I gotta come clean with you guys about this quiche. Yes, it’s loaded with lots of kale, and it’s awesome. But also, you see those tiny brown specks? Those aren’t quiche freckles. Those are facon bits. No, that’s not a typo. I said facon, not bacon.
Not into that, you can use bacon. That’s cool. But if you’ve never tried facon, you really should give it a go. We eat it at our house all the time. It doesn’t really look like bacon, and the texture is not the same either.
But it tastes awesome. And if you chop it up into small bits (facon bits), you can add it to risotto, quiche, salads, etc. .
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But whatever you do, I highly recommend making this quiche. It’s delicious. And you might be surprised by what I used for the crusts. 🙂
6 eggs
6-7 facon strips, cooked and chopped
2 cups chopped kale
1 small onion
5 cloves of garlic
1-2 tablespoons olive oil
1 cup sour cream
1 cup ricotta cheese
5 ounces (about 1 cup) grated cheese (I used Fontina)
salt + pepper
1 package crescent rolls
First cook your facon and chop it up into small bits. Set aside.
Dice up the onion. Mince the garlic. Remove the veins from the kale and chop up well. In a skillet, heat the olive oil over medium heat and cook the onion for 1-2 minutes until it begins to soften.
Add the garlic and kale and cook for 2-3 more minutes until the kale becomes bright green and just begins to wilt. Remove from heat.
In a large bowl, whisk together the eggs, sour cream, and ricotta cheese. Stir in the facon and veggies. Add half of the grated cheese and season with salt and pepper.
Why yes, this is the laziest quiche crust you’ll ever see. It’s pretty tasty, though, so you should totally give this a try if you never have before. Butter or spray your baking dish with nonstick cooking spray.
Roll out the crescent rolls, pinching the edges of each together so it’s one long rectangle of dough. Place it in the baking dish and trim off any excess edges. You can also use puff pastry sheets as well. Both are great and make baking a quiche super easy.
Fill the unbaked crust with the quiche filling, and top with the remaining cheese. Bake at 375°F for 40-45 minutes until the edges begin to brown and the center has a slight jiggle but seems solid. Allow to cool for 10-15 minutes before slicing into the quiche.
Serve along with some fresh fruit for a brunch/lunch, or add a salad for dinner.
Enjoy this quiche! And feel free to change up the veggies for whatever you have on hand. xo. Emma
Hey guys! I love this recipe, can’t wait to try. I wonder if you guys can create a “print button” that way it would be easy to print out just the recipe and not all the pics?
O.k. so this looks delish and can’t wait to try it out for the fam…
This looks awesome! Quiche is one of my favourites. I use puff pastry for it, and love it with bacon, mushroom, capsicum, onion and cheese. Never thought to try it with kale though, and this sounds quite interesting 🙂
Love how the quiche is rustic looking! Def going to try this one this weekend? This looks like it would definitely be a “boyfriend” approved recipe 😉
Wow, I’ve never heard of facon before… Such a lovely way to use up kale! And I love my quiche with a bit of jiggle 😀 x
For some reason the word facon made me laugh.
This quiche looks delicious!
I just saw so much kale at the farmer’s market, so thank you. And I’ve been wanting to try my hand at a quiche forever and your crescent rolls crust has pushed me over the edge, so thank you again!! 🙂 Happy Summer!
Definitely going to try this on my guests coming this weekend. Yum!
this sounds reaaally, really good. thanks for sharing!
xo, cheyenne
I am mesmerised that you have fresh kale available in the middle of summer?? :0
here in Europe that’s a real winter vegetable, impossible almost to find before autumn. Will have to postpone this quiche until winter!
This looks amazing and I have never thought to a)put kale in a quiche or b)use crescent rolls for the crust. Pinning this for a future meal.
I love all the kale recipes you’ve been posting (including the kale pizza one). I am definitely going to try this quiche recipe this weekend. Sometimes I substitute bacon for diced ham and throw in tomatoes too (although you have to squeeze the water out so it doesn’t get soggy).
-Chanelle :: thekimchronicles.com
ah, this looks so yum!
xo
Our “facon” is coconut bacon! You can google recipes. I prefer it over morning star, since I know what is going in to it! And soy free!
How brilliant! I’m always scared of making crust. I’m never scared of crescent rolls.
I usually make quiche with spinach, but you may have convinced me to give kale a try! I’ve been looking for a good recipe to put kale in. My kale chips didn’t turn out great, haha. Thanks!
YES! A fully vegan quiche would be awful, but I think a dairy-free one could (maybe) be possible!
quiche is a total staple in my house and i have to make it once weekly. being a vegetarian (and facon lover), i cannot believe i’ve never put facon bits in mine! thanks for the idea, it’ll be used wisely. 🙂
Wow, does this look SO yummy!! I’m so bookmarking this and am totally going to make it. Yum, yum!!!
I’ve always hated quiche but this recipe actually looks really good! I might just have to give it a try 🙂
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