Breakfast

Pumpkin Pancakes

I’m declaring today the Pumpkin Trifecta.That’s right: one day, three amazing recipes. Pumpkin is my favorite thing about fall, and I’m always looking for new ways to incorporate it into my diet.

Let’s start with breakfast: pumpkin pancakes. Simple, quick, and great with eggs, bacon, sausage, or just on their own. Pancakes also keep well, so one batch sets me up for several breakfasts for the week.

I’ve played around with several different recipes and settled on this amalgamation. It has a fair amount of pumpkin, and it’s not too sweet so the spices shine through. Serve it with a touch of real maple syrup, or a little butter and cinnamon.

P.S. No, I didn’t eat all of this. It’s not that I didn’t want to… but I had two more pumpkin recipes to tackle. :)

Pumpkin Pancakes

Adapted from several sources

Yield: about 15 pancakes

1 1/4 c flour

1/4 c brown sugar

2 tsp pumpkin pie spice

1 tsp cinnamon

3/4 tsp salt

1 c whole milk

3/4 c canned pumpkin

3 large eggs

1 tsp vanilla

In a large bowl, whisk together dry ingredients.  In a medium bowl, whisk milk, pumpkin, eggs, and vanilla to blend well.  Add pumpkin mixture to dry ingredients; whisk just until smooth (batter will be thick).

Heat a pan or griddle over medium-high heat. Brush surface with butter or oil, or use cooking spray. Pour batter in 1/4-cup portions onto hot surface. Cook until bubbles form on surface of pancakes and bottoms are brown, about 1 minute per side.  Flip over and cook for another 30 seconds or until they are cooked and nicely browned.  Repeat with the remaining batter.

Ranchero Breakfast Tostadas

Smitten.

That’s the best word I can think of when the fine folks at Bon Appetit asked its readers which recipe it should reveal from Sara Forte’s new cookbook, The Sprouted Kitchen.

Regular readers of Bon Appetit’s blog know the magazine regularly promotes new cookbooks through this hybrid recipe reveal-cookbook giveaway model. I’ve bought more than one cookbook because of this blog feature, and once I even won the giveaway contest myself (thanks, BA!)

At any rate, when I saw the picture of her ranchero breakfast tacos, I was in instant lust. Hearty black beans, velvety avocado, and a golden, runny egg yolk, all  presumably with a Mexican flavor kick… where do I sign up for this kind of breakfast on a daily basis?

Less than two weeks after BA’s post, I happened to come across the cookbook while shopping during a girls’ weekend in Nashville. It took persuading for me to pick up a copy.

My first field experiment, of course, was the ranchero breakfast tostadas. They lived up to the hype, and then some.

Sara Forte’s lovely new cookbook, The Sprouted Kitchen

By making the bean mash and shredding the cheese the day before, I had breakfast on the table in under 30 minutes. At first glance, that’s more time than I typically like to spend on breakfast during the week — yes, I’m that girl who rolls out of bed at the last possible moment every day — but half that time is the oven heating, and actual cooking takes less than 15 minutes. That’s absolutely doable and worth the investment.

(Note: don’t try to cut corners and skip browning the tortillas, or throwing them in the oven before it’s finished preheating. You want the tortillas to get nice and crisp so that they’ll crack easily when you slice your fork through them. Trust me: it will taste better and be easier to eat this way.)

Best of all, it’s a healthy and satisfying breakfast. A serving is two tostadas, and I couldn’t clean my plate. It offers enough fiber and protein to ward off the mid-morning munchies (I actually didn’t eat again until lunch 5 hours later!), as well as good fat from the avocados. If you prefer your eggs scrambled or poached, go for it, and adjust the spices to suit your taste.

Is this what love tastes like? At 7am, I think so.

Eggs, beans, avocado and cheese make for a hearty breakfast

October 18 Update: I’m officially in love. I’ve lost track of how many times I’ve eaten this in the last 2 1/2 weeks… if I could fry an egg at the office I think I might eat this three meals a day when I can get access to good avocados. It’s that good.

Ranchero Breakfast Tostadas

Adapted from The Sprouted Kitchen: A Tastier Take on Whole Foods, by Sara Forte (Ten Speed Press, 2012)

For every 2 servings:
1 cup cooked black beans, drained (canned or from scratch)
2 Tablespoons tepid water
2-4 Tablespoons sour cream or Greek yogurt
1 green onion, chopped
1/4 to 1/2 teaspoon ground cumin, to taste
1/4 teaspoon sea salt
1/2 teaspoon freshly ground pepper
Optional: 2 slices cooked bacon, chopped
4 small corn tortillas
Extra-virgin olive oil
2 teaspoons unsalted butter or coconut oil
4 eggs
1/2 cup shredded white cheddar cheese
1 avocado, peeled and thinly sliced
1 Tablespoon chopped fresh cilantro
Hot sauce and lime wedges for serving (optional)

Place beans in a  small saucepan over low heat. Warm through. Add water and 2 Tablespoons yogurt or sour cream, onions, cumin, salt and pepper. Mash with a potato masher or a large fork until coarsely mashed but not entirely smooth. Stir in bacon, if desired. Taste for salt and pepper, and add the remaining sour cream if you’d like the beans to be creamier. Turn off the heat and keep covered until needed. Make ahead: black bean mash can be prepared up to 2 days in advance and stored in the refrigerator. When reheating, add a small amount of water.

Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. Brush the tops of the tortillas with a bit of olive oil and lay on a rimmed baking sheet (it’s fine for them to overlap). Bake until just lightly browned, 6 to 8 minutes. Remove from the oven and set aside.

Heat a large frying pan with the butter or oil over medium heat. Working in batches as necessary, gently break the eggs in the pan and cook sunny-side up or to your desired doneness, covering the pan if you like your yolks more cooked through.

Build each tostada: top a tortilla with about 1/4 cup of bean bash, 1 egg, 1-2 Tablespoons cheese, 1/4 of an avocado, and a sprinkle of cilantro. Serve with hot sauce and a wedge of lime.

Bacon Spinach Quiche

I am not a morning person, and I am always looking for make-ahead breakfast ideas.

If I don’t get enough protein in the morning, I am invariably famished and sneaking down to the ABP in the basement of my office building for a sugary carb fix before 10:30.

Quiche seemed like a great solution: versatile (what leftover veggies are in mt fridge?), with protein and vegetables, as well as portable. Leave off the crust, and they’re pretty guilt-free.

But I’ve been experimenting with quiche recipes off on and on for about six months, and they always turn out watery. Turns out, eggs release water when they cook, without the right balance of fat in the liquid. You can’t substitute milk or half and half for the cream. Vegetables should be pre-cooked and sufficiently drained of excess moisture, especially for a very watery vegetable such as zucchini. Also, oven temperature matters: 400 degrees seems to work best.

This recipe is a starting point; substitute whatever vegetables and cheese you have on hand. A little salt is good, but be careful not to over-salt, especially if you’re using a salty cheese such as Parmesan.

Many cooks prefer to make quiche in a tart pan, and remove the sides when cooling. I don’t own a tart pan, so I just use a pie plate. This may be too much filling for a tart pan; start with 2 eggs and 2/3 c cream.

Bacon Spinach Quiche

4 slices thick-cut bacon (I used Trader Joe’s applewood-smoked bacon)
1 small onion, diced
2 cloves garlic, minced, if desired
4 c baby spinach (half a package)
3 eggs
1 c cream
Salt & pepper to taste
1/4 c shredded Parmesan (or to taste)

Preheat oven to 400 degrees.

In a large skillet, cook bacon. Remove bacon to a plate lined with paper towels to drain the fat; crumble. Remove all but one tablespoon of grease from the pan. Reduce heat to low. Add onions and saute for several minutes. Add garlic and continue sauteeing until onions begin to get translucent. Add spinach. Cook for an additional two minutes until spinach has cooked down. Transfer mixture to a cutting board to cool slightly. Run a knife through the mixture several times. Blot excess moisture from the vegetables with paper towels.

Lightly coat a pie plate with cooking spray. Spread bacon crumbles and spinach over the plate. Whisk together eggs, cream, salt and pepper; pour into pie plate. Sprinkle with cheese.

Place pie plate on a baking sheet and carefully slide into the oven. Bake at 400 degrees for about 30 minutes, until the filling has uniformly puffed (wait for the center to puff), browned and set. Transfer to a cooling rack. Let set for at least 5 minutes before serving.