< Blame it on the Food » Breakfast
 

Breakfast

...now browsing by category

Get into my belly, early!

 

Family Favorite Breakfast Casserole: EGG BAKE

Saturday, March 2nd, 2013

Ok, so this is not difficult and it is not gourmet, it is just good!

My Aunt makes this breakfast casserole EGG BAKE (my husband calls it ‘French Toast Casserole with Sausage & Cheese’) every holiday when we are together.  She also makes a really complicated Danish Pastry Wreath Recipe to accompany it. If you don’t have the time to make a homemade coffee cake to accompany this dish, make a box coffee cake (I love those too).

Egg Bake Breakfast Casserole Recipe

6 slices white bread/cubed
1 lb. cooked sausage
1 cup shredded cheddar cheese
2 cups milk
8 eggs, beaten
1 tsp. salt

Mike all together and refrigerate overnight.

Bake in a 9 X 13 pan at 350F for 35 to 40 minutes.

Most worth-the-work Family Holiday Recipe! Danish Pastry Wreath Recipe

Friday, December 24th, 2010
To pull my mom’s leg we joke that the Danish Pastry Wreath is my Aunt’s recipe and it gets my mom going because it was originally a recipe that she found in a 1960’s or 70’s cooking magazine.  The proper credit to the right person for this Danish Wreath is a clue straight off the bat that the Danish is remembered and desired by all of my family members on Christmas.  Admittedly, the Danish takes a couple of days to make unless you want to cram all day long.  Also, it takes a bit of help from a friend with some baking experience if you haven’t done much bread baking in the past, but it’s worth it!
We typically serve the Danish with an egg casserole on Christmas morning.  Enjoy!

Holiday Danish Pastry Wreath Recipe
2 wreaths
Baking time: 30 minutes
*Start early in the day to allow for chilling, rising, and cooling.

Leftovers: Tri-Tip Hash made with Spiced Tomato Gratin

Saturday, October 16th, 2010

On Thursday night we had Tri-Tip, Spiced Tomato Gratin (CSA Box #22 Recipe), and a Balthazar inspired salad with Lemon Truffle Vinaigrette.  Saturday morning we woke up and realized we could make Tri-Tip Hash with the leftover Gratin and meat!  It was like stepping into a greasy spoon on a Saturday morning after a long night, knee deep at the bar, except you’re only 15 feet from a shower to wash away your hang over.

In a cast iron pan throw together the leftover potatoes and meat and cook it up until fairly browned.  Serve with eggs and toast.

Who Put Baby in the Oven? Sunset Magazine Dutch Baby Recipe

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

Do you want a fast breakfast recipe?  This is a good one for when friends crash at your place and you don’t want to go to the store to buy ingredients.  A baked pancake recipe also known as a Dutch Baby.   It is similar to a pancake, but hybridized with french toast.

HOWEVER, you will need a cast iron skillet or other pan that can go into the oven.  If you don’t have a cast iron skillet, GO BUY ONE!

Sunset Magazine rocks it with some of the best recipes ever!  Do you find it hard to get rid of one Sunset Magazine or 100 Sunset Magazines?  Join the club!

Sunset Magazine Baked Sunday Pancake with Raspberry Sauce (topping optional)

Click to continue »

A Family Recipe: Buttermilk Belgian Waffles w/ Texture, Texture, Texture

Sunday, January 17th, 2010

This is another family recipe and it wasn’t Sunday morning if our mom didn’t make these.

In my mind, there are two kinds of great waffles:

-Crispy, Golden Brown: Thinner Waffles, w/ a crunch & smaller grid

OR

-Bigger Belgian Waffles: Taste-Packed, more Cakey w/ bigger grid (This recipe!)

Click to continue »

A Family Recipe: Cheese & Sausage Grits

Monday, January 11th, 2010

Cheese & Sausage Grits w/ Green Chiles

This is a family recipe that we love. If you have had plain and bland grits this recipe will make you love grits. This is a rockin’ recipe folks and serve it with hot sauce on the side!

Recipe>

Click to continue »

Pump it up with Pumpkin Donuts

Friday, November 13th, 2009

Pumpkin-Orange-Cinnamon Spice Donuts!

This recipe was really easy.  You can do it quickly and they are really tasty.  You could even try doing a frosted orange icing with orange juice, powdered sugar, milk, and orange zest, similar to a simple icing for cookies.

Donuts

1 c. brown sugar
4 tbsp. cooking oil
3 eggs, beaten
2-4 tbsp. grated orange rind
1/4 c. orange juice
1 c. pumpkin
1 tsp. cinnamon
1 1/4 tsp. salt
1/2 tsp. nutmeg
3 1/2 c. flour
3 tsp. baking powder
1/2 tsp. Soda

Cinnamon-Sugar Glaze

1/2-1 cup sugar
2 tsp. Cinnamon
1 tbsp. Orange zest (optional)

Put all ingredients together in your mixer.  Mix with the mixing hook until dough comes off of the sides.  You may need to add extra flour 1 tablespoon at a time to make dough firm enough.  Form the dough into a ball and let it chill for 2 hours (I skipped this part).  Pat down the dough on a floured surface and roll it to 1/2-2/3” inch thickness with a rolling pin.   Use a donut cutter or we used a round glass and a shot glass to make the classic donut shape with delicious donuts hole leftovers.

Heat oil or fat (we used canola oil) in a 3” pan, we used our cast iron pan, on the stove to 375 degrees.  We didn’t have a deep fry thermometer so we put the heat on low and let the oil warm up for around 15 minutes.  Then we tested it with a donut hole to see if the dough would cook in about 3 minutes.  If the oil isn’t hot enough, the donuts will absorb a lot of oil.  Once the oil is hot, put 3 donuts at a time in the pan to fry about 1 1/2 minutes per side, 3 minutes of cook time total.  Then use metal tongs to pull the donuts out of the oil and shake the donuts to drip some excess oil back into the pan.  Immediately toss the donuts in the cinnamon-sugar glaze in a smaller bowl.  You can then set the donuts on old paper bags to absorb some of the oil.  Serve while warm!!!

[We love donuts, but you can call them doughnuts if you want]

You Can Quiche Your Day Goodbye

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

Bouchon Quiche Recipe: The Most Delicious Waste of a Day You’ll Ever Have

For a baby shower this weekend, a friend asked me to make a couple of quiches.  As Northern California food bloggers near the home of Thomas Keller’s Bouchon Restaurant, we just couldn’t do it the simple American way with store-bought pie crusts and the “it’ll be ready in an hour prep, cook, and bake time quiche recipe.” Instead, we pulled out Thomas Keller’s Bouchon Cookbook and spent eight hours over three days assembling a couple of masterpiece quiches from the most labor intensive recipe we’ve ever found.  Even with two people working the entire time in the kitchen it was intense, sweating bullets and hoping for success.  We learned a lot from massive mishaps but in the end we were surprised to get some rave reviews from guests at the shower.

We made the quiche crust dough a day before we needed it and refrigerated it overnight.  The recipe was similar to the way that you make biscuits with flour and pieces of chilled butter.  We rolled the dough out on Friday morning and I got out my three pans with removable sides.  The fact that the pans had 3” high sides instead of a 2” high ring mold didn’t faze me at all considering I thought it was a minor detail.  In the end it made a huge difference in the ultimate success of our standup quiche shells.  We freaked when we opened the oven after fifteen minutes of bake time to find the sides of our crust fallen into the pan (see the oven photograph).  I immediately got online and googled Thomas Keller’s Quiche problems and found a few posts.  Others had the same issue and thought it was because there wasn’t enough dough to go over the sides taller pans.  They made extra dough to try and solve the problem, only to find out that the dough just can’t hold itself at 3” high so YOU HAVE TO USE A 2” RING MOLD PAN FOR BOUCHON QUICHE! We just continued and tried to patch the sides hoping it would all work out, and miraculously, it did!  We had a bit of a filling leak on one of the three quiches, but it still turned out to be pretty decent looking and utterly delicious.

If you ever attempt this, you have to let us know how it turned out!

Recipe information after the jump….

Click to continue »