Bacon, Apple, & Sweet Potato Pizza Is On This Weekend’s “Cozy Night In” Menu

Let’s get something straight: pizza is for all seasons. But there’s no denying that the most traditional versions feature all the produce stars of summer: tomato and basil or peach and pesto? Delicious, yes, but not at all what I’m craving for the fall months. So, now that we’re a ways into October, it’s the perfect time to roll out the bacon, apple, and sweet potato pizza I’ve been perfecting for y’all.

If you’ve hung around here for a while, you know that I’m kind of into pizza, and very into experimenting with unconventional toppings. This one features sweet potatoes (quite possibly the world’s most perfect vegetable, IMHO), sliced thinly and roasted like yummy “chips,” plus thinly sliced apples, crispy bacon, pretty red onions, and that fried crispy sage that will be your new addiction. It all comes together for an autumnal pizza topping combo that’s a little decadent and a lot delicious, and I know you’re gonna love it. So, let’s grab our dough and go!

How to Assemble Your Pizza

Let’s start at the beginning: my easy homemade pizza dough recipe. I’ve made the same one for the past 10 years, with just a couple of small updates along the way. Usually, I have a ball of dough in the freezer, which I thaw in the fridge overnight, and then let rest on the counter for a couple of hours before it’s time to stretch. You want to get all the chill off of it so that the dough is perfectly pliable, without tearing.

Next, it’s time to stretch. Stretching your pizza dough, as opposed to rolling it out, allows you to form that delicious, chewy crust around the edges and allows me to create more of a round pizza shape. I follow the stretching technique described in the Gjelina cookbook:

“With your fingertips, punch the air out of the dough and press your fingers into the center and extend outward to shape the mass into a small disk. Continue to press your fingers and palm down on the center of the dough while turning with your other hand, pushing out the dough from the center but maintaining an airy rim around the perimeter. Continue stretching out the dough on the work surface with your hand by spreading your fingers as far as you can as you turn the dough… You are done stretching the dough when it is 10 to 12 inches in diameter and thin enough so that you can read a newspaper through it.”

Don’t forget to use plenty of flour when kneading and stretching your delicious dough!

Tips for Making the Best Sweet Potato Pizza

Yes, a sweet potato pizza is a bit unusual, and the key to keeping it flavor-packed and not at all heavy is to cut your sweet potato slices super thin, preferably on a mandoline. I also echoed those super thin slices by using my mandoline to cut my red onion and apple paper thin. The end result is a pizza with layers of fall flavor and a surprising combination in every bite. Just add creamy goat cheese and mozzarella, and crispy, smoky bacon and fried sage, and we’ve basically moved into fall heaven territory. Don’t be alarmed by the lack of pizza sauce—you won’t even notice the difference with all of the flavors going on here.

How to Make Fried Sage

Now for the pièce de résistance: fried sage leaves. I make these so frequently through the fall months that I might as well have a pan of hot olive oil going on the stove at all times. These dress up a plate of pasta, roasted butternut squash, or a whole roast chicken in one fell swoop, and they couldn’t be simpler. Here’s how to make fried sage:

  • In a small sauté pan, add enough olive oil to cover the bottom of the pan by 1/2″. Heat over medium-high until it sizzles when you add a drop of water.
  • Carefully place sage leaves in a single layer in the oil. Fry for 1 minute, then use a slotted spoon to transfer the sage to a paper towel-lined plate. Top with another paper towel to press out excess oil. Eat as soon as possible while it’s still crispy and hot!

The Cheesy Topping

There’s something about goat cheese that feels very fall to me. Perhaps because it’s such a delightful complement to apples, pears, and winter squash. Here, it plays perfectly with all the cozy flavors. Even Adam (not the biggest goat cheese fan) didn’t take issue with it since the combination with creamy mozzarella cheese tamps down the strength of its flavor.

And there you have it: the bacon, apple, and sweet potato pizza I’ll be devouring through all of October and beyond. Yes, you can use a store-bought pizza crust and bake to keep prep time low, and yes, you can use a gluten-free crust or vegan cauliflower crust if that works better for you. As I’ve shared before, I’m a pizza lover through and through, and there are very few things you could do to a pizza that I wouldn’t love.

Can’t wait to hear if you give this one a try, and be sure to rate and review, and tag us @camillestyles on Instagram so we can see your version. Speaking of which, we need an official Camille Styles Pizza hashtag! Any suggestions?

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Description

This sweet potato pizza with bacon, apple, and fried sage leaves is bursting with fall flavors. It’s an autumn pizza made for cozy nights.


  • 1 ball pizza dough (enough to make 10 – 12″ pizza)
  • 1 large clove garlic, minced
  • 1 tablespoon butter, melted
  • 1 tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil, plus more for frying
  • 1 small sweet potato, peeled
  • 1 apple, peeled
  • 1/2 red onion, peel discarded
  • 2 or 3 slices bacon, cooked and crumbled
  • 4 ounces mozzarella
  • 4 ounces goat cheese crumbles
  • 12 sage leaves
  • flaky salt, like Maldon

  1. Preheat pizza stone on the bottom rack of a 500 F oven for at least 20 minutes.
  2. Make garlic butter by combining minced garlic, melted butter, and olive oil. Set aside.
  3. On a mandoline, thinly slice sweet potato, apple, and red onion. Set aside.
  4. On a well-floured pizza peel, stretch your pizza dough to a 10 – 12″ round. (Read how to stretch dough above, or watch me do it here.)
  5. Spread garlic butter in a thin layer on top of your pizza, evenly distributing the garlic. Top with bacon, sweet potato, apple, and a few red onion slices.
  6. Tear mozzarella and toss over the ingredients, then sprinkle on goat cheese crumbles.
  7. Quickly open the oven door, and slide your pizza onto the hot pizza stone—work fast so that the oven loses as little heat as possible. Cook for 10 minutes.
  8. Meanwhile, make fried sage: In a small sauté pan, add enough olive oil to cover the bottom of the pan by 1/2″. Heat over medium-high until it sizzles when you add a drop of water.
  9. Carefully place sage leaves in a single layer in the oil. Fry for 1 minute, then use a slotted spoon to transfer the sage to a paper towel-lined plate. Top with another paper towel to press out excess oil. 
  10. When the pizza is golden brown on the edges and the cheese is melted, use your pizza peel to slide it out of the oven.
  11. Slice into wedges, then top your pizza with fried sage leaves, a drizzle of olive oil, and flaky salt. Eat!

 

 

Need Crust Now? We Tried 8 Store-Bought Pizza Doughs and This Was the Clear Winner

As they say, birds of a feather flock together, and on this team, we are all self-professed obsessives when it comes to all things pizza. What’s not to love? Pizza is a love letter to the seasons, the ultimate entertaining recipe, and a warm hug on a Friday, pajama-clad movie night. And when you add the best store-bought pizza dough to the mix, well, things only get easier (and in turn, better).

While I have my favorite pizza places to order from and there’s nothing like the tactile pleasure of making your own pizza dough, a shortcut option is always welcome. Don’t get me wrong: On Saturday nights when I have all the time in the world, it’s wonderfully satisfying to pinch dough between your fingers and top swirls of sauce with all the cheese and freshly-chopped ingredients.

But when I’m in a pinch and need to cut some corners, ready-made and easy-to-prep pizza dough from the store is convenient to have on hand. Whether it’s a box of dry mix to keep in the pantry or fresh dough that you can freeze and thaw as needed, we tried ten different pizza doughs, ranked them all, and crowned the best store-bought pizza dough to keep on hand when the craving strikes.

Featured image by Michelle Nash.

Image by Michelle Nash

Ranking Guidelines

  • Flavor: For our taste testing team, we said a good pizza crust should have that fermented yeasty flavor that is well salted so it doesn’t just taste like bland flour.
  • Texture: Chewy over bready.
  • Ease of Use: The whole point of a ready made or easy to assemble crust should be that it’s ready in a cinch and makes our life easier.
  • Good Pizza Test: Does the crust work well when topped with sauce and toppings.

Testing Process

  1. This taste-off was slightly different from previous ones in that with pizza, we generally like fresh and hot pizza. Each crust was made fresh and tasted right away with initial notes taken, then tasted again with all finished crusts.
  2. The other callout is that most pizza crusts usually come with toppings. For this taste off, we made half of the dough topped with sauce and cheese to test the dough’s ability to stand up to additional moisture, as well as baking half of the crust plain on its own to focus on stand-alone flavor and texture.

Keep scrolling to find out the winners of this taste-off!

The Best Store-Bought Pizza Dough, Ranked

When it came to the results, one thing was clear: the fresh dough and refrigerated dough options greatly outranked the dry mixes on both texture and flavor. While dry mix gave us the chance to make a crust from scratch, there were a lot of variables that could impact the final product from a dry mixed dough.

We didn’t love the slightly oily flavor on this one, and the texture reminded us more of a roll-out pie dough than a pizza crust. Our tasters thought this might be good to make a quiche with, but not a pizza.

  • Texture: Pie dough
  • Where to buy: Walmart, Kroger, Sam’s Club
  • Average price: $3.50

This dry mix pizza dough ended up being more bready in texture than a chewy dough. The flavor was also reminiscent of white bread more than pizza. Fine if you’re making bread, but alas, that’s for another taste-off to come.

  • Texture: Bready
  • Where to buy: Amazon, Kroger, Meijer
  • Average price: $1.29

In full transparency, I grew up with the ready-made Boboli pizza crusts, so I knew what we were getting into. Most tasters didn’t enjoy the slightly tangy and savory flavor as they felt it was overpowering and too forward when you consider more delicate toppings. However, if we toasted this one in the oven and slathered butter on it, we wouldn’t complain.

  • Texture: Chewy, good air pockets
  • Where to buy: H-E-B, Walmart, Kroger, Jewel Osco
  • Average price: $3.99

While this ready-made refrigerated dough baked up fine, the texture was slightly crispy and a little chewy on the edges. The flavor felt like we were eating Pillsbury crescent rolls and bread dough rather than pizza. I mean, we love the pop tube crescent rolls, but they’re not quite pizza.

  • Texture: Slightly crispy, chewy edges
  • Where to buy: Target, Jewel Osco, Walmart, Meijer
  • Average price: $4.59

We had high hopes for this dough because of the use of beer in place of water in mixing together. While this dry mix still had more chew than some of the others and a nice flavor to it that leaned yeasty, it was still just slightly on the bready side for us. Overall good, but might want to tweak the prep method to ensure chew.

  • Texture: Chewy, but leaned bready
  • Where to buy: Whole Foods
  • Average price: $5.49

Among the dry mixes, Betty Crocker just slightly edged out the competition based on the crispy edges and chewy interiors. The dough had a few air bubbles that we liked our slices, but what kept the dry mixes like this one from reaching the top was again leaning slightly bready. We did have several tasters say they would keep a pouch of this mix in their pantry for just-in-case pizza nights though!

  • Texture: Crispy edges, chewy interiors, and good air bubbles. Slightly bready.
  • Where to buy: H-E-B, Amazon, Jewel Osco, Meijer
  • Average price: $1.54

2. Trader Joe’s

It was a close call between our winner and TJ’s fresh dough. The dough was very chewy with nice air pockets like the ones you’d get at a restaurant pizza oven. While the flavor was good, it wasn’t as yeasty and flavorful as our winner, but still a great option to have on hand for pizza night. This pizza dough held up nicely to the sauce and toppings as well.

  • Texture: Chewy, good air pockets, restaurant-quality.
  • Where to buy: Trader Joe’s
  • Average price: $4

This was a grand slam, everyone-on-the-same-page decision. While there was a little discussion between the WF and TJ’s ready-made dough, what sent Whole Foods over the edge was the flavor and texture. This dough had the most fermented pizza dough flavor that we all enjoyed while also having extra texture from the use of whole grains. You can find it in the bakery section or ready-made food area of your Whole Foods. It held up nicely to the sauce and we loved the chewy crust of each slice. If you’re going to have one pizza dough in your freezer for emergency pizza nights, make it this one.

  • Texture: Chewy, with additional crunch thanks to the use of whole grains.
  • Where to buy: Whole Foods
  • Average price: $4.99
Image by Michelle Nash

Pizza Recipes to Try

Looking for inspiration for your next pizza night? Here are a few favorites I’ll be trying with our winning store-bought pizza dough:

Peach, Pesto, and Balsamic Pizza

Bacon, Apple, and Sweet Potato Pizza

Caramelized Onion and Prosciutto Pizza

Butternut Squash and Arugula Pizza

This post was originally published on October 3, 2022, and has since been updated.

Taste-Off: The Best Pizza Crust