Hurricane Pizza

The past couple of weeks have been pretty eventful here in South Florida. We were barely missed by that hulking behemoth Katrina at the turn of September, and just this past Monday and Tuesday all of Miami-Dade and Broward counties were effectively shut down in preparation for Hurricane Rita, which luckily proved just to be an ugly tropical storm, but which is now barreling forth toward Texas at Category 5 force.
So it's been relatively difficult to think about food creatively, or even shop for bare-necessities food, throughout the hurricane-preparedness frenzies. Monday at noon, after Miami-Dade County announced the closure of its facilities, my office shut down, and as a foolhardy group of my co-workers made its way to have a celebratory lunch at Chili's (witness the peculiar spirit and character of the native Miamian), I packed myself into the S bus and made my way home to prepare. Stopped at CVS, which was nearly deserted, to pick up some meds and batteries, but figured water and electrical-outage food could wait until my mother was able to leave her office and take me along with her to Publix. The early-hours ghost-town CVS totally misled me.
Publix was an evil jungle at 4:30 p.m. when my mother and I set out to forage for supplies. Actually, the two Miami Beach Publixes were inaccessible, parking lots full and waited on by snaking lines of cars. A causeway and some 40 blocks away, the Downtown Publix was crawling with tightly-packed cranky people grabbing the closest thing, the darndest thing, anything within reach -- we're talking frosted cupcakes, boxes upon boxes of cereal (to be eaten, in the event of an outage, how? à la Ice Cube in Friday, with water?), ready-made hot dishes... Mom and I got the hell out of there and walked across the street to my old friend CVS, where I got the following crucial hurricane supplies:
- toilet paper
- Oreo cookies
- 6 one-liter bottles of Aquafina
- graham crackers
Anyway, so Rita passed through without much fanfare after all. Monday night, buried in our little studio apartment, we lived off of my mom's meatball stew (previously frozen and delivered in Tupperware) and the aforementioned Oreos; and Tuesday we braved the gusty, wet outer rings and made our way to the Van Dyke for overcooked calamari, gigantic comfort-food burgers, and the most gargantuan brownie sundaes ever recorded in the books (at least in mine). So we've completely been avoiding taking on the responsibility of food for several days now, which likewise reflects on the state of our fridge (poor, malnourished).
So tonight I decided to pull together a few odds and ends and throw them together onto a whole-wheat pizza crust in a nod to resourcefulness in the face of hardship, hurricane hardship, and laziness. The outcome is conveniently, alluringly pictured above.
While I George-grilled a chicken breast brushed with oil and aux herbes de Provence, topped the pizza crust with a store-bought red wine marinara (bertolli, not bad for prefab), slices of fresh water-packed mozzarella, dollops of ricotta and goat cheese, sundried tomatoes, fresh spinach, and manzanilla olives. When the chicken was cooked through, I cut it into small chunks and added it to the pizza. I sprinkled all toppings with grated Parmigiano-Romano cheese, herbes, and drops of olive oil, and slid the pizza into the oven at 450°F for about 15 minutes. The combination of toppings was delicious (fresh basil arranged on top just before serving would have capped off the experience, but none was to be had), but the pizza base was a big disappointment. The crust was chewy and rubbery all around, rather than being crisp on the outside and tenderly flaky inside, and the whole-wheat taste was overpowering and gluey. I definitely don't recommend, and I still strive for the heights of dough-crafting and pizza-making that characterize Spris. But that's a food review for another time.
I leave you heavy-lidded and with a belly full of hurricane pizza. Mmmm.





