Showing posts with label mini-loaf. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mini-loaf. Show all posts

Sunday, August 31, 2014

Crustless Quiche Mini-Loaves

This recipe is flourless, thus, gluten-free. The filling ingredients are—besides evaporated milk and eggs—coarse-cut ham pieces, cut-up sliced Swiss cheese, and thawed and drained, previously frozen zucchini. Because has so much sodium, I decided Swiss cheese would contribute less additional sodium than cheddar or other saltier cheese.

I had spotted an intriguing recipe for crustless mini-quiche that used cupcake cups. I started poking around for additional crustless quiches, which I list some links at the bottom of this article.

My inclination to modify kicked in. Why not make the quiche totally gluten-free? With my crusted quiches, I was always adding one or two tablespoons of flour. How about, instead of using cupcake pans, I finally use my mini-loaf pan that I've had for years and not yet used? The one ingredient that nudged me to make the recipe items all come together? Zucchini! More zucchini from the co-worker who had already given me lots of!

My pixstrip shows eight image areas:
  1. Implements
  2. separate bowls of zucchini, cheese, ham
  3. zucchini, cheese, ham combined in a larger glass bowl
  4. eggs, evaporated milk, spray oil
  5. mini-loaf pan, prepped with the spray oil
  6. Combo pic:
    1. mini-loaf pan with the filling mixture parceled out into the pan wells
    2. evaporated milk and eggs whisked together in the measuring cup pitcher
    3. closer-in pic of pitcher showing the total amount of fluid
  7. baked mini-loaf quiches
  8. baked mini-loaf quiches, one dished onto a plate (yum!)
Implements
  • mini-loaf pan
  • wide-mouth mixing bowl
  • measuring cup pitcher or similar
  • wire whisk
  • measuring cups
  • measuring spoons
Ingredients
  • Solid fillings, listed in the order that the 2nd pic shows
    • thin-sliced zucchini, previously frozen, then thawed and drained to weigh 10 oz. (YMMV if you use fresh zucchini.)
    • 8 oz shredded Swiss cheese (I used thin-sliced Swiss cheese that I cut into smaller pieces.)
    • 8 oz cubed ham or similar (I cut ham pieces into small-cube size.)
  • Wet
    • 4 eggs
    • 12 oz evaporated milk
Instructions
  1. Preheat the oven to 350°.
  2. Spray oil into the pan wells. You can do this step any time before you add the solid fillings or fluids into the pan.
  3. Prepare the bowls of zucchini, Swiss cheese, and ham. Stir together in a bigger bowl.
  4. Divvy up the fillings into the mini-loaf pan wells.
  5. Beat eggs and evaporated milk together in a separate bowl. (I used a large, plastic measuring cup.) If desired, beat the eggs first, then blend in the milk.
  6. Pour the egg-and-milk mixture into the pan wells, being careful not to overfill.
  7. Bake for about 40 to 45 minutes. Test for doneness with a toothpick.
  8. Use a cooky spatula or similar to press a mini-quiche's sides away from pan walls, then lift it onto a plate.
  9. Repeat extraction for each quiche. You can store the rest of them by wrapping each individually in food wrap and freezing them.
Post-Recipe Thoughts
When I tried extracting a mini-loaf quiche (gingerly using a cooky spatula and plastic knife), I noticed some fluid at the bottom of the pan well. It's a good thing I had drained the zucchini before I mixed and baked.

Each wrapped mini-quiche weighed about 4 ounces. Hmmm, snack size!

On occasion, I've thawed one a few hours or overnight in the fridge, then microwave it for about a minute, using a nearly ancient, low-power, 700-watt oven). I'd still get fluid, which I concluded came from the ham. (I've reheated ham slices from the same ham and wound up with fluid.)

One friend, more patient than I, reheated one mini-loaf quiche that I gave her. She placed hers inside a dish and lid set, and heated it in a regular oven. Hers came out fine, without extra fluid.

What did I do with the fluid? Sipped it like it was a broth. Tasty!

My recipe is versatile enough for using different ingredients, different baking shapes. You could even try pouring the ingredients into a pie shell for a regular quiche. For that matter, try the cupcake-sized wells as several recipes say to use.

The following webpages attracted my attention while I searched for ideas for crustless, mini, and quiche:

Crustless Veggie Mini Quiches
This recipe uses Egg Beaters pourable eggs. Yields cupcake-sized quiches. Some good advice about ingredients:
Use your favorite vegetables in these mini quiches. Firm vegetables such as carrots, broccoli or asparagus will need to be cooked in the microwave a few minutes and then chopped finely so they will be tender at the end of the baking time.
Mini Loaf Pan Quiche Lorraine
This recipe calls for loads of ingredients, including flour. (This recipe makes crusted mini-loaves in individual pans.)

Crustless Quiche Lorraine
In contrast to the previous recipe I listed, this one makes a full-size quiche that calls for a pound of bacon, a whole onion, and six eggs. The author does mention using a 12" ceramic quiche pan. She suggests cutting the ingredients by about a third if using a pie pan.

Crustless Quiche for One
This crustless mini-quiche is flour-free and free of cow dairy products, using soy milk and soy creamer. Even though using vegan and soy cheese, the author suggests alternatives of mozzarella or cheddar.

Mini Crustless Quiches
The recipe looks heavy on the eggs (5) and light on the milk (1/4 cup). The yield is six muffin-size mini-quiches, but I can't tell the muffin well size. The author makes a statement about about types of veggies to use (similar to another sentiment):
you can add whatever veggies you like {or tolerate} or happen to have on hand in your home
Mini Quiche Recipe
This recipe is light on both the eggs (1) and milk (1/2 cup). She uses a mini-muffin pan for 15 crusted quiches.

Update, as of 9/10/2014
  • Original zucchini amount: 2 cups prviously frozen zucchini, thawed to measure 2 cups
  • Original baking time: about 30 minutes, then test for doneness

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Waits N Measures, Baking Pans N Papers

I'm big on baking. I bake frequently enough to know what I'm doing, but still need to consult with recipes online and in books for quantities, capacities, and baking times and temperatures. I use cake mixes frequently for cooky recipes. I fiddle around with modifying basic cake mix recipes. Sometimes I change up ingredients. Sometimes I use different pans than the recipes call for.

I've included a table for using different baking pan cavities—square mini-cupcakes, mini-cupcakes, regulation-size cupcakes, and mini-loaves. For measuring capacity, I pulled out the pans and poured amounts of water into a well of each pan. The table has wait (bake) times and measures. Dimensions, capacities, and baking times are approximate. (I did mention in Lemon Poppyseed Mini-cupcakes recipe that mini-cupcake baking time is about 25% less than for regular cupcakes.)

Shape Dims (") Capacity Wells
/Pan
#min@
325-375°
square
silicone
1 1/2 x 1 1/2
x 5/8 dp
1 1/3 T
(4 tsp)
24 15-16
mini-
cupcake
1 3/4 U dia
x 1 1/4 L dia
x 5/8 dp
Less than
2 T
12 13-17
whoopie 3 dia
x 1/2 dp
4T 12 15-16
standard cupcake 2 3/4 U dia
x 2 L dia
x 1 1/16 dp
5T 12 15 to 20,
22 to 27
mini-loaf 3 5/8 x 2 3/8
x 1 1/8 dp
8 T
(1/2 C)
9 TBD
3 teaspoons (t) per tablespoon (T), 16 T per cup (C),
77 fluid drops per teaspoon

Caution: Recipes say to fill the wells about 2/3 to 3/4 full. Remember to differentiate advised-fill from capacity. If you fill the wells to capacity, the batter will expand during baking and spill over, making a BIG mess!
Actually, I still need to test for wait time for mini-loaves. I bought that pan several years ago, but I have yet to try using it. Visit Cake Mix Doctor and Duncan Hines topic links.

I recently acquired a couple of whoopie pans. I used one of them and one of my silicone pans for experimenting with a muffin recipe that calls for cake mix. The cake mix powder itself was a modification—half Red Velvet (Duncan Hines) and half strawberry (coincidentally, but not significantly, Pillsbury). More on the recipe in an upcoming article.

If using a cake mix powder, the box usually seems to specify baking times for 2 round layers, regular cupcakes (24), and a 9 x 13 sheet. In my experience, the mini-cupcakes yield tends to be about 2 1/2 as many—60. My Lemon Lemon Poppyseed Mini-cupcakes recipe yielded 77 units. (I'm positive that adding 2 T poppyseeds didn't contribute to raising the yield past 60.) In trying out the square mini-cupcakes, the yield would have been 24. More on that Red Velvet and strawberry cupcake experiment in an upcoming article.

For those who bake, the table is handy for planning the number of small-size baked items (assuming using an 18 1/4 oz. box of cake mix), the amount of batter to pour in, and how long to bake them. I am disappointed to say that, out of the three national brands of cake mix, only Duncan Hines mix has 18 1/4 ounces of powder for the normal 2-layer or 9 x 13 sheet cakes. The other two brands contain 15 1/4 ounces.

In my Internet travels, cupcakes and muffins, particularly small ones, cause confusion because of their similarities. Cupcakes are small cakes. You beat the batter. The cupcakes tend to have frosting. Muffins are quick breads, and the batter is best stirred gently. Muffins tend to have crumbs or icing drizzle. "Cupcakes Vs. Muffins: An Epic Battle and Some Big Questions" is an extensive article about their differences.

Standard paper liners seem to be mini-cupcake or standard cupcake sizes. Want to be cost-effective? For starters, don't pay extra for fancy colors or designs. The list has some quantities and prices to consider. (If the price was $[something].99), I rounded it up.
  • Michael’s (undiscounted—40% coupon available online)
    • 100 sm/$2 (~2 cents each)
    • 350 sm/$4 (~1 cent each)
    • 75 standard/$2 (~3 cents each)
    • 18 short crown 2 ½ dia/$2 (~ 5.5 cents each) Yow!
  • Make It Sweet (in Austin)
    • 100 sm/$2 (~2 cents each)
    • 500 sm/$6 (~1.2 cents each)
    • 75 standard/$2 (~3 cents each)
    • 500 standard/$9 (~ 1.8 cents each)
Looking for an alternative to short crown papers? Get large muffin papers and trim to size. Watch Todd Wilbur obtain shorter paper liners (at about the 1:41 mark) for making his peanut butter cup clones. Sure, he uses standard cupcake liners, but you get the idea.

Another Todd Wilbur video shows how avoid buying a Twinkie-shape pans for his Twinkie clone recipe by wrapping aluminum foil pieces around a spice jar. Move your pointer to about the :56 mark.