All Day Baking: Savoury, Not Sweet
By Michael James
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About the recipe
This is my version of a quiche lorraine, the classic French savoury tart. A great quiche relies on good ingredients and knowing and trusting your oven. The result is satisfying, versatile and easily transportable, and it is well worth the effort learning to perfect this bake.
Recipe From
½ quantity Flaky shortcrust pastry
granulated sugar or baking weights, for blind baking
250g (9oz/5 medium) eggs
250g (9oz) cream
250g (9oz) full-cream (whole) milk
1 tablespoon chopped thyme
1 teaspoon fine salt
½ teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
130g (4½oz) Gruyère, grated
180g (6½oz) streaky bacon
100g (3½oz) Caramelised onions
50g (13⁄4oz) unsalted butter
40g (11⁄2oz/2 tablespoons) olive oil
1kg (2lb 3oz) onions, thinly sliced
2 garlic cloves, thinly sliced
1 fresh bay leaf
5g (⅕oz) flaky sea salt
1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
1 tablespoon chopped thyme
I like to make and blind bake the shell in advance. Once you’ve lined the tin with pastry, chill it in the fridge before baking to produce a flakier crust. I blind bake with aluminium foil for good heat distribution and so you get right into the corners, and I like to use sugar because it’s cheap and provides an even weight as the pastry bakes. If there are any cracks in the pastry after blind baking, seal them by brushing a little egg wash over them before filling the quiche. For larger holes or tears, use some excess pastry to fill the gap and brush with egg wash, then return to the oven for a few minutes. Once baked, the shell will keep for up to four days at room temperature in an airtight container.
Easy to adapt and make gluten-free by using gluten-free flaky pastry.
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