Photo by Lizthechef
Lizthechef's Notes:
Expand1 single, unbaked pie crust Ask a question about this ingredient
1 ounce roquefort Ask a question about this ingredient
1 tablespoon egg wash Ask a question about this ingredient
Once your crust has been prepared and properly chilled, preheat oven to 375 degrees. Roll out the crust on a floured surface. Sprinkle bits of the cheese onto the crust and lightly press into the pastry, using your fingers. Gently settle crust into a ceramic quiche dish, cheese side up, brush with egg wash and prick with a fork across surface.
Ask a question about this stepBake crust for 20 minutes, or until browned. Remove from oven and add filling. (Leave the oven on).
Ask a question about this step1 teaspoon unsalted butter Ask a question about this ingredient
two scallions, chopped, white and light green parts only Ask a question about this ingredient
8 asparagus stalks, trimmed, peeled and cut into 3/4 inch pieces Ask a question about this ingredient
3 large eggs Ask a question about this ingredient
3/4 cups heavy cream Ask a question about this ingredient
4 ounces roquefort, crumbled Ask a question about this ingredient
While the crust is browning, saute scallions in small pan for a minute or two and set aside. Blanch asparagus in boiling, salted water for about two minutes. Drain and "shock" in ice water. Dry on paper towels and set aside. Beat the eggs with the cream and season to taste.
Ask a question about this stepOnce the crust has browned, distribute asparagus, scallions and cheese evenly over the crust. Gently pour the custard over all. Bake for 25 minutes. Cool 10 minutes before serving.
Ask a question about this stepThanks, Midge, but I've decided ChefJune is right about it being too spring-like, so I'm posting another one that is definitely "late winter" regardless of what area of the country we live in...
This sounds so delicious, but for me, asparagus screams SPRING!
Sorry but it is spring here in San Diego...
You can never miss with blue cheese and asparagus! Love it.
Thanks, Elizabeth!
I feel so foolish - thanks, yet again...my type doesn't do well with "1 1/2" so I type it out.
Food52 team, why am I unable to correctly edit my ingedients that are singular - all these extra "s's" set my teeth on edge. My error, obviously. Thank you.
If you use a numeric "1" rather than spelling it out, the system should recognize that the measurement is singular. Hope that helps!
Brette is the Editorial Assistant of Food52.
Delicious!