my stomach ached all evening. I just don't think I can do that much fat in one-fell swoop. Or one large slice, as it were.
Seasoning was off, but it did satisfy my craving for quiche and salad, although I forgot about having wine with it. And it looked so pretty: I'm always shocked when a pie ends up looking like a pie when I've been the one that baked it.
Followed the linked recipe, swapping 3 TBL lard for 3 of the butter to get a flakier version. I think I have CathyZ to thank for the lard idea.
Question: can you overprocess dough in a food processor PRE-LIQUID? This dough was coming to a ball before I even added the water. It was supposed to take 5-6 TBL of ice water and I only used 3 TBL...and still had to add a bit more flour since it was a tad sticky. Did turn out beautifully flakey (after the first attempt fell apart in the pan, then was grabbed and rerolled with a bit MORE flour and a lot more attitude), but tasted flat. Bummer: seasoning was a "large pinch of sea salt", which I actually pinched. I followed their freeze first step and the dough didn't collapse while pre-baking like they always have in the past (one of many reasons I don't "do" crust). I'll give this method another try.
For the filling, I sauteed 3 slices of bacon, then used the grease to saute/caramelize a large Vidalia onion, then used the remainder to saute 8 oz of mushrooms. Blotted everything on papertowels to remove excess grease.
Mixed up the filling and grated 8 oz of Emmenthal cheese, but ended up using half the liquid and half the cheese. I only have a 9" pie pan and this recipe called for a 10". Filling was a bit flat too, which surprised the dickens out of me. I didn't season it since I thought the bacon would do that. Apparently not.
Now...what to do with the remaining cheese/filling that won't involve a fat-laden crust and more fat-laden ingredients?
http://www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/Madame-Quiches-Quiche-au-Fromage-15850
Seasoning was off, but it did satisfy my craving for quiche and salad, although I forgot about having wine with it. And it looked so pretty: I'm always shocked when a pie ends up looking like a pie when I've been the one that baked it.
Followed the linked recipe, swapping 3 TBL lard for 3 of the butter to get a flakier version. I think I have CathyZ to thank for the lard idea.
Question: can you overprocess dough in a food processor PRE-LIQUID? This dough was coming to a ball before I even added the water. It was supposed to take 5-6 TBL of ice water and I only used 3 TBL...and still had to add a bit more flour since it was a tad sticky. Did turn out beautifully flakey (after the first attempt fell apart in the pan, then was grabbed and rerolled with a bit MORE flour and a lot more attitude), but tasted flat. Bummer: seasoning was a "large pinch of sea salt", which I actually pinched. I followed their freeze first step and the dough didn't collapse while pre-baking like they always have in the past (one of many reasons I don't "do" crust). I'll give this method another try.
For the filling, I sauteed 3 slices of bacon, then used the grease to saute/caramelize a large Vidalia onion, then used the remainder to saute 8 oz of mushrooms. Blotted everything on papertowels to remove excess grease.
Mixed up the filling and grated 8 oz of Emmenthal cheese, but ended up using half the liquid and half the cheese. I only have a 9" pie pan and this recipe called for a 10". Filling was a bit flat too, which surprised the dickens out of me. I didn't season it since I thought the bacon would do that. Apparently not.
Now...what to do with the remaining cheese/filling that won't involve a fat-laden crust and more fat-laden ingredients?
http://www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/Madame-Quiches-Quiche-au-Fromage-15850