Many Canadian families have a ham for Easter dinner. We will be in my house this year. A big ham usually means a meaty bone to make bean soup with after, as well as plenty of leftovers. This is a nice way to use up some of that delicious cooked ham. But not too much, you want lots for sandwiches too.
I used a pre-made pastry here, but of course you can make your own.
Ham and Cheese Quiche
Ingredients
1 (9
inch) refrigerated pie pastry
1 cup grated
Cheddar cheese
½ cup grated
Swiss cheese
2 tablespoons all-purpose
flour
½ cup diced
cooked ham
2 tablespoons honey
mustard
1
¼ cups half-and-half
5 eggs, beaten
¼ cup chopped
green onions
¼ teaspoon salt
Directions
Preheat the oven to
400 degrees F
Press pastry into the
bottom of a 9-inch pie plate.
Bake pastry for 5
minutes. Poke holes into the pastry with a fork and continue cooking until
lightly browned, about 5 minutes more.
Remove crust from the
oven, and reduce the oven temperature to 350 degrees F
Mix 1/2 cup Cheddar
cheese, Swiss cheese, and 1 tablespoon flour in a bowl; spread over warm crust.
Mix ham and honey
mustard together in a bowl; spoon over cheese mixture.
Mix half-and-half,
eggs, green onions, remaining 1 tablespoon flour, and salt together in bowl.
Pour mixture carefully over ham layer; top with remaining ½ cup of Cheddar
cheese.
Bake for 40 to 50
minutes until set in the center. Cool for 10 minutes before cutting.
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Thank you for the Ham and Cheese Quiche recipe! Sounds like the perfect way to start the day or have a wonderful supper too.
ReplyDelete2clowns at arkansas dot net
Thanks for sharing this ham and cheese quiche recipe, Vicki. It looks delicious. By coincidence, just yesterday my wife and our ten-year-old grandson made pizzagaina, which is very similar. He remarked that it’s really just a kind of ham quiche. Something I’d never thought of.
ReplyDeleteThe Italian version uses not only cooked ham, but also Genoa salami, prosciutto, and pepperoni. Tradition says it was made at Easter as a way to use up leftover preserved meats at the end of winter. I’m definitely going to try your version. It sounds a lot less labor intensive.
Sounds delicious though
DeleteHam and cheese quiche is a staple in my house but I never thought to add honey mustard. Sounds like a delicious addition and I'll try it next time. Thanks for sharing, Vicki!
ReplyDeleteLong time since I made a quiche. Maybe, if I have some ham left over,=after Easter, I'll make one.
ReplyDeleteVery yummy, Vicki!
ReplyDeletePerfect! Ham and cheese, hold the rye!
ReplyDeleteHoney mustard - that's what makes this different from mine. Definitely will try that! Thanks Vicki.
ReplyDeleteSounds delicious I will be trying this one. Deborah
ReplyDeleteCouldn't find honey mustard at the store. So, I used Dijon mustard Flavor of the mustard was so prominent, I couldn't tell that the quiche had ham. Even though I made it. I used a deep pie shell, but the liquid still ran over. It didn't stick to the cookie sheet, though.
ReplyDelete