Saturday, May 19, 2012

Eggcellent!



 Recently, I've been trying out a bunch of brunch recipes in order to prepare for the summer sleepovers and the late blinky mornings where no one wants to do anything, ESPECIALLY stand in front of a hot stove. Additionally, I've been seeing a lot of baked breakfast recipes and they have intrigued me. I decided to start with the basics before I got adventurous, the quiche & the frittata. I'm not going to get too bogged down with the cooking technicalities for these dishes as they are pretty readily available.



The Quiche

I looked at a few recipes prior to starting my quiche and I decided that I wasn't going to use heavy cream and instead substituted for half skim and half whole milk. I didn't want to deviate too far from the original on my first go around.
In the interest of saving some time, I also used one of those prepared frozen pie crusts that they sell in the supermarket. I knew I was going to make this for dinner and so, I had it defrosting in the refrigerator while I was at work. 

The cooking time for this was 40 minutes at 350 degrees F. My oven tends to run a bit warmer so I opted for the lower temperature. I used tomato, spinach, and crumbled fennel sausage with parmesan cheese  as the filling.



The Frittata!

I decided to use spinach, chopped up baby asparagus, mushrooms and asiago cheese in my frittata. This was SO easy to make and I'm already plotting a leek and potato one in the future. I had some left overs with this and I sliced them up and had them for lunch with a salad. Delicious!

Side note; I didn't have an issue with it, but some of the places I found recipes using spinach in a frittata warn about overcooking and undercooking the spinach. For obvious reasons you don't want the spinach raw, but, if you over cook the spinach you run the risk of all of it settling at the bottom.

Also, I didn't add any cream to mine. I did however add a splash of skim milk and whipped the egg whites separately before mixing in the yolks. I wanted this to be on the lighter side and it seemed to work.

After it was all said and done I found that I personally preferred the Frittata. I preferred it's texture and I found it to be less dense than the quiche. Plus, it's just so much fun to say. Frittata!

Monday, May 14, 2012

Mother's Day Dinner

I decided to make something light for dinner for Mom as we had already had a pretty heavy lunch. So, I limited it to kebabs, sangria and some cheese and crackers.

Sangria:
Cut up fruit- I used lemons, oranges, and some pears.
One bottle of red wine, in this case chianti
One can of diet ginger ale
Two packets of Splenda

From right to left, drunken goat cheese with whole grain crackers. Then sweet potato crisps with goat cheese and smoked salmon. I thought that the goat cheese would be too plain by itself so I mixed in some herbs de provence (savory, marjoram, rosemary, basil, thyme, lavender, and sage).

Kebabs- standard issue.

I did a white wine glaze on the chicken and used some of the chianti to glaze the beef while they were on the grill. Salt, pepper, garlic powder done!