Saturday, November 29, 2025

A Special Quiche


Sweetie and I were blessed this evening with a visit from our middle grandson and his sweetie as they made their way back home after spending Thanksgiving with his Mom. Because they had been on the road all day and still have many miles to go tomorrow, I wanted to give them a dinner that would be enjoyable but also relatively quick. A quiche that was baked this afternoon was just the thing.  It was after dark when we sat down to eat and I was only able to get a photo of the last piece - we really enjoyed it! - so it isn't the best photo set, but it gives you an idea of how it looked.

I love baking quiche and have made many in the past. This one was special because it was for them. It had a lot of great ingredients including chicken thighs that Sweetie had grilled yesterday, cooked onions and bacon, lots of Swiss cheese, some spinach because it goes so well with the other ingredients, and the usual egg custard that is classic in a quiche.

I used the Pillsbury pie dough circle that is so easy and tastes so good, blind baking it to a golden brown on the edges and pale gold in the interior. Of course you can always make you own pie crust or even buy one that is in a pie pan and frozen, but I find the Pillsbury one tastes fine and is super easy.

Because there is a lot of filling, I used a deep dish pie pan and rolled the crust circle out a bit so there was dough to turn under and crimp before baking. I used a pound of lentils as the pie weights, cool them after baking, and keep them for the next pie shell I need to blind bake.

Feel free to change out the filling ingredients. I've made this with chard or asparagus instead of spinach, with different cheeses, with mushrooms (which I cook with the onions), with ham instead of the chicken and so on. Keep the proportions about the same and you, too, can have a special quiche!



Quiche with Chicken, Spinach, Swiss Cheese and Bacon


1 9-inch pie shell, blind baked at 400 degrees F for 10-12 minutes (recipe follows or use refrigerated pre-made pie dough circles)

1/2 yellow onion, peeled and cut into ¼ inch dice

1 tablespoon olive oil
3 slices bacon, cut into small pieces and cooked until crisp, then drained

1 cup cooked chicken, diced in 1-inch dice
½ cup cooked, and drained chopped spinach, frozen and thawed OK
1 ½ cups Swiss cheese, cut into ¼ inch dice
3 eggs (or equivalent egg substitute)
1 ½ cups evaporated milk (I used non-fat) or light cream
¼ teaspoon salt
dash pepper
Dash nutmeg

Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.

 In a large skillet sauté the onion in the olive oil over medium heat, stirring often, until translucent or slightly browned, about 5 minutes.

Sprinkle the bottom of the pie shell with the sautéed onion, bacon, chicken pieced, drained spinach, and Swiss cheese, distributing evenly. Set aside.

In a bowl, beat the eggs lightly, then add the milk and beat with a fork to combine, add the salt, pepper and nutmeg and beat with a fork or whisk to combine.

Pour the egg/milk mixture over the ingredients in the pie shell. Place on a baking sheet and put in the preheated oven and bake 30-45 minutes, or until set and lightly browned. Cool for 10 minutes before cutting to serve.
Serves 6-8

Pastry Pie Shell

1 cup all-purpose flour
¼ teaspoon salt
1/3 cup chilled butter
1 egg, lightly beaten
2 tablespoons ice water
1 teaspoon lemon juice (optional)

Mix the flour and salt in a bowl. Cut in the butter with a pastry blender, or two knives, until particles the size of dried peas are formed.

In a small bowl mix together the egg, ice water and lemon juice (if using). Sprinkle over the flour mixture and toss with a fork lightly. Do not over mix. Gather the particles together in a ball. Wrap airtight and chill in the freezer for 10 minutes. Roll out with a rolling pin on a floured surface until large enough to fill a 9 inch pie pan with some overlap.

Fit into a 9 inch pie pan, smooth to fit, trip excess , tuck edges under and crimp as for any pie crust. Prick lightly all over the surface with a fork. Freeze 10 minutes. Remove from freezer and cover with a circle of parchment paper. Fill the paper with beans or pie weights (blind baking the crust).

Bake at 400 degrees F for 10 – 12 minutes. Cool slightly. Remove and save the beans or pie weights. Fill with filling as called for in recipes needing a pie shell. 

Friday, November 28, 2025

A Pie And A Mistake



 For those of you who have been dear readers for a while, here is another post where I show just how flawed I am. If you are new here that might surprise you since lots of social media is about showing how perfect you and your life are.

The latest version of how flawed I am revolves around the Thanksgiving pie. I decided to make a pumpkin pie since

1) I love pumpkin pie

2) Sweetie loves any pie, and

3) It's easy and delicious!

The mistake was trying to bake the pie early in the morning on Thanksgiving when I hadn't slept well the night before. I made the crust just fine because I was using the pre-made pie dough already rolled in a circle. Since I was using a deep dish pie plate I did roll it out a bit more, but even that was easy. Making the filling was slightly more challenging but still easy. Where I got in trouble was the baking. You bake at 425 degrees F for 15 minutes. No problem there, either. But here is where I went wrong. I reset the timer for 35 minutes but forgot to turn down the heat to 350. My poor pie baked for about 25 minutes at 425 instead of 350 and so the crust in some places was burnt and the top also had areas that darkened considerably (see photo above). It's a good thing that I checked on it early! 

The whole thing went into the fridge once it had cooled a bit and I decided to serve it anyway, with some dollops of whipped cream to distract from the burnt buts. I expected the filling to be overcooked and rubbery, but instead we found that the filling was firmer than usual, but still tender and delicious with no burnt taste! The guys had two slices!

Just goes to show you that I make mistakes but sometimes I get lucky and the results are still OK.

Hope that you and yours had a great Thursday.

XO, Elle

Pumpkin Pie 

1 15 oz. can pumpkin puree
2 large eggs
¾ cup brown sugar, packed
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
½ teaspoon salt
½ teaspoon ground ginger
¼ teaspoon ground cloves
10 oz. evaporated milk or light cream
1 unbaked 9 inch pie shell - OK to use your own recipe, or store-bought pie dough or pie shell


Prepare the pie shell in a fairly deep 9-inch pie pan, or use a pre-made pie shell if desired.

In a mixing bowl beat the eggs slightly, then add the brown sugar and beat to combine. Add the salt and spices and combine well.

Take the pumpkin puree out of the can and add to the egg mixture and combine. Slowly add the evaporated milk or light cream. When blended, pour the filling into the unbaked pie shell (which has been placed on a baking sheet), making sure to leave at least ¼ inch of the sides unfilled to allow for expansion during baking. If you have remaining filling, you can bake it in a buttered ramekin or custard cup as a treat for the cook!

Place the cookie sheet with pie in a preheated 425 degree F. oven for 15 minutes. Then reduce oven temperature to 350 degrees F. and continue baking for another 35-45 minutes or until a knife inserted in the center comes out clean. It's OK if it still jiggles a tiny bit in the center.Cool on a rack at least 45 minutes, up to 2 hours. Serve at once or refrigerate.

Thursday, November 27, 2025

Lots of Mushrooms


 Sweetie loves to eat mushrooms. He often chooses menu items with mushrooms when we eat out and he loves it when I add mushrooms to what I'm cooking. When I saw this recipe from Smitten Kitchen for a UnStuffed Mushroom Casserole where mushrooms are the star I knew that I had to make it. I'm a fan of mushrooms, too.

The recipe made much more than we could eat, given that it is fairly rich, so I made 1/3 of it and that was just right. We each had a hearty portion for dinner last night and then he had leftovers for lunch today. The recipe below is the actual recipe from her blog, so it serves 8. The concept is that you take a lot of the items that you would stuff individual mushrooms with and combine them with cooked mushrooms to make a casserole. It works!

I found that I needed to add about 1/4 cup very hot water to the bowl where I was mixing the cooked mushroom mixture and the cream cheese. Maybe I let the mushroom mixture cook too long? Anyway I think you are better off with the full recipe.

This is a really delicious and fairly rich dish. If you love mushrooms, do make this! I used fairly large crimini mushrooms instead of button ones, so that may be why mine was drier, too, but the brown mushrooms really have a good solid mushroom flavor.

I messed up by adding the minced parsley to the crumb mixture that goes on top of the mushroom mixture once its in the casserole, but I did add some minced parsley to the mushroom mixture once I realized my mistake. It meant that I didn't add any on top after it was cooked.

This makes a great main course if you serve it with a whole grain and some greens or a salad or green veg. Sauteed winter squash would go well with it, too. A crusty bread served with it allows you to scoop up any sauce that doesn't cling to the mushrooms. We served it with bread, spinach and pork chops, but I only ate half the pork chop because the casserole is fairly filling!


Happy Thanksgiving!

Unstuffed Mushroom Casserole

This is doubled from the original recipe and exactly as you see it here (filling a 2-quart baking dish) because the original makes way too little to share. You know that joke about spinach? It turns out white mushrooms reduce about 1/3 of their original volumes after cooking; don’t be disappointed.

  • 6 tablespoons olive oil
  • 3 pounds medium white button mushrooms, quartered
  • Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
  • 6 cloves garlic, finely chopped
  • 8 ounces cream cheese, cut into pieces
  • 1 cup grated gruyere, comte, or cheddar etc.
  • 2 cups panko-style breadcrumbs
  • 1 cup grated parmesan
  • 1/2 cup fresh parsley, chopped
  • 4 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted

Heat your oven oven to 350°F.

In a large frying pan (12-inch is ideal here) over medium-high heat, heat half (3 tablespoons) of the olive oil. Once it’s very hot, add half (1.5 pounds, but seriously, just eyeball this) of your mushrooms but don’t move them yet. Give them 1 to 2 minutes to brown underneath before adding 1/2 teaspoon kosher salt, a few grinds of black pepper, and half the garlic, then moving them around, trying to get them to brown on more sides until they begin releasing their liquid. Some have a little, some have a lot; in both cases you can to cook the mushrooms, stirring, until the liquid mostly, but not fully, cooks off — a thin puddle should remain. Scrape these mushrooms into a large bowl and repeat the process with the remaining olive oil, mushrooms, and garlic, plus more salt and pepper.

Once the second half of the mushrooms have mostly cooked off their liquid, add everything in the pan to the first half of mushrooms in the bowl. Add diced cream cheese and stir just until combined (the remaining liquid from the mushrooms should help it get saucy), then half of the panko (1 cup), all of the gruyere, half of the parmesan (1/2 cup), and most of the parsley (reserve some for garnish) and stir to combine. Transfer to a 2-quart baking dish.



Combine the butter and remaining panko (1 cup) and parmesan (1/2 cup) in a bowl with a couple pinches of salt. Sprinkle over top of the mushrooms


and bake until the breadcrumbs are light golden brown, 25 to 30 minutes. Sprinkle with remaining parsley and eat right away.

To make this ahead of time, please read: Since I’m usually making this to entertain and like to get things out of the way, I pause the recipe (in the fridge until needed, covered with foil) where you transfer the mixture to a baking dish. To finish cooking, I first get the mushroom mixture warm without the crumbs, leaving the foil on, about 10 minutes, and then bake it the rest of the way with the crumbs on, until they’re a light golden brown, usually another 25 minutes. If you put the crumbs on sooner, they get too dark. If you finish baking the dish with crumbs and later rewarm it, the mushrooms get a little overcooked and the crumbs too toasty.

Wednesday, November 26, 2025

Pies and Soup!

 


For me Thanksgiving is all about being grateful and, of course, the turkey, but for the rest of my family I think it might be all about the pies. I also love soup so this season has both.

I do love the make pies. Last week I was even given the delightful opportunity to help bilingual kindergarten children make pumpkin pies. There were two tables, right next to each other with one being the pie crust table and the other being for making the filling. It was a lot of fun and the teacher, who is also my next door neighbor, brought over some of the leftover pie for me and Sweetie. Unfortunately I didn't get a photo...or a taste. Sweetie thought that it was all for him and ate it up while my neighbor and I were having tea in another room. He said it was good!

I also made a pumpkin pie for us and we finished it off this weekend with one of our grandsons and his girlfriend. They stayed overnight on their way to be with his mom for Thanksgiving. It was such a delight to meet his girl and to get to visit with them. We finished the pumpkin pie...and still no photos!

I did get a photo of the clam chowder I made last week (see top of post), but there isn't a recipe. I promise that soon I'll have a 'normal' post with both a photo and the recipe, but it's been that kind of week plus.

Tomorrow we celebrate Thanksgiving with Straight Shooter, up from San Francisco. There will be turkey, of course, but also more pumpkin pie. Maybe this time I can get a photo.

Have a great Thursday dear reader. If you're an American or live in the U.S., I wish you a Happy Thanksgiving. I give thanks for you all, even the 'lurkers'.

Friday, November 07, 2025

Harvest Plate


As the days have been getting shorter the tomatoes still left on the vine have been ripening increasingly slowly. There are still a lot of green tomatoes but recent rains have caused some of the tomatoes that were in the middle of their ripening to turn brown as they spoiled. Fortunately I harvested some tomatoes during the last week before they ripened but when they were a bit warm colored. I brought them inside and they have ripened. Tonight I sliced some of them and made a lovely plate with three kinds of tomatoes, kissed after slicing with balsamic vinegar, olive oil, pepper, garlic salt and some flecks of fresh basil. This is the way that Sweetie likes them, and so do I. 

Wednesday, November 05, 2025

Is It A Flower Or A Snowflake?



Either way, its a delicious and spectacular looking yeasted sweet bread that is far easier to make than it looks. Some people call it a pull-apart bread, but you can easily cut it, too, for a cleaner presentation.

The original of this bread was filled with Nutella, which is lovely if you like chocolate and hazelnuts and sweet bread, and many do. I prefer cinnamon and sugar, so that's how I made it. To keep the filling from being too dry, I also added a thin layer of cream cheese to each layer of dough, along with the brown sugar and spices.

This is a great bread for a party, or for the holidays when you want to wow folks a bit. It can be made ahead and frozen, but if you do that, add the glaze after you have thawed and freshened the bread a bit in a warm oven. Let it cool almost to room temperature after warming it in a 325 degree F oven for 10-15 minutes. Than drizzle on the glaze and give it a few minutes to harden. Alternately, sift some powdered sugar over the warm bread...that gets the snowflake look going, but I think it looks most like a snowflake anyway! 


Christmas Brioche Flower or Snowflake


Makes: 1 large Brioche Flower or Snowflake - can be shaped ahead and put in fridge overnight, baked in the morning

Ingredients:


For the sponge:

1/2 cup (2.25 ounces) bread flour or all-purpose (I used 
all-purpose  )
1 1/4 teaspoons instant yeast
1/2 cup (4 ounces) whole milk, lukewarm (90 to 100 degrees F.)


For the dough:


3 large eggs, slightly beaten
3 cups (13.75 ounces) all-purpose flour (might need as much as 1/4 cup more, depending on how liquid the dough is)
3 tablespoons sugar
1 1/4 teaspoons sea salt
1/2 cup (4 ounces) unsalted butter, melted
1-2 teaspoons milk, if necessary to form a smooth dough

For the filling and glaze:
soft cream cheese
brown sugar
cinnamon


1 tablespoon milk plus 1 tablespoon water for glaze
Icing (confectioner's) sugar

To make the sponge, stir together the flour and yeast in a large bowl (or the bowl of your stand mixer). Pour in the milk and whisk the ingredients together until all of the flour is hydrated. Cover with plastic wrap and let it ferment for 30 to 45 minutes, or until the sponge rises and falls when you tap the bowl.

To make the dough, add the eggs to the sponge and whisk (or beat on medium speed with the paddle attachment) until smooth.  In a separate bowl, stir together the flour, sugar, and salt.  Add this mixture to the sponge and eggs and stir (or continue mixing with the paddle on low speed for about 2 minutes) until all of the ingredients are thoroughly incorporated. Let the dough rest for 5 minutes to begin to develop the gluten.  Then mix in the melted butter by hand, using a wooden spoon or Danish dough whisk or with the mixer on medium speed using the dough hook. Add in a couple of teaspoons of milk if the dough is too dry. 

Transfer the dough to the work surface and knead for about 8 to 10 minutes until the dough is soft and smooth.  It shouldn't be too sticky too handle.

Form the dough into a ball and place it in a clean bowl.  It doesn't need to be oiled.  The butter should keep the dough from sticking to the bowl.  Let the dough bulk ferment in a warm place (70- 75 degrees F.) for 1-2 hours, or until doubled in size.


Meanwhile, cut out a circle of baking or greaseproof paper about 30 cm (12″) in diameter. Place the paper on a baking sheet.

To shape the flower, once risen, turn the dough out onto a surface, knock it back knead for 3-4 minutes. Divide the dough into 4 pieces and form each piece into a ball.

Roll a ball of dough out into a circle measuring about 25 cm (10″) in diameter. The dough should be about 3-4 mm (1/8″) thick.

Place the dough onto the baking paper and spread on a layer cream cheese (thin), followed by a thin layer of brown sugar and sprinkle of cinnamon or of cake or pie spice, leaving a small gap at the edge. Don’t make the layer too thick but be sure to evenly cover the dough.

Roll out a second ball of dough, place it on the first layer and spread with the same combination as the first layer. Repeat with the third and fourth balls of dough but do NOT spread any filling on the final layer.

Cut the brioche into 16 segments but leave a small (3 cm/1½”) area in the centre of the dough uncut (a spice cap is about the right size to cover the center...cut to it.

Take a pair of adjacent segments. Lift and twist them away from each other through 180°. Lift and twist through 180° again, then twist through 90° so that the ends are vertical. Press the edges together firmly. Repeat this process for all pairs of segments.

Place the brioche in a large plastic bag or cover with lightly oiled film. Leave in a warm place for 1-2 hours to prove.

Brush with the glaze then bake at 160°C/320°F fan oven, 180°C/360°F conventional oven for 20-25 minutes.  I baked it at 375 degrees F. for 15 minutes, then turned it down to 350 and baked it another 5 minutes or so.

Place the bread on a wire rack to cool. Once cooled, dust lightly with icing sugar or drizzle with more of the glaze.