Last week I made a savory cake with zucchini. It turned out pretty well, even though I made the recipe up. Using the internet, I searched for savory cakes and found a few recipes. Many of them were too complicated for what I wanted to do, and others used ingredients that I didn't have on hand. So I fudged it. Here is (roughly) what I did. It made two standard loaves.
Preheat your oven to 180ºC. Butter two standard loaf pans and put them in the fridge.
Grate two medium-sized zucchini. I used the fine blade in my food processor. Salt them lightly and let them disgorge excess liquid in a sieve. After about ten minutes, squeeze the squash gently in your hands to remove more liquid. Set aside.
I used 200 grams of lardons fumés, lightly sautéed, but not browned. In the US, if you can't get smoked slab bacon, use traditional bacon. Cook it lightly but don't let it get crispy. Then cut it up into large bits with a knife. You could also use chunks of leftover ham, chicken, or even pork roast.
I also had a hunk of Gruyère in the fridge. It was just over 100 grams. I grated that up. Any hard, grate-able cheese will work here, from Swiss to Jack to Cheddar. Whatever you like. I saw a couple recipes that used chopped up goat cheese and I would have done that, but I didn't have any goat cheese on hand.
For the batter, lightly beat six eggs in a bowl, then add 2 cups of flour, two teaspoons of baking powder, eight tablespoons of vegetable oil, and a cup of milk. Next, add the cheese, the bacon, and zucchini to the batter along with salt and pepper and mix it up well.
Pour the batter into the buttered loaf pans and bake them for about an hour. You know they're done when you do the wooden-skewer-comes-out-clean test. Then let them cool before turning them out of the pans.
And there you have it. These cakes are good sliced or cut into small cubes and served with before dinner drinks. I sliced one and put the other in the freezer for later.
Looks perfect! And I have all of the ingredients on hand.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the recipe.
OMG this sounds delicious!
ReplyDeleteYum! Yum! Yum!
ReplyDeleteI'm having my morning coffee. A piece of this savory cake would be perfect...
ReplyDeleteHmmmmm
ReplyDeleteThank you so much! I will make this for a picnic this weekend.
Gilbert
ps shouldn't you and Ken be working on a cook book? "Cooking in the Loire Valley" ;-)
Sounds great Walt. I bet it would make wonderful toast with yummy French butter.
ReplyDeleteSue
loulou, you bet!
ReplyDeleteevol, hey! What have you been up to?
rick, yum!
diogenes, that sounds good.
gilbert, enjoy! No, no cookbook. :)
sue, I hadn't thought of doing that!
Looks like it would be quite tasty. Hey I've been meaning to ask you. I want to make my grandmother's taquito recipe but it calls for a pot roast. What is that in French? Is it the "bas de palette". Or some kind of Roti? It probably doesn't really matter but it's driving me nuts that I can't figure out the equivalent, if there is one.
ReplyDeletetornwordo, good question! I don't really know. I've never seen "bas de palette" in France. We have bas de côtes and palette and paleron, though. I think the names of cuts are different in every country!
ReplyDelete