Green Strata With Goat Cheese and Herbs Recipe (2024)

Ratings

5

out of 5

776

user ratings

Your rating

or to rate this recipe.

Have you cooked this?

or to mark this recipe as cooked.

Private Notes

Leave a Private Note on this recipe and see it here.

Cooking Notes

Keiko

The steps as written made no sense to me. I cooked down the greens in a little water, then blitzed them with the herbs and one cup of milk. Then whisked in the eggs and the rest of the milk, cream, and cheese. Threw in the bread and let it all soak in the fridge for a couple of hours, mixing occasionally. Pressed it into a pan, covered with plastic wrap, and weighted with some cans. Came out great, not bready or lumpy. The pressing technique I learned from America's Test Kitchen.

kayandallie

What a mess. I put the greens and hot milk into my Cuisinart 11 cup food processor and hit the pulse button. Hot milk and green bits down the side and onto the counter. I've transferred it all over into my blender but meanwhile my kitchen is a disaster with milk and green bits everywhere, not to mention that it wasn't a joy playing around in hot milk.
Use a blender.

Ila

Looks like green baby food. Why puree at all? poach veggies as needed in milk/cream, drain, chop/scissor roughly, lay over bread base. Proceed with rest of Step 2..

Shelley Dreyer-Green

Yes, the processor was slightly messy but doable (I have a 14 cup Kitchen Aid), and yes, it took about 30 rather than 20 minutes to bake the eggs at the end. I used about 3/4 of a 24 oz. loaf of Brioche, 6 cups of a 16 oz. "Zen Blend" pre-washed package of baby greens; kale, collards, chard, spinach, tatsoi, mustard, mizuna, pak-choi and komatsuna. I also used 8 instead of 6 oz of goat cheese. A delicious and beautiful 5* success for an annual 8 woman beach retreat, most of which I made ahead.

pam

I read most of the notes and opted for my blender instead of the food processor. It was a disaster. Mixture all over everything. Worked fine in my food processor. Either way, you really can't incorporate all of the milk and cream at once. Experience should have reminded me of that.

Cat M

I made this with leftover collards (southern style), and slightly stale grocery store whole wheat potato bread that had a soft crust. Managed to get the eggs just right for a lightly thick runny sauce. Next time I would use the ricotta to hold its consistency better than the goat cheese did. But the flavor was delicious and worth making again.

I wouldn't let it cool too much before serving or the egg yolks will be too gelatinous rather than saucy.

Louise

Yummy! I dispensed with heating and cooling the milk, which seemed time-consuming and messy. I blitzed the greens in the food processor. Then I whisked the eggs in a bowl, added cold milk, and then the green paste. Poured that mixture over the bread. Not sure what I missed by not wilting the greens with scalding milk, but this worked fine.

Betsy R. Schneier

I prepared this for a family that claims to be disinterested in egg dishes. The cheese combined with the pepper made all the difference. One time I used goat cheese, another, a local variant. We've served both rose and sancerre with this dish, and although the sancerre tasted great, so did the a dry, Washington State Rosy!

Uviolet

The whole family liked this, including a 4-year-old who doesn't particularly like eggs or 'green things'. I agree that a blender would work better. I used baby kale, parsley and dill because that's what I had, but would go with spinach next time. I did 20 minutes for the eggs, and that was set enough to serve but then break and enjoy the runny yolks.

Susanna

I added 2 minced garlic to the processor which made it taste like pesto. Really delicious, but would like to try w/o my lil addition. Also cracked just 2 eggs at one end for hubby and my dinner. I plan to cook fresh eggs, probably over-med, to go w/ the bread pudding left overs. W/o eggs is just as delightful.

michelle

Fantastic! After reading others’ comments on the puréed milk/greens, I tried a different technique that worked well. I heated the milk in a *large* pot, then tossed the greens in there to wilt, and then puréed (still in the pot) with my immersion blender. Worked like charm without a mess (and dirtied fewer dishes).

Dave

This is always devoured quickly, a perfect brunch dish. Use challah bread, if you can find it.

George

I read the previous notes and just wizzed the greens in the processor, put them in a bowl, covered them with the hot milk and let it cool... otherwise, as written... great great great cabin food!

Priya

My sisters made this for Fathers Day brunch and interpreted "soft herbs" to mean dried herbs. I'm not sure how alarm bells didn't go off in their heads at the thought of adding 3/4 cup of dried herbs, but it actually still tasted pretty good! So if you're worried about messing this up, you can't do much worse than us, and it'll probably still be ok.

alain banan

good-morning every one , this fantastic dish you can give , just a little , phphiifftt up in the air by adding some rich tasted (little strong) world famous Danish Cheese . You can add any danish taste full cheese together with the goat cheese as well , - good luck go with care alain , copenhagen

easier method….

I sautéed the greens in a little oil, added the cheese, scattered onto of the bread, then added the egg mixture over the top. Perfect and easy, I am sure just as delicious as described in the more complicated original.

Jeff

No need to purée the greens and make a mess. Chopped them finely and simmered them in the cream/milk until soft.

michelle

Fantastic! After reading others’ comments on the puréed milk/greens, I tried a different technique that worked well. I heated the milk in a *large* pot, then tossed the greens in there to wilt, and then puréed (still in the pot) with my immersion blender. Worked like charm without a mess (and dirtied fewer dishes).

Robyn

I have to say, this was the first thing I have cooked in a long, long time that was nearly inedible. But the dog liked it so that was something.

CKE

This was pretty good right out of the oven. Not so good as leftovers (Very green…). I prefer a more classic breakfast casserole. Don’t plan on making again as I just didn’t love it.

sklinemo

We love this recipe for Easter brunch! As an alternative to a food processor or blender, put the milk/greens mixture in a deep soup pot and blitz with an immersion blender.

KP

Use the dang blender

Olivia T.

Made this with some slight mods based on what I had on hand and it was great! I cooked down the greens in some olive oil with garlic, green onions (didn’t have any soft herbs) and then blended that mixture with the milk and cream (didn’t warm those) and it was totally fine. Also cut the recipe in half and used Gruyere instead of goat cheese. Will definitely make this again!

Linda

Don't put all of the milk mixture in with the greens - only need enough to "lubricate" it, then pour pureed mixture into bowl and add rest of the milk, stir and let cool.

cait

After reading the reviews, I opted to skip the warming of milks and just blended the greens in a blender. I didn’t think blending was a messy process. I also added jalapeño and sautéed onion to the bake. It turned out nicely.

Laura

I love how vibrant this dish is! Next time I would probably cook the eggs on the stove top and then add one runny egg to each serving. When I baked them on top, the yolks were overcooked, but the whites were still jiggly. I also used a blender for the milk and the greens, which made it an evenly smooth consistency. Lovely dish for Mother's Day!

Shawn

Delicious! Used spinach, dill, chives, and a little parsley. Not quick and easy, but worth the trouble. Served it for Easter brunch.

ljr

This is a great way to use up greens and old bread but I'd leave the mint out. I used what I had wilting in my fridge for herbs - mint, parsley, tarragon, mint and dill. Next time I will leave out the tarragon and mint and go with oregano, basil, thyme and lots of parsley. I also think I'll go with the chopped or scissoring idea in the notes below. I used chard, spinach and some radish greens.

Callie

Take care that in Step 2 you don't add the goat cheese, just the parmesan. I didn't read closely enough and missed out on the goat cheese rounds. Not my favorite strata ever but still quite enjoyable and nice that it at least feels a bit healthier to have so many greens in it.

Rebecca

Really tasty! Didn’t have a blender/food processor so just mixed chopped greens/herbs/cheese right into the hot milk and continued on with the recipe from there

Private notes are only visible to you.

Green Strata With Goat Cheese and Herbs Recipe (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Errol Quitzon

Last Updated:

Views: 5408

Rating: 4.9 / 5 (59 voted)

Reviews: 82% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Errol Quitzon

Birthday: 1993-04-02

Address: 70604 Haley Lane, Port Weldonside, TN 99233-0942

Phone: +9665282866296

Job: Product Retail Agent

Hobby: Computer programming, Horseback riding, Hooping, Dance, Ice skating, Backpacking, Rafting

Introduction: My name is Errol Quitzon, I am a fair, cute, fancy, clean, attractive, sparkling, kind person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.