Pizza Party

The Most Quintessentially Portland Pizza Toppings

You knew Mama Lil’s was going to be on this list, right?

By Brooke Jackson-Glidden and Alex Frane September 24, 2025 Published in the Fall 2025 issue of Portland Monthly

Sure, Portland’s pizzerias fire plenty of plain old pepperoni pies and true-to-form margheritas. But a few Oregonian standbys have become their own kind of classic: Portland-pickled peppers, house-fermented hot honey, spring goodies freshly yoinked from the ground. Below, a tour of some of the city’s most Portland pizza toppings, and where you can find them.


Hot honey

Spotted at: Pizza Kat, Red Sauce Pizza, No Saint

This fermentation-fueled city overflows with heat seekers, so hot honey holds court at condiment stations within several Portland pizzerias. A handful make their own, like Pizza Kat and Red Sauce; others lean on the industry standard, New York–made (and Brooklyn pizzeria–popularized) Mike’s Hot Honey.

Mama Lil’s Peppers

Spotted at: Pizzeria Otto, Apizza Scholls, Life of Pie

Chefs adore these Portland-pickled Hungarian Goathorns, folding them into aioli or slapping them on breakfast sandwiches. Pizza is no exception. The peppers are a common compatriot of fennel sausage or cured meats like soppressata. Real pepperheads and pizza freaks add them to pies with pineapple and pepperoni.

Wild Oregon mushrooms

Spotted at: Grana, Lovely’s Fifty Fifty, Paladin Pie

Oregon’s dense, damp forests have attracted mushroom foragers and truffle hunters for as long as people have lived here, and every chef in town has a dog-eared copy of All the Rain Promises and More. Mushrooms on pizza go beyond the button in Portland, as pizzaiolos load pies with morels, oysters, and Oregon’s state mushroom, the golden chanterelle—depending on the season.

Green garlic

Spotted at: Gracie’s Apizza, Lovely’s Fifty Fifty, Pizza Thief

Wander a farmers market in spring or early summer and you’re sure to come across green garlic, an early-harvest version of the allium that resembles a scallion with a larger bulb. Lighter, brighter, and milder than your standard husky head, green garlic gets blitzed into olive oil or shaved thin before it appears on Portland pizzas.

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