Butternut Bánh Mì Pizza

Butternut Bánh Mì Pizza from The Faux Martha


When we lived in Oak Park, IL, when we were young and alive, when we didn’t have enough money to take the train downtown to Chicago, I stood next to the continental divide sign, legs spread wide, imagining I was standing on two magnets pulling water to opposite ends of our coasts. Would I spilt in two like the water? Turns out I’m not that malleable. Not nearly as malleable as a recipe. We’re straddling two seasons right now, standing in muddy, dead grass with glints of green over a slice of Butternut Bánh Mì Pizza, between winter and spring.


Butternut Bánh Mì Pizza made from leftovers from The Faux Martha


This Butternut Bánh Mì Pizza is comprised of bits of both seasons. The hardy butternut squash turns into a sweet and smoky chipotle sauce. Springy radishes are split thin and soaked in vinegar, turning pinker than an Easter egg. Limes and green onions stand in as signs of life, if not in Minnesota then in California.


spring radishes


It’s also compromised of leftovers from my fridge—leftover pulled beef, puréed butternut squash, and pickled radishes. I call this game Leftovers Tetris, which is one of my favorite games next to Dishwasher Tetris (the only two games I can smoke Kev in). The game goes like this. You take leftover Chipotle Butternut Sauce from this recipe and leftover pickled radishes from that recipe and leftover humble chuck roast from The Minimalist Kitchen and turn it into something entirely new, a Butternut Bánh Mì Pizza. It’s also a game of emptying out the fridge completely by Sunday. I seem to be winning this week.


what to make with leftover beef


In parenthood, they tell you to turn things like cleaning or brushing teeth into a game instead of a fight. Trickery, you know? It works on adults, too. Especially adults straddling dinnertime and deadlines, grocery budgets and aging produce, early spring and late winter. And it tastes like a Butternut Bánh Mì Pizza. But don’t tell anyone you made it from leftovers.


Butternut Bánh Mì Pizza slice from The Faux Martha







Butternut Bánh Mì Pizza












Print

shopping list










Yields

varies

   
adjust servings













This is one of those non-recipes. Use this recipe as a guide. Start with your favorite homemade or store-bought pizza crusts, top with olive oil, cheese, prepared beef. Then garnish with all the traditional Bánh Mì toppings. I like to make this pizza when all the ingredients are present in the fridge, when I have leftover butternut squash, pickled radishes, and a roast. Otherwise, this can be a bit clunky to make in one sitting.






Ingredients


Pizza Crust







Use your favorite homemade or store-bought recipes


Bánh Mì Beef





3/4

c. leftover cooked beef*



1

tbsp. soy sauce



1

tbsp. water



1

clove minced garlic





drizzle of honey


General Toppings







olive oil





shredded mozzarella cheese


Bánh Mì Toppings







Butternut Chipotle Sauce





Quick-Pickled Radishes





thinly sliced jalapeño





sliced green onions





roughly chopped cilantro





lime wedges






Instructions

Make pizza crust of your choice. Try the quick, crispy recipe in this 72-hour recipe.


Make bánh mì beef. Into a small sauce pan or skillet, add all the beef ingredients over medium heat. Cook until heated through, about 3 minutes.


Assemble pizza. Brush the entire crust generously with olive oil and coat with mozzarella. Sprinkle beef over pizza. Bake until bubbly according to pizza crust recipe instructions.


Top with remaining bánh mì toppings, garnishing as desired. Squirt or drizzle generously with butternut sauce. Serve hot and squeeze with lime.








Notes

*Feel free to use leftover pulled chicken or pork. I used the Humble Chuck Roast recipe in The Faux Martha.

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 29, 2019 07:00
No comments have been added yet.


Melissa Coleman's Blog

Melissa  Coleman
Melissa Coleman isn't a Goodreads Author (yet), but they do have a blog, so here are some recent posts imported from their feed.
Follow Melissa  Coleman's blog with rss.