Cauliflower Pizza Crust

4.99 from 170 votes
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This simple healthy cauliflower pizza crust recipe is so delicious and crispy, you will never believe it could possibly be so good for you!

Easy 5 Ingredient Cauliflower Pizza Recipe
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The best cauliflower pizza crust

If you somehow still have not tried making your own cauliflower pizza, this super easy recipe is definitely one you should save.

Or better yet, add it to the menu for a healthy dinner tonight.

The best part is, unlike many low carb pizza crust recipes, this 5 ingredient cauliflower pizza crust can easily be picked up without falling apart!

The recipe includes options for low calorie, oil free, egg free, vegan, gluten free, sugar free, dairy free, flourless, paleo, Whole30, low carb, weight loss, and keto diets.

Here are over 25 healthy Cauliflower Recipes

How To Make Cauliflower Pizza Crust

Easy homemade cauliflower pizza

As someone who really loves carbs, I never thought that I would ever get on the cauliflower pizza crust bandwagon.

Taking my beloved doughy Italian pizza crust and replacing it with a vegetable?

No thank you. I wanted no part of this trend.

For months, I completely ignored the cauliflower-for-carbs idea sweeping the internet.

I tuned out whenever a friend would rave about making low carb Cauliflower Rice, cauliflower breadsticks, or Cauliflower Tacos and how they were life changing.

But as time went on and the cauliflower trend only seemed to grow stronger, curiosity finally got the better of me. I had to know what all the hype was about.

I gave in and tried my hand at a plant based, homemade cauliflower pizza.

And I fell in love.

Readers also love this Coconut Curry

Homemade Cauliflower Pizza Crust
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Step by step healthy recipe video

Above, watch the vegan cauliflower pizza crust recipe video

Cauliflower pizza crust health benefits

Even before you add any toppings whatsoever, this tasty cauliflower crust is packed with vitamins and nutrition.

Each slice of pizza packs in three grams of fiber, two and a half grams of protein, and over fifty percent of the RDA for Vitamin C.

This is just for one slice. Who ever stops at just one slice of pizza?

The entire cauliflower pizza is under 300 calories. It makes a great personal pan pizza to enjoy with garlic bread or alongside a salad for a healthy dinner.

Vegan Cauliflower Pizza Crust Recipe

Low carb pizza crust ingredients

The recipe calls for just five ingredients, with no eggs and no cheese required.

You need raw cauliflower, baking powder or ground flax or chia, flour or almond meal, salt, garlic powder, water, and optional dried oregano.

Look for a head of either conventional or organic cauliflower that is mostly white, without many brown spots. Orange and purple cauliflower are fine choices as well.

It is fine to swap out the florets with raw riced cauliflower. If using cauliflower rice, measure out only three cups instead of four.

Frozen cauliflower will work as long as it is first defrosted and fully thawed. Squeeze out all excess water before proceeding with the recipe.

Flour varieties that perform well in the recipe include all purpose flour, whole grain spelt flour, oat flour, gluten free sorghum flour, or low carb almond flour.

Once you get the base recipe down, you may customize your crust by adding in different spices or seasonings, such as rosemary, thyme, turmeric, ground cinnamon, onion flakes, or dried basil.

Vegan or keto cauliflower pizza crust

The crust is already naturally vegan and added sugar free.

To turn it into a keto crust, use the almond option in the recipe. If you find yourself with leftover almond flour, make Keto Brownies or Almond Flour Banana Bread.

We have not tried substituting coconut flour but believe it should work. You will most likely need to use less, since coconut flour soaks up water like a sponge.

A few readers have reported success using coconut and other flour alternatives. Report back if you experiment.

Cauliflower Crust With Tomato Sauce

How to make cauliflower pizza

Line a long baking sheet with parchment paper, then set this sheet pan aside.

If you are using flaxmeal or ground chia seeds instead of baking powder, whisk the ground flax or chia with the water, and refrigerate for at least half an hour or overnight.

Using a sharp knife, chop the cruciferous vegetable into small florets.

Steam the cauliflower florets either in the microwave or in boiling water on the stove top until they are completely soft.

Drain fully, then let the cauliflower cool while you prepare the dry ingredients.

Stir the flour, garlic powder, salt, optional oregano, and baking powder (if using) in a small dish.

Preheat the oven to 450 degrees Fahrenheit.

Once the steamed vegetables are no longer hot, place them in a dry, clean dish towel or cheesecloth over a sink or bowl. Squeeze out as much moisture as possible. At least two thirds cup of water should come out.

Place the dried florets into a large mixing bowl. Add the one fourth cup of water or the flax mixture to the bowl.

Mash and stir very well, then add the flour mixture and stir to evenly incorporate all of the ingredients.

Use your hands to form a large ball, and place the ball on the prepared baking sheet.

If you prefer, divide the dough into three or four balls to make mini cauliflower pizzas.

Pat into a circle shape. Add a second sheet of parchment paper over top of the unbaked crust. Spread the dough with your hands or a rolling pin until it is around a fourth of an inch thick.

Peel off and discard the second sheet of parchment.

On the center rack of the oven, bake the grain free vegetable crust for twenty five minutes or until lightly brown in color with crispy edges.

Add your pizza toppings of choice. A few tasty options are included below.

Bake for an additional eight minutes to heat the toppings. Remove from the oven, slice with a pizza cutter or knife, and enjoy.

Vegetable crust topping ideas

Feel free to choose your favorite traditional pizza toppings, such as tomato sauce, mushrooms, spinach, pepperoni, and Mozzarella cheese.

Or have fun creating new fancy flavors such as avocado, barbecue, jalapeño, mac and cheese, kale chickpea, white Alfredo, or caramelized onion pizza.

Add sliced pineapple and optional bacon bits for a cauliflower Hawaiian pizza.

Or top your cooked savory pie with sliced purple potato, broccoli, corn, orange bell peppers, and roasted red peppers to make a rainbow pizza.

Feeling adventurous? Try a dessert pizza by spreading on Homemade Nutella and mini chocolate chips or peanut butter and sliced bananas.

Low Carb Keto Cauliflower Pizza Crust Recipe

Where can I buy cauliflower pizza crust?

If you do not have time to make your own, premade frozen cauliflower pizza crust is readily available at grocery stores such as Target, Walmart, Aldi, Costco (Kirkland), Wegmans, H-E-B, and Whole Foods.

Brands include Cali’flour Foods, Caulipower, Green Giant, Simple Truth, and Trader Joes.

Store bought crusts are almost instant to prepare. Just remove the frozen crust from the box and microwave or bake in the oven according to the package directions.

Many restaurants also now offer a gluten free cauliflower crust swap for regular crust, including Pizza Hut, Domino’s, and California Pizza Kitchen.

The Best Easy Cauliflower Pizza Crust Recipe

For the pizza in the photos, I added tomato sauce and Melty Vegan Mozzarella Cheese recipe from my own Hello Breakfast Cookbook.

4.99 from 170 votes

Cauliflower Pizza Crust

This healthy cauliflower pizza crust recipe is so delicious and crispy!
Prep Time: 10 minutes
Cook Time: 33 minutes
Total Time: 43 minutes
Yield: 6 slices
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Ingredients

  • 1/2 medium head cauliflower (4 cups small florets)
  • 1 1/2 tsp baking powder or 2 1/2 tbsp ground flax or chia
  • 1/4 cup water
  • 1/3 cup flour (spelt, white, oat, or almond all work)
  • 1/4 tsp garlic powder and optional 1 tsp dried oregano
  • 1/2 tsp salt

Instructions 

  • To make cauliflower pizza crust, line a baking sheet with parchment paper. If using flax or chia, whisk with the water and refrigerate for at least a half hour. Steam cauliflower florets until fall-apart soft. Drain fully. Stir the flour with the oregano, garlic, salt, and baking powder (if using). Preheat the oven to 450 F. Once cauliflower cools, place it in a clean dish towel or cheesecloth over a sink or bowl. Squeeze out as much moisture as possible. At least 2/3 cup water should come out. You want it as dry as possible. Place the dry cauliflower into a bowl and add the 1/4 cup water or the flax mixture. Mash and stir well. Stir in the flour mixture. Form into a ball or mini balls. Place on the baking sheet. Pat into a circle, then use another sheet of parchment on top and use a rolling pin or can to spread the circle to about a fourth inch thick. Take off the top sheet of parchment. Bake 25 minutes, or until the cauliflower pizza crust is lightly browned with crispy edges. Add toppings of choice. Bake an additional eight minutes. Allow to cool five minutes. Slice and enjoy!
    View Nutrition Facts

Video

Notes

Leftover cauliflower? Use it up in these popular Buffalo Cauliflower Wings.
 
Like this recipe? Leave a comment below!

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Meet Katie

Chocolate Covered Katie is one of the top 25 food websites in America, and Katie has been featured on The Today Show, CNN, Fox, The Huffington Post, and ABC’s 5 O’clock News. Her favorite food is chocolate, and she believes in eating dessert every single day.

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339 Comments

  1. Mary theresa Boudreau says:

    Hi, looks great, have you tried using frozen cauliflower? what do you think about using frozen cauliflower?

  2. Stacey says:

    May I please have the brand of Melty Vegan Mozzarella?

  3. Melissa says:

    Adaptations I made: I didn’t squeeze out all the moisture. I steamed it and then just let it cool in the strainer so it could drip dry. (I hate removing nutrients from a recipe if I can get away with it. I even save the steaming water to use in other recipes.) I used buckwheat flour. I did the flax/chia in water method (not baking powder). I had to cook it far longer. 35 min followed by 25 min and it was still too soft but held together. In future I think I would sprinkle the chia/flax onto the cooked, drained cauliflower and then mash them together and let it rest (not adding any extra water). The chia/flax should absorb the extra liquid. I would probably add 2/3 cup of buckwheat flower next time as well. And bake it 40 min for the first bake. I’m keen to try the recipe again but I’d allow a lot of extra time to do it. Great concept. I’m pretty sure other mashable veg would work too. Sweet potato/yam, carrot, beet, broccoli… Has anyone tried it?

  4. Melissa says:

    Wondering if anyone has tried coconut flour successfully? If so, what was the measurement used? I was thinking it might dry out the dough nicely and avoid needing to squeeze out the cauliflower water. Hmmm…

    1. Craig says:

      I used it for a first try and it did alright.

  5. Melinda Muyargas says:

    This was great! I only wish it said how many servings it was. For me, it made a personal size pizza. Next time, I would use a whole cauliflower to make a full size pizza!

  6. Belinda Lee says:

    I’ve tried to sign up for two free recipes each week but the I’m not a robot thing doesn’t accept my answers (we don’t have crosswalks in Australia), I’ve gone through over 10 different ‘tests’ so I’ve given up! could you please just add me to your email list? thanks Belinda
    PS I’m not a robot !

    1. CCK Media Team says:

      Hi, we are so sorry about that! No idea why it’s even asking you for those verifications! I just sent a confirmation email, so just click on the confirmation link in the email and you should be good to do. Let us know if you don’t start getting the emails next week!

  7. Tammy says:

    Can you use frozen riced cauliflower?

    1. CCK Media Team says:

      We haven’t tried, but be sure to report back if you experiment!

  8. Craig says:

    I used frozen riced and coconut flour and it was pretty tasty.

    1. Robin says:

      I am thinking to try out this recipe with coconut flour. I was wondering how much coconut flour you put in, was it less than 1/3 cup, as coconut flour absorbs more water I believe? Also did you remove the water from the cauliflower as well or just let the coconut flour soak it up? Thank you 🙂

  9. KareninStLouis says:

    How big is this crust (diameter in inches)?

  10. Loretta says:

    This was seriously delicious! I’m not a fan of cauliflower but my pizza made with this crust was very, very good and really didn’t taste like cauliflower. Of course the sauce, cheese and turkey pepperoni added a lot of flavor! I’m going to make it again but will probably start with frozen cauliflower just to save a step. Thanks for convincing me to try it!