After posting this picture of the egg casserole I made for MOPS this morning on Facebook, I received several requests for the recipe. My mom used to make this casserole for a special breakfast or brunch, along with a yummy coffee cake that had cherry pie filling in it. I really love to use ham-off-the-bone, and will cube some leftover Easter or Christmas ham to stick in the freezer until I need it. Even though this casserole is easy to put together, it does require a little pre-planning. I usually assemble it the night before I need it, and let it sit in the refrigerator overnight.
In a 9″ X 13″ pan, place 5 slices of the cubed bread. Place cheese strips on top of bread, then cubed ham on cheese strips. Beat eggs and add milk, salt and mustard. Pour over ham. Melt butter and pour over all. Place remaining 2 slices of bread cubed on top. Cover and refrigerate 2 hours or overnight. Bake for 1 hour, uncovered, at 325 degrees.
Kale is the hot new health food–new to those of us who are still trying to convince ourselves that french fries count as a veggie, that is. Kale chip recipes and raves have been all over the internet for a while; it seems like everyone is making them and loving them! I decided to see what all the hoopla was about and make some for myself. However, the first time I tried to make them, I ran into a snafu. The container of greens I bought said BABY KALE in big letters, BUT it was actually salad with baby kale mixed with other greens. Since I was not going to take the time to pick out all the kale leaves, making kale chips was going to have to wait.
I finally bought a bunch of kale and decided to make a simple kale chip recipe I found on Allrecipes. On Pinterest, I saw a similar recipe for zucchini chips, and I have a pile of zucchinis from my brother-in-laws garden. I wondered, which healthy recipe would my kids like better?
Kale Chips
The first recipe we made was the kale chips recipe. First, I washed the kale and cut off the large stems with kitchen shears. Lily was the food photographer. Emmy served as the kale spinner.
We added a tablespoon of olive oil and coated the leaves in the baggie. Then I added a tablespoon of red wine vinegar and some sea salt. We spread the leaves on a cookie sheet and baked at 300 degrees for about 35 minutes, until the edges were a little brown and the leaves were crispy. As they were baking, Lily and Emmy thought the kale smelled like spinach.
The verdict:
Lily and Emmy actually liked how the kale chips tasted better than I did. They ate quite a few of them! Kale chips were very easy to make, and after I got used to the taste, I ate quite a few, too. I thought I would taste the vinegar a bit more (I love vinegar!) but the chips didn’t have any vinegar flavor.
Zucchini Chips
The zucchini chip recipe is very similar to the kale chip recipe, with one big difference; the chips have to bake longer.
I sliced my zucchini very thin. The recipe calls for a mandolin, but since I don’t have one (here I thought it was a kind of string instrument!) I used my butcher knife. I was supposed to blot the slices with a paper towel, but I forgot this step. That may have helped them bake faster. I placed the slices on two cookie sheets lined with parchment paper, and brushed olive oil on the slices. I then sprinkled them with sea salt, and baked in the oven at 225 degrees for two hours.
The Verdict:
Lily loved the zucchini chips, and Emmy wouldn’t even touch them. I was surprised, because she normally will eat zucchini. I liked their taste, but it was hard to get all of them crisp without burning some of the chips. So some of my chips were still soggy, and some were crisp. It may have been because my slices weren’t uniform. I also didn’t like checking on them every few minutes for two hours.
Since my family will eat zucchini in other ways, such as in a veggie stir fry, I don’t think I will make zucchini chips again even though they were tasty.
What about you? Have you tried either kind of veggie chip, or do you have a different way of making veggie chips?
We use cookies to optimize our website and our service.
Functional cookies
Always active
The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
Preferences
The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
Statistics
The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes.The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
Marketing
The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.