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James Baigrie
 
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Smoked Salmon and Dill Quiche
 
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MAKES ONE 13"×18" (HALF SHEET) QUICHE

We use a half sheet pan to make this large rectangular quiche. The recipe is based on one from The Silver Palate Cookbook by Julee Rosso and Sheila Lukins (Workman, 1982).

FOR THE CRUST:
3 cups flour
1 tsp. salt
1⁄4 tsp. sugar
11 tbsp. cold butter, cut into small pieces
6 tbsp. cold vegetable shortening, cut into small pieces

FOR THE FILLING:
6 eggs
3 cups heavy cream
Pinch freshly grated nutmeg
Salt and freshly ground black pepper
8 oz. smoked salmon, cut into small pieces
1/4 cup coarsely chopped fresh dill

1. For the crust: Sift flour, salt, and sugar together into a large bowl. Using a pastry blender or 2 table knives, work butter and shortening into flour mixture until it resembles coarse meal. Sprinkle in 1⁄2 cup ice water, stirring with a fork until dough forms. Transfer to a floured surface and quickly knead several times until dough is smooth. Shape dough into a disk, wrap in plastic wrap, and refrigerate for 2 hours.

2. Roll dough out on a floured surface into a 16"× 21" rectangle, ease into a 13"× 18" half-sheet pan, and trim off excess. Refrigerate for 30 minutes. Preheat oven to 400°. Prick dough all over with a fork, line with parchment paper, and fill with pie weights or dried beans. Bake until edge of crust begins to color and pull away from sides of pan, about 25 minutes. Remove weights and paper. Bake crust until lightly browned all over, about 5 minutes more. Remove from oven. Reduce over temperature to 375°.

3. For the filling: Beat eggs, heavy cream, nutmeg, and salt and pepper to taste together in a medium bowl.

4. Scatter salmon and dill evenly over crust, then pour in filling. Bake quiche until filling is set, about 20 minutes.

 
This recipe was first published in Saveur in Issue #81
 
Recipe Reviews
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Member online editor, saveur.com's Review:  
Correction

Benandk:

Thank you for pointing out our
error; the recipe has now been corrected. Hope
you enjoy it! 

Cheers,

Sarah
Karnasiewicz, Online Editor, SAVEUR 


Member Phillycook's Review:  
Not a quiche!

I'm sure it's a very nice recipe for a salmon
appetizer, but it's certainly not a quiche. Real
quiche has a slow baked custard as its filling
and should have a luxurious and sensual texture.
This is more a pizza with salmon.

The
reason one makes quiche in a 1 1/2" high
spring form is to allow for the slow baking of
the custard. 

 


Member benandk@mac.com's Review:  
missing ingredient
You forgot to list dill as an ingredient.


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