Mile-High Alpine Quiche Recipe on Food52 (2024)

Serves a Crowd

by: loubaby

September17,2009

4.7

3 Ratings

  • Serves 12

Jump to Recipe

Author Notes

Put together this recipe from great pie crust sources and quiche recipes and combined them. The high crust and flavors are fantastic--you'll never buy store bought crust again.....very impressive for a brunch party. —loubaby

What You'll Need

Ingredients
  • Quiche Filling
  • 1/2 poundbacon, chopped
  • 2 poundsmushrooms, thinly sliced
  • Salt and Pepper
  • 4 Green onions, chopped
  • 1 teaspoondried thyme
  • 1/2 poundSwiss cheese, shredded
  • * Pastry Shell
  • 4 cupshalf and half
  • 6 eggs, beaten
  • *Pastry Shell
  • 2 cupsflour
  • 1 teaspoonKosher salt
  • 1/2 poundbutter, cold, unsalted, cut up
  • 1/4 cupice water
Directions
  1. Quiche Filling
  2. Preheat the oven to 325. Cook bacon in a large skillet over moderately high heat until crisp; remove bacon to paper towel. Keep heat at moderately high and cook mushrooms in bacon fat about 5 minutes, stirring occasionally. Reduce the heat to medium; add onions and thyme and cook, stirring often, until the mushrooms are tender, about 10 minutes. Season vegetables with salt and pepper; cool.
  3. Sprinkle 1/4 cup of the cheese over bottom of the Pastry Shell. Combine half and half and eggs; season with 1 teaspoon salt and 1/4 teaspoon pepper. Stir in bacon, remaining cheese and vegetable mixture into eggs. Pour egg mixture into pastry shell.
  4. Bake the quiche for about 1 1/2 hours, or until brown on top and the custard is just barely set in the center. I wiggle it in oven and there is a slight jiggle to the middle section; this will finish cooking upon cooling. Let cool slightly in the pan to be able to carve nicely. Run a small spatula between the pan and the baked crust to make sure it releases from pan before removing springform pan latch. Cut quiche into wedges and serve warm or at room temperature.
  5. Make AheadThe quiche can be cooled and refrigerated overnight. To serve, first cut quiche into serving size wedges, place pieces on a baking sheet and bake 350 oven about 12-15 minutes until warm.
  1. *Pastry Shell
  2. 1.In bowl of Standing Mixer or a Food Processor mix flour and salt. While machine running, add butter til mixed in. Add water, half at a time just until thoroughly incorporated. Flatten the pastry into an 8-inch disk, wrap in plastic and refrigerate until chilled, at least 1 hour or overnight.
  3. 2.Set a 9-inch springform pan on a baking pan with sides, lined with parchment paper or foil. Spray the inside of the pan with cooking spray.
  4. 3.On floured board, roll out pastry into a 16-inch round; transfer to the springform pan and press it firmly up to the top of pan, trimming as necessary. Refrigerate the pastry for 15 minutes to firm up.
  5. 4.Preheat the oven to 375°. Line the pastry shell plastic wrap or parchment paper; fill the shell with dried beans or rice. (I save a whole bag of this stuff and reuse it all the time) Bake the crust for about 40 minutes, or until lightly browned. Grab the plastic wrap or parchment paper and remove the beans. Bake crust for another 15 minutes until nicely browned. Cool Pastry shell. The pastry shell can be covered and held at room temperature overnight.

Tags:

  • Pie
  • Quiche
  • American
  • Pork
  • Vegetable
  • Bacon
  • Egg
  • Cheese
  • Thyme
  • Serves a Crowd
  • Breakfast
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  • Alison

  • Rachel

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4 Reviews

Loraine F. May 9, 2021

The pastry slid down the sides of the springform pan during the blind bake and it was a mess. I found another crust recipe with eggs in the crust for more stability and it worked perfectly.

Alison April 17, 2020

I have made this recipe twice now, neither time with mushrooms as half my house doesn't like mushrooms. The first time we just did it with bacon and onion, and this second time with swiss chard, zucchini and the bacon, green onion mix. Its awesome takes a bit of time with the pastry crust and baking time but it is very much worth the effort.

Rachel October 4, 2018

Line the pastry shell with plastic wrap for blind baking?? That's a great way to eat melted plastic. That has to be a typo?

Alison April 17, 2020

While I agree that the use of plastic wrap seems weird, my chef in cooking school did it all the time and no melted plastic.

Mile-High Alpine Quiche Recipe on Food52 (2024)

FAQs

Should you Prebake crust for quiche? ›

And yes, as you'll see, you should always prebake quiche crust to avoid a gummy pastry. Preheat the oven to 450°F. Roll out your homemade or purchased refrigerated dough into a 12-inch circle.

Why does my quiche always have a soggy bottom? ›

Wet pie fillings + raw dough are a tricky combination. If the bottom crust doesn't set before the filling soaks in, it's going to be gummy. A metal pie pan placed on a preheated surface will set the bottom crust quickest; once cooked, the liquids from the filling above won't soak in, and as a result: no soggy bottom.

What temperature do you cook a large quiche? ›

Crumble bacon over baked pie crust and sprinkle cheese over crumbled bacon. Carefully pour egg mixture into pie pan. Bake quiche at 425 for 15 minutes. Reduce heat to 350 degrees and bake 15-20 minutes longer until golden brown or until knife inserted in center comes out clean.

How do you make a quiche without a soggy bottom? ›

If you pour the egg custard into an unbaked crust, the liquid is unfortunately going to seep into the crust, preventing it from crisping up. The simple solution is to blind-bake the crust before adding the custard. Follow This Tip: Blind-bake the pie crust before pouring in the custard to ensure a crisp, flaky crust.

Should quiche be cooked at 350 or 375? ›

BAKE in center of 375°F oven until center is almost set but jiggles slightly when dish is gently shaken and knife inserted near center comes out clean, 30 to 40 minutes.

How to blind bake a crust for quiche? ›

Partially blind bake: Line the chilled pie crust with parchment paper. Fill with pie weights or dried beans. Make sure the weights are evenly distributed around the pie dish. Bake until the edges of the crust are starting to brown, about 15-16 minutes.

Should I egg wash the bottom pie crust? ›

You've spent time and effort putting the pastry together, so don't sell yourself short by skipping the final step—the egg wash for the pie crust. The truth is that cream and egg washes are a simple but vital step to improving the appearance and flavor of pies and other baked goods.

How long do you blind bake a pie crust? ›

Line with the parchment paper and fill with pie weights or dried beans, filling right to the bottom of the crimps. Place the pie tin on a baking sheet, and place in the oven. Bake for 15 to 18 minutes, or until the edges are slightly golden brown. Remove from the oven, remove the parchment paper and beans.

What's the best cheese for quiche? ›

You can use any shredded cheese you like; one winning combination is havarti, colby, and Parmesan. Quiche is an excellent choice for any meal, including a busy weeknight dinner. It can even be prepared in advance and refrigerated or frozen, then quickly reheated.

Can you put too many eggs in a quiche? ›

The Kitchn cautions that using too many eggs can make the consistency of the quiche rubbery and tough, while using too few eggs can prevent the custard filling from setting properly, giving you a runny, soggy quiche. The recommended proportion is one egg to one-half cup of cream or milk.

What is the formula for quiche? ›

Ratios: The best way to make a quiche is to add the eggs to a large measuring cup, then add the cream or milk. For every egg used you should add enough milk or cream to create a 1/2 cup. Meaning for 1 egg you will add enough cream or milk to make 1/2 a cup of mixture.

Should vegetables be cooked before putting in quiche? ›

Cook the Veggies First

"Vegetables will take longer to cook than your egg custard, so always sauté onions, steam broccoli, etc. before you add them to your egg mixture to ensure every bite of quiche will be perfectly cooked," says Kristin Beringson, executive chef at Henley in Nashville.

Why does my quiche sink when I take it out of the oven? ›

Excess moisture is one reason why quiches collapse in a watery pool on your plate. Vegetables and meats like ham give off tremendous amounts of water when they're cooked. Therefore, if you're using vegetables in your quiche, it's imperative that you cook them first.

How do you keep bacon from sinking in a quiche? ›

Another tip is to run a chopstick around the quiche so the solid ingredients in the filling don't all sink to the bottom. "For us the aim is to get the outside golden and the inside just set like scrambled eggs," he says.

When should I Prebake my pie crust? ›

You do not need to pre-bake a pie crust for an apple pie or any baked fruit pie really, but we do freeze the dough to help it stay put. Pre-baking the pie crust is only required when making a custard pie OR when making a fresh fruit pie. you should probably get: Pie weights are super helpful to have for pre-baking.

What happens if you don't bake the pie crust first? ›

Pre-baking also prevents you from ending up with undercooked shells or undercooked fillings. For no-bake pie recipes, you definitely need to pre-bake, or else you'll wind up with an all-around goopy bite. Other items that include a pastry crust, like galettes, don't always need to be pre-baked.

Should I Prebake premade pie crust? ›

The directions on the crust say to thaw and bake as recipe directs, the recipe includes a homemade crust though which they want pre-baked. If the frozen crust says to bake as recipe directs and the recipe says to pre bake then yes, you should pre bake it.

What happens if you don't blind bake? ›

There are two times when blind baking is necessary: When we're making a custard pie or when the pie filling is unbaked. With a custard pie, like a pumpkin pie, the moisture in the filling can make the crust soggy before it has time to actually bake.

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