Pizza night — without the guilt

Who doesn’t love pizza night? Moms love taking a break while serving a meal that everyone agrees on. Many dads consider pizza a favorite food. Children seemingly never tire of it. Plus, it’s budget friendly. But there’s often that nagging worry that pizza is a “junk food.” Is it?

“With the right choices, a weekly pizza night can certainly fit into a healthy family meal plan,” reassures Janice Newell Bissex, a Boston-area dietician and co-author of “No Whine with Dinner: 150 Healthy, Kid-Tested Recipes from The Meal Makeover Moms.”

Consider these tips for ordering up a healthful pizza:

• Go for thin. A thin crust has fewer carbs and calories than a deep dish or stuffed crust. A few pizza parlors are even starting to offer a whole wheat crust.

• Eat less (or eliminate) meat. Pepperoni is consistently the number one favorite meat topping. Unfortunately, it’s loaded with grease and salt. If it isn’t “pizza” without pepperoni, ask for half of the usual amount to be placed on the pie. Ditto for sausage. Instead, opt for grilled poultry, shrimp, Canadian bacon, or ham. Or, replace the meat with meaty mushrooms, like portobellos. You’ll hardly notice the difference.

• Order vegetable toppings with abandon. Here, the sky’s the limit. Load up on black or green olives, red or green pepper, onion, artichoke hearts, spinach, sliced or sun-dried tomatoes, fresh basil or broccoli. Aim for at least three veggies on a pie. They add bulk, flavor, and nutrients, making a small portion more satisfying.

• Get saucy. Most pizzas contain sauce, while some contain chunks of tomatoes. Either way, enjoy them guilt free. The lycopene in whole tomatoes is more available in tomato chunks and sauce. Herbs and garlic add antioxidants along with their flavor.

• Lighten up the cheese. While a good source of protein, calcium, and potassium, pizza’s cheese also contains saturated fat. Since many pizza preparers layer it on thick, it’s easy to overdo it.

“If the cheese completely covers the top of the pizza, consider asking your pizza guy to go light on the cheese next time,” suggests Bissex. At the table, sprinkle on grated Parmesan or Romano cheese. It’s flavorful in small amounts and even provides that fifth taste of “umami,” or deliciousness.

• Fill up on salad. Bissex’s family often starts with a salad or vegetable-based soup to take the edge off everyone’s hunger. Studies show that people who eat a high-volume, low-calorie food like salad — or a broth-based soup — as an appetizer, eat fewer calories overall.

Your own pizza parlor

How hard is it to make a pizza at home? Not very. You can pick up a pre-baked crust or fresh or frozen dough, and with a little planning, you can bake your own pizzas. Invest in a pizza stone and peel for best results.

“[My] pizza may be made from dough I make in my breadmaker. But on days when there’s time constraints, I’ll add toppings — diced tomatoes, sauteed spinach, onions, and mushrooms — to a frozen cheese pizza,” explains Camille Prindle, a suburban Chicago-based mother of four, who prefers baking her own pizza.

Bissex concurs. “My girls love pesto pizza topped with sauteed onions, red bell pepper, and spinach. My husband and I like to also add artichoke hearts and mushrooms. To get your kids excited about all those veggies, set up a make-your-own-pizza bar, and then let the kids add whichever toppings whet their appetite.”

Pizza can be an indulgent meal with an overload of calories, saturated fat, and sodium — or it can be a healthful meal that’s “just right.”

Christine M. Palumbo, RD is an award-winning Naperville-based dietitian and mother of three who loves a good quality restaurant pizza. She also enjoys whipping up a totally from-scratch pizza from time to time. Follow her on Facebook at Christine Palumbo Nutrition.

Sausage, Mushroom and Cannellini Pesto Pizza

Makes 10 servings

Ingredients

1 15-ounce can cannellini beans, drained and rinsed

2 tablespoons prepared basil pesto

1 tablespoon lemon juice

1 tablespoon water

Kosher salt and freshly-ground black pepper

1 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil

8 ounces mushrooms, coarsely chopped

1 12-ounce package chicken sausage (use your favorite flavor), casings removed and the meat crumbled

2 12-inch pre-made pizza crusts

2 cups shredded part-skim mozzarella cheese

Directions: Place the beans, pesto, lemon juice, and water in the bowl of a food processor and process until smooth and creamy. Season with salt and pepper to taste and set aside. Preheat the oven to 450°F (or the temperature indicated on your prepared pizza crust package). Heat the oil in a large, nonstick skillet over medium heat. Add the mushrooms and cook, stirring frequently, until softened, about 7 minutes. Add the crumbled sausage and saute until fully cooked, about five minutes. (The time will vary depending on whether the sausage was precooked or not.) Spread the bean puree evenly over the two pizza crusts. Top each with the mushroom and sausage mixture. Top evenly with the cheese (1 cup per pizza crust). Bake according to pizza crust package directions and until the cheese melts. Cut each pizza into five slices and serve.

Tip: The bean puree and mushroom-sausage mixture can be refrigerated or frozen for later use, if you only want to make one pizza at a time.

Nutrition information: (1 slice): 320 calories, 12 g fat (4.5 g saturated), 600 mg sodium, 33 g carbohydrate, 3 g fiber, 20 g protein, 25 percent calcium, 15 percent iron

Used with permission by “No Whine with Dinner: 150 Healthy, Kid-Tested Recipes from The Meal Makeover Moms” (M3 Press, 2011).

Relevant Directory Listings

See More

FlexSchool

<p>Our mission is to provide an engaging learning experience in a supportive environment where students are free to explore their passions, embrace their challenges and find a community of teachers and friends who understand and accept them as they are.</p> <p>Academics:</p> <p>To meet the unique needs of gifted and 2e learners – students who may have co-occurring learning challenges along with their gifts – we provide a gifted-level curriculum with built-in scaffolding, developed by credentialed experts in both gifted education and special education, as well as subject-area experts. Small, discussion-based classes ensure our students can engage in stimulating conversation with intellectual peers while receiving individualized attention and support.</p> <p>Talent Development and Experiential Learning:</p> <p>Central to our program is our strengths-based, interest-based approach to learning. All FlexSchool students pursue personal passion projects and choose from a diverse menu of enrichment activities and electives designed to support exploration and talent development. Our signature FlexFriday experiential learning program provides essential connections between classroom learning and the real world.</p> <p>Executive Functioning and Learning Support:</p> <p>All FlexSchool students have access to an extensive range of accommodations, including breaks as needed, daily executive functioning support, flexible seating, extended time, assistive technology and more. Learning Specialist support is available on every FlexSchool campus.</p> <p>Social-Emotional Learning and School Counseling:</p> <p>Our caring team of certified school counselors, under the guidance of a consulting psychologist, provide robust social-emotional learning and social pragmatics programming. Students are welcome to visit the school counselor at any time – no appointment necessary. FlexSchool counselors also maintain a collaborative relationship with parents and outside providers.</p> <p>Rolling admissions:</p> <p>We understand that student needs don’t always neatly align with the academic calendar, so FlexSchool admits students on a rolling basis. To learn more, join FlexSchool founder Jacqui Byrne live via Zoom for a Virtual Open House. To receive a call from our admissions team, inquire online, email us at [email protected] or call 908-279-0787.</p>

Advantage Care Health Centers

<p><span id="docs-internal-guid-db4b2459-7fff-adc1-4601-75b3690fc174"><span style="font-size: 11pt; font-family: Arial; color: #434343; background-color: #ffffff; font-variant-ligatures: normal; font-variant-east-asian: normal; font-variant-position: normal; vertical-align: baseline; white-space: pre-wrap;">Advantage Care now offers in-person and Tele-Health services to all new and current patients through their secure online platform visit: </span><a style="text-decoration: none;" href="https://advantagecare.doxy.me/"><span style="font-size: 11pt; font-family: Arial; color: #434343; background-color: #ffffff; font-variant-ligatures: normal; font-variant-east-asian: normal; font-variant-position: normal; vertical-align: baseline; white-space: pre-wrap;">https://advantagecare.doxy.me</span></a><span style="font-size: 11pt; font-family: Arial; color: #434343; background-color: #ffffff; font-variant-ligatures: normal; font-variant-east-asian: normal; font-variant-position: normal; vertical-align: baseline; white-space: pre-wrap;"> to see how it works.  Tele-Health Services for Children and Adults include the Following: Primary Care, Psychotherapy, Psychiatry.  Advantage Care continues to take proper measures to keep their patients, community, and staff safe during the pandemic. Advantage Care Health Centers are Long Island’s premier Federally Qualified Health Centers. They accept Medicaid, Medicaid Managed Care Plans, Medicare. The mission of their centers is to provide the highest quality comprehensive primary, dental, mental, and behavioral health care services.  They offer these services to all members of the community with a commitment to those who might otherwise be excluded from the health care system, while remaining cost-effective and efficient. Advantage Care specializes in providing services to children and adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities.</span></span></p>

Blüm Autism Study

<p><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: Arial;" data-sheets-value="{" data-sheets-userformat="{">The Blüm Study is currently enrolling children aged 3–8 with autism. Visit blumstudy.com for more information and to find a study location near you!<br /></span></p>