Chari at Happy to Design hosts Sunday Favorites. It is a repost of one of your favorite posts and a fun blogging party. This will be linked to Chari's blog for Sunday Favorites.
-----------------------------------------------
So many evenings my husband and I prefer a lighter dinner and we both happen to enjoy a good quiche. This particular quiche we both thought to be exceptional. It has this luchious creamy texture, more so than in most quiches.
The recipe comes from a book I am really enjoying, Farm to Fork by Emeril Lagassee. This is Emeril's newest book and like most recent cookbook authors he encourages everyone to cook with local fresh ingredients.
Herbed Quiche With Blue Cheese
1 pie crust
6 ounces cream cheese, at room temperature
2 ounces Maytag blue cheese, at room temperature
2 tablespoons unsalted butter, at room temperature
3 eggs
1 cup heavy cream
1 cup whole milk
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
3 tablespoons chopped fresh mixed herbs, such as parsley, thyme, tarragon, chives, and/or oregano
1. Preheat the oven to 400*F.
2. Place the pie crust in an 8-inch fluted tart pan.
3. Line the pastry shell with parchment paper, and fill it with ceramic pie weights or dried beans. Place the tart pan on a baking sheet, and bake for 9 minutes. Remove the baking sheet from the oven and set the tart pan on a wire rack to cool. Remove the parchment paper and the weights.
4. Reduce the oven temperature to 375*F.
5. In a medium bowl, whisk together the cream cheese, blue cheese, and butter. Whisk in the eggs until well blended. Stir in the cream, milk, salt, pepper, and herbs. Pour the filling into the partially baked pie shell. Return the tart pan to the baking sheet and bake, rotating the quiche halfway through, until it is puffed and golden brown, 25 minutes. The quiche is done when a knife inserted in the center comes out clean.
6. Remove the tart pan from the baking sheet and set it on a wire rack to cool for at least 5 minutes before slicing. Serve hot, warm, or at room temperature
6 to 8 servings
Using fresh herbs is a MUST for this quiche and I do grow many herbs in my garden. However, if you don't grow your own herbs most grocery stores are carrying fresh herbs. I used Italian parsley, thyme and garlic chives. The recipe says you can use oregano and even though I do have it in my herb garden I find that I rarely use it. It is a very strong herb used fresh. I think the use of tarragon would be delicious but mine was knocked back by the cold weather and is just now beginning to come back up. The next time I prepare this I will definitely use the tarragon. I also used a gorgonzola cheese which is what I had on hand and I think most any blue cheese works well in this recipe. The Maytag blue would probably be a more stronger tasting cheese and I will probably use it the next time.
Not exactly the best photo but it surely was so very delicious. I simply pared this quiche with sliced heirloom tomatoes with a drizzle of basil infused olive oil and sprinkled with one of my favorite sea salts, a French Herbed Sea Salt. I use this Herbed Sea Salt all the time, in pasta water, on veggies before serving, it is a favorite of mine and I am never without it.
A nice crisp bottle of Pinot Gris went nicely with it as well and made for a fabulous dinner. My husband said it was the BEST I had ever made and that says a lot to me since he is a very picky eater. Another very poor pic but you can definitely see the creaminess of this quiche.
I hope you will try this quiche, it would be excellent for a ladies luncheon or a lighter evening dinner. You won't be disappointed.
I have that book and will have to mark that recipe for sure as we both love blue cheese!
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing your delicious sounding recipe with us! It looks so yummy....can't wait to try it. Mine will not be as pretty as yours as I do not have that fabulous pie pan with the scallops! It is a wow all by itself.
ReplyDeleteTGD and I love a quiche right out of the oven. I like to change things a little, so I think I'd like to try a quiche with blue cheese - but it will probably be Danish Blue!
ReplyDeleteHi Carolyn...
ReplyDeleteMmmm...your Herbed Quiche with Blue Cheese looks and sounds sooo delicious, my friend! My honey and I, both love blue cheese so I will definitely be giving your recipe a try! Thanks so much for sharing it with us for the Sunday Favorites party this week!
Warmest wishes,
Chari
We love quiche here too. I'd have to switch the cheese, though, because my husband hates blue cheese but will eat gorgonzola - strange. All of the fresh herbs in this sound wonderful. I'd better try it before we get a hard freeze!
ReplyDeleteHi Carolyn!
ReplyDeleteYour quiche with blue cheese looks mighty yummy to me! Beautiful fluted pie dish to make it in, too. I want one like that! LOL
This recipe sounds very similar to a zucchini quiche that I make & I agree, the stronger the flavor of the cheese, the better it tastes.
Thanks for sharing your recipe. I'll try it soon.
Its funny, but I have photos of another quiche on the plate with tomatoes, looking exactly like your dinner! I almost posted it this week, too. That would have been funny. GMTA
fondly,
Rett
hi Carolyn!!
ReplyDeleteThis looks GREAT! I will try it as we LOVE quiche!
Happy Halloween!
joan
Love your blue cheese quiche. We are eating lighter too and trying to use local ingredients. It's definitely the way to go.
ReplyDeleteSam