Это предварительный просмотр рецепта "Taco Quiche, garden vs gardener".

Рецепт Taco Quiche, garden vs gardener
by Katie Zeller

Did I mention that I was cleaning?

Along with actual hoovering and dusting and scrubbing, I’m cleaning out the pantry.

Cleaning out the pantry means checking the ‘use’by’ dates and using whatever needs using.

Which is how I ended up putting a jar of commercial taco sauce into a quiche.

For what it’s worth, I view these dates with a certain degree of latitude. Still, there comes a time when it’s either use or throw away. When the season changes and I know I won’t use something for six months, I try to use it right away.

Since I use mostly fresh ingredients I don’t have a lot of stuff with dates on anyway, and even that tends to languish.

Sometimes I buy on impulse…. sigh….

This was good.

Taco Quiche

Total time: 50 minutes

Ingredients:

Crust:

Instructions:

Crust:

Mix shredded potato, salt and egg.

Pat into a lightly oiled quiche or 10″ (25cm) pie plate, working it up the sides a bit for the edges.

Bake in 400F (200C) oven for 10 minutes. Remove.

Filling:

Heat oil in large skillet and add chili powder, onion, pepper, and garlic.

Sauté until tender, about 7 minutes.

Add beef and brown, breaking it up.

Add green chilies, oregano and taco sauce, stir well.

Whisk eggs and milk together.

To assemble:

Spread the beef mixture over the baked crust.

Top with cheese.

Pour the egg mixture over all and bake for 30 minutes, until center has set.

Remove and let rest 5 minutes. Slice and serve.

Note: I usually put the quiche dish on a baking sheet to make it easier to handle – it gets kind of full…

I’ve been asking myself why a Type A personality like me insists on having a vegetable garden.

I can’t control nature therefore I can’t control my potager.

I like things to be orderly….. to progress in the proper way.

See that partial row of lettuce on the left? It’s not a partial row because we’ve been eating it…. It’s a partial row because the nematodes have taken out the rest of it.

The onions along the row in the back are bolting. Apparently when warm spring weather is followed by cool spring weather followed by warm spring weather the onions get confused and think it’s time to flower.

Isn’t erratic weather the definition of spring?

Why don’t the onions know this?

And, lastly (for the moment) my tomatoes may or may not have early blight. I’m watching them carefully.

I just have to keep reminding myself of how good all those veggies taste picked fresh from my garden.

Last update on May 8, 2015

Taco Quiche, garden vs gardener was last modified: May 8th, 2015 by Katie Zeller

Related