Quiche is often a forgotten option that can be served for any meal. One of my favorite flavor combinations is roasted tomato, asparagus and gruyere quiche. So naturally, I simply had to make a quiche with those ingredients. The roasted tomatoes really take this quiche to the next level. Putting sliced raw tomato on the quiche before baking is not the same thing. The roasting is what make these tomatoes really shine and adds an extra level of flavor to this dish.
Quiche is Versatile, Easy and Makes Great Leftovers
If you've been reading my blog posts, you know that I cook with leftovers in mind. When I worked in corporate America, it seemed ridiculous to spend money on lunch every day. Eating lunch out every day is expensive and will destroy your budget. Watching my co-workers spend about $15 per day on lunch helped me to lean towards cooking meals I know I enjoy making and eating.
It's also important to determine which foods will taste good reheated. Some foods taste great reheated in a microwave, others stove top and still others: toaster oven. This quiche, definitively, tastes great any way you reheat it. And bonus: you can always freeze slices of quiche and take them out later on a night you don't feel like cooking.
No quiche would be complete without homemade crust. I understand that crust can be time consuming and, if you must, go ahead and use the pre-made Pillsbury crust. However, I highly recommend taking the extra time to make a crust from scratch. It makes all the difference.
If you're looking for other breakfast of brunch ideas, don't forget to check out my Western Omelet and Buttermilk Biscuit recipes.
Try to cook good food for yourself and your loved ones. You can follow along with my written instructions and my video walks through all the steps too.
Roasted Tomato, Asparagus & Gruyere Quiche
- Prep Time: 1 hour
- Cook Time: 35
- Total Time: 1 hour 35 minutes
- Yield: 6 slices 1x
Description
This fantastic, easy-to-make roasted tomato, asparagus, gruyere quiche will be a hit at your next brunch! Freezes well for leftovers too.
Ingredients
Roasted tomatoes
- 4 large tomatoes, cored & seeds removed
- 1 clove garlic, finely diced
- ⅓ cup olive oil
- salt and pepper, to taste
Dough
- 2 cups flour
- 1 ½ sticks of cold butter, cubed
- 2 tablespoons sugar
- ½ teaspoon salt
- 2-4 tablespoons ice cold water (approx.)
Quiche filling
- 5 eggs
- ¼ cup heavy cream
- ¼ cup of whole milk (can use all milk if you prefer - still delicious)
- ½ teaspoon salt
- 6-7 stalks of steamed asparagus
- 1 cup shredded gruyere cheese
- Roasted tomatoes (see recipe below)
Instructions
- The roasted tomatoes: You can do this a day ahead if you like. You need to core 4 large tomatoes and cut them in half. Then remove the pulp and seeds.
- Finely dice one clove of garlic.
- Spread tomatoes out in a baking dish. Sprinkle the diced garlic on the tomatoes. Drizzle olive oil all over the tomatoes. Salt and pepper to taste here. Bake in preheated oven for 1 hour at 400 degrees.
- The dough: Cut your cold butter into cubes – makes it easier for mixing the dough.
- Put flour in a large bowl. Add your salt and sugar and mix with a fork.
- Add butter cubes and mix with a pastry cutter if you have one. For years, I used my hands so that’s okay too. You want the dough to be slightly crumbly. When it gets to the crumbly point, you’ll add the very cold water, 2 tablespoons at a time. I usually pour water in a cup with ice cubes before I start making the dough. Mix the dough with your hands at this point to start forming your dough ball. If you need a bit more water add a little. You don’t want the dough to be wet and slimy. You want just enough water that you can form the dough into a ball.
- Once your dough ball is formed, wrap it in plastic and put in freezer for about 15 minutes before rolling it out.
- The quiche filling and assembly: Plan your time with the steamed asparagus. You should already have steamed it when you get to the point of blending the eggs. Vegetables are watery. I like to steam the asparagus and blot it with paper towel ahead of time. Otherwise, raw asparagus in the quiche will release a lot of water as it cooks and it will make the quiche watery. We don’t want that.
- Shred your gruyere cheese.
- Chop your steamed asparagus into small pieces.
- I use a blender for the eggs, but you can do it by hand if you prefer. Add your eggs to the blender along with the milk, cream, salt. Blend until well combined.
- Roll out your dough. Have a little flour on hand in case you need to flour your rolling pin. I usually roll the dough onto the plastic wrap (see video). This way, once the dough is rolled out to the size of your pie plate, you can simply flip it over into the pie plate and gently peel the plastic wrap off.
- Once you place the dough in your pie plate, press it down gently, fold over the extra dough around the edges, then use a fork to create a pattern all the way around.
- Put your gruyere cheese down, then asparagus, then pour in the egg mixture. Lastly, add the roasted tomatoes to the top of your quiche. You may not use all the tomatoes. I think I used 5 for the top of the quiche and the rest I used for a salad. I do use a crust protector ring when I make pies and quiche. You can also use foil – I’ve done that many times. Use any leftover roasted tomatoes for salads or sandwiches.
- Cook in a preheated over at 400 degrees for the first 10 minutes. Then reduce to 375 degrees for 25-30 minutes. My oven runs hot so your oven may take more time to cook the quiche. Just insert a knife through the middle. When it comes out dry – the quiche is ready.
Enjoy!
Notes
- You may be wondering, “Why can’t I just slice raw tomato and add it to the top of the quiche and they will cook in the oven with the quiche?” You can do this, but your quiche will have a very different flavor. Roasting tomatoes brings a very distinct, deep, rich flavor to the tomato. It tastes nothing like raw tomato put on top of a quiche and going in the oven.
- If you don’t want to add heavy cream just add all milk instead. I do think a little heavy cream gives the quiche a touch of richness, but I’ve made this many times with milk only and it’s still delicious!
- You can make more than 4 roasted tomatoes. I usually make at least 8 so I can use them for other things like salads, avocado toast, sandwiches etc..
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