This didn't start as a recipe. I actually made it for dinner last night and carried the remainder to work today. I debated if it was a fritatta, an omelet, a quiche??? So, I decided to call it a Whatever Thingy! :) One of my employees asked me for the recipe today...I wrote down the ingredients and instructions and told her it actually wasn't a recipe that I was participating in an ingredient post on a facebook board and didn't get to last week's ingredient of asparagus and this week's was potatoes so I just made my own recipe to use what I had on hand.
Paula's Whatever Thingy!
Ingredients:
4 Medium Red Potatoes, peeled and sliced thin
1 (6-8 oz.) pkg. biscuit country ham slices, julienned
2 Tbsp. butter
2 Tbsp. Extra Virgin Olive Oil
Salt and pepper to taste (depends on the ham's salt content)
2 cups blanched and drained asparagus, cut in 2" strips
6 large eggs
1/2 cup half & half
salt & pepper to taste
6 oz. brie cheese, cut into cubes
Optional add-ins:
1/4 cup chopped shallots
1 cup sliced mushrooms
1/2 tsp. crushed red pepper
Directions:
Preheat oven to 400 degrees.
In 10" cast iron skillet, heat butter and EVOO over med-high heat. Add potatoes and cook until golden on one side. Season to taste. Turn, add ham and cook until potatoes are cooked through and golden. Can add optional add-ins at this time. Turn off heat.
While potatoes and ham are cooking, prepare asparagus.
Whisk together eggs, half & half; season to taste.
Sprinkle prepared asparagus over cooked potatoes & ham. Pour egg mixture over. Sprinkle with Brie cubes. Place in preheated oven and cook 20-30 minutes (depending on desired doneness of eggs).
I served mine last night with a toasted wheat English muffin and a very chunky blueberry jam. This morning, I reheated a slice in microwave and had a piece of Wheatberry Toast with Strawberry Jam. Both were delcious! Enjoy!
A recipe is likened to a personal expression of poetry/prose... When shared with others, it extends a part of our innermost being... For others to enjoy for years to come, not short lived like a rose. A recipe takes on our individuality and culinary expression, talent and skill... Brings to mind the likes/dislikes of family and friends, memories of special gatherings... Sharing a part of ourselves with others, making memories, spanning time our "appetites" they fill. Paula George 2005
This does look yummy!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Martha..it was Yummy! :)
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