I Love Pizza but...
poodledoodlepop
Posts: 23 Member
I am looking for a healthier way to make pizza! I love a thin crust, crispy, with cheese, & sauce... But OMG the calories!!! Any ideas on how to make it healthier? * Friend me, I am looking for friends for encouragement*
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Replies
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Pizza Hut thin 'n crispy is 190/slice (66 g, medium cheese.) How much lower calorie do you need?0
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Make your own. These crusts are awesome and pretty low-cal:
http://www.flatoutbread.com/products/thin-crust-artisan-pizza/
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eat half a pizza with a large salad0
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Thin crust is one of the more calorie friendly options you can choose. Make your own at home with ready made crusts (Boboli has thin crust now), refrigerated dough (Trader Joes sells pizza dough or you can get Pillsbury refrigerated dough), or make your own dough: flour, yeast, water. Other alternatives: flat out breads, pita bread, or flour tortillas.
When you make it at home you can control how much of all the other toppings you use. More vegetables, less meat, etc. We make pizza about once a week on the grill or on a pizza stone in the oven. I can eat half a margherita pizza for less than 700 cals. I usually have salad and wine too!
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My favourite homemade pizza uses wholemeal wraps, some tomato sauce to spread, some finely chopped ham, lite cheese and pineapple and it tastes amazing and ends up being under 350 calories for the whole pizza0
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AbsoluteTara79 wrote: »Make your own. These crusts are awesome and pretty low-cal:
http://www.flatoutbread.com/products/thin-crust-artisan-pizza/
Nope nope nope. Not pizza.
I like Flatout but those will never help with a pizza craving. Pita bread is much more satisfying, if you can find some relatively low cal (there's a brand that makes high protein ones that turned out pretty well, but the name escapes me).
Still looking for a thin crust recipe to make my own though0 -
1 part Greek yogurt with 1 part flour makes a great pizza base. It's relatively low calorie for a pretty big pizza. Add whatever toppings you like. You control the cheese and such, so you can make it as healthy as you want. Slimming world's smash pizza base is pretty low calorie too, and tastes good as well.0
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poodledoodlepop wrote: »I am looking for a healthier way to make pizza! I love a thin crust, crispy, with cheese, & sauce... But OMG the calories!!! Any ideas on how to make it healthier? * Friend me, I am looking for friends for encouragement*
What do you mean by make it "healthier"? Lower calorie? More nutrients? More fiber?
Add some vegetables for toppings. Use less cheese.
Eat smaller portions and pair it with a salad.0 -
We do fathead pizza. So yummy... https://recipes.sparkpeople.com/recipe-detail.asp?recipe=25594050
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AbsoluteTara79 wrote: »Make your own. These crusts are awesome and pretty low-cal:
http://www.flatoutbread.com/products/thin-crust-artisan-pizza/
Nope nope nope. Not pizza.
I like Flatout but those will never help with a pizza craving. Pita bread is much more satisfying, if you can find some relatively low cal (there's a brand that makes high protein ones that turned out pretty well, but the name escapes me).
Still looking for a thin crust recipe to make my own though
Pita is the most "pizza" like crust to me. I broil until crispy, turn it over, top with sauce/cheese/toppings and broil until it's done. Takes less than 10 minutes and is a common dinner for my family.0 -
Make it work into your calorie allotment for the day.
We always have thin crust delite from Papa Murphy's with veggies, no meat, light on the cheese. I don't miss the meat at all, but if you want meat, just allow for it.0 -
I use reduced fat cheese and a thin crust I make at home. I add veggie and lean meat toppings and can make a 10-12 in pizza that is about 1000 calories for the whole thing. So I can have the whole pizza and a couple of light beers for dinner.
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I've started making pizza base with cauliflower. Whizz it up in a processor, microwave for 4.5 mins then damp out moisture on a tea towel, mix in 2 eggs and seasoning, spread on a baking tray and bake on a high oven for 15 mins, then take out and add toppings and bake for a further 10 mins. Looks like pizza, slightly different taste but I still find it yummy!0
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I use tortillas sometimes. .and bake them in my toaster oven. I can have 2 pretty good size ones for 400 calories. Pita is also a good one.0
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I have also learned to just like cheese, or cheese and pineapple.0
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cheetara86 wrote: »I've started making pizza base with cauliflower. Whizz it up in a processor, microwave for 4.5 mins then damp out moisture on a tea towel, mix in 2 eggs and seasoning, spread on a baking tray and bake on a high oven for 15 mins, then take out and add toppings and bake for a further 10 mins. Looks like pizza, slightly different taste but I still find it yummy!
^this. I use a slightly different recipe because I am allergic to eggs, but it tastes great and satisfies the pizza craving.0 -
AbsoluteTara79 wrote: »Make your own. These crusts are awesome and pretty low-cal:
http://www.flatoutbread.com/products/thin-crust-artisan-pizza/
Nope nope nope. Not pizza.
I like Flatout but those will never help with a pizza craving. Pita bread is much more satisfying, if you can find some relatively low cal (there's a brand that makes high protein ones that turned out pretty well, but the name escapes me).
Still looking for a thin crust recipe to make my own though
Speak for yourself, but I actually prefer these over take-out.
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An Italian pizza Margherita has "only" 700 calories. Sure it's not low calories, but it's absolutely doable for one dinner.
I checked how many calories there are in one "american-style" pizza at a local chain: 3000 (!!)
Now I get why pizza is considered "bad".
Simply follow an italian recipe and, depending how much flour you use, you can have a tasty not-so-high in calories pizza.
It's very easy to make one if you have this kind of ovens (about 60 euros):
Add tomato sauce, mozzarella, vegetables (or whatever you prefer), 10g of extra-vergin olive oil and that's it.0 -
Tortilla wrap. Tomato puree. Whatever toppings you want. Oven for 10 mins. Voila!0
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I make mine with 90 grams (3/4 cup) whole wheat flour. warm water, yest, sauce and cheese. Comes out to 500 cals total because I use fresh mozzarella which has a lot less calories than the shredded stuff. I only need 2 oz of it.0
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I've learned to just get smaller pizzas. We used to get Extra Larges around here and then we reduced it down to a Large, and now even that's too much so we get medium pizzas.
Occasionally we'll get a thin crust (that really does save on the calories), but otherwise I just fit the medium slices into my calorie goal. I love pizza too much to mess with it's complete yumminess.0 -
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I use Flatout wraps which are 90 calories. Their website has pizza recipes too.
http://www.flatoutbread.com/product-recipes/pizza/page/2/
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Oh I love pizza as well, so when I don't make my own, then I make it fit.0
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I had 2 slices yesterday at fazolis, and 2 breadsticks. It came in at 850 calories, i just ate around it part of what got me here is thinking that 5 pieces of pizza is normal..0
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I use the flat out wraps also. Put some fig jam, goat cheese, some prosciutto and throw it on the bbq. So delicious0
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LovingLife_Erin wrote: »1 part Greek yogurt with 1 part flour makes a great pizza base. It's relatively low calorie for a pretty big pizza. Add whatever toppings you like. You control the cheese and such, so you can make it as healthy as you want. Slimming world's smash pizza base is pretty low calorie too, and tastes good as well.
That sounds interesting. I will have to try it. Is it sort of a cracker consistency when baked? Do you have to press it into a pan or does it roll out? Do you have to pre bake the crust? Thanks.0 -
soulofgrace wrote: »LovingLife_Erin wrote: »1 part Greek yogurt with 1 part flour makes a great pizza base. It's relatively low calorie for a pretty big pizza. Add whatever toppings you like. You control the cheese and such, so you can make it as healthy as you want. Slimming world's smash pizza base is pretty low calorie too, and tastes good as well.
That sounds interesting. I will have to try it. Is it sort of a cracker consistency when baked? Do you have to press it into a pan or does it roll out? Do you have to pre bake the crust? Thanks.
I use this 2 ingredient pizza dough too. It's really good. A little crispy on the outside but soft on the inside. You need to use self-rising flour or add the additional baking ingredients. Here are the instructions.
http://www.theslowroasteditalian.com/2014/02/2-ingredient-pizza-dough-recipe.html0 -
I eat 1/2 a pizza with a huge pile of stir fried vegetables.0
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