamic vinegar
Toppings For One Pizza:
- olive oil for greasing
- cheese: fresh ricotta, buffalo mozzarella, goat cheese, mascarpone, whatever you like
- 1 nectarine, sliced thinly, (not paper thin)
- shavings of fresh Parmigianno Reggiano
- fresh basil
Instructions
- Make the dough: Place the flours and salt in a stand mixer fitted with a dough hook. (Or knead by hand.) Combine the water, sugar and yeast in a small bowl and let sit for five minutes until the mixture bubbles slightly. Add the olive oil and stir. With the mixer on low, gradually add the oil-water mixture into the bowl. Knead until the dough is firm and smooth, under 10 minutes. The dough will be very wet and sort of difficult to work with. I liberally coat my hands with flour before attempting to remove it.
- Divide the dough into four balls, about 7½ ounces each. Line two cookie sheets with parchment paper. (Be sure to oil the parchment paper.) Place two balls on a sheet. Lightly rub the balls with olive oil, then cover loosely with plastic wrap. The dough is very sticky and wet, so, be sure to coat the balls or the plastic with oil. Let the balls rise in a warm spot until they have doubled in bulk, about two hours.
- To roll out the dough: Dab your fingers in flour and then place one ball on a generously floured work surface. Press down in the center with the tips of your fingers, spreading the dough with your hand. When the dough has doubled in width, use a floured rolling pin (or continue using floured hands if you are skilled at making pizzas) and roll out until it is very thin, like flatbread. The outer portion should be a little thicker than the inner portion. Note: If the dough is being very stubborn, let it rest for 15 to 20 minutes. In this time, the gluten will relax, and the dough will be much easier to work with.
- To make the reduced balsamic: Place balsamic in a small sauté pan. Turn heat to medium high. Let simmer until reduced and noticeably thick — watch it like a hawk. If it burns, it’s ruined. There’s no salvaging burnt balsamic. Err on the side of under reduced. It reduces more than you expect as it’s cooling. Remove from heat.
Baking:
- Preheat the oven to 500ºF. Line a sheet pan with parchment paper or grease lightly with olive oil. Place rolled out dough onto parchment paper or greased pan. Drizzle dough with a little olive oil and with your hand, rub it over the surface to coat evenly.
- Cover the dough with a layer of cheese — mozzarella, goat cheese, ricotta mascarpone, whatever you wish. Arrange one layer of sliced nectarines or peaches on top of the cheese. Sprinkle the fruit layer with fresh Parmigiano Reggiano. Place pizza in your very hot oven and bake for about 10 minutes or until the crust is slightly brown and the cheese is melting.
- Remove from the oven and sprinkle with fresh basil or arugula. Drizzle with the reduced balsamic. Slice and serve. Yum.
- Prep Time: 3 hours
- Cook Time: 10 minutes
- Category: Pizza
- Method: Sheet pan
- Cuisine: Italian, American
This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my disclosure policy.
64 Comments on “Nectarine Pizza with Fresh Basil and Reduced Balsamic”
Fruit season is in full swing so I am inspired:D
If I had this in front of me there is no way I would have been able to leave one single crumb uneaten. It looks absolutely amazing.
wow, certainly a winning combo. i wouldn’t have been able to resist, either.
ah, the sweet, juicy burst of the nectarines would be just perfect. excellent.
so i live in paso robles…any idea which restaurant??? can’t wait to try this one
Imagine this grilled…
Oil one side of the dough, grill it oil-side down for a few minutes until grill marks appear, flip, top and cook for a few more minutes. Finish in the oven if cheese needs more melting.
Oy indeed.
Holy smoke, this sounds like the ultimate summer pizza! We’ll go to the farmer’s market tomorrow for nectarines and make this on Sunday. Many thanks.
Restaurant is called Farmstand 46. Sounds divine!
I’ve been helping a local pub put together a menu for a Californian wine dinner. And I have been struggling to convince them that pizzetti bianci with fig and goats cheese is a TOTALLY Californian thing to do. I have to show him this post.
Made it unto next’s week dinner list!
Made this last night for dinner (w/ peaches and mozz.) – so good! To cut the prep time I used Trader Joe’s pizza dough.
Just made this last night (though I used Peter Reinhart’s pizza dough) with peaches and goat cheese and it was fantastic. I was surprised how mild the sweetness was… less sweet that the tomato based pizza we made with it. The peach slices were so perfectly soft and the balsamic reduction really added another dimension.
I just came across your blog and love it. I am doing one of your peach tart recipes right now and will let you know how it goes.
I’ve never had a sweet Pizza. But I think I’ll try your recipe once!!! It looks delicious.
This looks delicious which is no surprise. Everything you make looks delicious!
I tried this with a mild Italian gorgonzola — well, mild is a relative word, of course — and intensel aromatic farmers’ market basil (Phat farms, or was it Two Dog?). Amazing. Thank you, Alexandra!
This looks beautiful and delicious. And I think it looks like a personal pan size pizza – perfectly acceptable to eat all by yourself
Okay, this sounds incredible! Absolutely divine! This has been bookmarked! Also, incredible photography.
Love your site; beyond happy that I found you!
Mary xo
Delightful Bitefuls
By some miracle, I found nectarines in New England in January and made this pizza last night – it was possibly the most delicious thing I have ever eaten. I used a combination of herbed goat cheese and fresh mozzerella for the cheese, and Trader Joe’s pizza dough because of time constraints (although I’d love to try my hand at making the homemade dough!) Thanks for the recipe! Everything on your blog looks delicious, I can’t wait to try more of them!
This makes me so happy, Nicole! I love Trader Joe’s pizza dough — it’s really a great product. I just moved back to the east coast and I don’t have a TJ’s near me…very sad about this. So glad you liked the pizza! I’m a New Englander myself — grew up in CT.
Looks yummolicious! This really doesn’t sound that fattening to me so I think even ifyou are still in bathing suit mode you could eat it! Can’t wait to try it 🙂 Thanks
Thank you for this great inspiration! It looks fabulous.
OMG I made this (but added ham) and it was SO AMAZING. Thank you for posting!!
yummy and beautiful!!
I felt compelled to comment that this pizza dough recipe is fantastic. I’ve made two batches now, incorporating a lot more flour while kneading the second time. both turned out great, but the second, drier, batch was a dream to work with, and it froze very well. The cooked crust has a nice balance between chewy and crispy. Thanks for sharing!
Kate — So glad to hear this! I made this last night for 6 friends. We had fun assembling various pizzas and baking them off two at a time and standing around the kitchen grazing all night.
I was sent here by Pinterest. Made this last night for my hubby and me and we were in HEAVEN!!! It was PHENOMENAL. I used, ricotta, goat cheese crumbles, blue cheese crumbles, mozerella, and then the parmiggianno on top of the apricot slices and it was perfect. The blue cheese added a delicious zing, I highly recommend! I also used trader joe’s whole wheat dough to save time and it was perfect! Thank you so much for sharing. This will become a staple in our household!
Heather — So happy to hear this! Blue cheese sounds incredible. You don’t have to twist my arm… I adore blue cheese. Thanks for writing in!
Hi Alexandra,
New to your blog and found you via Pinterest. This pizza looks fantastic and I can hardly wait until nectarine season to try it. Pinned for the future!
This pizza looks SO good! I love using fruit on pizza – such a tasty topping, and really makes it feel ‘special’. The nectarines and reduced balsamic sounds like such a great combo.
Sara — It’s really yummy! Definitely a good one for the summer!
i grilled it and used goat cheese with apricot and peach.
SOOOO good!
Thanks 🙂
Oogle — awesome to hear this! What do you use to grill? Do you use a stone on the grill grates, or do you grill the dough directly on the grates?
Do you think Brie could be used on the base instead?
Sunny — absolutely! Brie would be wonderful.
This makes me long for summer again……