Author Notes
Last Thursday a friend sent me an email with Yotam Ottolenghi's recipe for Cauliflower Cake. When Friday rolled around and the theme announced, cauliflower popped into my head as an unsung hero of winter vegetables. Turning to the Flavor Bible for inspiration, I decided to tinker with cauliflower, blue cheese, bacon and apple as flavors that both complement and contrast one another. The blue cheese I used, Buttermilk Blue, is a lovely mellow, yet flavorful blue that is creamy, bold without being overpowering, and has a delicate finish. The resulting quiche is rich and tangy with just a hint of sweetness. A note about the tart technique: I followed Judy Rodgers' very descriptive and well-written technique to make dough for Pâte Brisée or all butter crust. It produces lovely, smooth dough very easily, resulting in a flaky, buttery crust. —gingerroot
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Ingredients
- for the tart crust
-
1 1/4 cups
all purpose flour
-
1/2 teaspoon
salt
-
1
stick unsalted butter
-
2 tablespoons
ice cold water
- for the filling
-
3
slices thick, applewood smoked, uncured bacon
-
1 1/2 cups
cauliflower, cut into individual florets (halving large ones)
-
2 teaspoons
minced garlic
-
1 tablespoon
apple cider vinegar
-
1 tablespoon
water, plus more if necessary
-
1/3 cup
Fuji apple, peeled, cut into ¼ inch dice (can substitute another late season variety) drizzled with juice from 1 lemon wedge to prevent oxidation
-
1/3 cup
finely grated Emmentaler (grate right before adding to quiche)
-
1/4 cup
finely grated Buttermilk Blue Cheese (grate right before adding to quiche)
-
1 cup
half-and-half
-
3
large eggs
-
Freshly ground black pepper
Directions
- for the tart crust
-
Combine flour and salt in a mound on a cool, clean surface. Place stick of butter on top of mound. Slice butter into ¼-inch thick pieces. Dip each slice of butter in flour, coating top and bottom.
-
Using your thumbs and index fingers, flatten each slice, gently squeezing. As you do this, sections of each slice will fall on to the flour mound. Repeat until you have flattened every slice.
-
You should now have a pile of thin, flour coated butter flakes on top of your flour. Slide both hands, palms facing up, under the edges of the flour mound and bring your hands together, raking floury butter flakes and gently combining pieces by pressing your thumbs down against your other fingers. Repeat until you have mostly saw dusty clumps with a few larger flakes.
-
Sprinkle 1 T of ice-cold water over pile. Gently work mixture together with your hands to combine dough. If dough gets sticky, dip fingers in flour. Add remaining tablespoon of ice cold water and gather, eventually rolling dough into a smooth ball (be careful not to overwork, or dough will be tough). Wrap ball in a large piece of plastic wrap and flatten into disc (about 1 inch thick and 4 inches across). Fold plastic wrap around edges of disc to seal and refrigerate for at least 30 minutes and up to 1 day.
-
When ready to use, remove from refrigerator and allow disc to sit at room temperature for about ten minutes before rolling out. Roll out dough (slightly larger than tart pan) and carefully wind around pin while sliding ceramic tart pan under. Unwind dough from pin into tart pan, carefully pressing into the bottom and up the sides. Trim excess with kitchen shears. Place in the freezer for 10 minutes.
-
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Line dough with parchment, fill with at least 1 cup of rice or dried beans and bake for 15 minutes. Remove pan from oven, remove parchment and weights, and poke surface of dough all over with a fork. Return to oven for 12 more minutes. Remove and set aside to cool before filling and baking. Do not turn off oven.
- for the filling
-
Place bacon slices in a cold pan that is large enough to fit all three slices in a single layer and turn heat to low. Slowly cook bacon, turning up heat if necessary. You want to cook the bacon to the point that the fat just begins to render, without burning. Remove bacon slices to a paper towel lined plate. Do not turn off burner.
-
Pour off all but 1 T of drippings and briefly rest pan on a cool burner. Add cauliflower pieces and return pan to hot burner. Cook cauliflower, constantly turning to prevent burning, about a minute. Add apple cider vinegar and cook for a few seconds, add 1 T of water and continue cooking, stirring. Mix in garlic and cook until cauliflower is tender and golden, about 3 minutes more, adding another tablespoon of water if necessary to prevent burning. Remove pan from heat.
-
Cut each bacon slice in half lengthwise and then chop crosswise.
-
Assemble tart by sprinkling half of the Emmentaler onto the bottom of the crust. Layer in the bacon, then the cauliflower, and then the diced apple. In a large Pyrex measure, combine the half-and-half with the eggs and the blue cheese. Add fresh ground pepper. Pour egg-cheese mixture over cauliflower filling and top with remaining Emmentaler.
-
Transfer to oven and bake for 25-30 minutes, until golden and slightly puffed. Allow quiche to cool for at least 10 minutes before serving. Enjoy!
My most vivid childhood memories have to do with family and food. As a kid, I had the good fortune of having a mom who always encouraged trying new things, and two grandmothers who invited me into their kitchens at a young age. I enjoy cooking for the joy it brings me - sharing food with loved ones - and as a stress release. I turn to it equally during good times and bad. Now that I have two young children, I try to be conscientious about what we cook and eat. Right about the time I joined food52, I planted my first raised bed garden and joined a CSA; between the two I try to cook as sustainably and organically as I can. Although I'm usually cooking alone, my children are my favorite kitchen companions and I love cooking with them. I hope when they are grown they will look back fondly at our time spent in the kitchen, as they teach their loved ones about food-love.
Best of all, after years on the mainland for college and graduate school, I get to eat and cook and raise my children in my hometown of Honolulu, HI. When I'm not cooking, I am helping others grow their own organic food or teaching schoolchildren about art.
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